Zürcher Nachrichten - Israel’s Haredi Challenge

EUR -
AED 4.334151
AFN 77.8911
ALL 96.74255
AMD 446.113817
ANG 2.112588
AOA 1081.622045
ARS 1706.640144
AUD 1.694871
AWG 2.12577
AZN 2.001288
BAM 1.957665
BBD 2.377665
BDT 144.377509
BGN 1.981932
BHD 0.444922
BIF 3498.346743
BMD 1.180164
BND 1.503532
BOB 8.156803
BRL 6.193269
BSD 1.180524
BTN 106.686611
BWP 15.628952
BYN 3.381521
BYR 23131.214804
BZD 2.374161
CAD 1.612452
CDF 2625.864602
CHF 0.915589
CLF 0.02583
CLP 1020.125085
CNY 8.192875
CNH 8.185807
COP 4321.040743
CRC 585.257415
CUC 1.180164
CUP 31.274347
CVE 110.37012
CZK 24.265883
DJF 210.22022
DKK 7.465995
DOP 74.500957
DZD 153.375302
EGP 55.303406
ERN 17.70246
ETB 183.940048
FJD 2.604151
FKP 0.864097
GBP 0.87161
GEL 3.174806
GGP 0.864097
GHS 12.9614
GIP 0.864097
GMD 86.745383
GNF 10360.867975
GTQ 9.054624
GYD 246.975226
HKD 9.220208
HNL 31.182699
HRK 7.535109
HTG 154.8675
HUF 378.308624
IDR 19910.842233
ILS 3.672735
IMP 0.864097
INR 106.497234
IQD 1546.472903
IRR 49714.409554
ISK 144.795585
JEP 0.864097
JMD 184.635852
JOD 0.836756
JPY 185.077455
KES 152.287979
KGS 103.204967
KHR 4764.558082
KMF 492.128304
KPW 1062.183028
KRW 1727.565411
KWD 0.362712
KYD 0.983783
KZT 582.224527
LAK 25373.1661
LBP 105718.384885
LKR 365.317939
LRD 219.580298
LSL 19.071364
LTL 3.484717
LVL 0.713869
LYD 7.478122
MAD 10.83512
MDL 20.062193
MGA 5222.974504
MKD 61.603711
MMK 2478.088599
MNT 4212.19062
MOP 9.500031
MRU 47.08985
MUR 54.358763
MVR 18.245263
MWK 2046.949571
MXN 20.550704
MYR 4.658141
MZN 75.247247
NAD 19.071364
NGN 1614.570237
NIO 43.441375
NOK 11.539255
NPR 170.698578
NZD 1.971812
OMR 0.453761
PAB 1.180534
PEN 3.968179
PGK 5.131888
PHP 69.345247
PKR 330.536312
PLN 4.218774
PYG 7795.424576
QAR 4.302498
RON 5.092762
RSD 117.373199
RUB 90.371868
RWF 1723.021352
SAR 4.425803
SBD 9.517607
SCR 16.18246
SDG 709.853886
SEK 10.66218
SGD 1.502904
SHP 0.885429
SLE 28.972816
SLL 24747.448565
SOS 673.441404
SRD 44.693245
STD 24427.012485
STN 24.523357
SVC 10.328837
SYP 13052.112374
SZL 19.062236
THB 37.497332
TJS 11.049324
TMT 4.136475
TND 3.420658
TOP 2.841551
TRY 51.383748
TTD 7.993613
TWD 37.360407
TZS 3050.72365
UAH 50.940417
UGX 4214.013542
USD 1.180164
UYU 45.553386
UZS 14479.79095
VES 446.083531
VND 30648.859615
VUV 141.251085
WST 3.217534
XAF 656.612977
XAG 0.01576
XAU 0.000244
XCD 3.189452
XCG 2.127535
XDR 0.815613
XOF 656.582347
XPF 119.331742
YER 281.262561
ZAR 19.083282
ZMK 10622.888903
ZMW 21.928071
ZWL 380.012333
  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • CMSC

