Scenes from the Haredi protests against the conscription law in Jerusalem on the 30th of last month.
Scenes from the Haredi protests against the conscription law in Jerusalem on the 30th of last month. 🔴**A House Divided: How the Haredi Draft Crisis is Tearing Israel Apart ** 🎞You’ve seen the videos. Black-garbed men flooding the highways of Jerusalem, setting dumpsters on fire, clashing with police in scenes that feel more like a civil uprising than a protest. This isn't Hamas or Hezbollah. This is an internal front exploding at the worst possible time for Israel. The long-simmering crisis over military service for the ultra-Orthodox, the Haredim, has boiled over, and it’s threatening to shatter Netanyahu’s government, reshape Israeli society, and undermine the national unity so desperately needed in a time of war.
👌Let’s break down how we got here.
💳**Who Are the Haredim? The "God's Army"**
🌕First, a quick primer. The Haredim (literally, "those who tremble" before God) are the most theologically conservative stream of Judaism. They live in tightly-knit communities, often speak Yiddish as a primary language, and separate themselves from what they see as the corrupting influence of secular modern life. For them, the study of Torah (Jewish religious texts) is the highest possible calling—the very purpose of Jewish existence.
🌕This isn't just a lifestyle choice; it's a theological imperative. They believe that their devotion and study are what sustain and protect the Jewish people, even more than any army. As their placards at protests read: "We're protecting Israel by praying." In their worldview, they are the spiritual IDF, and their yeshivas (study halls) are the front lines.
⚪️**The Unspoken Bargain: Why No Draft?**
🗒So, how did they get an exemption from the military, a sacred duty for most Israelis? It goes back to the state's founding in 1948. Israel’s first prime minister, David Ben-Gurion, exempted a few hundred elite yeshiva students to help rebuild the great centers of Jewish learning destroyed in the Holocaust. It was a temporary deal.
🤔But temporary has a way of becoming permanent. The Haredi community grew exponentially, and the exemption became a cornerstone of their identity and survival. Politically, their unified voting bloc made them kingmakers. Successive governments, dependent on their support, kept kicking the can down the road, perpetuating a system where a growing segment of the population doesn't serve in the military, doesn't study a core secular curriculum, and largely doesn't participate in the workforce to the same degree. The "unspoken bargain" was this: you support us in politics, and we protect your way of life.
⚪️**The Breaking Point: War and a Court Deadline**
📄Then came October 7th. The massive call-up of 300,000+ reservists, the deep sense of national burden, and the sight of endless funerals shattered the pre-war status quo. The sense of "we're all in this together" made the Haredi exemption feel increasingly untenable to the secular majority.
🔽Simmering resentment turned into a full-blown constitutional crisis when Israel's Supreme Court intervened. With the government failing to pass a new law, the court ruled that without a legal framework for the exemption, the state could no longer funnel funds to yeshivas whose students dodge the draft. Even more critically, it ordered the government to begin enforcing the draft on Haredi men, with arrests for draft-dodging to begin.
🌕This was the match that lit the fuse. The recent protests, some drawing hundreds of thousands, bringing Jerusalem to a standstill, are a direct response to these first, symbolic arrests. The message from the Haredi leadership is absolute and uncompromising: "Not one boy."
⚪️**The Core of the Opposition: It's About Survival**
🌕Why such ferocious opposition? It’s not simply about not wanting to serve. For the Haredim, this is an existential fight.
🔢 Theological Threat: Immersion in the secular, co-ed environment of the IDF is seen as a direct threat to their pious way of life. They fear it will lead to intermingling, a dilution of faith, and exposure to ideas that contradict their core beliefs.
🔢 The End of [Study](https://t.me/observer_5/188): They view full-time Torah study as a non-negotiable commandment. Forcing young men into the army means taking them out of the yeshiva, which they equate with spiritual death for the individual and the nation.
🔢 Cultural Assimilation: This is the biggest fear. The army is Israel's great melting pot. For the Haredim, it's a melting pot that erases their distinct identity. They see conscription as the first step toward the forced secularization of their community, a tool to dismantle their world.
🌕The Domino Effect: Netanyahu, the War, and a Government on the Brink
✌This crisis is a political nightmare for [Benjamin](https://t.me/observer_5/188) Netanyahu, and it hits on three simultaneous fronts.
1⃣ His Government's Survival: Netanyahu's coalition depends on Haredi parties. If he pushes for a draft law that satisfies the Supreme Court and the public, his Haredi partners will likely bring down the government. If he gives in to the Haredim, his more secular coalition partners, like Benny Gantz’s National Unity party, have threatened to quit. He is trapped in a lose-lose scenario.
2⃣ The War Effort: This is the most damaging aspect. While Israel is fighting a multi-front conflict in Gaza and facing daily skirmishes with Hezbollah in the north, its society is visibly fracturing. It projects an image of profound weakness and disunity to enemies like Iran and Hamas, who can simply sit back and watch Israel tear itself apart from within. The notion of a nation united in a fight for its survival is crumbling.
3⃣ Public Morale: For the soldiers on the front lines and the reservists who have put their lives on hold for months, the sight of a large, able-bodied community not sharing the burden is a bitter pill to swallow. It fuels a deep-seated anger that is radicalizing both sides—secular Israelis against the Haredim, and as we've seen with the violent protests, Haredi youth against the state itself.
📌The Bottom Line:
🌕Israel is at a historic crossroads. The post-[1948](https://t.me/observer_5/188) status quo is broken. The war with Gaza exposed the fault lines, and the Supreme Court has forced a decision. Netanyahu is trying to perform an impossible balancing act, but the ground is shaking beneath his feet. He can either preside over a fundamental reshaping of the relationship between religion and state in Israel, or he can watch his government collapse. Either way, the days of the old bargain are over. The question now is whether Israel can forge a new one without tearing itself apart in the process.
**🔵**[Link to the article in Arabic ](https://t.me/almuraqb/204)