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Oif Simchas Lakewood Rosh Chodesh Adar 5778

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                     משנכנס אדרמרבין בשמחה


-Chasuna: Salb- Mendlowitz at Ateres chana hall Bais Faiga
-Chasuna: Freiman- Krohn at Lake Terrace hall

-Vort: Hachosson Heshy Miller to Hakalla Sara Chaya Ringel Bas R' Shloimy at Shemen L'mincha simcha hall, 2 Milano Dr. Lakewood NJ, 7:30 pm

-Annual reception for Yeshiva Heichal Hatorah Rav Mottel Dick Rosh Yeshiva  at the home of Rabbi and Mrs. Menashe Frankel,  1415 Ardenwood Ave., Lakewood  7:30 PM.

-Kumzitz and Jam  Music. Food. Drink at Ohr Mattisyahu 953 E. County Line Rd. Lakewood 9:45 pm After Maariv

- Farm Fresh: FREE RUGELACH TASTING TODAY AND TOMORROW Thursday & Friday, Feb. 15 & 16.  Rugelach Just $5.99 lb.  while supplies last

Kosher.Com - Shabbos with Yussi : Yerushalmi Kugel

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Brought to you by Kosher.com "Shabbos with Yussi" is back with the ultimate crowd pleaser: Yerushalmi Kugel. Watch Yussi Weisz from Snaps Kosher in Lakewood, NJ, as he demonstrates the absolute best way to create the basics. Jewish food, perfected. For the full kugel Recipe click HERE

NJ lawmakers Want to Reinstate the Individual Mandate on Obamacare

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After President Trump Repealed he individual mandate on those who dont have health insurance to pay a yearly penalty, Democrat lawmakers at the NJ state Senate’s Commerce Committee approved the Democratic legislation, introduced earlier this week requiring a fee. The Bill would require every taxpayer in NJ to have health insurance or pay the tax. It still would have to be voted on by the assembly and legislature, Gov Murphy would sign it.


Read more at NJSpotlight

The bill (S-1877), the “New Jersey Health Insurance Market Preservation Act,” would require those who don’t have health insurance plans that meet certain minimum standards to pay a fee to the state. This penalty would be determined under calculations previously used in the ACA, based in part on the cost of an average bronze-level plan sold on New Jersey’s individual health insurance market.



Exemptions would be available to individuals who could not afford coverage or for those who earn too little to pay tax, based on regulations to be determined by the Department of Banking and Insurance. The State Treasurer would also be empowered to consider hardship and religious exemptions on a case-by-case basis.

Sen. Gerald Cardinale (D-Passaic), called the measure “wrongheaded,” and objected to the concept of taxing individuals who have not chosen to purchase a specific product, in this case health insurance. “I don’t want to be insulting, but I think the tendency of legislators to try and run people’s lives is not warranted. We’re not that smart. People can make decisions for themselves,” he said.

The measure, which would take effect in 2019 but requires advance planning among state officials, was amended by the committee to ensure that all tax penalties collected be deposited in a newly-created fund; that fund would be used to help pay for reinsurance claims.

How would state determine affordability?
Additional amendments might also be needed, suggested Maura Collinsgru, healthcare policy director for New Jersey Citizen Action. While she supported the idea “in principle,” she worried about how the state would determine who could not afford coverage.

Collinsgru also flagged language that would make a taxpayer responsible for the coverage of all dependents, noting that this could disadvantage families in which one breadwinner is covered by an employee-sponsored plan, but other members are unable to afford coverage. As a result of the ACA’s “family glitch,” she said these families are often unable to obtain federal subsidies to help pay for care because one parent has a job and is covered.

“While we know this bill is modeled after the Affordable Care Act, the Affordable Care Act didn’t get it all right,” she said, adding that these shortcomings are a concern “in high-cost states like New Jersey.”

Lakewood VAAD Silent on Fire Elections

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 This motzei shabbos there will be elections at the LFD asking the public to spend more money for capital improvement projects. There was very little publicity about it so far. Last Year the Vaad involved itself in the fire elections endorsing a candidate and said  to vote down the budget.  The VAAD who claims to look out for the Tax payers and always issues statement for who and how to vote has not said a word this year prior to the 2018 fire elections which will increase taxes. The two commissioners are running unopposed, but why is vaad not recommending on how to vote o the budget, they usually do. It did meddle into the fire district elections for commissioner last year putting up a last minute candidate.

