Israeli ultra-Orthodox students will no longer be exempt from military service

Israeli ultra-Orthodox students will no longer be exempt from military service
Israeli ultra-Orthodox students will no longer be exempt from military service

Israel’s Supreme Court has ruled to end the military service exemption granted to ultra-Orthodox students – a move that could fuel tensions around Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition.

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The unanimous ruling of the Israeli Supreme Court ends decades-long exemptions for ultra-Orthodox students of Talmudic schools from serving in the armed forces.

Israel’s highest court has ruled that in the absence of specific legislation, the law on compulsory military service was to apply equally to all citizens, including the ultra-Orthodox.

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The war in Gaza has led to the mobilization of many soldiers, more than 600 of whom have been killed since October.

The ultra-Orthodox parties, politically influential and an integral part of Benjamin Netanyahu’s coalition, oppose the change and could leave the coalition if the exemptions end.

The ultra-Orthodox community views full-time religious study as its contribution to the state and fears that military service may cause it to deviate from its strict religious observance.

Lately, Israeli prime minister strove to strike balance between respecting court rulings and maintaining his coalitionwhich has a slim majority in Parliament.

New recruits will represent less than 10% of conscripts

Most Jewish men and women in Israel are required to complete their compulsory military service at the age of 18. But the ultra-Orthodox previously benefited from exemptions if they studied full-time in religious seminaries.

This exception aroused the anger of a large part of the Israeli population, while hundreds of soldiers were killed in the war against Hamas.

The Court also decided to maintain suspension of state subsidies for educational institutions serving ultra-Orthodox mena move that could increase tensions within the coalition and increase pressure on lawmakers from their religious leaders and constituents.

Following this decision, the ultra-Orthodox community will provide approximately 13,000 men of conscript age each year, or less than 10% of the total number of conscripts.

The Movement for Quality Government in Israel called on the government to immediately enlist all eligible ultra-Orthodox seminary students, emphasizing their legal and moral duty in light of security requirements.

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