The Ultra Orthodox, Well Being and the Israeli Army Draft
By N. Shuldig
Sometimes we can find two news items that seem to cancel out
each other. The following two items came to my attention this past week.
Item 1:
The fight between the secular Israelis and the ultra
Orthodox regarding army service in Israel has heated up again. The seculars
demand that the ultra Orthodox should serve in the IDF and participate in the
compulsory draft just as the seculars and their children do. Why should the
protection of the state be made mandatory only on one group and not on the
other?
Item 2:
Interestingly enough another bit of news came to me in the
form of a Gallup poll that was taken across a two year period in the USA to
measure the well-being levels of various types of Americans. Amongst the
questions asked by pollsters was one question to determine the religiousness of
the respondent. They were asked if he/she was a) religious, b) not religious or
c) somewhere in between. What exactly religious meant was left to the
respondent to define for himself, but obviously in the most liberal of
interpretations meaning that religion is very meaningful in the respondent's
life.
The stunning results showed that Americans who considered
themselves religious scored the highest of all categories. The religious Jews
topped everyone in feeling well about themselves and their personal life with a
score of 72.4 percent followed closely by Mormons with a well-being level of
71.5%. This showed that of all Americans, it is the religious who are most
content and happy in their lives.
The only problem with these numbers is that of all the
Mormons polled 73.4 percent of their members reported themselves as being
religious while only 16.9% of the Jews who responded considered themselves
religious. A full 53.5% of American Jews consider themselves not religious. The
significance of these numbers is that a majority of American Jews who consider
themselves Jewish also consider themselves not religious. These people, meaning
not religious for the most part, share the lowest category of happiness and wellbeing
in the survey.
Now let us go back to item one and put it together with item
two. Although they seem like bits of random information that are passed off via
the news media every day that have no plausible connection, there is much we
can learn here. Let us look deeper into these two news items:
Secular Israelis are upset about the ultra-Orthodox who
refuse to serve in the IDF. Of course this is exaggerated, (many ultra Orthodox
do serve in the IDF) but there is some truth in it. Let us examine the
situation deeper.
For many years, ever since the beginning of the state of
Israel, when David Ben Gurion decided that he did not want the ultra-Orthodox
in the army, the various governments have found it convenient to continue this
policy. The reason was twofold: one, there were plenty of idealistic secular
young men who were willing to fill the ranks, and two, the government did not
want to deal with the needs of the religious ultra Orthodox soldiers: higher
level of kashrut, separation of men and women soldiers, times for prayer
services and learning, and strict Shabbat and Yom Tov observance. The ultra
Orthodox, on their part, were delighted to be relieved of this mandatory
service so they did not have to 'mix' with non-religious.
What has changed from 1948 that has brought this problem to
the foreground of Israeli politics is that until now the army and government now
want to draft the ultra Orthodox in the army?
Two things have changed: one, the non-religious Israel youth
have lost the endearing ideal of serving in the IDF. Whereas once serving in
the IDF was a badge of merit and courage, today, the secular Israeli youth have
degenerated to being on the most part nothing more than personal-pleasure
seeking youth, similar to the secular American counterpart who also do not want
to join the army. No longer is serving with pride and courage the mark of the
idealistic youth; just the opposite many secular youth look upon it as a waste of
their time. Many Israeli youth want to enjoy life, to make money and to leave
Israel, to live somewhere else or they seek personal pleasures, drugs, drinking
and sex without the confines of marriage and good taste. Many secular boys and
girls (like their religious conterparts) seek exemptions from the army; they
see no personal advantage or purpose in serving. This population base which has
been the man power base for the army is both reduced in number and in quality.
The second change is that the ultra Orthodox religious population
has grown greatly in proportion to the general population. The religious men
are still idealistic and love the land of Israel. But their love of Israel and
the Zionist love of Israel is not the same. The Zionists loved the land of
Israel because they saw that here they could be free Jews and have their own
state and not be dependent upon the nations of the world - but their very
liberal values and press have made them guilty about enjoying it. The ultra-Orthodox
love it because it is 'Eretz HaKodesh' the holy land that G-d gave to us
and they delight in being here.
The Orthodox claim that it is their learning Torah that
keeps Israel safe and protects the inhabitants. The seculars say it is their
army that keeps the citizens of Israel safe. Who is correct? Well obviously we
need both G-d's grace and help plus plenty of ammunition.
The proposal that all ultra Orthodox go into the army is
equal to requiring all seculars to spend time in Torah study. The truth is that
we do need both since both will benefit; the seculars can benefit by learning
traditional Jewish thought and customs and the secular country will benefit by
increasing their personal well-being. In addition, the ultra Orthodox will
bring the army up to standard and give the army dedicated man dependable man
power.
But do not think that any one is capable of teaching Jewish
subjects properly. What passes today as Jewish education in the secular Israeli
schools is merely in name. Since neither the secular teacher nor the non
religious parents have any real idea of what true Judaism is, and since their
only claim to teaching it comes because they have a degree in education - all
of this goes against the need for a Yeshiva educated man to teach in the secular
schools Torah subjects properly.
If this is not done, the secular student will think he knows
all about Torah since his 'teacher' (who knows little or nothing) taught him
while he was in school. No, the answer lies in a compromise between the demands
of the seculars and the foot dragging of the ultra-Orthodox.
In this manner both will benefit. The ultra-Orthodox will
bring religious well-being values to the secular public and give the army moral
and ethical man power. At the same time the ultra-Orthodox will gain a foot
hold in the secular Israel work society too. It seems that this, if handled
correctly, can lead to a win-win situation.
~~~~~~~
from the August 2012 Edition of the
Jewish Magazine
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