A simple answer is that the current commissioners were  endorsed previously by the vaad ,therefore the vaad must approve everything going on. Also, in a few months is primary election for township committee where Menashe Miller and Meir Lichtenstein are up for reelection the vaad rathr not bother the tzibbur now and cause voter fatigue, they rather prepare for the primary election battle which is expected to be a exciting campaign.




Masa Umatan Rental List Februaury, 14 2018

Parkland Rabbis Stand With Community Through Tragedy

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Hamodia- The Florida school shooting that gripped the nation on Wednesday was especially traumatizing for the local Parkland community, a great number of whom are Jewish. As police revealed that 17 people had, sadly, been killed, it transpired that some of the victims were Jewish as well. In a conversation with Hamodia on Thursday, Rabbi Shuey Biston, outreach and programming director at Chabad of Parkland, recounted yesterday’s harrowing events.
Photo: Cousins Daniel Zaphrany, left, and David Zaphrany, Bentch Hagomel after surviving the shooting

“I got a phone call about the shooting shortly after it happened,” said Rabbi Biston. “Chabad of Parkland is actually the regional headquarters for Chabad of North Broward and South Palm Beach, and is located five minutes away from the school, so immediately upon receiving the call I hurried over to the school grounds, and I witnessed the emergency vehicles rushing to the scene.


“Kids began pouring out of the school campus, crying and screaming, and in fact between 200-300 of the Jewish students there have had their bar or bat mitzvah at Chabad, so when the kids saw me and my brother-in-law, Rabbi Mendy Gutnick, the educational director at our center, they came running to us, hugging and crying in face of the horror, as frantic parents began arriving in search of their children amid the mass chaos.”

Rabbi Biston notes that there is one girl, who’d had her bat mitzvah at Chabad, whose two friends on either side of her were shot, yet she miraculously escaped unscathed.

After the school’s evacuation was completed, Rabbi Biston and Rabbi Gutnick were left to contend with the heartbroken parents whose children were as of yet unaccounted for. They received reports of four Jewish children, one of whom attended Chabad and the others known to them through family and friends, who were missing.
Rabbi Biston also serves as the chaplain at the Broward County sheriff’s office, and he used his connections to help the parents in their attempt to locate their children among the injured in the hospital, though if a child could not be located outside the school or in the hospital, it sadly meant that the remaining option was that they were part of the crime scene.

Families and friends congregated at a local hotel, and at about 1 a.m. families began being summoned one by one and had the terrible news broken to them. When the Jewish families were called, the Rabbis were at their side, there for them through their cries of grief. The Jewish victims were students Alyssa Alhadeff, who was affiliated with Chabad, Jaime Guttenberg, Meadow Pollack, Alex Schachter and Mr. Scott Beigel, a geography teacher who closed a door as he was shot, saving students’ lives.

Rabbi Biston then worked with Broward County sheriff Scott Israel, who is also a member at Chabad, to ensure that kvod hameis was preserved and there are in fact two funerals scheduled for Friday. Money is currently being raised to help with the funeral expenses: https://thechesedfund.com/cause/funeral-cost-florida-tragedy.

ערב שבת פרשת תרומה ראש חודש אדר Lakewood Zmanim

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Friday, February 16, 2018 / א׳ אדר תשע״ח

-Candle Lighting: 5:15 pm
-Shkiah 5:33pm
-Weather Shabbos day High 36F  chance of rain

בלבבי בלבבי משכן אבנה להדר כבודו, ובמשכן מזבח אקים לקרני הודו, ולנר תמיד אקח לי את אש העקידה, ולקרבן אקריב לו את נפשי היחידה
 (הצדיק רבי אלעזר אזכרי)

Melava Malka Motzei Shbbos Parshas Terumah 5778 Lakewood

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LFD Elections for Budget increase in Tax dollars at Town hall until 10:00pm

