The
Blessings of Hesder Yeshivot
Rabbi Eliezer
Melamed
Hesder
Yeshivot
In recent
years, various people have criticized and attacked the Hesder yeshivot
because of its shortened military track. True, they acknowledge that the Hesder
yeshiva students are good soldiers, but they claim that specifically
because they are good soldiers, the argument is even stronger: Why shouldn’t
they contribute three years like their secular brothers? Let’s go back to
square one.
The Value
of Torah Study
Israel’s
existence depends on its connection to the Torah. When we kept the Torah, we
flourished; when we abandoned the Torah, we were defeated by our enemies and
exiled from our land. Even during the lengthy exile, we survived in the merit
of Torah study.
The more straightforward
the learning is, the greater positive influence it has. Some of the troubles
stemmed from Torah study that was not properly oriented, for example, when studying
Torah without first reciting a blessing (Nedarim 81a), in other words,
without emunah (faith) in God who gave us the Torah, or without
recognizing the specialness of Am Yisrael and its unique role, as we recite
in the blessing: “Who chose us from among all the peoples, and gave us His
Torah.”
In the
Zionist yeshivot, Torah is studied straightforwardly, and as a result this
type of learning showers blessings on all areas of national life. The quality
of the soldiers is one example of this.
The
Percent of Combat Soldiers
The percent
of combat soldiers from Hesder yeshivot is especially high – approximately
85%. There is no other group with such a high percentage of combat soldiers.
This figure is even more amazing when considering the basic data of yeshiva
students. We are not talking about guys with particularly combat qualities. Many
young, religious men who are emotionally and physically fit for combat service,
nowadays enlist for three years and serve in elite units. The young men who go
to Hesder yeshivot are regular guys, with a desire to learn Torah. In
other circles, many of them would be considered nerds – medium-bodied with eyeglasses,
preferring to avoid combat service. But in the framework of Hesder, they
enlist for combat units. Despite their apparently inferior beginning figures,
the Hesder platoons are usually the outstanding units in the battalions,
and in most competitions, they come in first place – both in physical fitness,
and in their level of professionalism. Ten percent of Hesder soldiers continue
to become commanders and officers.
The
Welcome Impact of the Learning
The welcome
impact of the learning continues later on, as well. Among the graduates
emerging from Hesder yeshivot are rabbis, educators, researchers, social
activists, workers and businessmen helping to develop the Israeli economy.
Many of them
earn above-average salaries, remain in the country, and pay taxes. Several
merit establishing sizeable families – larger than their parents – and thanks
to them, the Jewish nation continues to recover from the curse of the exile.
When people
talk about the ‘brain drain’ of academics leaving Israel to go abroad, everyone
knows they are not Hesder yeshivot graduates. They stay in Israel. Prof.
Moshe Kaveh, former president of Bar-Ilan University, commented to me that
these young men are worth investing in above all, because they will return the
full investment.
Many of the yeshiva
graduates settle Judea and Samaria, fulfilling the vision of the prophets, trying
to save the people of Israel – survivors of the sword – from the terrible
threat of withdrawal from our old-new homeland.
The vast
majority continue serving for decades in reserve combat units – and this, while
out of the total population, only ten percent serve in reserve duty.
Several educators,
rabbis in Secondary and Higher yeshivot, rabbis in synagogues,
communities and neighborhoods are Hesder yeshiva graduates. On a daily
basis, they carry on their backs the mission of educating. Thanks to them,
religious education is constantly advancing, developing generations of students
loyal to the Torah, the Jewish people, and the Land of Israel.
The
Welcome Impact on the I.D.F.
In the first
decades of the State, the religious community was made up of good Jews who
clung to the Torah under harsh conditions, but unfortunately, were not b’nai
Torah (leading their lives according to Torah). Their positive
influence was minimal. They raised youth ashamed of wearing a kippah,
and many of their children left religion. They did not stand out in the army,
and only a few reached elite units.
The main
reason for the improvement of the level of military service among the religious
is the Torah study in yeshivot. Out of the learning halls of Mercaz
HaRav and Beit El yeshivot emerged Rabbi Eli Sedan and Rabbi
Yigal Levenstein, who established the Pre-Military Academy (mechina) in
Eli. And as a result, all the other preparatory academies were inspired by the
great spirit blowing in the study halls of the yeshivot were Torah was
learned straightforwardly – Torat Eretz Yisrael. Even the men who served
in the army without studying first in a mechina, received a boost and
inspiration from their peers who studied in yeshivot.
Until then, the
majority of yeshiva students were Hareidim who learned the Torah
of chutz l’aretz and failed to appreciate the Israeli army; consequently,
the religious who did serve, walked bent over. But as the Zionist yeshivot became
stronger, the stature of those serving straightened out. They knew that in the sacred
Zionist yeshivot they were very much appreciated, and their service was
accompanied by love and prayer. The contribution of the religious soldiers intensified,
until they became the leaders in all of the combat units.
