Shmad in Israel?

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  • #2270637
    simcha613
    Participant

    It’s such a shame that anti-IDFers need to resort to lies to support their position. There is no shmad in Israel! The Medina is not trying to secularize it’s residents. The Medina invests more money into Yeshivos then any other state. The state wants the Charedim for two reasons:

    1) The IDF needs more soldiers. It’s a fact. With the current lack of manpower, miluim requirement are being extended, age requirement are being expended, boys are being pulled out of mechinot, businesses are suffering because soldiers are required to stay in the battle longer.

    2) Sharing the burden is a value. The risks and sacrifices of war should not be borne by only part of the population. We all need to join together to face our enemy… we R”L mourn and iyH will celebrate victory together.

    If you dispute those values, then just say so. Stop pretending there is shmad to validate why secular and Religious Zionist families have to risk their sons and daughters to war while Charedim watch them fight our battles from the sidelines.

    #2270716
    Ysiegel
    Participant

    You can call it shmad, or call it whatever you like, but the fact is that there is absolutely no real need for the bnei Torah to be drafted. There are at least as many leftist tel avivim as there are haredim who avoid the draft, and if all the bnei Torah were to be drafted, there would be a serious lack of funds and lack of means of organization to ingest them all.

    There are literally positions in the IDF like “officer of sprinkers,” who, as the name suggests, is in charge of making sure that the sprinklers work…There is a position called “officer of pens.” His job is–you guessed it–to make sure that every officer in an indoor meeting has a pen. I can go on with examples… The IDF’s major power is in its reserves, and currently there are more reserves on duty than ever before.

    If you’re then going to argue that many (many!!) soldiers from special units were lost zt”l and these need to be replaced, then you must be joking to suggest that haredim with no special background of physique training etc. are supposed to suddenly join the IDF into units that are made only for those who try their hardest to get in. In fact, there is often a 1:100 or smaller ratio of those accepted into those units, not even because of skill but because of the limited nature of the availability of spots in these units. In fact, most of those killed were high level officers r”l, and these are NOT going to be replaced by a bunch of Haredi recruits, not in your wildest imagination.

    So the fact holds that there is NO difference now in the Leftists’ statements than any other instance in the past decades, where suddenly they chap a rein on a given situation whether political or otherwise, to try again to stop the Charedim from their way of life and try and force them into the army where they are supposedly needed.

    All of this is just on the purely political, tactical, and logical side of things (and my sources are from very close acquaintances, as well as from my own experiences within army circles).

    Now, let’s jump into what’s ACTUALLY important here: You seem to be suggesting that kochi ve’otzem yadi asa es hachayil hazeh – that it is our own strength and power of our hands that give the IDF their advantage. How did I reach that conclusion? Because you’re suggesting that it is important for bnei Torah to STOP LEARNING TORAH in order to join the army, which is now physically weakened?! It is the Torah view that we must make a kli in nature, but ch”v that this kli should be on account of Torah learning. ESPECIALLY when the alternative is not just bittul Torah (why bittul? because there are others who are more fitting to do this melacha in the current state of thing s- read the above half of my response), but it actually HARMS the spiritual state of the drafted bochur drastically! I know this from personal experience – my own experience in the IDF as well as many, many who did not make it beruchniyus because of the multitude trials and tribulations that service life has to offer. I can explain this more at length but this is not the place for it…

    #2270778
    HaKatan
    Participant

    simcha613:
    It’s such a shame that Zionists and their idolatrous supporters need to resort to lies to support their position. Zionism is shmad, as are its platforms and protocols, and the State of Israel is the Zionist State that puts Zionist shmad into action. It’s really not complicated and it’s also no secret if you just read their platforms and witness the evil they do in the portions of E”Y they control.

    They want chareidim for exactly one reason: to convert them from Judaism to Zionism.

    “Sharing the burden” is not a Torah value. Just the opposite: it is a Zionist value. The Zionists chose to invade the area a century ago – against the wishes of the Jews there – and the Zionists proceeded to light the area (and world) on fire; it’s not anyone else’s responsibility to put out the Zionist fire.

    So sad.

    #2270776
    sensibleyid
    Participant

    I think Rabbi Yehoshua Pfeffer’s more nuanced approach is best. He wouldn’t make the assertions Simcha613 made but thinks it is very important for chareiedim to participate more in the IDF and society in general. not that that doesnt come with challenges or that it should be done wholesale and drastically.

    #2270773
    lakewhut
    Participant

    Fact: until the Tal Law it was up to the generals to decide if charedim are drafted? For most of Israels existence the secular Israelis don’t want charedim in their units.