-Yeshiva Emek Halacha annual Melava Malka  at Khal Zichron Yaakov 175   Sunset Program begins 9:15 Guest speaker Rav Yitzchok Paler Shlita
-B"M Ohr Yechezkel annual Melava Malka at 307 Ridge avenue 8:30 pm Guest speaker Rav Yaakov Weinfeld Shlita  Rav Lev Avrohom
-B"M Zichron Chaim Villas shul Annual Melava Malka at the shul 901 E Kennedy   boulevard Guest speaker Rav Dovid Feinroth shlita
-Bnos Devorah annual Dinner at Neemas Hachaim hall music by Strumz
-Shloshim event for Mrs. Shevy Shurkin A"H at Bais Faiga hall 8:45 pm for   women & Girls
-Melava Malka Rebbeim Lakewood Cheder at the shabbaton
-Shiras Devorah Dynamic Holocaust Expo 575 Oak  8:30 pm
-Cooking with Comedy at Gourmet Glatt Ladies night out 9:00 pm

LFD Elections for Budget increase in Tax dollars. at Town hall until 10:00pm

BDE

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Matzav.com reports
It is with great sadness that Matzav.com reports the passing of Eliezer Zvi Biegelseisen z”l of Lakewood, he was nine years old.

Eliezer Zvi was a son of R’ Meir and Chava Esther Biegeleisen.

The levayah will be held at 10 p.m. at the Congregation Sons of Israel’s Holocaust Memorial Chapel, located at 613 Ramsey Street, off of East 7th Street, in Lakewood. The family will be sitting shivah at 1675 Hidden Lane.

Yehi zichro boruch.

Lakewood Fire Budget Defeated

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Around 400 people voted today in the Lakewood Fire Elections, the two commissioners ran unopposed.  The fire Budget asking for $1.3 million tax increase was voted down by the taxpayers.

When a budget is defeated State law requires the municipal government  to hold a public hearing on the budget and either approve it or cut the budget.  Last year the Lakewood township made a small reduction of $10,000 and passed the budget after taxpayers voted against it.



Video: Purim Eat4oorah

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  Oorah is proud to announce their latest fundraising campaign, "Eat4Oorah": http://eat4oorah.org/
Join the campaign by committing to gain 5 pounds or more this Purim to help yiddishe kinderlach.
With resources such as a helpful list of high-calorie foods, and support along the way, it’ll be easy to raise the requisite $1,800 to participate.

Song by Binyomin Miller, aka "Skinny Pinny", "Dr. Dreizich":

There’s all these crazy things that everybody does

To make a little money or to make a lot of buzz
You have to be a jogger, a singer, or a tantzer
B’ikar don’t forget that you have to get a sponsor
So this year we decided to do something for Peerim
To help us raise some money, from all of the gevirim
We wanted something classy, with a little bit finesse
So all you have to do is fress and fress and fress!
You don’t have to join, I don’t mean to sound pushy
But listen to the rules, from your friend Ushy
This program is amazing, I don’t mean to sound ba’al ga’avish
But this is where it’s at – no one cares about Fiveish
Let’s see how many pounds every one of you could gain
Let’s see how many sides you could eat before the main
I eat a whole schnapps cake, ad dl’o yudeh
I eat laffy taffys ah gantz choidesh Uder
I tink in the mikvah, Ich mach groiseh hachanos
Before I do the mitzvah of achilas shaloch manos
Before I eat a snack, koidem kol darf Ich vashen
Cuz I’m kovei’ah se’udah on jelly hamentaschen
I ate a lukshen keegel down to the last noodle
I dress up like a XL Kohein Gadol
So raise some gelt for Oorah, they need it really bad
Even though they’ll probably just spend it on an ad
Stop what you’re doing
[kugel, herring, kishke, chulent, mashed potatoes, chocolate donuts]
Just start chewing
[challah, chicken salad, cheesecake, onion rings, pastrami sandwich]
Listen to me, hallo!
[sunny side up, toasted bagel, macaroni, gala, k’neidlach]
Eat up the food and swallow
[yapchik, halva, watermelon, peanut butter, jelly bellies]
On Peerim all the men drink wine until they throw up
And kids trade nosh from aisle three in the Co-up
But you should eat until you look like Og Melech Habashan
You eat the whole Peerim, and maybe even Shushan
While all of your chaveirim are dressing up like clowns
You could spend the day, gaining lots of pounds
You could eat all the cake in Shomer Shabbos in New York
You could eat it even faster if you don’t use a fork
Help the Yiddish kinder by eating fish and lukshen
And it’s a lot more fun than a five dollar auction
I know that you could do it, be a gadol – not a katan
By the end of the day, you should pop every button
You should be so fat and wasted by the time that you finish
You should look like a submarine singing Chayiv Inish
Your friends will not recognize you, they will say, “Ver bist di?”
Everyone will think that you are Chris Christie
Mach a big mesibah, and help kids that are Jewish
Ess vi es darf tzu zayn, kirtzon ish va’ish
I hope you understand from watching this film
That this is a mitzvah that is kineged kulam
Geb a groiseh shmeichel
[salmon, bukser, tangerine, Italian ices, avocado]
Nem ah sach meichel
[rugelach, potato knishes, apple strudel, mozzarella]
Join my chaburah
[frozen pizza, sour bears, potato chips, farshidineh greentzeig]
And come eat for Oorah
[chocolate pudding, oatmeal cookies, pickles, yogurt, burny snack bags]

