Jerusalem – Analysis: The Power And Peril Of Rabbinic Political Leadership

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    Leader of the ultra orthodox Shas party Aryeh Deri pray near the grave of Rabbi Ovadia Yosef at the Sanhedriya cemetery in Jerusalem on March 18, 2015, a day after the Israeli general elections for the 20th parliament. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90Jerusalem – For both the Ashkenazi and Sephardi haredi communities the 2015 election campaign was bitter, divisive and fraught with poisonous rhetoric about religious and political legitimacy.

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    But perhaps more than ever, the central pillar upon which haredi politics is built, adherence to the instructions of the community’s rabbis, was brought to the fore, and the power, but concomitant weakness, of this system was highlighted.

    The Shas movement has for many years been constructed on the cult of personality surrounding its late spiritual leader Rabbi Ovadia Yosef. His charisma and dynamism brought Sephardi haredim together under one political banner, and drew non-haredi Sephardim to the party as well.

    When Yosef was alive, few challenged him and those who did suffered heavy defeats while Shas maintained its power.

    This time around, Yosef was no longer present physically, and although Shas used his image and words from beyond the grave as its most powerful electoral tool, a new political movement was able to take form and mount a serious challenge to Shas’s domination of the Sephardi haredi political arena.

    Daat Torah, the notion that an observant, Orthodox Jew should consult his rabbi on matters like elections which are not of a religious nature, served Shas well while Yosef was alive, but Yosef’s death in October 2013 led to the death of consensus.

    Yosef was unparalleled in his Torah scholarship and force of personality, and so the notion of Daat Torah was a winning proposition for Shas every time. But with Yosef’s departure there is no star rabbinic personality whom everyone agrees is the “Gadol Hador,” the Torah giant of the generation.

    This allowed MK Eli Yishai to claim that he did not have to listen or adhere to the words of the new Shas spiritual leader, who is relatively unknown and not much loved, but could instead listen to the words of his own spiritual leader, Rabbi Meir Mazuz, who gave Yishai the religious sanction to form his own party in competition with Shas.

    Yishai and his mongrel Yahad party failed just barely to make it into the Knesset, but garnered an impressive 118,000 votes, which would have given them at least three seats in any past Israeli election, where the threshold was lower.

    Meanwhile Shas sank to a seven- seat nadir not seen since the 13th Knesset in 1992 when it received six mandates.

    When the various political forces and undercurrents in the haredi world do not coalesce around one particular rabbi and his Daat Torah – his opinion on matters based on his Torah knowledge – political division is a sure outcome.

    And a similar schism has occurred in the Ashkenazi non-hassidic haredi community, the roots of which are also found in the Daat Torah system.

    In 1988, Rabbi Elazar Menachem Shach, one of the outstanding Torah scholars of his time and a dynamic political personality, set up the Degel Hatorah party as a breakaway from the hassidic-dominated Agudat Yisrael movement.

    Within the non-hassidic “Lithuanian” haredi sector, Shach became the “Gadol Hador” and it was his “Daat Torah” that determined political reality and political legitimacy.

    Shach was the undisputed religious leader of the generation, while his successor after him, Rabbi Shalom Yosef Elyashiv, was held in the same regard, so that political unity was preserved and Degel’s monopoly on power and policy within the community was maintained.

    Elyashiv died, however, in 2012, and, as with Yosef, consensus as to who was the new generational leader died with him as well.

    Elyashiv left behind two claimants to his rabbinical throne, Rabbi Aharon Leib Shteinman and Rabbi Shmuel Auerbach. The assorted politicians, politicos and loyalists surrounding both rabbis waged a fierce battle following Elyashiv’s death to crown their respective rabbis, and it was Shteinman who was ultimately victorious.

    Auerbach’s supporters did not concede defeat, however, and they and the rabbi have led an insurgency, ostensibly based on Auerbach’s more extreme approach to the issue of haredi enlistment, but to a large degree motivated by the decision of Shteinman and his backers to freeze Auerbach’s faction out of political power.

    The Daat Torah of Shteinman, and the attendant threats of the religious responsibility that would be borne by anyone not voting for Degel, once again proved its efficacy and brought 206,000 haredi men and women to vote for United Torah Judaism, the joint Knesset faction combining Degel and Agudat Yisrael.

    But the party nevertheless lost a seat because Auerbach’s faction boycotted the election due to its feud with Degel, and deprived UTJ of as much as 30,000 votes.