    #2270791
    Participant
    Participant

    Lies or not, I think it’s a colossal mistake for Chareidim to object to the draft based on either shmad or bitul torah.
    These reasons, at best, are not going to appeal to ochlei nleveilos utreifos.

    But the real reason to be anti the draft- for EVERYONE–is that the government, and the IDF, have ABSOLUTELY NO BUSINESS ASKING–DEMANDING–PEOPLE TO RISK THEIR LIVES WHEN THEY COULDN’T GIVE A HALF A BLAST ABOUT IT.
    They do their best to put the soldiers on the line to kiss up to their American enemies. To save Gazan terrorists. The people are SICK and have no business whatsoever drafting anyone.

    #2270805
    coffeeroomguy
    Participant

    Give it up already. This “why are my sons dying while yours are safe” is a totally emotional argument which holds no water.
    The reality is that the Bnei Torah sitting in learning are being mezakeh the soldiers כל שעה ושעה. That is their tafkid. Just because it does not involve danger of death does not mean it is less useful or that they are not “sharing the burden”. That phrase is nothing but a leftist talking point, I’m sorry to say. The Bnei Torah are the Shevet Levy of our time, and Shevet Levy was not required to serve in the Jewish army. Mind you, the IDF does not have the halachic status of a Jewish army, and this war does not have the status of a milchemes mitzvah. This is the position of the Gedolei Hador (as smart and pious as some Religious Zionist rabbonim may be, none have the actual status of Gedolei Hador, which would give them far, far, far much more halachic power than they have now).
    Furthermore, the reason is not necessarily shmad. It is a problem of weakening the chareidi way of life and giving into non-chareidi pressure. We will not abandon our holy way of life to join the IDF. They do not need us, and they will not have us. End of story.

    #2270807
    akuperma
    Participant

    Note that secular Israelis, who appear to be the economic and political elite, i.e., the ruling and/or upper class, are NOT complaining about government institutions coercing their children into becoming frum. They are making no demands for “secular” accommodation. They are not complaining about over-representation of religious Jews in the officer corps of the military. The fact that they dominate the country is strong evidence of the bigotry towards the non-elite groups (the religious, and especially Hareidim and religious non-Ashkenazim).

    It has been well documented that the secular-run army has the effect of moving a considerable percentage of Jewish recruits into a secular lifestyle they did not have previously, and that it appears that the biggest determinant of whether a young Israeli brought up religious does, or does not, “go off the derekh”, is military service. One should note that this takes place before they run into the significant discrimination in employment they encounter after the military.

    #2270842

    Those who want their own protection should negotiate with any surrounding country or polity to allow them to settle there. Maybe Egypt will be interested in settling Sinai with Jews. This is a place of history of Jews learning under Hashem’s protection. Hizbollah is also very religious and they might be interested in having a buffer between them and Zionists.

    #2270928
    yankel berel
    Participant

    @hakatan
    The Zionists chose to invade the area a century ago – against the wishes of the Jews there – and the Zionists proceeded to light the area (and world) on fire; it’s not anyone else’s responsibility to put out the Zionist fire.
    [katan]
    —–
    Irresponsible. Totally Irresponsible.
    Terrible and krum.
    Since when does the Torah exempt from the hiyuv of saving a yid from a fire just because a tsiyoni started it ???
    Let the yid burn because a tsiyoni started it ?
    Does hatsole anywhere, operate on the basis of such principles ?
    Shomu Shamayim …..

    #2271002
    SQUARE_ROOT
    Participant

    HaKatan said:

    Sharing the burden is not a Torah value.
    Just the opposite: it is a Zionist value
    .”

    ================================

    Tractate Avot, chapter 6, paragraph 6, teaches that there are 48 ways to Torah.

    One of the 48 ways is to SHARE THE BURDEN with your fellow Jew:
    משנה מסכת אבות פרק ו
    נוֹשֵׂא בְעֹל עִם חֲבֵרוֹ

    #2271014
    SQUARE_ROOT
    Participant

    HaKatan said:

    The Zionists chose to invade the area a century ago
    – against the wishes of the Jews there – and the Zionists
    proceeded to light the area (and world) on fire; it’s not
    anyone else’s responsibility to put out the Zionist fire
    .”

    ======================================

    This statement contains many falsehoods and classic
    anti-Jewish propaganda, the same kind of anti-Jewish propaganda
    that has been used many times by Nazis during World War II,
    and by professional terrorists, like: the PLO, Hamas, and Hezbollah.