Sunday Feburary 18 Lakewood, NJ

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-A Fun Purim Shopping Experience at Gourmet Glatt Lakewood  today Sunday
there will be a clown, live  music & giveaways From 12:00 - 3:15

-Costume Closeouts 2275 W County Line Beenet Mills Plaza, Jackson open today from 10:00 pm-9:00pm

-Flash Sales every hour at Evergreen kosher in Lakewood

-Golden Fluff Purim Snack Headquarters walk in arehouse get snacks by the case Corner 2nd and Monmouth Lakewood, NJ 9:00 am -6:00 pm

-CKY camp reunion register at Bias Hatorah hall 1815 Swathmore 4:30- 8:30

Shoppers Pack Stores ahead of Purim

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Stores and shopping centers in Lakewood were jam packed today with shoppers trying to beat the erev Purim Rush. With only one more Sunday before Purim, people were buying up shalach manos items and other purim goods. At some stores the lines were out the door with parking lots full to capacity. Stores advertised sale items and frugal shoppers flocked to take advantage. 
families with children were getting costumes and other purim shtick in various stores.
With lots of stores hopefully there is enough buisness for everyone during the yom tov season.  

Oif Simchas/Events lakewood February 18, 2018

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-Vort: Hachosson Yaakov Freimark to Hakallah Tzippy Borenstein bas R' Dov at Stolin Hall at 153 east 7th st in lkwd from
7:00 pm -10:00 pm 
-Vort: Hachosson Mendy Bloch to Hakallah bas R' Tzvi Ziskind at Tashbar   Simcha hall  82 oak street Lakewood, NJ 6:30-9:30 pm
-Vort: Hachosson Chaim Rosner to Hakallah Devoiry Bernfeld Bas R' Menachem at KZY 175 Sunset 6:00 pm- 9:00 pm

-Chasuna: Beyer Schwartz Ateres Chana hall Bais Faiga

-Dinner Yeshiva Ohr Yehuda of Lakewood at Ne'emas Hachaim hall reception 7:00 pm
-Rachmasrivka Cheder of Lakewood annual Dinner at Ateres Reva hall 7:00 pm
-Parlor meeting yeshiva Amalah Shel Torah at 606 9th street 9:30 pm
-Parlor Meeting  on behalf of Mishpachas Harav Avrohom Erlanger shlita (Mechaber Sefer Birchas Avrohom) at 10 Palm Court across from Bais Rivka Rochel 10:00 -11:30 pm Guest Speaker R' Yaakov Rayman shlita

- For Women & girls Rachel Factor evening of song, Dance and Inspiration at Zichron Shneur hall 280 Oak Knoll, Lakewood nj 8:30 pm $20 admission  R' Tovia Factor will speak at 10:30 for the men

Live stream A Time Shas-a- Thon


Audio: Secular Subjects in Yeshivas

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Headlines Podcast
One Thousand Dollar Sandwich - Is it Kosher?
with Rabbi Aryeh Leibowitz - Rav of Beis Haknesses of North Woodmere - 16:15