    Once again, the demise of a single, acknowledged rabbinical leader has showed the potential weaknesses and pitfalls of the Daat Torah system and the potential for political divide inherent in it.

    The persuasive force and power of the concept of Daat Torah is not dying out any time soon, as even Tuesday it motivated close to half a million people to vote for the political parties their rabbis instructed them to vote for.

    But the lack of consensus over the rabbinic leadership in the haredi world may in the short term get worse, while the divides between the different communities deepen. The absence of a single successor to the great rabbis of the past may make those political divisions harder to bridge in the future.


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    14 Comments
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    9 years ago

    When will we learn that the best policy — politically and spiritually — is unity?

    Hasid
    Hasid
    9 years ago

    So true!
    they should all take a lesson from this and respect minorities, if Deri would have respected Yishai or Rav Steinman’s people would have compromised with Rav Orebach’s followers all of this could have been prevented and the haredim would have had a bigger power in the Knesset, only with peace they can have a success!!!!

    commonsense99
    commonsense99
    9 years ago

    Sadly we are our own worst enemy, remember its all about money and power not about torah

    9 years ago

    Unfortunately we all conveniently forget that the 1st breakaway was as mentioned in the article by rav shach when he didn’t want to sit with the chasidim in agudas Yisroel. Well what do you expect from his followers!!!

    Mad-jew22
    Mad-jew22
    9 years ago

    A very very sad reality today is the lack of unity and the double dose of machlokes In every single jewish community (even in community’s it’s this way) Now if it’s this way in communitys one can understand how much more so intercommunity relations/feelings/opinions are Samar bobov mo Lubavitch litfish sefardi we need to wake up and realize we are an am echad mifuzar umiforad bein haamim and put our differences asside nu it’s time to wake up

    Mad-jew22
    Mad-jew22
    9 years ago

    We need to unite desperately I for one am taking on a resolution to Improve in achdus please let’s all unite we truly are a am echad been here before everyone be here after everyone

    9 years ago

    The notable lack of unity is a sure symptom of ikvesa d’meshicha. I rejoice at the tangible unity in my own small but diverse community. But the broader picture is not so promising.

    Buchwalter
    Buchwalter
    9 years ago

    You are worst enemy of klal yisroel. The disease is called koved and for koved you would schlacht Yidden. Yiddishe kinder, frauen and einfache Yidden were shipped to the gas chambers of Birkenau and others saved by the Zionisten the Sochnuth and to Switzerland. The Alexander Rebbe was different and he had the same opportunity but said vi meine chasidim gein will iach gein and he went to Birkenau. You have the NK , true rabbis saying get out of Palestine wearing Yasser Arafat ymsh malbish.
    Everyone should be frim, in the midbor remember the eygel. Wake up and practice ahavas yisroel frim or nisht frim and maybe der eiberbishter vet zufrieden zein

    9 years ago

    Anyone that still believes in “das torah” after these elections is at best naive. When rabbonim come out with such outright attacks on opponents saying the other guy is unlearned(As if I care whether my kenesset representitive is a lamdon or night. So babiesh) or they guy is a ganef. Or whether they give rousing speeches how voting for this guy will or will not give you a sher in the world to come. Or their goons break into each others property. Or they allow shtender throwing and name calling in thier yeshiva. To me all this makes me very skeptical on our loose term of today called “das torah”.
    It behoves us all to reconsider if the whole notion that the army is trief and we all must learn and never work is that really all lshem shomaim?

    There is an old saying” ויאמר עשׁו ישׁ לי רב”

    tar45
    tar45
    9 years ago

    Where is the כבוד התורה in this article?? Why refer to our gedolim by last name with it harav before their name EACH time!!!

    LionofZion
    LionofZion
    9 years ago

    Well put #10 .
    A better question is whether the concept of Daas Torah exists at all. Tall tales notwithstanding, it never existed before the advent of Chasidism. Today, the Litvish are no different than the Chasidim. The truth is rabbis do not have superpowers and may know Torah, but they are not any more knowledgable about worldly matters than anyone else.

    9 years ago

    What has been proven is that these people are a bunch of fools. Any Rabbi who disparages the religious observance of another person based on a political disagreement is a behama and his followers are fools.

    9 years ago

    Daas Torah is something that a Jew take s upon himself, that a certain leader/deeply religious/given over to the cause is speaking the truth. The 2nd a so called “gadol” starts endorsing himself, that is the complete apposite of daad Torah