    During World War II, the Nazis operated a newspaper called
    “Der Stürmer”, which was filled with false anti-Jewish propaganda.
    HaKatan’s comment would fit perfectly into the pages of “Der Stürmer”.

    Notice how HaKatan’s comment blames *** ONLY *** Jews,
    for *** ALL (100%) *** of the problems, both in Israel and the world.

    In HaKatan’s view of the world, *** ALL (100%) *** of the problems
    are the fault of the Jews, and *** ONLY *** the Jews, which implies
    that the Arabs and Muslims are blameless and innocent.

    Jews did not “INVADE” Eretz Yisrael, they bought it with money,
    at very high prices. And it was given to them by both the
    League of Nations and the United Nations Organization.
    But HaKatan chose to ignores all that.

    #2271082
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Square, you should know that the “we bought it” argument is almost a complete fabrication. Zionists bought up some kibutzim, and tel aviv.

    They also took kver 300 arab villages. Some by force, like deir yassin (whether or not this was a military campaign or an intentional slaughter is anyone’s guess at this point) and others were because the Arabs fled the armies.

    #2271086
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Sharing the burden of the Torah community is a Jewish value. Sharing an imposed burden by enemies of Torah who want you to not keep the Torah is not a Jewish value

    #2271108
    simcha613
    Participant

    Avira- that’s an example of the sheker that is used to defend the policy of not serving in our defense. I can’t speak for early secular Zionists, but nowadays the State of Israel is not an enemy of Torah nor does the government or army want anyone to not keep Torah. The burden is the burden of both the secular and Torah community in EY as Hamas and our other enemies want to destroy all of us, and the burden of standing in between blood thirsty terrorists and our people should not be a burden that’s borne only by the secular and Dati Leumi communities.

    #2271121
    yankel berel
    Participant

    An internal meeting of dati leumi educators has determined that around 30 % of their youth go OTD because of IDF enlistment , and they resolved that price is a worthwhile one , since it is being paid for the defense of the State.

    It is clear that service of yeshiva boys in the IDF has a dramatic effect on their yiddishkeit. To argue otherwise is simply unrealistic.
    There are many elements within the government and the IDF who would love to ‘reform’ and ‘reeducate’ the haredim.
    Forced Service for haredi youth in the IDF is an ideal tool for them.

    This might be a case of metu echav machmat milah where one is exempt from a mitsvah because of tragic precedents.
    This is not a blanket exemption, however.
    There are cases where this heter would not apply .

    How to manage such a delicate situation while we are in galut between our misguided and sometimes hatefilled brothers , is a an unenviable task better left to ziknei gdolei torah veyirah.
    .

    #2271132
    yankel berel
    Participant

    @avira
    They also took over 300 arab villages. Some by force, like deir yassin (whether or not this was a military campaign or an intentional slaughter is anyone’s guess at this point) and others were because the Arabs fled the armies.
    [avira]

    1] That was after the arabs started a war against the yidden.
    Had the arabs accepted the 47 partition plan like the yidden did , then they would have still been there.

    2] Don’t forget the yiddens villages in gushe etsyon , the old city in j-m , in hevron, etc taken by the arabs ?

    3] What with all the yidden in arab lands, their houses and their property , forcibly confiscated by arabs ?

    Could that be considered ‘payment’ for lost property in ey ?
    .

    #2271135
    Participant
    Participant

    @AAQ
    I’m assuming that your post was a [cowardly] response to me.
    If so, you characteristically completely missed the boat.

    I’m making a completely reasonable declaration that in order to mandate a draft you have to A]risk the soldiers’ lives not one iota more than necessary. B]Be out to win the war. {I don’t remember if I actually discussed B} in my above post, but it’s still true.}
    Failure to do that voids any right to make a draft.

    Now, the questions: SO, what’s gonna be? What should we do? Do you want to die?

    Great questions. Excellent questions. Phenomenal questions. I’m not offering any answer.
    But it remains true. In order to have the right to impose a draft, the government must meet the above two criteria.

    #2271140
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Yankel, the “who started it” is just as childish as when kids get into a fight. Both sides can point to an earlier point where there were attacks or aggression; it’s not clear at all who started it, but the zionists had a bloodlust, personified by their leaders writing “רק בדם תהיה לנו הארץ”

    You’re right that the arabs expelled the sefardim, which is often ignored by leftists – no one’s saying the arabs were “right.” My point was that it’s a myth that the zionists merely bought up all of or most of the land – it wasn’t even close.

    We’ll get what’s owed to us in the geulah shlaima, including the heavy losses of the sefardims money, and the revenge of the 6 million kedoshin in Europe. Hashem will avenge all of it.

