Aharon Ariel Lavi’s excellent essay in Mosaic adeptly explains the profound conflict between the majority of Israelis and the rapidly growing ultra-Orthodox (haredi) minority. It may be that this conflict, which can seem as irreconcilable as the conflict between Israelis and Palestinians, can only be managed; but, as Lavi explains, it cannot even be managed unless most haredi men can somehow be persuaded to depart from their yeshivas and acquire the educational tools that would render them capable of finding jobs in a modern economy.
The dominant haredi view, never before put into practice on anywhere near the current scale in Israel, can be summed up succinctly. Advanced Torah study—largely, if not exclusively, the study of Talmud and its commentaries, along with medieval and later legal codes and their commentaries—is the highest vocation to which any Jewish male can aspire. By engaging in such labor, moreover, yeshiva students confer a greater benefit upon the Jewish people and the state of Israel than do those in any other activity, including military service. Men pursuing this advanced calling, therefore, are rightfully entitled to public funds to provide for their own and their families’ material needs, and to exemption from any (other) form of national service.
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