The Best National Service for Women
Rabbi Eliezer Melamed
Army
Service for Women
Q: Rabbi, in your opinion, are women permitted
to serve in the Israel Defense Forces?
A: The opinion of almost all rabbis is
that women should not serve in the I.D.F. for two main reasons. The first
reason is maintaining tzniyut (modesty) in the framework of the army, for
the Torah specifically commands us to be stricter about guarding the sanctity
of the military camp (Deuteronomy 23:10-15).
The second reason is the fear that a young woman’s spiritual and religious
level will decline being in a secular framework and under the command of
non-religious officers. And although these two reasons relate primarily to
service in combat units, in practice, such concerns also exist in other units.
Therefore, the rabbis who ruled categorically against women serving in the army
were correct, with some of them vigorously encouraging National Service as a
substitute for military service.
The
Public Course of Events
In the first
decades of the State of Israel, the majority of national-religious girls served
in the army. The prevailing attitude among most of the national-religious
community was that the need to safeguard national security and integrating into
the general public were supreme values worth endangering an individual’s
religious level. In practice, during those years about half of the graduates of
the religious educational system abandoned the tradition of Torah observance.
As a result
of the bitter consequences of this unmonitored integration, and thanks to the
strengthening of Torah education, Torah values and mitzvoth became more predominant,
and the percentage of those abandoning religion declined to about twenty
percent. At the same time, the number of religious girls serving in the army greatly
diminished. In the year 2000, only 1,700 religious girls out of a graduating
class of 7,000 enlisted in the army. In 2008, their numbers dropped below
1,300, which was less than twenty percent of the graduates of the religious
school system.
Although the
percentage of girls who became non-religious is equivalent to the percentage of
those enlisting in the army, they do not fully match. Some girls abandoned religion
without serving in the army, while others who did serve became religiously
stronger. But in general, the trends of enlisting in the army and a weakening
of religious observance were compatible.
Changes
in Recent Years
In recent years,
significant changes took place. On the one hand, the number of girls wishing to
do National Service continued to rise, whereas the number of challenging
positions to serve in has not increased accordingly. Every prestigious position
attracts competition, and as a result many girls receive repeated rejections
and feel frustrated. In order to address the demand of girls wishing to serve,
new paths were opened in which it is difficult to maintain a suitable religious
atmosphere. Thus, even in the framework of National Service, girls are faced
with difficult trials.
At the same
time, the army is making a great effort to recruit high-standard religious
girls. To do so, they offer the girls challenging courses, promising to provide
a supportive religious environment, and some of the units are actually doing
this successfully. Thus, within five years, the number of religious girls
enlisting in the army has grown from under 1,300 a year, to over 1,500. Together
with this, the religious situation of the girls serving in the army has
improved, thanks both to the improving conditions in the army, and to the
preparation and guidance the girls receive from the midrashot (seminaries)
established for this purpose.
I heard a
story about a religious girl serving in the Intelligence Corps in the Tel Aviv
area. Most evenings she sleeps at her parent’s house, but occasionally, she has
to do night-duty. One Shabbat, as she
stood at the gate of her base, a senior officer drove up. She requested to see
his permit to drive on Shabbat. Seeing as he did not have one, she refused to
open the gate. The officer got angry, shouted, and intimidated her, but she
refused to open the gate, and he was forced to enter by foot. Another example was
a religious female soldier who was not given a long, military skirt as required
by halakha, and refused to continue serving until she received the
promised skirt. Such girls are worthy of admiration.
The Ruling
has not Changed
Together
with the praise due to all who assist the observant girls maintain their
religious level while serving in the army, and the girls themselves, the
fundamental reasons for opposing serving in a military framework remain the
same, and therefore, the rabbi’s position objecting to girls serving in the
army is correct.
And although
it is understood that some girls serve in non-combat units and are not weakened
religiously due to their military service, the ruling does not come because all
the girls are weakened, but rather, because significant percentages of them are
weakened. This is similar to the closing of a road where the percentage of
accidents is exceedingly high, even though the majority of the drivers handle
it safely.
Indeed, there
is room to propose that military representatives meet with the leading rabbis
to examine the possibility of serving in home-front units, such as the
Intelligence Corps, while attempting to establish programs similar to the hesder
yeshivot that would be suitable for girls to serve in a halakhic framework.
In such meetings, everything must be laid on the table, including the question
of women carrying weapons, and the gender separation of units. In the meantime,
however, when even the service of religious men in the I.D.F. is not properly
regulated, especially in the area of tzniyut – such a proposal cannot be
raised.
The Circle
of People who do Enlist
There are rabbis,
as well as male and female teachers, who, out of close acquaintance with the
girls in their circle, claim that army service does not harm their religiosity.