    0.0600

    23.58

    +0.25%

  • CMSD

    0.0500

    23.92

    +0.21%

  • GSK

    2.0850

    59.315

    +3.52%

  • BTI

    0.2350

    61.865

    +0.38%

  • RIO

    -4.1000

    92.38

    -4.44%

  • RBGPF

    0.1000

    82.5

    +0.12%

  • NGG

    -0.5000

    87.29

    -0.57%

  • BCC

    -1.1950

    89.035

    -1.34%

  • BCE

    -0.9800

    25.36

    -3.86%

  • BP

    -0.9650

    38.235

    -2.52%

  • RYCEF

    -0.0600

    16.62

    -0.36%

  • VOD

    -0.9950

    14.715

    -6.76%

  • AZN

    1.9250

    189.375

    +1.02%

  • RELX

    0.6600

    30.44

    +2.17%

  • JRI

    0.0600

    13.21

    +0.45%


Israel’s Haredi Challenge




The ultra‑Orthodox, or Haredi, community in Israel has become the focus of intense national debate. When the state was founded in 1948, a small number of exceptional Torah scholars were allowed to devote themselves to study instead of serving in the military. Nearly eight decades later, the people who follow this stringent interpretation of Judaism make up almost one in seven Israelis. Their numbers are growing rapidly, their political parties wield outsized influence in coalition politics, and their educational and economic choices increasingly shape the country’s future. As Israel grapples with war in Gaza, coalition infighting and a fragile economy, many secular and modern‑orthodox Israelis view the Haredi sector as the most formidable challenge to national cohesion and prosperity.

A population boom and its consequences
Demography is the most visible driver of change. Haredi families typically marry young and have large households: fertility rates average more than six children per woman, compared with about three across Israeli society. As a result, the community’s population has doubled in just fifteen years and now exceeds 1.3 million people. Demographers project that, by the start of the next decade, they will make up around one sixth of Israel’s citizens, and that their share of the 25‑29 age cohort will rise from 13 per cent in 2025 to 28 per cent by 2060. Around sixty per cent of Haredim are under the age of twenty. This youthful, rapidly expanding population concentrates in high‑density neighbourhoods in Jerusalem and Bnei Brak, placing intense pressure on housing, schools and local services.

Education and the labour market
Most ultra‑Orthodox boys’ schools devote the bulk of the day to religious studies and neglect secular subjects such as mathematics, English and science. The government provides funding to schools that pledge to teach a “core curriculum”, but enforcement is weak and many Haredi schools either ignore or water down these subjects. Policy analysts argue that this educational deficit locks many Haredi men out of higher education and skilled employment.

In the labour market, a gender divide has emerged. Haredi women, who often shoulder the financial burden while their husbands study, have made significant strides; about four fifths participate in the workforce. In contrast, employment among ultra‑Orthodox men has stalled at just over half, compared with around 85 per cent among other Israeli men. Many rely on stipends for yeshiva students and generous child allowances, reinforcing the incentive to remain outside the labour force. An OECD survey issued in April 2025 notes that budgetary support for yeshivas was increased significantly in recent years, deepening men’s disincentives to seek work. The same report stresses that reallocating funding toward schools that teach the full curriculum and conditioning childcare support on both parents’ employment could help narrow labour‑market gaps.

The result of low male employment is acute economic disparity. Ultra‑Orthodox households tend to earn roughly two thirds of the income of non‑Haredi households and depend more heavily on public benefits. With the community’s share of the population rising steadily, these gaps threaten to undermine Israel’s fiscal base and widen social divisions.

The conscription crisis
Israel’s defence doctrine rests on the principle of universal national service. Yet tens of thousands of Haredi men receive de facto exemptions because they are enrolled in religious seminaries. In June 2024, the country’s Supreme Court declared that, in the absence of a specific law distinguishing yeshiva students from other citizens, the defence service statute applies to them like anyone else. The justices decried the previous system as selective enforcement and a violation of equality, especially during wartime.

The ruling has proved difficult to implement. Despite an urgent demand for additional combat troops in 2025, only a tiny fraction of eligible ultra‑Orthodox men have presented themselves at induction centres. Estimates suggest that fewer than five per cent responded to call‑up notices and barely one per cent were actually inducted. Many secular and modern‑orthodox Israelis, who have spent long stints on the front lines since October 2023, are angered by what they see as an unfair distribution of sacrifice. Ultra‑Orthodox leaders argue that Torah study is a form of national service and insist that conscription would erode their religious way of life. They cite fears of exposure to secular influences, mixed‑gender environments and the weakening of rabbinic authority.

Protests and political turmoil
The dispute over military service has triggered some of the largest demonstrations in Israeli history. On 30 October 2025, hundreds of thousands of Haredi men converged on Jerusalem in a “million‑man march” to demand that yeshiva students remain exempt. The protest shut down highways and public transport, drew thousands of police officers and resulted in the death of a teenager who fell from a building. Banners proclaimed, “The people are with the Torah,” and speakers accused the government of betraying Judaism. The rally followed arrests of students who ignored draft notices.

