Jerusalem - Maran Harav HaGaon Chaim Kanievsky, shlita, told senior United Torah Judaism MK Moshe Gafni on Sunday that the recently proposed bill for Charedi enlistment is acceptable and can be advanced through the Knesset.

The Jerusalem Post has learned that the rabbi described the bill as “the lesser of two evils,” that Degel Hatorah MKs – forming half of the UTJ Knesset faction – should not go to war over the legislation, and that it could be supported in general.

Maran did not, however, authorize the specific wording and clauses of the bill, but rather the proposal in general terms. Changes may be requested.

Gafni met with several other leading haredi rabbis on Sunday morning to discuss the issue, including Rabbi Gershon Edelstein, Rabbi Moshe Hillel Hirsch, Rabbi Baruch Mordechai Ezrahi and Rabbi Baruch Dov Povarsky, shlita.

The decision is highly significant since the bill includes financial sanctions from the state’s budget against Charedi yeshivas if enlistment targets are not met, meaning that Maran and the other rabbanim have ostensibly given consent to the notion that there can be negative consequences if Charedi men do not enlist to the IDF.

The vague language coming from Maran's entourage and the stipulation that “certain changes” will be requested indicate, however, that Degel MKs will likely try and water down the financial sanctions.

During a meeting of coalition party leaders on Sunday, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said that the bill should speedily advance, be authorized by the government within two weeks and passed into law before the end of the Knesset’s summer session on July 19.

“Decisions need to be made [and] agreements formed so as to bring the bill for authorization by the government within two weeks,” Netanyahu said.

Maran's approval comes following opposition expressed to the bill on Thursday by the Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah of Agudat Yisrael, the Chassidic half of UTJ.

The grand rabbanim of the Chassidic groups which make up Agudat Yisrael said that their MKs should quit the coalition if the bill is passed by the Knesset, although they seemingly left room for changes to be made to the legislation.

It is unclear how the apparently opposing positions of the Chassidic and Lithuanian rabbis will be reconciled, although MKs from Degel and Aguda reportedly met on Sunday to try and resolve some of the differences.

If the financial sanctions could be sufficiently diluted it is possible that Aguda could withdraw its opposition.

These sanctions are already considered somewhat weak, and would not go into effect for the first two years of the law’s existence.
Further diluting them would make the law practically ineffectual, leading to opposition from defense minister and Yisrael Beytenu chairman Avigdor Liberman, as well as heightening the possibility that the High Court of Justice would strike down the law.

And Liberman has said that he wants the bill, proposed by a special committee in his ministry, to be passed without changes. Read more at JPost