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25 October 2025

The Battle Inside Israel Over Who Must Fight in Its Wars

Joshua Leifer

On a sweltering day in early July, when a cease-fire in Gaza seemed impossibly remote, the funeral procession for Moshe Shmuel Nol, a 21-year-old Israeli soldier killed by Hamas fighters, left from his family’s home in Beit Shemesh, a religious suburb west of Jerusalem. It was the kind of scene that had become routine in Israel over the last two years. Mourners lined the street, Israeli flags held aloft, almost limp in the breezeless air. The bereaved family strode in a silence broken only by muffled sobs. Since Oct. 7, 2023, more than 900 Israeli soldiers have been killed. Military funerals have often been broadcast on television, the eulogies played over the radio, sometimes several in the span of a few hours. Nol was one of five soldiers from his unit buried in two days.

Yet the cortege in Beit Shemesh was also very unlike those to which Israelis have become accustomed. The father who came to bury his son was dressed in the black suit, white shirt and black hat worn by ultra-Orthodox Jews, or as they are known in Hebrew, Haredim — “those who tremble before God.” The grief-stricken mother, her hair covered by a wig, walked behind him, wearing a long-sleeved dress in the punishing sun. Among the mourners were Hasidim in long black coats and black hats, men with beards and curled sidelocks. Video of the procession and funeral spread quickly on social media and in the press.

The Haredim have historically been exempt from Israel’s draft, which is compulsory for most citizens, and over the two years of Israel’s war in Gaza, this became the source of considerable political strife. Ever since the most recent provision extending their exemption expired in 2023, the Haredi political parties — which made up nearly one third of Benjamin Netanyahu’s governing right-wing, religious coalition — have pushed to enshrine a new exemption into law, despite widespread opposition. The Haredi parties backed the coalition’s controversial “judicial overhaul,” a sweeping program, unveiled in January 2023, that would strip the country’s judiciary of much of its power and shred Israel’s fragile system of checks and balances. They did so in order to shield any new draft exemption law from judicial review.

But if the images of Haredim standing alongside soldiers in Beit Shemesh suggested that the struggle over ultra-Orthodox conscription was headed toward resolution, it was an illusion. After Israel’s Supreme Court ruled in June of last year that the government’s refusal to draft the Haredim was unconstitutional in the absence of any legal framework to extend their exemption, the defense ministry began to issue draft orders. The Israel Defense Forces say they have so far sent out 80,000; barely 3,000 Haredim have complied.

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