These events have destabilised the governing coalition. Ultra‑Orthodox parties hold roughly 18 of the Knesset’s 120 seats, making them indispensable partners for Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. In July 2025 the United Torah Judaism party walked out of the government over the failure to pass a draft‑exemption law, and the Shas party resigned from its cabinet posts while continuing to vote with the coalition. Both insisted that they would not return until the status of yeshiva students was secured.

In early November 2025 Netanyahu sought to break the impasse by advancing a conscription bill drawn up by Knesset Foreign Affairs and Defence Committee chair Boaz Bismuth. The proposal aims to enlist fifty per cent of each annual ultra‑Orthodox draft cohort within five years. Critics, including opposition leader Yair Lapid, denounce it as a draft‑evasion bill riddled with loopholes. It lowers the threshold for yeshiva students to qualify for exemptions and softens penalties; draft evaders would be allowed to travel abroad after age 26, and licence suspensions would be scrapped. Supporters argue that codifying a realistic target will stabilise the coalition and bring ultra‑Orthodox parties back into government. As of mid‑November, the bill’s fate remains uncertain, and any perceived capitulation could provoke further protests or even bring down the government.

Gender segregation and the public sphere
Beyond conscription and economics, the ultra‑Orthodox exert growing influence on daily life. Although Israel’s Supreme Court outlawed gender‑segregated public buses in 2011, incidents persist. In 2023 a bus driver ordered teenage girls to cover their bodies and sit at the back, asserting that the route was a religious line; the case ended in a legal settlement in 2025. Advocacy groups recorded dozens of complaints of gender exclusion on public transport that year.

At the legislative level, coalition lawmakers have promoted initiatives that critics say blur the separation between religion and state. In October 2025 ministers proposed a bill requiring every public institution to affix a mezuzah and granting broad protections for religious rituals. Under the measure, interfering with Orthodox practices would become a criminal offence, and gender‑segregated prayer could be permitted if it reflected the worshippers’ tradition. Supporters framed the bill as protecting Jewish heritage; opponents warned that it would turn public spaces into ultra‑Orthodox domains and infringe upon democratic norms. Although some of the most controversial provisions were later removed, the episode underscored fears among secular Israelis that their society is being remoulded according to Haredi standards.

Change from within
The Haredi world is not uniform, and signs of change are visible. A survey published in October 2025 by researchers from the Hebrew University found that while the community retains conservative values, economic necessity has driven increasing acceptance of employment and professional education, particularly for women. Respondents described a “bounded pragmatism”: they adapt behaviour without renouncing ideology. Core religious studies and male higher education remain sensitive boundaries, but many respondents expressed openness to new national Haredi political frameworks. Opposition to mandatory military service was widespread and couched in moral terms.

Another social shift involves those leaving the ultra‑Orthodox fold. A study by the organisation Out for Change in 2025 found that growing numbers of former Haredim remain religiously observant in varying degrees and maintain ties to their families. Contrary to stereotypes, departure from the community does not always entail a complete break with faith; for many it is a move towards a hybrid identity that balances tradition and modernity.

Paths to integration
Addressing the ultra‑Orthodox challenge requires a multi‑layered approach. First, education policy must ensure that schools receiving state funds teach the full core curriculum; enforcement of funding conditions should be robust. Universities and vocational colleges can develop programmes tailored to ultra‑Orthodox students, offering separate campuses or hours to accommodate cultural norms. Financial incentives, such as earned‑income tax credits, should encourage men to seek employment rather than rely on stipends.

Second, conscription policy needs to balance equality with respect for religious sensibilities. Creative solutions could include expanded civil‑service tracks, specialised military units that protect religious observance, or alternative service in healthcare and education. The goal should be to share the defence burden more equitably while acknowledging the community’s fears.

Third, coalition politics should not treat public funds as bargaining chips. Transparent budgets, clear criteria for subsidies and accountability for yeshivas would reassure taxpayers that funds are being used responsibly. Dialogue between government ministers, army officials and rabbinic leaders is essential to design policies that are both just and workable.

Finally, a pluralistic public sphere must be safeguarded. Laws should protect freedom of religion without imposing religious norms on unwilling citizens. Resolving disputes over gender segregation, Sabbath observance and kosher certification will require compromise and a renewed commitment to democratic principles.

Conclusion
Israel’s ultra‑Orthodox community poses a unique challenge because its demographic momentum intersects with issues of economy, defence, politics and culture. The community’s deep commitment to tradition, combined with its growing size and political leverage, tests the country’s ability to remain both Jewish and democratic. Navigating this challenge will demand a delicate balance of enforcement and accommodation: enforcing equal obligations and educational standards while accommodating religious identity and autonomy. If Israel can foster integration without coercion and encourage responsibility without alienation, the Haredi challenge could become an opportunity to strengthen social cohesion and economic vitality.