    From an objective point of view, I don’t care that they kicked out Arabs; same way the arabs kicked out the ottomans, who kicked out the Byzantines, then the romans, then the jews – we know the story.

    #2271147

    Participant (and we all are), I think I responded to someone else. I see a problem with your argument that you talk like a consumer: those in power owe you a justification for you to agree to something. Think like a free religious person about your obligation to Hashem and other Yidden. Someone (a person or a community) who lives together with others needs to participate in the society. If you think Army is not doing something right, vote and raise your own officers and push your policies. Sometimes, in a democracy, you have to even accept a decision that you think is wrong.

    “Yeshiva as a Maimonidean desert” that Chazon Ish created is not a correct analogy. Living in a desert presumes you take care of yourself, not erquesting others to send an army to protect your oasis.

    #2271148
    HaKatan
    Participant

    Such Zionist nonsense. Gosh.


    @yankel
    berel:
    No, the Zionists started the war against the Arabs (and British) long before 1947. The “Partition Plan” came much later after the Zionists invaded against the wishes of the Jews and also the lihavdil the British and Arabs.


    @simcha613

    “nowadays the State of Israel is not an enemy of Torah nor does the government or army want anyone to not keep Torah.”
    This is one of the biggest and most absurd untruths I can recall seeing on these boards. Wow.
    In addition to the facts about Zionism and its “State” and army/shmad indoctrination force, you can also observe that if 30% of the already idolatrous “National Religious” are going further OTD in the Zionist army, then that army very obviously is not friendly to Torah.

    Zionists: Give it up. The Zionist idol is exactly that: an idol. edited 

    #2271164
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Arabs who kicked out the berbers**

    #2271180
    simcha613
    Participant

    Katan- I think you’re confusing two issues. Are the challenges with being religious in the army? Of course there are, as there is with anything in life. I think that 30% number is a gross exaggeration thougb.

    But does that mean it’s shmad? That’s one of the most ridiculous jumps I heard. The army is not trying to destroy religion. In fact, over the past few decades, the army has become more and more Torah friendly. I believe they make sure to have minyanim available for soldiers who want it (at least in the more religious units). They have a mehadrin level of kashrus (as opposed to regular rabanut). In fact, the rule in the ENTIRE army (not just the regular units) is that dairy is not allowed to be served so that they don’t accidentally come to a basar vechalav situation! It’s all pareve or besari.

    The army and the state is not trying to destroy Torah. Those accusations are sheker and Motzei sbem ra. But deep down you know why you still spout them… Because the other reasons why Charedim don’t join together in the defense of our people don’t really cut it. So you need to make things up.

    #2271192
    yankel berel
    Participant

    @katan
    …. the Zionists started the war against the Arabs (and British) long before 1947. The “Partition Plan” came much later after the Zionists invaded against the wishes of the Jews and also lihavdil the British and Arabs ….
    [katan]
    ====
    You seem to forget that one cannot misrepresent facts [it is a three letter word in English starting with an L] even letsoreh kana’ut .

    ‘The zionists’ encompass many groups . Some fought the British, some did not.
    The hagana , the labor zionists , between 1917 and 1948 [the years of British rule] ,did not, except for a short period between October 1945 and August 1946.
    The etsel and the lehi , the revisionists did.
    So much for the facts.
    .
    The zionists did not ‘invade’. They did not conquer EY.
    They came to live and work there.
    Some came legally, with British permission, some came illegally, without British permission [like Rav Wosner z’l].
    So much for the facts.
    .
    They did not come against the wishes of the Jews.
    The overwhelming majority of the Jews wanted and explicitly petitioned the British for unfettered Jewish immigration to EY.
    So much for the facts.
    .
    All those facts are easily verifiable , as verifiable as a simple letter in karyane de’igreta …..
    .

    #2271193
    yankel berel
    Participant

    Zionists: Give it up. Give up this idea that the Jews are there to serve the State. Then it will become an idol.

    But – Zionists :DO NOT GIVE IT UP .

    Do not give up on the idea that the State is there to serve the Jews. Then it will not be an idol , rather be a kli for a mitsva.

    Do not give up defending the State .
    Do not give up defending innocent Jewish blood.
    Do not give up defending Jewish property.

    You will get olam haba for defending the innocent and defenseless Jews. [this last line is from HRav HGoan R Chaim Shmulevits z’l – in his sihot in wartime]

    #2271202
    Participant
    Participant

    sorry, aaq. I didn’t [and still don’t] see any other post suggesting their own protection, so I figured it was a misinterpretation of my post.

