An opinion article published on Ynet claimed that the protests against the government’s judicial reform plan “is not about judicial reform but about secular-liberal Israelis’ fear of Charedim.” “It is not about the government’s proposal to reform the judicial system and not the criminal trial of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu,” the article, written by Alon Goldstein, begins. “It is not about the occupation or the high cost of living. It is not even about the alleged social inequality and racial injustice.” “It is about anxiety and deep-rooted fear. Large swaths of Israel’s secular-liberal society are in the throes of a historic process of mourning. “The truth is that the Chareidi population is growing at an unprecedented rate in Israel. Its annual growth stands at 4.9% – compared to the 2.5% growth of the secular population. The number of Chareidi Israelis doubles every 15 years, which will make that sector one-third of Israel’s population within three or four decades, provided the trajectory is not reversed. “Israelis have been living with those figures for years. They have been known and recorded by the Central Bureau of Statistics (CBS), the Education Ministry and the IDF. But the secular public has been in denial. The results of the recent elections and the legislative blitz that ensued, have pushed those who have been denying the numbers to the next phase: outrage. “Hundreds of thousands of Israelis are now in the midst of an existential crisis, with a right-wing and religious coalition set to implement their campaign platform. They rightly understood that Israel was changing and will continue to change in the foreseeable future. Dire prophecies of a future mirroring Afghanistan or Tehran were thrown up in the air, causing a rush to immigrate, remove funds to overseas’ accounts and fall into total despair. The panic was fueled by politicians who – on one side of the political divide – childishly and stupidly perpetuate the prophecies of doom, while on the other, irresponsible and incomprehensible legislation was being advanced along with threatening rhetoric and glee over the dread of opponents. “The vast majority of opponents of the government are patriotic Zionists, who view all Chareidim as one entity, a bunch of draft dodgers, primitive people, parasites whose lives are paid for by the secular tax-paying Israelis. Those protesters believe the Chareidi sector aims to turn Israel into a religious theocracy where women would be silenced, and adulterers stoned to death. That is the source of their dread – not the judicial system overhaul. “I know this because I have been on both sides of the divide. I remember myself as a young student shouting anti-Chareidi slogans at demonstrations. I, at the time, did not personally know any Chareidi people, but believed that I was right and feared a growing Chareidi population would overrun the country. “Many years later, that anxious student realized the prophecies had not materialized. The Chareidi population had grown considerably, but there was no religious coercion and Israel continued to thrive. In time, I learned to see the different nuances in the Chareidi community. I sought out and befriended people there, and understood that apart from our daily routines and practices, we are all the same. “We all hope to live in a free society, support our families and provide our children with education […]
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