Pace of Charedi integration into Israeli life slowing down
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Pace of Charedi integration into Israeli life slowing down

Israel Democracy Institute says that full-time yeshiva enrolment has increased and rates of employment have slowed

Charedim in Jerusalem. (Source Wikipedia. Author: Effib at Hebrew Wikipedia.)
Charedim in Jerusalem. (Source Wikipedia. Author: Effib at Hebrew Wikipedia.)

The pace of Charedi integration into both the workforce and academy has slowed significantly, indicating a “worrisome” trend in Israeli society, a Jerusalem think-tank warned in a new report.

The Israel Democracy Institute said Wednesday that full-time yeshiva enrolment has increased among the fervently Orthodox Charedim, rates of employment have slowed and fewer members of the community are enrolling in secular higher education.

According to the IDI, as of last year there were 114,000 Charedi men in full-time religious study, a rise of 21 percent over three years ago and a reversal of the previous trend of growing workplace participation.

By contrast, between 2013-14 there was a 16 percent drop in yeshiva enrolment. During the past decade, amid calls for reform, the number of Charedi students had grown by 141 percent and the number of Charedim registered in secular graduate programs as of 2017 was five times what it was in 2010.

“This year’s report reveals worrisome trends,” said IDI researchers Gilad Malach and  Lee Cahaner. “The findings show that the trend towards the rise in the rate of employment and academic studies has come to a standstill, after several years of a consistent increase in both. Although there is encouraging data regarding an increase in income and a decline in poverty rates, this appears to be the fruits of past government policies that encouraged higher education, army service and employment.”

Israel’s growing Charedi population currently numbers over a million. Characterised by strict religious observance, the communities also exhibit lower rates of employment and military enlistment. Israel’s non-Charedi policymakers, and even some in the Charedi community, say the lifestyle is not sustainable economically and is a threat to Israel’s democratic and civic fabric.

Efforts to integrate Charedi Jews grew apace in recent years. Although 45 percent live in poverty, the average Charedi monthly income increased by eight percent between 2015-16, “reflect[ing] a rise in ultra-Orthodox salaries among those employed,” said IDI. While the poverty rate among the Charedim is high compared to the 11 percent rate among other Israelis, it is actually a significant improvement over the 58 percent Charedi poverty rate as recently as 2005.

While just under half of Charedi men are unemployed (while 73 percent of Charedi women work), that represents a significant rise over 2003 when only 36 percent of Charedi men and 51 percent of Charedi women held down jobs.

The recent gains can be credited to the “rise in the number of well-educated members of the ultra-Orthodox community and the advancement of ultra-Orthodox workers in the labor market (as a result of a combination of appropriate skills and education, and government programs),” Malach and Cahaner commented. “Nevertheless the expenditures of the ultra-Orthodox are still higher than their income, which may point to the transfer of illegal funds and the receipt of unreported donations from abroad.”

Meanwhile, despite opposition by many rabbis to internet-connected devices, 54 percent of Charedim in 2017 reported using a computer, an increase of 10 percent over 2007. The rate of enlistment in the military has also increased significantly, with 3,700 Charedim having enlisted in the Israel Defense Forces or a civilian national service framework last year, a slight increase.

According to a government report issued last year, Israel’s population will double in about 40 years. Some 29 percent — or 5.25 million of its projected 18 million residents — will be Charedi Jews.

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