    #2271365
    HaKatan
    Participant

    simcha613:
    If your local Catholic Church would have a cultural program and have minyanim and kosher food, the entire program would still be totally treif.

    Zionism is idolatry. Period. The Zionist State uses its army to indoctrinate/shmad its inductees with the Zionist redefinition of Judaism. That’s exactly what it is. That is obviously totally treif, as all the gedolim said going all the way back, and no amount of Zionist apologetics and nonsense can possibly kosher that enormous pig.

    Jews do not belong in the Zionist army, no matter how much Torah they learn or don’t learn. Period. The Zionist army is spiritually extremely damaging, and it is plainly forbidden to enlist. Period.

    As well, the Zionist army is known to make OTD a large percentage of its inductees, those who were somewhat religious before entering that shmad. It’s not just theoretical, though it would be just as forbidden even if it were only theoretical.

    It’s astonishing that people even bother trying to deny any of this when it’s plain as day.

    #2271457
    yankel berel
    Participant

    @avirah
    Yankel, the “who started it” is just as childish as when kids get into a fight. Both sides can point to an earlier point where there were attacks or aggression; it’s not clear at all who started it,
    [avirah]
    ==============
    This is not a playground squabble. This was a discussion about contravening 3 Shevuot , al hatsad that they apply lema’ase.

    You stated that 300 villages in the hands of the Israelis contravenes the Shevuot. Whereas the fact that they are in Israeli hands is a direct outcome of real Arab attacks and threats to repeat the Mongol Massacres chvsh.
    The Israeli’s proclaimed their medina when the Mandate expired. If the Arabs would have kept within their allotment under the UN Partition Plan of 1947 , the Israeli’s would too.

    Remember , the Israeli’s accepted Partition. The Arabs did not, they aimed to drive the Jews into the sea.

    Pikuach nefesh is docheh the shevuot. That was the point.

    #2271458
    yankel berel
    Participant

    @AAQ
    “Yeshiva as a Maimonidean desert” that Chazon Ish created is not a correct analogy. Living in a desert presumes you take care of yourself, not erquesting others to send an army to protect your oasis.
    ====
    Incorrect. Or better said – correct.
    Correct – when talking about the analogy.

    Satmar Rave asked Chazon Ish how come you do not run away to the caves, as mandated by Rambam , when surrounded by resha’im. Whereas Ch’I answered that Yeshivot are the caves of the Rambam . End of quote.

    Said discussion Was not pertaining to IDF service at all.

    IDF service – for haredim and for yeshiva boys are 2 totally different complex issues to be analyzed separately.
    .

    #2271486
    simcha613
    Participant

    Hakatan- so it would be okay from a frum Jew to sit on the board of a Catholic church? The Zionism is idolatry argument is dead. Charedim sit in the Knesset with the guidance of Gedoli. They are obviously not Zionists in the classical sense but it reveals that your comparison of Zionism to Catholicism is your digging down in your sheker and Motzei shem ra because you realize how ridiculous your position is. Whatever problems there are with the Medina, they are enabling Yishuv Eretz Yisroel, Kibutz Galuyos, and Toras Eretz Yisroel. Tzahal is protesting all Jews from the genocidal maniacs that surround us… Secular, Dati Leumi, and Charedi alike. This is a burden that protects all of us and should be borne by all of us. Stop twisting your thumbs into some twisted philosophical position to defend your denial of these basic Torah truths

    #2271502
    yankel berel
    Participant

    @hakatan
    Non frum zionists could turn their state and its army into an idol. But frum Jews who serve in the Army can do so without turning the State nor the Army into an idol.

    It is true that with young and impressionable recruits it is easier to shove it down their throats .

    But this is not universal. Not at all.

    There are plenty of haredim who went thru the Army and emerged with their emuna intact.
    .

    #2271551

    Yankel, right, I refer to that conversation. I am just exploring what this implies. I don’t think Rambam demanded Army protection in the desert, but expected to fend for yourself.

    #2271587
    HaKatan
    Participant

    simcha613:
    Zionism was, is and always will be idolatry. The Torah’s definition of idolatry doesn’t change.

    Regarding the Chareidim in the Zionist parliament, that is halachically almost-impossible (read Rav Reuven Grozovsky’s biayos haZman). And according to the Satmar Rav and others, it’s severely prohibited.

    Whatever illusory benefits you fantasize that the Zionist State provides (there would not have been the need for any army, and Mashiach would have been here had it not been for the State, according to both the Brisker Rav and the Satmar Rav) does not kasher the enormous pig and idol that is Zionism and its State.

