Thursday, February 23, 2012

Israeli Court Invalidates The Tal Law That Exempts Military Service For Ultra-Orthodox Jews

Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men stand next to an Israeli soldier at the Western Wall. However, in the future they may stand side-by-side wearing the same military uniform. Photo: Reuters

Israeli Court Invalidates A Military Exemption -- New York Times

JERUSALEM — The Israeli Supreme Court has invalidated a law that exempted from military service ultra-Orthodox Jews engaged in religious studies, adding a new urgency to the government’s negotiations with religious parties over a more equitable distribution of the burdens of citizenship.

The 6-to-3 decision, handed down late Tuesday, declared the so-called Tal Law unconstitutional at a time of growing tension in Israel over the place of the ultra-Orthodox. The law, in effect since 2002, granted exemptions to tens of thousands of religious academy students. It was widely viewed as a failure, and Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu had already said it would not be renewed when it expired this summer.

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More News On The Israeli Court Ruling That The Tal Law Is Unconstitutional

Israeli court axes military exemption
-- Sydney Morning Herald
Israel top court scraps pious Jews' draft exemption -- Reuters
Ruling could spark coalition crisis in Israel -- AP
Israel military exemptions tossed -- Philly.com/L.A. Times
Israeli Supreme Court strikes law on ultra-Orthodox army deferral -- Gulf Times/AFP
Analysis: Secularists face uphill struggle to make the ultra-orthodox serve -- Scotsman

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