Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Hundreds study Torah at epicenter of Tel Aviv protests

The “Fellowship on Kaplan” initiative brought Israelis together to discuss their differences and to listen to each other.

Israelis study Torah at a tent on Kaplan Street in Tel Aviv, Aug. 10, 2023. Source: Facebook.
Israelis study Torah at a tent on Kaplan Street in Tel Aviv, Aug. 10, 2023. Source: Facebook.

Hundreds of Israeli put aside their political differences to study Torah this week at an outdoor study tent established at the heart of the anti-government protests in Tel Aviv.

The “Havruta on Kaplan” or “Fellowship on Kaplan” initiative is named after the central Tel Aviv thoroughfare where demonstrations against the government’s judicial reform program have been taking place for months.

“We put up a tent in the heart of Tel Aviv and began to study Torah, men and women, young people and adults,” said Itamar Chen, one of the group organizers.

Several prominent modern Orthodox rabbis taught two classes during the daytime, while cold drinks and pizza were handed out to protesters who opposed the viewpoints of some of the speakers.

“During the day there were classes offered by Rabbi Elyakim Levanon, the chief rabbi of Samaria, and one by Rabbi David Fendel, the rabbi of Sderot and the head of the Rabbinical Court for Monetary Affairs in Sderot,” explained Chen.

“We sat in circles, we listened to each other, we shared with them and they shared with us. And the initiative? It reached its goals,” he added.

Last month, the Tel Aviv Municipality announced the renaming of a section of Kaplan Street as “Democracy Square” in honor of the weekly Saturday night protests there, which have often spilled over into illegally blocking the nearby Ayalon Highway (Route 20).

“In the 75th year of the State of Israel, it has become clear, completely contrary to everything we thought, that its democracy is not something taken for granted,” Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai wrote on Twitter.

“And we are here to remind everyone, again and again, that Israel has no right to exist as a country, as a society, as an idea, without democracy.”

On July 23, an estimated 200,000 supporters of the reform initiative converged on Kaplan Street for the “March of the Million” mega-rally.

The previous large-scale protest in support of judicial reform, which took place near the Knesset in Jerusalem on April 27, was attended by some 600,000 people.

“Leadership should be responding with moral clarity, not suggesting that the act of teaching about the Holocaust has somehow ‘missed the mark,’” said Kurt Schwartz, CEO of CAMERA.
The judges said the sanctions, which the United States imposed in response to the Hague-based court’s targeting of Israel, are unlawful.
The Fedayeen Football League plans to hold the game in the heart of the city’s World Cup activities, wearing keffiyehs and waving Palestinian, Iranian and Lebanese flags, to call for FIFA to expel Israel.
Katie Lawson, a university spokeswoman, told JNS that it was the “first time in more than six years that this authority was exercised.”
The anti-Israel “Squad” member is backing Imraan Siddiqi’s bid to unseat a Democratic incumbent, as progressive challengers target fellow Democrats in Washington state legislative races.
Only 34% of respondents approved of the way the U.S. president was handling Iran, with 62% disapproving.
Benny Gantz, JNS editor-in-chief Jonathan S. Tobin, Gilad Erdan, Mosab Hassan Yousef, Nissim Black and leading voices in security, diplomacy, media, law and Jewish communal affairs headline the summit’s third day in Jerusalem.