The
Claims of the Ignorant
Anybody observing
the enormous blessings the Hesder yeshivot have produced realizes that
the more students they have, the better off the State of Israel and the I.D.F.
are. Still, there are some ignoramuses, who insist on harming the Hesder
yeshivot by limiting the number of students, or by reducing the months
spent learning Torah.
They fail to
understand that the study of Torat Eretz Yisrael in the holy Zionist yeshivot
– both in Hesder and higher yeshivot, is the reason for all this
wonderful prosperity. Those who think that by shortening Torah study they will
gain more months of combat service, are similar to a fool who slaughters the
chicken that lays the golden eggs.
Those same
ignoramuses also fail to understand that the difficulty of maintaining a
religious way of life in the army caused many not to enlist and cross over to
the Haredi community. Thanks to the yeshiva students the Jewish
character of the army was strengthened – first in the Hesder divisions,
and from there its influence spread throughout all of the I.D.F.
Harming
the Dignity of Hesder Yeshivot
The
criticism from the religious public causes the greatest harm, aiding and
abetting the attacks of the secular public on the Hesder yeshivot. The person
who actually led this assault more than anyone else is MK Elazar Stern. I
believe his intention was good, but in practice, no one slandered the Hesder
yeshivot and the religious public more than him. He began slandering Hesder
when he was the head of Human Resources (Aka) in the I.D.F., and continues
today.
The average
secular Jew greatly appreciates the Hesder yeshiva students, but after a
religious person with senior military status like himself sharply criticizes
their shortened army service – it is hard to expect from a secular person to
understand more than him, the importance of Torah study. Yet, many of them do
understand, as evidenced by Maj. Gen. (Res.) Yiftach Ron-Tal.
The Claim
of Equality
And still,
there are those who ask: Isn’t this preferential treatment of the Hesder
yeshiva students who serve only sixteen months, as opposed to the rest of
the soldiers who serve thirty-two months?
The answer
is: There is no preferential treatment whatsoever, because any young man who
wants to study Torah in a Hesder yeshiva, can. To do so, he must commit
to serve five years, of which sixteen months are spent in the army, and the
rest of the time in yeshiva. Anyone who is willing to sacrifice another
two years of his life for this purpose – welcome!
We recently
hosted three soldiers for a Shabbat meal – two regular soldiers and their
commander, a Hesder yeshiva student. I asked the two soldiers if they
would prefer to continue on a Hesder track, and complete it two years
later. Both of them preferred finishing the army in three years and to be freed
of any obligation.
Ask soldiers
yourself what they would prefer – serving for three years, or for five years
with most of the time spent in yeshiva, and you will immediately realize
there is no preferential treatment. After all, the teachers in yeshiva
high schools try to convince the students to go to Hesder yeshivot, but
many of them fail to be convinced, because despite understanding the importance
of Torah study, the task is too difficult for them.
If Only Everyone
Served in Hesder
If only all
I.D.F. combat soldiers served in the Hesder framework! As a result, our
security situation would be improved. Straightforward Torah study shapes one’s
entire value system, and improves the soldiers in all respects – reliability,
responsibility, professionalism, and above all else – high motivation.
If the
majority of soldiers were to enter their army service after learning in a Hesder
yeshiva, loaded with such values, military service could be streamlined,
its duration could be shortened, and better results could be achieved. Incidentally,
the Hesder model of army service is the only one that can cause a genuine
recruitment of members of the Hareidi community.
The
Proper Policy
The exaggerated
yearning to receive approval and agreement from other authorities is one of the
difficult problems of religious public representatives. They should have
opposed adding even one month of service, calmly explaining the huge
contribution Torah study has for Israeli society at large, and at the same
time, work to increase the number of applicants to Hesder yeshivot for
next year. Correcting the situation begins with an inner-belief in ideas and
values, and the ability to maintain them even in difficult times.
In the face
of all the attacks, it must be stated that we also have claims and
proposals for change: for example, eliminating compulsory conscription of women,
who’s national, economic, and moral damage outweighs its benefit. Likewise, a careful
investigation should be made as to why the percentage of army evaders and yordim
(emigrants) among the secular is so high. Isn’t it about time they put a little
more genuine Jewish and Zionist education in the schools? Isn’t it about time they
reinforced family values and modesty? If equality, then why only in the narrow area
of the length of regular army service? Why not demand an equal percentage of
recruits to all combat units from all groups and sectors? And why not demand an
equal percentage of reserve duty soldiers? Why does the religious community
have to contribute to the army several hundred percent more than its
proportionate share?
The ‘Yesh
Atid’ party arose out of the claim that the middle-class, which bears the
burden of the State’s existence, could not be squeezed any further. The
National-Religious community is therefore the quintessence of bearing the burden!
More than anyone else, it enlists in the army en masse for both regular and
reserve duty, guards the legacy of Torah study and mitzvoth, establishes
large families, pays above-average taxes, frequently volunteers, encourages aliyah
and prevents yeridah, settles the land, and sacrifices their lives in
defense of the nation and the land beyond all others – as attested to by the kedoshim
(holy ones), whose bodies lie in the cemeteries. There is a limit to how much
more can be squeezed from it. All these contributions are thanks to the
significant education and Torah study in the Hesder yeshivot.