For full report see https://www.tabletmag.com/sections/israel-middle-east/articles/israel-two-big-lies
Looking at the most explosive political issue threatening to derail the
Israeli government mid-war: namely, the conscription of roughly 63,000 young
Haredi men to the Israel Defense Forces. One would hardly know, listening to
the hyperventilation in the Israeli media, that there are already 6,000 Haredi
men serving in the army, that hundreds of them are combat soldiers, and that
they volunteer in such solid and consistent numbers that the IDF saw fit, in
1999, to establish an independent battalion just for Haredi soldiers, called
Netzah Yehuda.
How come Haredis don’t serve in the army? Why those Haredis who showed up
rejected.
Haim Ramon, a longtime Labor Party politician who served as a minister in
Yitzhak Rabin’s cabinet happened to browse a document released
by the Knesset’s research and information center that provided statistics about
various population groups and their representation in the IDF. One stat in
particular left Ramon feeling confused: Since Oct. 7,
the Knesset revealed, 4,000 young Haredi men showed up of their own volition
and asked to volunteer to fight, an initiative that would’ve doubled the number
of Haredi soldiers overnight and proven a potential way out of the political
impasse.
Almost immediately, the IDF deemed 3,120 of these men unfitting to serve,
mostly for being too physically weak to fight. Which, if you know anything
about the IDF, is a shocking revelation. A non-Haredi Israeli would have to
suffer from a truly debilitating health condition to be found unfit for
service; otherwise, 18-year-olds struggling with all manner of maladies—asthma,
say, or a bad back or a minor heart condition, even with Downs syndrome—are
happily recruited and assigned to support positions that do not require
strenuous physical exertion. You can find these excellent and motivated men and
women serving as intelligence officers or riflery instructors, drivers or
parachute packers, performing services the army absolutely needs. And you’d
think that with the national interest allegedly being the swift swelling of the
IDF’s ranks, the army would’ve made an effort to accommodate these enthusiastic
young Haredis in its ranks.
Instead, not only were they rejected, but also, of the 880 volunteers who
were found fit, only 540, or 61 percent, were recruited. In total, then, of the
throngs of proud and patriotic black-hatted Israelis who, when it mattered
most, wished to join their brothers and sisters in fighting, the army accepted
a mere 13.5 percent.
This heartbreaking account provides us with two urgent insights.
First, the entire debate about Haredis in the army is predicated on a
bright, shiny untruth. The army doesn’t need Haredi recruits to meet its goals.
If it did, it would’ve welcomed every one, or at least the ones physically fit
to fight. The army further understands that fully integrating Haredim into its
ranks would require a wide array of logistical challenges—providing strictly
kosher food, for example, or addressing concerns rising from coed military
service—it currently cannot and does not want to address.
Second, while liberal Israeli politicians are quick to refer to Haredis
in derogatory terms like shirkers and parasites, the Haredi community has just shown that it
is more committed than ever to seeing itself as part of Israel’s national
narrative. If you’re looking for a bit of perspective there, a 2023 report from the State Comptroller’s office revealed
that, in 2021, a whopping 32 percent of young military-age Tel Avivis chose not
to join the IDF, a fact that generated precisely zero national outcry.
Put bluntly, anyone who is asking why Haredis don’t serve in the army
should first ask why the army widely rejected those Haredis who showed up.