    #2271622

    Hakatan, you can disassociate from groups you don’t like, it is fine by me. But then you need to make sure that you live an honest life without taking more than you are giving, whether you are in EY or in Stamford Hill. If you don’t want to rely on idf, negotiate with the government to move to an area adjacent to the border and organize your own self defense, either train fully chareidi militia, or pay Wagner group, or daven. Same for financial support. If you push for such resolution politically, you may not get immediate agreement from most ardent Zs, but you will get a lot more support and respect from regular Israelis.

    #2271621
    yankel berel
    Participant

    @aaq
    I can’t see any inference from said Rambam to the question of joining the army . He is simply talking about a totally different scenario.

    #2271620
    yankel berel
    Participant

    @hakatan
    Regarding the Chareidim in the Zionist parliament, that is halachically almost-impossible (read Rav Reuven Grozovsky’s biayos haZman). And according to the Satmar Rav and others, it’s severely prohibited.
    ====

    It is more than ‘possible’…..
    Haredim in Israeli Parliament is not only possible , but accepted halachic practice dating back to the very first Parliament in 1949.
    This is supported by the overwhelming majority of Poskim ,Rabanim and Rashei Yeshivot in EY and in in Huts La’arets, not only as ‘permitted’, but as a Chov Gamur and as a Mitsva.

    Some Kana’im do not participate , but this has no bearing on accepted halachic practice , as mentioned.

    #2271629
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Yankel, the frum parties would only be in the opposition for almost 40 years. That was the ruling of the chazon ish and all of the other gedolim.

    Rav shach said in the 80s that this psak no longer applies. Under Menachem begin, things were different. He was sympathetic to frum people and was the closest thing Israel has ever had to a religious prime minister.

    What Rav shachs understanding of the differences were is beyond my understanding; i have emunas chachamim that he saw a significant change which permitted joining the government.

    But at the time he said you can’t be a full minister. Under rav chaim kanievsky, this was changed too, and yaakov litzman became the first charedi minister. Again, we only follow what the gedolim say

    #2271673
    yichusdik
    Participant

    It’s been a few years since I wrote here, but I can see some of the same voices making the same noises.

    It would be useful for the chareidi oilem in E’Y to take on a part of the burden that it can see fit and control – for example, take on the entirety of fire fighting services. Direct national service to that, and control the environment. Or some of the para medical services. Or some of the needs in hospitals. But don’t be reactive – take initiative and take responsibility.

    The alternative is that in a few short months or years, an aroused electorate, who have just sacrificed their children in this Milchemes mitzva, will reverse every financial gain the Netanyahu aligned chareidi parties have achieved in terms of budgets. And you will look at this “shmad” of the greatest amount of learning in the history of Am Yisroel being done right now on the dime and the backs of those whose sons and daughters also sacrifice their lives to protect you, as a distant memory of bounty and good fortune. At that point you’ll have the luxury of pointing to those people who resent you and say “see, see, I told you they hate us!” but you’ll have a fraction of the resources and you’ll still be bleeding away the achdus of the whole Am, as well as the goodwill that helps fund your existence. Congratulations on making your own challenges bigger and more difficult.

    And finally, if you can’t or don’t want to see the difference between “koichi v’oitzem yodi” and doing one’s hishtadlus, you haven’t been paying attention to anyone or anything going on around you for decades and fundamentally don’t understand your environment. That can’t be beneficial for you. You still have my tefillos for your full teshuva and greater understanding.

    #2271771
    doom777
    Participant

    Let’s not let the super Zionists and Neturei Karta hijack this discussion into whether Zionism is a treif avodah zara, or the culmination of Jewish dreams.

    The conversation in this thread is whether or not the IDF is shmad. We don’t have to come to an agreement regarding Zionism as an ideology in order to properly evaluate the threats and benefits coming from IDF service. For example, Bedouin Arabs are not zionist (obviously), but many of them serve in the IDF for their interests. Alternatively, many Zionist inclined, but G-d fearing Israelis do not send their kids to the Army, to avoid OTD.

    So lets focus on the IDF. The argument for going to the army is to take part in the general society, to share their burdens, as well as placate our secular brothers who demand that we take our part. The arguments against it, is that it will take Jews away from learning, and overall it will force Jewish boys in an culture that deprioritizes Jewish values, while normalizing secular ones.

