“Torah study is a foundational value in the heritage of the Jewish people and the State of Israel.”
On the surface, this is not, you would have thought, a contentious statement. Yet life in Israel is lived on an iceberg: what is on the surface represents only a small percentage of the total mass.
This one terse statement is the final total wording of the pared-back Basic Law: Torah Study, passed this week in its second and third readings and now enshrined in law. Lacking a constitution, Israel’s legislators have, over the years, passed a number of basic laws – a classification that carries something of a constitutional status. Basic laws are intended to serve as guiding principles of government, and although their exact status is not clear, they have historically been treated within Israel’s judicial system as superseding other laws.
This week sees the Government scrambling to pass a slew of laws in what will be the last week of the sitting of the current Knesset, prior to its dissolution on July 17, in preparation for the campaign leading to the general election that is scheduled for October 27.
If you are nor abreast of political developments in Israel, you may be wondering why this apparently innocuous statement of the value of Torah study has been taking up such valuable Knesset time precisely now. The answer is simple: but the ramifications of that answer are profound.
This basic law represents the latest attempt by the haredi (ultra-Orthodox) political parties to ensure their community blanket exemption from national service. It simultaneously represents the latest attempt by Bibi Netanyahu to secure his continued leadership of the country by securing the continued support of the haredim.
I want this week to focus on the beliefs and actions of the haredim, rather than of Bibi. The Israel Defence Force, when calculating its needs, has always factored in an average of a month of annual reserve duty over a period of decades. However, this model has been sustainable only because Israel’s military campaigns have typically been short and sporadic. We are currently over 1000 days into this war, and the strain on the reservists, in terms of their family and work commitments, as well as emotionally and mentally, and on the country as a whole, has been, and continues to be, colossal. Understandably, there have been calls across Israeli society, including, this week, from the IDF commander in chief, for the haredi sector to share the burden.
The response from the haredim continues to be threefold. First, Torah study is a supreme value, such that haredim cannot take time away from it for any other purpose. Second, their Torah study has triggered divine protection of Israel as effective as the protection offered by the IDF. Third, the IDF is not structured in such a way that young haredi men can serve in it and preserve their haredi values.
I want to examine each of these arguments, and to ask whether they are valid, and what they tell us about the haredi community.
Taking the third argument first. The IDF has taken great steps to create an environment that threatens the haredi way of life as little as is possible, within the constraints of running a people’s army to stave off an existential threat. The solution the IDF offers is undoubtedly less than ideal. At the same time, this haredi position shows remarkably little confidence in the effect that 12 or more years of education within the haredi world have had on the resilience of young haredi men to resist the temptations of the outside world. John Milton put it best when he stated: “I cannot praise a fugitive and cloistered virtue, unexercised and unbreathed, that never sallies out and sees her adversary, but slinks out of the race where that immortal garland is to be run for, not without dust and heat.”
Turning next to their first argument. It is clear from the classic Jewish sources, from the written Torah to the Oral Law to Rambam and beyond, that the purpose of Torah study is to equip the student to fulfil the mitzvot. The virtue does not lie in the study per se, but in its application in the student’s life. When we look at the mitzvot, we see the requirement to fight in a righteous war, we see the duty to help and protect others, we see the duty to shoulder societal responsibilities. Torah study that interferes with, or prevents, or comes at the expense of, carrying out these responsibilities is not Torah study for the sake of Heaven.
I turn finally to the second argument. The haredim ask the nation to believe that their Torah study has triggered divine protection of Israel as effective as the protection offered by the IDF. This is part of their professed belief that, for one who devotes his whole life to studying Torah, God will provide. They ask the nation to believe this, but their very actions demonstrates that they themselves do not believe it. Rather than spending their every waking moment studying Torah, many haredi rabbis form political parties, spend their days in the Knesset plenum and committees, call their students away from the study halls to demonstrate in the streets, overturn and set fire to rubbish bins and police vehicles, bring traffic to a standstill, in order to achieve their political ends and to provide for their material welfare.
If they believed what they ask the rest of the nation to believe, they would simply study and trust in God. Their very presence in the nation’s political life puts the lie to their preposterous, and profoundly unJewish, claim.
For the haredim, the sole purpose of the Basic Law: Torah Study is to ensure that haredim do not serve in the IDF. For Bibi, the sole purpose is to buy him more time as prime minister. The one ray of sunshine on this bleak prospect is my hope that enough Israeli citizens, and, specifically, enough Likud supporters, will be sufficiently disgusted, at this coalition abandonment of the reservists and other defence forces who have carried this country for almost three years, to vote for a change of government on October 27. We can only hope, because, if after the election we have more of the same, the future will look even bleaker than it does now.