Israeli Knesset Debates Basic Law on Torah Study Amid Opposition and Legal Concerns
The Israeli Knesset is currently voting on the Basic Law: Torah Study in its second and third readings. The law aims to constitutionally strengthen the status of Torah learners, particularly in the context of future legal challenges regarding military conscription exemptions for yeshiva students. The bill's wording was softened following legal advisories to avoid explicit balancing of Torah study against other constitutional values, instead enshrining it as a fundamental value alone.
Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu did not attend the vote, and two Likud members, Yuli Edelstein and Dan Illouz, voted against the bill. The law is seen by coalition and ultra-Orthodox factions as a key step toward securing legal protections for Torah study and countering claims of inequality in the Supreme Court.
Ahead of the vote, IDF Chief of Staff Lieutenant General Eyal Zamir sent an unusual letter to Netanyahu, Defense Minister Israel Katz, and the Foreign Affairs and Defense Committee chairman Boaz Bismuth. He requested the removal of a clause that would allow the military to determine who qualifies as a yeshiva student exempt from arrest for draft evasion, warning it would incentivize draft dodging and conflict with military needs.
Opposition leaders, including Yair Lapid, Gadi Eizenkot, Naftali Bennett, Avigdor Lieberman, and others, jointly called on coalition members to reject the bill, citing harm to the IDF during wartime and ignoring the Chief of Staff's warnings. Shas party leader Aryeh Deri criticized the opposition, accusing them of trying to block the bill to preserve the current legal establishment's power. His remarks were interpreted as a warning to coalition partners that opposing the Basic Law on Torah Study could jeopardize support for other key legislation, such as the proposed split of the Attorney General's role.
The vote marks a critical moment in the ongoing debate over the legal and societal status of Torah study and military service exemptions in Israel, with significant political and legal implications ahead.
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