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Politics05:55 · 21m ago

Critics Argue Israel’s Basic Law on Torah Study Undermines Its Sanctity

Arutz ShevaRight
Translated & summarized from Arutz Sheva by baba
The story · English

Michael Shafirber contends that Israel’s Basic Law on Torah Study does not protect the Torah but instead reduces it to a political tool designed to justify military service exemptions. He argues this approach damages the Torah’s dignity and public standing by subordinating it to political interests rather than elevating its eternal value.

Shafirber explains that the law’s primary purpose is to provide a moral framework for selective exemption from military service, rather than to strengthen or honor the Torah itself. He highlights that the public debate in Israel focuses less on Torah study and more on the exemption issue, with the Torah being used as a political narrative rather than a spiritual guide. This, he warns, is a serious desecration of the Torah’s honor.

Drawing on rabbinic warnings, Shafirber notes that when the Torah serves only one sector’s interests, it ceases to be a unifying life guide for all Jews and instead becomes a political bargaining chip. He emphasizes that the Torah’s survival through centuries of persecution was not due to legislation but because of the devotion of millions of Jews, even under threat of exile, poverty, and death.

He calls the Basic Law on Torah Study a moral failure that transforms the Torah from an eternal value into a political instrument, thereby weakening its status and alienating many Israelis. Shafirber urges that debates about military service exemptions should be honest and transparent, focusing on security, equality, and societal structure, without cloaking them in religious justification.

In conclusion, he asserts that the Torah does not need legal protection, as it existed long before the Knesset and will endure after it. Protecting the Torah means guarding it from being exploited by laws that serve political interests, lest it lose its sacredness and respect among the people of Israel.

Read the original at Arutz Sheva
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