Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Court rules Israel’s Education Ministry must create pre-army programs for national religious girls

As a result of the ruling, the state will fund pre-military education programs to train girls on living in a less insular, more open and diverse society, and will provide instructors for a variety of topics.

Soldiers of the Bardales Battalion train in urban warfare on a foggy morning near Nitzanim in southern Israel, on July 13, 2016. Formed in 2014, the Bardales Battalion is an infantry combat battalion of the Israel Defense Forces composed of 50 percent female soldiers and assigned for future routine security along the Jordanian border in central Israel. Photo by Hadas Parush/Flash90.
Soldiers of the Bardales Battalion train in urban warfare on a foggy morning near Nitzanim in southern Israel, on July 13, 2016. Formed in 2014, the Bardales Battalion is an infantry combat battalion of the Israel Defense Forces composed of 50 percent female soldiers and assigned for future routine security along the Jordanian border in central Israel. Photo by Hadas Parush/Flash90.

Israeli’s High Court of Justice has ruled that the Education Ministry must fund educational programs to prepare young women from the national-religious sector for army service, like it does for boys from the same demographic.

Israel’s Chief Rabbinate issued a halachic ruling against young women serving in the Israel Defense Forces and many rabbis across the country have also expressed their disapproval for the practice, which they say is inappropriate and ill-suited to women, and which increases the chances of both male and female soldiers engaging in relations incongruent with Jewish tradition and law. However, some rabbis say IDF service for girls is permissible.

There are several pre-military schools for boys, but because religious girls are strongly urged to participate in National Service programs rather than in the army, pre-military education for national-religious girls has received far less funding.

According to Justice Neal Hendel, funding pre-military education programs for boys but not girls is prejudicial.

“We cannot close our eyes to the rising number of religious women serving in the IDF. If state-funded religious schools believe it is necessary to prepare teenage boys for the challenges of army service, why not do the same for teenage girls?” said Hendel.

As a result of the ruling, the state will fund pre-military education programs to train girls on living in a less insular, more open and diverse society, and will provide instructors for a variety of topics.

Amnon Lorch of Yigal Arnon & Co, the law firm which filed the suit, said 4,000 religious-Zionist girls serve in the IDF.

The department filed its amended complaint nearly a month after the Ivy League school filed a motion to dismiss the federal lawsuit.
“As disinformation spreads, we must ensure state publications inform voters—not amplify antisemitic or xenophobic rhetoric,” Democratic Assemblywoman Gail Pellerin stated.
Fewer than half of Israelis believe Israel’s security is a central consideration for the U.S. president, while skepticism is growing that a potential U.S.-Iran agreement would weaken Iran’s regime.
“Many other groups are subject to mistreatment, or even subject to mistreatment by the Jewish, and they’re not crying so much,” Luc Jasmin said about a resolution defining Jew-hatred.
“Giving legitimacy to rhetoric that recklessly manipulates the memory of Nazism dishonors the victims of the Holocaust,” Danny Danon, the Israeli ambassador to the United Nations, said.
“We will be taking Kharg Island, and other oil infrastructure points,” the president wrote.