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JERUSALEM, ISRAEL – MAY 26:  (ISRAEL OUT)  Ultra-Orthodox Israelis gather prior to a military graduation ceremony on May 26, 2013 in Jerusalem, Israel. The Netzah Yehuda battalion was formed in 1999 with the aim of creating a unit which would allow ultra-othodox Israelis to take a role in the military. Traditionally exempted from compulsory conscription, Government plans to invoke compulsory drafts for ultra-Othodox to military service has led to violent protests and the subsequent postponement of public graduation ceremonies in recent days. (Photo by Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images)
Ḥaredi Israelis gather prior to a military graduation ceremony on May 26, 2013 in Jerusalem. Photo by Lior Mizrahi/Getty Images.
Observation

July 9, 2021

Podcast: Yehoshua Pfeffer on How Haredi Jews Think About Serving in the IDF

By Yehoshua Pfeffer, Tikvah Podcast at Mosaic

Why do Israel's ultra-Orthodox Jews so adamantly decline to serve in the military—and could that change? A communal leader walks us through the deliberations taking place.

This Week’s Guest: Yehoshua Pfeffer

Mandatory army service plays an essential function within Israeli civic culture, absorbing and equalizing Ashkenazi, Mizraḥi (Middle Eastern), religious, secular, male, female, Ethiopian, Russian, Druze and more. In the IDF, all of these identities step back and create room for a national Israeli identity to step forward.

Almost every Jewish community in Israel serves in the IDF, except one: the ḥaredi (ultra-Orthodox) community. Seventy years ago, Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, famously gave ḥaredi leaders an official exemption from compulsory national service, an exemption that persists to this day, along with much accompanying controversy. On this week’s podcast, the ḥaredi leader Yehoshua Pfeffer, himself a rabbinic judge, asks whether that exemption is just. In conversation with Mosaic’s editor Jonathan Silver, he explores the background behind the reluctance to serve, and brings us inside the debate currently unfolding within Israel’s Orthodox communities about the fulfillment of civic obligation and moral duty.

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