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Israel severs link between religious school and IDF

Defence Minister Ehud Barak’s decision to end the Har Bracha yeshivah’s hesder arrangement, which allows 18-year-olds to combine Torah studies with army service, has sent shockwaves through the IDF

December 17, 2009 14:32
Students at Har Bracha yeshivah on the West Bank. Pupils have declared they will not evacuate settlements

By

Anshel Pfeffer,

Anshel Pfeffer

2 min read

Defence Minister Ehud Barak’s decision to end the Har Bracha yeshivah’s hesder arrangement — which allows 18-year-olds to combine Torah studies with army service — has sent reverberations through the IDF and the network of yeshivahs which have, for decades, enjoyed close relations with the military.

“This isn’t about just one yeshivah,” said a senior rabbi this week. “This is a battle for the soul of the next generation of the national-religious community.”

The yeshivah’s head, Rabbi Eliezer Melamed, first fell foul of the IDF’s top brass four years ago, when he advised soldiers to disobey orders and not participate in the evacuation of the Gaza settlements. The General Staff at the time recommended severing relations with Har Bracha, which is situated on the West Bank. But then Defence Minister Shaul Mofaz declined to change the yeshivah’s status in order not to exacerbate the crisis between the religious right-wing and the state following disengagement.

This time, Rabbi Melamed angered the army’s commanders when he gave backing to soldiers from his yeshivah, who hoisted placards announcing their refusal to take part in the removal of settler outposts.

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