    It’s obvious to me that the threats outweigh the benefits. We have no obligation to placate people who want to destroy us (spiritually or physically). If they are unhappy with us, it’s their anti-Semitism (hatred of Judaism is just as anti-Semitic as hatred of Jews) speaking, and we may never comply. Sharing the burden may be a good midah in general, but every middah should be evaluated. Charity is also an important middah, but you wouldn’t give 10k to charity if your children can’t afford clothes.

    The IDF does not need haredim because of any manpower losses. It’s true, there is a manpower shortage in the IDF — but there is also an overabundance of manpower. The answer to this riddle, is that high quality combat troops are in short supply, however low quality people who can’t be relied on are everywhere. Now what kind of soldiers would Yeshiva Boys, or even Shababnik at risk boys become? How many yeshiva boys run even 5k? Enlisting haredim will not solve any IDF manpower problems, and the service limit will still have to be extended to keep the combat troops in uniform.

    So why do Israeli elites want to enlist the haredim? They say it themselves, to “integrate” charedim into society, meaning to make them non-frum. Simcha said:

    The army is not trying to destroy religion. In fact, over the past few decades, the army has become more and more Torah friendly. I believe they make sure to have minyanim available for soldiers who want it (at least in the more religious units). They have a mehadrin level of kashrus (as opposed to regular rabanut).

    It’s true there is kosher food and minyanim in the army, but being frum is not just about kosher food and tefillin. The fundamental of being a frum Jew, is declaring that Hashem’s word is of highest importance in your value system. As an IDF soldier, can you say that you will only follow your commands as long as they don’t contradict Hashem’s Torah? No, you may not. If your commander orders you to do something prohibited by the Torah, you must do it. For an example, see the officers cadets who were expelled because they refused to listen to women singing. (however if your commander orders you to do something against international human rights, not only can you refuse, but you must refuse such an order. shows you what their values really are)

    Final note, as I already mentioned in other discussions on this topic, personally — all of my friends went to the Army, and almost all came in frum, and came out OTD. I’ve seen too many of these cases. This is not an acceptable supposition. Even if the IDF needed us, this price of losing your entire olam haba, and bringing asonot on Am Israel is just too high.

    #2271762

    Avira > Rav shach said in the 80s that this psak no longer applies. Under Menachem begin, things were different.

    Note that Rav Schach advised against an agreement between Haredi politicians and Begin to have fully gov-funded haredi schools in order not to lose ability to maintain private support.

    #2271763

    yankel > I can’t see any inference from said Rambam to the question of joining the army

    Just think it through: what was Rambam’s shitah about surviving in the desert? Did he expect the country government (reshaim that are causing the exile to begin with) to protect the desert community with taxes and army?

    #2271794

    doom > Sharing the burden may be a good midah in general, but every middah should be evaluated. Charity is also an important middah … The fundamental of being a frum Jew, is declaring that Hashem’s word is of highest importance in your value system

    Thanks for posting a reasonable argument! Having someone else defend you, against his will, does not seem to me to fit into Jewish value system. Pages and pages of gemorah are spend on how to be considerate of other Yidden. Having them serve in the army instead of you seems worse than not helping his animal to unload…

    > If your commander orders you to do something prohibited by the Torah, you must do it.

    As you look at serving as an optional activity, this is surely a justification not to go. But if you look at a joint need for defense of the community that you have to participate – then, this is something that you have no control of while you are engaged in an activity. Steipler was trying to keep shabbos in Russian army .. and many others

    > all of my friends went to the Army, and almost all came in frum, and came out OTD.

    this is terrible, and if the numbers are so skewed as you say, even startling. There are a couple of questions to ask:

    1) what was their education that did not prepare them to deal with real life. Yes, there is a great value in keeping community safe from problematic activities, but at the end, it is up to individuals to follow Torah. Is Hashem expects us to follow Torah only when fully furnished and subsidized? It is an insult to our ancestors and everything they went through.

    2) if you understand responsibility, then you can work on making things happen. Same way the community shows power to protect itself and also find government funds to use, could use this power to make sure that some members of the community are trained to be part of charedi units and deal with tensions between army orders and observance.

    #2271806
    yankel berel
    Participant

    @avirah

    Sorry , but you are factually wrong. r YM Levin was a full Minister in the First Government of Israel.

