The haredi public
must internalize that they will need to begin committing national
service, Interior Minister Moshe Arbel (Shas) said in a podcast that was
published on Thursday.
The
comment was rare, as haredi leaders have largely refrained from taking
the side of increasing haredi service since a crisis over the issue
broke out in February, when the defense ministry revealed that it was
planning on overcoming a lack of manpower by increasing mandatory and
reserve duty, and not by drafting thousands of haredi men, who enjoyed a
blanket exemption.
The legal foundation for this exemption expired on March 31, and according to a Supreme Court temporary directive on March 28,
the state is now required to draft haredi men and must provide by April
a progress report on the matter. The court will hear the case of
whether to make the directive permanent on June 2.
"The reality after October 7
is that the haredi public must understand and internalize that there is
no moral option to continue this way," Arbel said on a podcast by an
organization called "Hariv'on Herivi'i" [Hebrew for "Fourth Quarter"]
that was recorded weeks ago but published on Thursday.
Hardei men must start "carrying the burden"
Arbel
added that there were 1,500 men in every haredi age-group who could be
drafted immediately, and "who must be part of those carrying the
burden."
"In
addition, there are more than a few institutions defined as being for
at-risk youth. All of these institutions – there is no justification in
the world that those for whom Torah is not their vocation will not be a
part of the army," Arbel said.
Arbel made similar comments during an interview with the Jerusalem Post that will be published in the Magazine section on the first Passover holiday (April 22).
According
to its website, "Hariv'on Herivi'i" is an "all-Israeli civil mass
movement, working for the transition of Israeli democracy from a
politics of submission and victories to a 'politics of hospitality' and
solutions."
Shas, which represented Sephardic Israelis, put out a statement on Thursday, apparently in response to Arbel's comment:
"The
topic of the conscription law and the status of the holy yeshiva
students is bestowed only in the hands of … Moetzet Chachmei HaTorah
[Hebrew for "Council of Torah Sages"] … and is managed by the movement's
chairman Rabbi Aryeh Deri and his representative in the negotiations
Rabbi Ariel Atias. The movement's representatives were instructed not to
speak at all on the topic. Shas's stance is expressed only by the Shas
movement's official organs."
Arbel's comments came after a number of conflicting public statements by rabbis affiliated with the Shas in the past week.
These
included a letter signed by some of its leading rabbis calling for no
conscription whatsoever, but also a statement by Rabbi Moshe Maya, a
former Knesset member for Shas and current member of the Council of
Torah Sages, in favor of the ongoing negotiations on the matter.
Thursday included additional developments regarding haredi conscription on a number of fronts.
On
the legal front, the Attorney General's Office revealed in a letter to
the government that it has yet to receive for legal examination a plan
for conscription that reflects the current legal situation.
The
letter was a response to a letter from Government Secretary Yossi Fuchs
to the AG demanding independent representation in the pending court
case on the situation.
The
AG is the government's statutory legal counsel before the Supreme
Court. Still, Fuchs claimed that there was an "essential gap" between
the government and the AG's positions that was "unbridgeable." The AG's
answer was that the government has yet to put forward any position
whatsoever that had "real content" or was based on "fundamental
professional basis," and therefore could not examine whether or not the
positions were compatible.
The
letter did reveal, however, that talks were being held "at a number of
levels" in the defense establishment to come up with a
government-proposed bill. The AG's office stressed that until such a
bill passes, continuing the blanket exemption was illegal, and the
government was required by law to draft haredi men of the appropriate
age.
On the
negotiation front, Kikar Hashabat's Yishai Cohen reported that the
current number being discussed is 25% of every haredi age group.
There
are approximately 12,000 men in every age group, and this would mean
3,000 every year – far more than the current numbers.
According
to Cohen, there would also be closer oversight of yeshivot by the
authorities, and sanctions if these numbers are not met.
https://www.jpost.com/israel-news/article-796584?