It seems they are also a bit mistaken, and in truth, some of the girls from
their circles are weakened religiously in the army, as well. All the same, it
turns out that indeed, quite a few girls from their circles manage to maintain
their level of religiosity – in the virtue of their advanced religious
awareness, and also because even before entering the army, they were not so
careful about keeping some of the halakhot, and thus found it easier to
maintain their religious level in a secular environment.
However, the
ruling for girls not to enlist is not based on this circle of people, for with
all its importance, it is quite small. But out of a broad consideration, the
general ruling of the overwhelming majority of rabbis that girls should not
serve even in home-front military units is justified.
Also, it is
important to add that even for girls who fail to listen to the rulings of the
rabbis and enlist in the army, thanks to the rabbis’ position opposing their recruitment,
the girls now benefit from improved religious conditions. Precisely because of
the rabbis’ opposition and criticism, the military establishment is making
great efforts to prove that army service does not harm them. However, had the
rabbis’ position changed, the secular mind-set of most of the army officers probably
would have prevailed, and the conditions for religious girls would have
worsened, as is the case with religious male soldiers.
Therefore,
the policy of the State-Religious schools opposing military service for women –
in line with the rabbi’s ruling – is correct.
And they are right not to allow military representatives to present to
the girls the various avenues of army service.
Do Women
Need to Serve?
After all
this, I will present my fundamental position, according to which it would be
appropriate to cancel compulsory military and national service for women.
From a
security and economic aspect, this type of service is ineffective. By employing
fully-paid civilians instead of girls doing national service, the I.D.F. and
the social service systems would achieve much better results, at an immensely
lower cost.
There are
two main reasons for this. First, each girl doing national service costs the
state an average of NIS 4,000 per month – not far from the minimum wage. Many
of the women soldiers and girls doing National Service could make a far greater
contribution had they first studied a suitable profession. But because they
serve immediately after finishing 12th grade, lacking professional
training – despite all the good will, their contribution is relatively insignificant. The second reason is that because the service
is compulsory or quasi-compulsory (in the case of National Service), the state is
obligated to employ all female recruits and volunteers, even when there is no
need. Thus, we find girls complaining about meaningless military and national
service (like cutting cartons, and serving coffee).
For the
Good of the Country
The one
significant reason for serving is that it expresses the individual’s commitment
to the nation. However, it seems that reason alone does not provide the state
the moral justification to require each and every woman to devote two years out
of her life. The only justifiable reason for this is security needs crucial to
the survival of the state, and currently, there are no such security needs.
In addition,
from an economic aspect, compulsory service causes the state huge losses – in
hidden unemployment occurring in the army, and in the loss of two years of work
and tax payments that young women could have provided in the civilian market. This
is not the place to elaborate, but we are talking about the loss of billions of
shekels.
Serving in
the army is also a factor in delaying the age of marriage by approximately two
years, and thus inhibits the demographic growth of the remnants of the Jewish
people who have gathered to the State of Israel. This is not the place to make
the arithmetic’s, but if the state were to absolve all girls from army service,
thus lowering the age of marriage and parenthood by one year alone, within
fifty years, over a million Jews would be added to the Israeli nation, even if
the number of children each woman gave birth to remained the same. Even from a
purely military aspect, this would make a greater contribution to the Jewish
people.
Furthermore,
religious girls coming from low-income families are harmed more than others by
doing National Service. The two year delay increases the risk that such girls
will not be able to attain a respectable profession, and find a suitable groom.
Conclusion
These are
the reasons which have led me to the conclusion that for the best interest of
our nation, it is preferable to encourage young religious women to hasten their
professional studies, thus making it easier for them to get married at the age
of twenty.
True, there
are many people shocked at the possibility of casting doubt on the obligation
of national service, and for a good reason. An individual’s willingness to
devote himself for the sake of the common good is extremely important, to the
point where for some people, casting a doubt on it seems like a violation of
the holy of holies of our national existence. Yet, nevertheless, we are
obligated to consider what’s best for our nation.
In my
estimation, there is a reasonable chance that within a decade or two, logic
will prevail and compulsory service for women will be cancelled, and
consequently, National Service as well. Does the religious community have to
wait until the non-religious realize this, or can it promote this change?
A
Proposed Solution: A Deferment Program for National Service
I will
attempt to introduce a proposal which gives a reasonable opportunity for all
the considerations mentioned. Programs can be created in which the girls first
study for a Bachelors degree in a suitable profession, and afterwards, volunteer
to work full-time for a year or two in the field they specialized in. All the
money that the State of Israel invests in the girls doing National Service will
be given to them while working, following their studies. This amount can add-up
to more than NIS 2,500 per month.
Such
programs can be created in many areas: education, nursing, law, social work,
physiotherapy, occupational therapy, and others. A program can also be created
for outstanding students who will serve after completing a Master’s degree, or
PhD. Maybe we can suggest to the heads of National Service that they lead this
move, which will only improve the quality of service.
This article
appears in the ‘Basheva’ newspaper, and was translated from Hebrew.