    #2271816
    AviraDeArah
    Participant

    Yankel – could be the gerrer rebbe allowed it, or it could be there were extenuating circumstances, but either way, rav shach received a lot of criticism from brisk for changing the yeshiva world’s policy

    #2271822
    simcha613
    Participant

    Doom- I appreciate your post and I would like to counter with a few points. I don’t want to debate so much on the facts as you present them, but just to say that my impression was quite different than yours. I know many many people… friends, neighbors, family, who served and I only know of one person who I suspect went off the derech R”L. So, while your experience may be different, I don’t know if the numbers are really that high. In terms of a commander giving anti-halacha orders, I don’t know how often that happens. The kol ishah case was a big deal, but that was years ago. The army has a rabbanut that I do believe protects the rights of religious soldiers… and there also may be a different level of psak when we’re dealing with war, not everything that would be a violation of halacha for civilians in peacetime would apply to soldiers in war. I’m also not sure if your description of the lack of need for soldiers is accurate, or how ineffective Charedi soldiers would be after their basic training.

    That being said, I would like to counter with two of your other points-

    1) “Sharing the burden may be a good midah in general, but every middah should be evaluated. Charity is also an important middah” I think the comparison to charity highlights a big issue with how many Charedim view the army, and the concept of sharing the burden. Tzedakah is when we share the burden of others. You may not be suffering financially, but your friend is, and charity is supposed to be you bearing HIS burden and helping him out. But the army is not someone else’s burden… it’s ALL of our burdens. The genocidal maniacs want to kill all of us, not just the secular and Dati LeUmi. We all benefit from the protection of the army and we all expect the army to protect all of us. The Torah teaches us that it is unacceptable for one who’s load fell to expect someone else to help him if he himself doesn’t join in. All the more so when we are dealing with stakes as high as pikuach nefesh and hatzalas Yisroel. Sharing the burden is not about sharing in the burden of others… Sharing the burden is about participating in our own burden, and not expect others to do the dirty work for us while we benefit from their sacrifice and sit back and watch.

    2) Is the army dangerous? Of course it is! War is dangerous not only spiritually, but physically. That’s a reality of war. Even though it’s not one of the “big three” averios, we are still expected to risk our lives for both a Milchemes Reshus and a Milchemes Mitzvah… and despite not having a Sanhedrin, the current war may indeed be considered a Milchemes Mitzvah as it’s for Hatzalas Yisroel. The risks do not outweigh the rewards… Hatzalas Yisroel is one of the most important things we can do. If a person is needed for Pidyon Shevuyim would you accept his arguments that he’s not responsible because he’s afraid of the spitirual challenegs involved in traveling to who knows where to save Jews? Defending our people is not just “good midos”. It’s an essential part of being part of the Klal. Despite the risks. And maybe, the more yeshivos that prepare their talmidim to serve, and the more Yirei Shamayim who join the ranks, would also inspire change in the army itself.

    #2271881
    doom777
    Participant

    Quick note, on Arutz Sheva hebrew website, there is right now an interview with Dr Shuki Friedman on Haredi enlistment. If you understand Hebrew, go read it yourself, I would link it but I don’t think that it’s allowed.

    Here is what he has to say:

    והדבר הראשון הוא להפסיק את התמיכה באורח החיים החרדי
    The first thing is to end support for the haredi way of life

    So you see, they are quite open about their plans, and always have been. All you have to do is listen to how they speak about it to each other.

    #2271920
    simcha613
    Participant

    Doom- what does Dr. Friedman mean by “ending support to the Haredi way of life”? If you read on, he seems to specifically refer to the prevalent reality among many Charedim who don’t serve, don’t work, and rely on governmental support. Now, you can have a problem with that assessment of Charedi society, but don’t take his words out of context. He doesn’t mean he wants to erase Charedim…. he just wants to try and fix three specific potential problems. And by enabling them to serve, not only will they obviously serve the people in the armed forces, but it will also remove many of the barriers for Charedim to find honest work and enable them to support their families without relying on support of others.

    #2271907
    mdd1
    Participant

    Avirah…, stop with your libel about the blood thurst!! Just some Zionists felt that in view of how the Arabs and the British acted they would not get the country that was promised to them in a different way.
    and the violence was started by the Arabs who started to attack Jews once they realized the Zionists wanted to restore the Jewish state in the land.

    #2272147
    Chaim87
    Participant

    Just to jump into this bandwagon , I suggest we focus on the practicality vis ideology;
    1) Charedim are generally not suited culturally to fight. Refer to WNYC all things considered on 3-25 where they have a segment about this and discuss if it even makes sense.
    2) The religious accommodations would be such a drag on the IDF that its another strain. Imagine gera chasdim who hold you need to wear a long reckel and even men can’t just wear pants.
    3) Lamasa if you force it via a draft charedim will reject even more. This is just the facts.

    #2272160

    avira > rav shach received a lot of criticism from brisk

    here we go again. If someone else disagrees w/ Rav Schach, then he is an apikoires. But my group can. Can we all have equal rights here?

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