Yair Lapid and Aryeh Deri - Photo Credit: Arutz Sheva |
It’s hard to tell exactly where the truth lies. But there is
definitely something going on with Shas, the party guided by the rabbinic
leadership of Rav Ovadia Yosef. And it is for the better.
According to a Ynet report last week, Shas actually agreed
to install a core curriculum into its educational system. That would mean that
it will not lose any funding. It would also mean that all Sephardi Yeshivos
would be able to continue functioning as they have in their study of Torah for the vast
majority of the day – leaving only a couple of hours for the core curriculum.
If that is the case, it is an earth shattering decision. A crack in the wall of unified Charedi opposition to Limudei Chol.
If this were to happen a new era would begin whereby Charedi
students (at least Sephardi ones) would for the first time be able to learn
some of the basic skills necessary for the modern day job market. Skills that would
enable them to go on towards a higher education and even professional schools.
Not that they would all do that. I’m sure that the Charedi ethic of full time
Torah study would still be emphasized and that a core curriculum would be
seen much the same way it is by Charedim in the US – as a necessary evil
required by the government. While that is still problematic, the mere fact
that they are mandating a core secular studies program is a major step forward
as it will provide better options for those who do want to enter the workforce
at some point in their lives. They will have those skills in their pockets.
I
would hope that even though they would be installing a core curriculum under
protest, that they would have at least the same attitude about it that Rav Elia Svei had that there is no Mitzvah to waste your time. If you are going
to study Limudei Chol, you may as well do it well. His Yeshiva high school in Philadelphia once boasted a fine secular studies program.
Education Minister Shai Piron - Photo credit: Arutz Sheva |
Unfortunately the conversation was characterized by Deri as a
victory for Shas. That deteriorated into an accusation by Finance Minister Yair Lapid
into calling Deri liar. So much for
trying to avoid hatred.
But, despite all this uncertainty, I see light at the end of
the tunnel. It seems that Shas has at least blinked. If in the end there is
some sort of core curriculum adopted by Shas... that will destroy the so-called
unified opposition by Charedi rabbinic leadership to secular
studies. The idea put forward that the evil Israel government is out only to
destroy Yiddishkeit incrementally - a little bit at a time will lose its validity. Because if
Shas has adopted this program it will show that a Gadol is now convinced that
this is not so… something which most of the rest of the religious world already
knows. Besides - they would have to accuse Rav Yosef of joining with the forces of
evil. I do not see that happening.
I don’t know where that puts the Ashkeanzi rabbinic leaders.
But my guess it is somewhere between a rock and a hard place. All the screaming
and shouting about leaving the country instead of succumbing to the evil decree
will be seen for what it is - an
unreasonable fear of the past. A past based on legitimate fears about removing
Jews from the shackles of Torah. Where anti Torah forces insidiously wanted to introduce a few innocent core subjects that they hoped would become a slippery slope away from
Yiddishkeit. This is what I have called fighting ghosts.
I don’t know whether the current Askenazi rabbinic leaders
will change their attitude. My guess is that they won’t. How they will deal
with Rav Yosef is an interesting question. But I’m sure they will stick to the
program.
What may very well happen is that a new grass roots paradigm will arise along
the lines of a Yeshiva like Marava. Marava
is a Charedi Yeshiva that operates on the American model. They have a serious
Limudei Kodesh (religious studies) program and a serious Limudi Chol program. Which is subject to the educational standards of the State. These new schools may not measure
up entirely to Marava, but they will measure up to whatever the government decides is
a required core curriculum.
It would therefore be a prudent move for these rabbinic leaders to be
in on the negotiations of what a core curriculum should consist of. If Shas has
decided to go along with this program than I’m sure they will be in on the
process.
If this happens the Ashkenazi Charedi world can then have its cake - and eat
it too. What will happen is what should have happened a long time ago. The vast
majority of their students will get a minimal amount of preparation for a
better life – a life that will no longer almost guarantee poverty. But there will also probably still be some Charedi schools that will not offer
secular studies. They will be privately funded. And there will be a lot
less of them. They will contain the elite students of Torah with the potential to
be Gedolim.
Not that I think they too wouldn’t be better off with a
strong knowledge of Limudei Chol. But... one battle at a time.
Now that Shas has (hopefully) come around... this is a step in
the right direction which may spark an overall change. The only question is… have they? Or is all this just talk?
I guess we’ll have to wait and see.