Jerusalem – Lapid: No Need To Fear Civil War Over Charedi Draft

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     A Ultra Orthodox Jewish man walks near the Israeli Army recruiting office in Jerusalem on 11 February 2013. Recruitment of Ultra Orthodox Jews to the army is one of the major challenges of the next Israeli government upon  joining of the Israeli politician Yair Lapid, chairman of the Yesh Atid party ('There is a Future') to the government. Lapid wants to promote the Tal law which requires universal army recruitment. Currently, exemptions from mandatory military service are possible for the ultra-Orthodox Jews.  EPA/ABIR SULTANJerusalem – The call for equality in the burden of national service took center stage Monday, as new MKs, including Yesh Atid leader Yair Lapid, made their first speeches in the plenum.

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    “We are in a crisis. The thing that is broken, that is smashed into pieces, is the ability of the government to act as sovereign when facing the different groups that make up the population,” Lapid said.

    According to the Yesh Atid leader, the government “no longer knows how to say…there are rules and there are laws, and the apply to everyone.

    Lapid referred to “price tag” criminals and Arab villages “that the police does not dare enter” as well as the ultra-orthodox, saying that the situation in Israel deteriorated from democracy to anarchy, and “the rule of minorities over the majority.”

    Referring to comments by Shas and UTJ MKs, Lapid said “we cannot be afraid of the fact that the discussion of equality in the burden once again brought voices threatening a civil war.”

    “There won’t be a civil war. Ten percent of the population cannot threaten the other 90% with civil war,” he stated. “A civilized society does not deal in threats, and if this house does not act because of threats, it is emptying the idea of democracy of all its values.”

    Lapid added that it is the Knesset’s job to overcome fears and tensions to bring solutions to problems tearing Israeli society apart.

    “Is it too much to imagine a country in which every haredi child learns English and every secular child knows what a page of Talmud looks like?” he asked. “I believe it is not. I believe in Israel and I believe in Israelis, in our ability to start over and create a model society that we can be proud of.”

    Each new MK’s speech was followed by congratulations by a veteran MK.

    United Torah Judaism MK Menahem Eliezer Moses spoke of Lapid’s family history, specifically mentioning that his grandfather was a rabbi in Hungary and a Viznitz hassid, who came from a family of 18 children.

    As such, Moses added, he does not understand how Lapid, who did not stay in the plenum to hear the UTJ lawmaker speak, could oppose Torah study or government aid to large families.

    “Do you really think you could force 100,000 yeshiva students to serve in the army?” Moses asked. “Where is there land to build all the prisons for them? There isn’t even enough land for homes for young couples.”

    The UTJ MK also pointed out that government funding for yeshiva students is lower than the amount spent on prisoners.

    In addition, Moses said that Lapid should not discount the possibility of “a tear in the nation,” one of the euphemisms UTJ and Shas MKs have used for civil war, because while haredim may be 10% of adults, they are nearly one-third of young children in Israel.

    Several other MKs, addressing the plenum for the first time, mentioned the issue of haredi enlistment.

    “I believe in all my heart in the importance of the world of Torah and in the value of learning Torah, but I believe no less that our nation has many needs and we cannot carry them alone,” MK Elazar Stern (Livni Party) said. “The time has come for all of us to serve the country in which we all live.”

    Labor MK Omer Bar-Lev said that as the son of former IDF chief of staff Haim Bar-Lev, he cannot stand by while only a small group serves its duty to the state, but that the real problem is the burden of diplomatic paralysis and social gaps.

    Meanwhile, MK Itzik Shmuly, also of Labor, did not just talk about equality in the burden, he acted, submitting a bill meant to symbolically move the country in that direction.

    Shmuly’s bill is an amendment to the 1953 Education Law, which would add teaching the value of serving the country in the army, national service or civilian service and in volunteering, to the list of goals of government-funded education.

    The legislation is almost identical to a proposal by then-MK Zevulun Orlev (Habayit Hayehudi) from 2011.

    “We cannot educate for social justice without teaching to share the burden,” Shmuly explained. “In the next Knesset, I plan to promote issues of teaching values in schools, because that is one of the important ways to shrink social gaps.”

    Meanwhile, the Knesset prepared to work without a coalition in the coming weeks, with the temporary House Committee, led by MK Ze’ev Elkin (Likud Beytenu) voting that MKs Ofir Akunis (Likud Beytenu) and Yitzhak Vaknin (Shas) serve as temporary deputies to acting Knesset Speaker Binyamin Ben-Eliezer (Labor). Both MKs were Deputy Knesset Speakers in the last Knesset.

    The temporary House Committee must also choose temporary chairmen for the Finance and Foreign Affairs and Defense Committees, assign offices to MKs and decide when the Knesset goes on Passover vacation.

    In addition, Ben-Eliezer approved a request from Akunis to mark the anniversary of former prime minister Menachem Begin’s death on Wednesday.

    Content Provided as Courtesy of The Jerusalem Post

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    17 Comments
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    proud-mo-israeli
    proud-mo-israeli
    12 years ago

    civil war? no problem! We’ve got the guns….bring it on!

    LeviP
    LeviP
    12 years ago

    Ha!
    The chareidim are threatening civil war… With what? Guns? but chareidim don’t fight in the army… Where are the guns? Where is the training?
    So for this they can fight? So why can’t they fight for pikuach nefesh?

    And if they will declare civil war without guns, and they will fight with their Torah study, the rest of Israel has nothing to fear…

    Reb Yid
    Reb Yid
    12 years ago

    I’ll bet Antiochus said the same thing.

    ShaloiOsaniGay
    ShaloiOsaniGay
    12 years ago

    # 1&2 here is your answer
    נשאל מהם מה מדתו. אמרו לו אין כחו אלא בפיו.
    “His strength is solely in his mouth.” They said

    12 years ago

    Israel was never and will never be a democracy, that’s a lie.

    BaruchBendit
    BaruchBendit
    12 years ago

    Who said anything about putting the Haredi draft-dodgers in jail?

    Hit them where it really hurts: Cut off all funding to the families and the Yeshivot of the draft dodgers.

    Anon Ibid Opcit
    Anon Ibid Opcit
    12 years ago

    The haredim are going to start a civil war? Them and what Army? Burning dumpsters and throwing rocks and dirty diapers will last about half a minute against water hoses and clubs to say nothing of bullets. Besides, the moment their rabbis require them to fight they’ll all demand yeshiva exemptions.