Secular Subjects in Yeshivas 
with Rabbi Gedalya Weinberger - Chairman, PCS - Chairman Emeritus, Agudas Yisroel - 33:30
with HaRav Shmuel Kamenetzky Shlit"a - Rosh HaYeshiva, Philadelphia - 54:20
with HaRav Dovid Yosef Shlit"a - Rav, Har Nof - Member, Moetzet Chachmei HaTorah - 55:20
with HaRav Mendel Shafran - Av Beis Din Hayashar V'hatov Yerushalayim, Rosh Yeshiva Noam Hatorah Bnei Brak - 106:30
with HaRav Nissan Kaplan - R"M Yeshivas Mir, Yerushalayim - 58:00

with HaRav Hershel Schachter - Rosh Yeshiva, Yitzchok Elchonon, Leading Posek for OU Kosher - 107:45
with HaRav Nochum Eisenstein - Rav in Maalot Dafna, Talmid of Rav Elyashiv - 110:40
with HaRav Zalman Gifter - Rav, Nesivos Mordechai Toms River, NJ - 122:50
with HaRav Mayer Schiller - Spokesperson for New Square - 136:15

Presidents Day

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Lakewood Township Municipal Offices will be Closed on Monday, February 19, 2018 in observance of President's Day. The public schools are also closed. The United States Postal Service will not deliver mail on Presidents Day, but UPS and FedEx will operate as usual.  

Rockwel: Tel Talpiyos Campaign for Satmar Bais Medrash

Oif Simchas Lakewood February 19, 2018

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-Vort: Hachosson Avrohom Simcha "Sika" Friedman to Hakallah Chaya Rochel Klein Bas R' Moishe at 207 Glen Ave South Lakewood 7:30 pm
-Vort: Hachosson Moishe Goldstein To Hakallah Bas R' Avi Feigenbaum  8:30 pm @ Bnos Devorah 360 Oak Street, Lakewood NJ

-Chasuna: Bleier- Goldring at Lake Terrace hall
-Chasuna: Kaminsky- Richter Ateres Chana Hall Bais Faiga
-Chasuna: Klein- Friedman Ateres Reva hall
-Chasuna: Rochwerger- Silberberg Fountain Ballroom Lakewood Cheder

What Is the New Law Regarding Giyus Habanos, and Why Has It Sparked Such a Commotion?

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OP-ED: Agudas Bnei Torah of America posted on JBN

Did you know that religious girls are being drafted into the army?
Did you know that young girls are being put in jail?
Did you know that this past Tuesday, Feb 13 the Israeli Government enacted a law granting the IDF the final say in whether or not an applicant for a religious exemption is indeed “religious”?
Like many, you may have heard only vague reports or may be totally unaware. Please read this op-ed outlining the current deteriorating situation for our dear young girls living today in the Holy Land of Eretz Yisrael.

The Way it Was

In the early 1950’s the religious community in Eretz Yisroel was in an uproar over the issue of giyus habanos– compulsory conscription of women into the Israeli Defense Forces (IDF). The Chazon Ish, zatzal, and the other gedolim of the day waged a fierce battle to oppose the implementation of any program or law that would require religious young women to serve in the military in any capacity, including substituting military service with a compulsory term of sheirut leumi-National Service (which includes various branches of public services).  



No doubt as a result of the furor that was created, the government did not pursue conscription policies for religious women. Women were allowed to apply for a military deferment based on religious grounds. The application process was simple, and the deferments were easily obtained:

At age 16, girls received a draft order and were given a full year to respond to it. 
A girl was able to sign an affidavit stating that she objects to serving in the army on religious grounds, and that she maintains a religious lifestyle in that she does not drive on Shabbos, and she eats only kosher food, both at home and outside her home.
The affidavit was authorized by a rabbi, and was then submitted to the lishkas hagiyus-the Recruitment Office of the IDF. Oftentimes, the authorization and submission of the affidavit were done through the girls’ school.
The army was legally required to accept the affidavit, and the submission thereof automatically granted the young woman a lifetime deferment from military service.
Nullifying the exemption was possible, but highly unlikely. In order for the army to do so, a formal complaint would have to be filed against the girl alleging that her declaration was false. The complaint would have to be filed within 30 days of the submission of the affidavit, and proof of the allegation would have to be brought in court in a timely fashion.


