Under lockdown rules, gatherings are limited to 20 people outdoors and 10 indoors. But on Saturday night, in the Shikun Hahistadrut neighborhood, music and singing rang out from the open windows of a Torah study seminary as celebrants gathered.
A leading Israeli rabbi at a protest this week warned Israel’s leaders that ultra-Orthodox boys will do anything to be able to continue studying Torah, instead of joining the army — a requirement for all Israeli citizens. Throw us in jail, he said; we’ll all go.
Beyond the sea of black and white clothing is a community that transformed from sidelined minority to a political force. Sephardi Jews make up roughly half of Israel’s population, but the community was long impoverished and faced discrimination by Ashkenazi Jews descended from European countries. Rabbi Ovadia Yosef changed much of that.
There’s a perceptible tension between mainstream Israeli society and its growing ultra-Orthodox minority. It’s on display at a shopping mall in Ramot, a community that’s become more ultra-Orthodox. Ultra-Orthdox rabbis have called for a mall boycott, hurting sales.