Violence escalates in Israel amid ultra-Orthodox military draft protests
The most fundamental rift in Israeli politics is arguably not the wars it is fighting on multiple fronts, nor the international isolation stemming from its
The most fundamental rift in Israeli politics is arguably not the wars it is fighting on multiple fronts, nor the international isolation stemming from its genocidal war in Gaza. Instead, the conscription of young ultra-Orthodox men into the military continues to divide the countryâs major political parties and bring demonstrators to the streets. Thousands of ultra-Orthodox Jewish men brought city centres across central Israel to a halt on Thursday night as they protested against the arrest of their fellow adherents for refusing conscription into the army. Their refusal to serve in the military is not, however, out of a moral objection to Israelâs various wars, but instead because they view serving in the army as diluting their faith and drawing them away from studying it. Protests by angry young ultra-Orthodox men have become regular occurrences across Israel. Violence is routine. Dozens of police officers and protesters have been injured, and scores more arrested for their involvement in the unrest, with the blockage of streets and closure of parts of city centres becoming usual. The threat of losing parliamentary support over the issue from the two main ultra-Orthodox parties, Shas and United Torah Judaism (UTJ) has pushed Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahuâs coalition to bring forward a bill to dissolve parliament, as well as align itself with what stands to be an unpopular bill going through parliament that, if successful, promises to enshrine the exemption of ultra-Orthodox religious students from the draft. Praising the advancement of the bill, parliamentarian Yisrael Eichler of the UTJ described it as âa declaration of holy war against those who blaspheme God, persecute the Torah and oppose those who study itâ, as fellow UTJ member of parliament Meir Porush referred to the billâs opponents as âanti-Semitesâ and âenemies of the Torah and its studentsâ.
Both said that Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) parties were compelled to bring forward the bill due to the âsystematic persecution of Torah scholarsâ by âdictatorial juristsâ, in a reference to members of Israelâs Supreme Court, whose longstanding opposition to their exemption has seen the homes of individual judges targeted for violence by protesters. âI think ultra-Orthodox recruitment could be one of the main issues in the election campaign,â Israeli political analyst Nimrod Flaschenberg said. âItâs easy for politicians to target the draft exemption specifically, as society as a whole has grown more militaristic through the [Gaza] genocide,â he continued. âThe ultra-Orthodox generally have very large families, meaning that many people fear, with some foundation, that in decades to come they may eventually constitute a much larger part of the population, at which point Israel will not be able to consider itself a developed first-world society,â he said, referencing how the numbers of ultra-Orthodox students granted exemption from military service has increased from 400 in 1948 to the more than 54,000 students eligible for recruitment today. Separate lives Since the 2010s, Israelâs Supreme Court has repeatedly struck down laws and extensions preserving blanket draft exemptions for the ultra-Orthodox community, ruling they violate equality before the law. In June 2024, it went further still, declaring the system unlawful and ordering the conscription of eligible ultra-Orthodox men, intensifying political conflict and triggering protests, arrests and increased violence between the state, the military and ultra-Orthodox leadership. In the minds of many ultra-Orthodox, the army served as a âmelting potâ that risked secularising ultra-Orthodox recruits and distracting them from Torah study, which their leaders framed as a form of national service of its own, providing âspiritual protectionâ for the Jewish people, Benjamin Brown, an authority on ultra-Orthodox Judaism at the Israel Democracy Institute, said.