The New Law

The Chok Sheirut Bitachon is the State of Israel’s law that mandates compulsory army service for Israeli citizens.

In 2010 an amendment to the law-“Tikun 18”-was brought to the floor of the Kneset. The amendment was aimed at simplifying the procedure to annul, when deemed necessary, a religious exemption that a religious girl had received. If passed, Tikun 18 would give the IDF the authority to reject a young woman’s affidavit for up to two years after her submission if they had legitimate cause to believe that the declaration was false.

United Torah Judaism (UTJ) was, obviously, opposed to the new law, and MK M. Gafni requested that Prime Minister Sharon veto it based on the argument that the law was one-sided; it granted the military the right to decide that the applicant’s declaration was false, but did not provide adequate means for the applicant to defend herself. Sharon agreed, and the law was terminated.

In 2012, the law was brought up again by the Kadimah party. Despite strong opposition from UTJ (which was, at the time, in a coalition with Kadimah) the law was passed as a temporary law that would be in force for a period of three years from the time of the law’s implementation.  However, before the law could be implemented, the Kneset ruled that the relevant government committees responsible for overseeing the draft system would have to confer and decide upon the exact parameters and conditions of the law. This finalization of the law never took place, and, consequently, the law was never implemented.

This past November (2017) a reform organization by the name of Chidush petitioned the Supreme Court to implement the law. The Supreme Court, in turn, charged the Kneset with setting up the law, and gave the Kneset a deadline to do so-February 18, 2018.

The next three months were months of turmoil. The Kneset attempted numerous times to hold a meeting of lawmakers and representatives from the relevant committees to work out the details of the law but the meeting was repeatedly postponed, at times due to forceful public protests.

But on Tuesday Feb 13, days from the deadline, the dreaded news came. The committees had met to give the law its final form, and Tikun 18 was enacted. As of now, the IDF is able to challenge the authenticity of a young woman’s declaration of religious observance for up to two years after the submission of her affidavit.

The law gives the IDF broad authority to challenge an affidavit and to call the applicant to a ra’ayon dat-a “religion interview” in order to ascertain whether or not her claim of being religious is reasonable. 

The ra’ayon dat is not a novelty. In a number of cases over the past decade or so the Supreme Court handed down rulings allowing the army to interview applicants for a religious exemption, or girls who has already received an exemption, in order to ascertain that the girl in question was indeed religious. Although this authorization was only given for the specific cases at hand, the IDF used these rulings as precedents, and has been known to subject girls to a ra’ayon dat on their own whim.

In the past two years the IDF has brazenly been calling ever increasing numbers of applicants to a ra’ayon dat. The Mizrachi newspaper, HaShavua, reported that at least a 50% of religious girls have been called in for a ra’ayon dat this year. In an in depth article printed in HaShavua (Jan. 19, 2017) a rabbi is quoted as reporting that in his school a frightening 80% of the girls were called for a ra’ayon dat. Many Mizrachi rabbanim had recently begun to instruct their constituents to refuse to participate in a ra’ayon dat, if they are called in.

Although the IDF was subjecting many girls to a ra’ayon dat, the legality of their actions was very questionable. Now, with the passing of Tikun 18, this unpleasant tactic has become a proceeding that the IDF is legally authorized to implement. The IDF will be able to challenge any young woman’s affidavit almost indiscriminately, and with impunity, for a long period of time after her submission.



Unfair Evaluations

In a ra’ayon dat, the young and frightened applicant is taken into a room without a parent or an accompanying friend, and appears before a panel of five evaluators, who question her on matters pertaining to religion.

The five member panel consists of:

One rabbi serving (or who has served) in the IDF,
One individual recommended by the Chief Rabbi’s office.
Two officers serving (or who have served) in the IDF,
One judge.
The fairness of the ra’ayon dat is questionable. Of the five members on the panel, only the first two will necessarily be religious.The others need not be, and it is entirely possible that these members will be lacking in a basic understanding of Judaism. Nevertheless, they are given the authority to assess someone else’s level of religious observance.

