Ultra-Orthodox men block Jerusalem traffic in protest against Israeli military draft

September 13, 2023 GMT
Israeli police officers disperse ultra-Orthodox Jewish men and boys blocking a road during a protest against the country's military draft, in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Sept.13, 2023. Demonstrators said they were protesting the arrest of an ultra-Orthodox man accused of evading the military draft. Military service is mandatory for most Jewish Israeli men, but the ultra-Orthodox often receive exemptions in order to continue their religious studies. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg)
Israeli police officers disperse ultra-Orthodox Jewish men and boys blocking a road during a protest against the country's military draft, in Jerusalem, Wednesday, Sept.13, 2023. Demonstrators said they were protesting the arrest of an ultra-Orthodox man accused of evading the military draft. Military service is mandatory for most Jewish Israeli men, but the ultra-Orthodox often receive exemptions in order to continue their religious studies. (AP Photo/Ohad Zwigenberg)

Hundreds of ultra-Orthodox men on Wednesday blocked a major Jerusalem intersection, snarling traffic and crippling public transportation across the city, in a demonstration against an attempt to force a community member to comply with the country’s mandatory military draft..

The demonstrators formed a large circle on the tracks of the city’s light rail, singing, dancing and praying. Train service was halted, and traffic was backed up for blocks.

The demonstration was a precursor of a looming battle over the country’s military draft.

Military service is compulsory for Jewish males, but politically powerful ultra-Orthodox parties have won exemptions for their communities to allow men to study full-time in religious seminaries. These exemptions have prompted widespread anger and resentment from the secular majority.

With the government working on a new draft law, ultra-Orthodox parties, which are a key coalition partner of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, hope to strengthen the system of exemptions. Opponents, including key members of a mass protest movement against Netanyahu’s judicial overhaul, say the exemptions are unfair and must end.

Although young ultra-Orthodox men are generally exempt from military service, they must still register with the army. Israeli media said Wednesday’s protest was triggered by the arrest of a young religious man who refused to file the paperwork.