To bring us out of the
yeshivas and into the Israeli melting pot'
By Aryeh Dayan
(C) reprinted
with the permission of Haaretz Daily (English)
Two weeks ago, a few days before
the Tal Bill exempting yeshiva students from army service won third and
final reading Knesset approval, a fire erupted in the Jerusalem office
of the Degel Hatorah movement. The offices are located in the Geula neighborhood,
in a crowded Haredi residential area. The blaze destroyed the contents
of a few cupboards, and blackened part of the ceiling and walls in the
office, but no one was hurt as the the fire broke out at night when the
Degel Hatorah office was empty, and the flames did not spread to any of
the neighboring residential apartments.
Police investigators decided
it was a case of arson. Yeted Ne'eman, Degel Hatorah's journal, wrote
that investigators found among charred remains a container of flammable
glue which was apparently used to intensify the blaze.
Police investigators have yet
to detain suspects, and no organization has claimed responsibility for
the fire, so the motivation behind the apparent arson of one of the two
ultra-Orthodox movements which make up the United Torah Judaism party
(the party which led the parliamentary campaign on behalf of the Tal bill)
cannot be determined with certainty. Nonetheless, even if nobody in the
UTJ party is willing to say so openly, it's clear the act of arson occurred
against the backdrop of an argument which has in the past year divided
the Ashkenazi Haredi community. The argument relates to the Tal bill,
or, more precisely, it involves the part of the law which is termed the
"year of decision."
The secular media, which mostly
neglected this internal Haredi debate, ignored the act of vandalism at
the Degel Hatorah headquarters in Jerusalem.
The way in which the act was
covered by the Haredi media suggests that nobody is blaming secular hooligans
for the arson. Agudath Yisrael's journal Hamodia limited coverage of the
incident; it wrote that the fire was caused by "anonymous elements,"
and refrained from indulging speculation about motives.
Yeted Ne'eman, in contrast,
used big headlines to describe "Shock, amazement and consternation
among the Torah public." The subheadline explained that the "base,
humiliating act" was perpetrated by "a group of crazed louts."
In the code language used in Haredi newspapers, the allusion referred
to groups of radical ultra-Orthodox activists who oppose what they regard
as the Haredi parties' overly moderate positions.
Tempted
to leave the yeshivas
Echoes of the bitter argument
among Haredi factions about the year of decision were rarely heard outside
of the ultra-Orthodox world. A much more raucous public debate about the
IDF enlistment, or exemption, of Haredi men has dominated discussions.
Despite the economic and social importance of the issue, very few secular
Israelis displayed interest in the question of whether a 22-year-old Haredi
man who has received service exemptions for four straight years should
be allowed to leave yeshiva studies for a year without being conscripted,
or be entitled to a "year of decision" in which he examined
his prospects for becoming integrated in the work world, outside of the
yeshivas? In contrast, this question about the year of decision rattled
and divided the Haredi leadership.
The Tal bill, which was authorized
by the Knesset overrides the objections of many influential Haredim, and
confers this year of decision option. A Haredi man who chooses at the
end of the year of decision to continue in the work world, and not to
return to yeshiva study, is to be called up for a few months of military
service, or a year of non-military, compulsory public service. The IDF
has the authority to decide about what sort of service is to be done by
such a Haredi man. Public service assignments for organizations such as
Yad Sara can be done concurrently with salaried work at a regular job.
As things stood before the
passage of the Tal bill, any Haredi man who wanted to leave yeshiva life
and work to support his family was first of all required to enlist in
the IDF. The year of decision mechanism is designed to accomplish a dual
purpose: For men who really do not want to go on with Torah studies, the
year enables them to consider their next step without the sword of immediate
conscription dangling over their heads. The mechanism provides such men
a year-long opportunity to adjust to civilian work roles. Secondly, the
device has the aim of helping the Haredi community raise its standard
of living, if only by a limited degree.
The idea originally stems from
various Haredi circles, and it became an important component in recommendations
furnished by the Tal Committee. Yet it has met with fierce resistance
from Haredi sectors.
Haredi supporters of the year
of decision, particularly Bnei Brak Mayor Rabbi Mordechai Karelitz and
Deputy Minister Rabbi Avraham Ravitz, both of whom are affiliated with
Degel Hatorah, believe the formula should alleviate the economic distress
faced by young ultra-Orthodox families. These supporters hinted that the
year of decision might even trigger a process of change throughout the
entire Haredi society, a society which is increasingly hard-pressed to
overcome the lopsided structure caused by the requirement of continuing
with yeshiva studies until an age is finally reached at which IDF conscription
is no longer a threat.
Opponents of the year of decision,
who include most Agudath Yisrael members and MK Moshe Gafni (Degel Hatorah),
believe the formula is unnecessary. "Whoever doesn't want to study
should enlist in the IDF," says Gafni. The critics also warn that
the mechanism is also potentially harmful. It is liable to tempt Haredi
men toward leaving yeshiva study, they fear. The opponents contended that
acceptance of the year of decision formula would constitute surrender
to secular Israelis whose true wish is to undermine the yeshiva world.
Shas joined Haredi supporters
of the year of decision formula. "The whole subject of conscription
doesn't apply so much to us, and we dealt with it only out of solidarity
with our Ashkenazi brothers," one senior Shas MK told Ha'aretz, on
condition of anonymity. "I estimate that only one of our 17 Knesset
seats comes from Haredi men who have IDF exemptions. As to the argument
between the Ashkenazi factions about the year of decision, we decided
to support the more pragmatic position."
Despite such pronouncements
of non-partisan interest, it appears Shas, too, has an electoral stake
in the year of decision debate. Thousands of Sephardic yeshiva students
reach the age of 22 each year; and Shas' support of the year of decision
formula is likely to make them very happy.
Arguments about the year of
decision among Ashkenazi factions continued right up to final Knesset
balloting on the Tal bill. On the day of the third reading vote, MK Gafni,
and also MK Meir Porush tried to introduce qualifying motions which would
have repealed the year of decision.
"Gafni brought up this
reservation, but also took steps to ensure that the repeal would fail,"
Deputy Minister Ravitz says, striking a cynical chord. "He understood
that the law would not pass without a year of decision, and that the whole
issue would be sent back to the High Court if the bill wasn't legislated."
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