Many times, the questions created by these young “judges” include fine details of religious observance. Presumably, these questions were researched since anirreligious evaluatorwould have no first-hand intimate knowledge of Judaism. Sometimes the questions are beyond what even fully religious girls – brought up in religious homes and schooled in religious schools – would be aware of!

Samples of questions girls have been asked in a ra’ayon dat:

How many chapters are there in Pirkei Avot? 
Can you recite the blessing of kiddush levanah?
Girls who cannot properly answer the questions are then denied their exemption for not living a “religious lifestyle”!

While at the interview, the evaluators use coercive tactics and persuasion methods to convince girls to enlist, even if her exemption is upheld. She is confronted with various arguments, and the evaluators play on her emotions. A common tactic is to cause the girl to feel guilty for not contributing to the state.

Girls have also been told that the IDF has hidden information about them, showing that they are not really religious as they claim to be, and have been threatened with the exposure of the information if they didn’t agree to enlist.

Sometimes, girls are told to return the next day for further questioning. There have been cases of girls who have avoided reappearing, and who have been arrested and put in jail.

A Nefarious Agenda

When discussing Tikun 18, the Knesset states its concern that there are completely irreligious girls who are taking advantage of the current law, and who are wrongfully applying for religious exemptions. Tikun 18 allows the IDF to quickly identify these cases.

But in reality the government has clearly expressed its desire to begin a proactive campaign to recruit religious girls. In the summer of 2013 the Government passed a resolution (Decision No. 638, Subsection 64) that directed the army to pursue the recruitment of religious girls, and recently, sources have revealed that a new office has been established to serve under the Chief of Staff, whose sole directive is to hasten the recruitment of religious girls.



Preying on the Vulnerable

Before the government and IDF embarked on their new initiative to enlist religious women, all young women were legally allowed to sign a declaration that they fit the requirements for a religious exemption, and the military had no real way to thwart them. But sadly, in today’s reality, several groups of young women have become easy prey for the IDF, who can now subject them to a ra’ayon dat, which they are all the more likely to fail, and have begun to apply undue pressure, using unethical tactics, to persuade them to enlist.

The more vulnerable groups include:

Girls who are weaker in their observance,
Girls who have a sibling already serving in the IDF,
Religious girls from families that are marginally religious or irreligious,
Recent immigrants from France,
Girls from outlying areas of the country, and
Baalos teshuvah, who were formerly irreligious, even though they are now fully religious.


Underhanded Tactics

In the preceding generation, the Chazon Ish, zatzal, and the Steipler Gaon, zatzal, ruled that it is forbidden for a religious girl to enter the lishkas hagiyus, deeming it an act that is yehareig ve’al ya’avor (an act that one must avoid, even if it leads to the forfeiture of one’s life). In our times, Harav Chaim Kanievsky, shlita, reiterated this ruling on several occasions when asked whether or not a young woman should comply if she has been summoned to appear at the lishkas hagiyus in order to get her deferment.

Now, however, it is becoming more commonplace to see numerous chareidi girls entering the lishkash giyus on a daily basis. The government and the IDF are expending great energy to devise and implement ways and means to lure these girls into those buildings at all costs. Once inside, the girls are subject to interactions with the authorities aimed at persuading and coercing the girls to agree to enlist. 

In times past, the Rabanut was accommodating and would send dayanim to chareidi girls’ schools twice a year to sign all of the students’ affidavits. The school would then send these affidavits via registered mail to the lishkas hagiyus, and the girls would receive their deferments as a matter of course.

Two years ago, even before the passing of Tikun 18, the IDF forbade the Rabanut from paying the dayanim for their services at the schools, and even forbade the dayanim from accepting any monetary reimbursement for their lost time and travel expenses. (The official defense of this action was in order to avoid bribery of the dayanim!) Consequently, the Rabanut announced that due to a lack of manpower they can only send a dayan down to a school if there are 120 girls in need of a signature.

Based on the country’s birth records, the IDF prepares a draft notice for every young woman who turns 16. In the past, the IDF mailed these notices out twice annually (every 6 months) but recently the IDF began sending out the notices quarterly (every 3 months). Additionally, whereas in the past a young woman would be granted one full year to respond to her notice, new legislation has been passed that grants her only 3 months to respond.

