Senior Dati-Leumi Rabbi Permits Admission of State-Religious Girls to Ultra-Orthodox Seminaries in Beit Shemesh
In a significant development in Beit Shemesh, Rabbi Elimelech Kornfeld, a leading rabbi of the Degel HaTorah faction, has issued a directive allowing girls from state-religious (Mamlachti-Dati) schools, specifically from the Netzach institution, to be admitted to ultra-Orthodox seminaries, provided they fit the seminary's spiritual ethos. This marks a dramatic shift in the city's educational landscape, where until now, the ultra-Orthodox leadership had strictly prohibited such admissions, maintaining a "red line" against integrating students from state-religious frameworks into traditional seminaries like Beit Yaakov.
Beit Shemesh has long been a microcosm of the tensions between the mainstream ultra-Orthodox community and the growing modern religious population, especially in neighborhoods like Ramat Beit Shemesh D, where many families identify as modern Orthodox and where state-religious educational institutions have expanded rapidly. Historically, prominent rabbis from the Lithuanian ultra-Orthodox sector, including Rabbi Yitzchak Zilberstein and Rabbi David Yosef, have strongly opposed sending children to state-religious schools, emphasizing the importance of preserving pure Torah education under strict rabbinic supervision.
This new directive from Rabbi Kornfeld, cited by Yossi Goldring, head of education in Beit Shemesh, could reshape the educational and political dynamics within the ultra-Orthodox community, potentially appealing to modern Orthodox voters ahead of national elections. While some local education officials expressed surprise at the ruling, they affirmed their acceptance of the rabbi's position. Rabbi Kornfeld himself declined to comment on the matter. The Beit Shemesh municipality stated that the school placement process concluded in April and refrained from commenting on internal discussions.
This decision contrasts with previous hardline stances, including a letter from Rabbi David Lando, head of Degel HaTorah's Council of Torah Sages, warning against adopting state-religious educational frameworks, which he viewed as a threat to the purity of ultra-Orthodox education. The shift may signal a strategic accommodation to demographic changes and political considerations within the city's diverse religious population.