Thus, in any given school small groups of girls are continuously becoming “of age,” and must quickly submit their affidavits. A school rarely has a group of 120 girls at one time who need the dayan’s authorization. The new legislation has successfully brought about the necessity for the girls to take care of their affidavits themselves. They must seek out a dayan themselves, and they must present the affidavit to the lishkas hagiyus themselves.

Both prospects present an issue for the chareidi population who wish to protect their daughters from interaction with their surrounding secular Israeli society.

In order to have her affidavit signed by a dayan, the girl must go down to a state Beit Din. (She can also get the affidavit signed by a shofet at a state Beit Hamishpat.) While in these government offices the girls are often detained, sometimes for long hours, in a place where secular Israelis are dealing with issues of divorce, harassment and abuse, mamzeirus, and other unfortunate issues. It is not a place that a frum girl should have to enter. 
In the past, a girl could have a relative bring her affidavit inside the lishkas hagiyus, or could even submit it to the soldier guarding the outside of the building. No longer. Currently, the policy is that the affidavits must be delivered personally.
Girls who have opted to mail in their affidavits via registered mail have received letters or phone calls denying the receipt of their affidavits, and demanding that they appear at the lishkas hagiyus at any rate. Sometimes the affidavit is returned in the mail for no apparent reason. This has also happened to girls who personally delivered their affidavits. The lishkas hagiyus has mysteriously stopped giving a receipt for a submitted affidavit, and girls are often called down to re-appear, after being informed that their affidavit was not received.

The IDF has even been known to contact these girls after their allotted 3 months. The girl is now considered “late” and can be subjected to a ra’ayon dat. Sometimes, the IDF simply refuses to accept the submitted affidavit if it is given in too close to the deadline. They will later accept it, but since the 3-month deadline has passed, the applicant is also subjected to a ra’ayon dat.

Girls have been called down to pick up their deferments in person. Once in the office, the officers there will try to coerce them into enlisting, or subject them to a ra’ayon dat.

There have been reports of girls who were told to sign a “exemption form,” and then are told that they were in reality signing a consent to enlist.



The Fear Factor

The IDF commonly plays on a girl’s emotions and fears. Some girls have received arrest warrants even after sending in their declaration in a timely fashion, or have received a home visit by a soldier to inform them that they could be arrested any day for being a deserter.

In this climate of uncertainty and fear, many girls are simply so alarmed and anxious that they choose to enlist voluntarily rather than go through the torment engendered by the authorities in their attempts to coerce them to enlist.



Breach of Human Rights

Giyus habanos is an embarrassing stain on the State of Israel’s reputation. Only one other country in the world – North Korea – subjects its female citizens to compulsory army conscription.

But beyond that, it is shocking for a government to force any of its citizens into military service if such service goes against their religious (or even personal) beliefs. Indeed, the world community recognizes this as a breach of basic human rights.

The International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights (ICCPR) is a multilateral treaty that was adopted by the United Nations General Assembly in 1966. The covenant commits its parties to respect the civil and political rights of individuals, including the right to life, freedom of religion, freedom of speech, freedom of assembly, electoral rights and rights to due process and a fair trial. The ICCPR is part of the International Bill of Human Rights.

The ICCPR does not allow a government to conscript its citizens into army service against their beliefs.

The Israeli government officially recognizes that serving in the armed forces can be a contradiction to maintaining a fully religious lifestyle. It is incomprehensible that a government can promote a policy designed to compromise its citizens’ rights to freely engage in their familiar religious lifestyle.

The passing into law of Tikun 18 is not a matter to be treated lightly. It affords the government a very dangerous tool in their campaign to see a broad compulsory army conscription of the dati and chareidi sectors of Israeli society. It is an especially frightening prospect that the government is now targeting bnos yisroel, whose goal in life is to maintain a high level of tznius and kedushah, as they raise the next generation of the Jewish nation.

Kol kvudah bas melech pnimah. The outrage, and the affront to the Torah and to the human rights of our young Israeli sisters must stop. Please help our cause by getting informed, getting involved and by helping to get our voices heard!
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