The planned Thursday procession to prison is expected to galvanize the haredi street into a massive show of support for the hassidim and against the High Court. Deputy Education Minister Meir Porush (United Torah Judaism) has already announced that he will set up his office outside the walls of the prison on Thursday.Yoav Lalom, who, with the Noar Kahalacha nonprofit organization, filed the original petition, wouldn’t comment on the court ruling.Levy, who headed the judicial panel, had suggested to the parents in the morning hearing that the girls return to the school for the remaining two weeks of the term, and try to work out a solution over the summer vacation.The parents’ attorney, Mordechai Green, then consulted with rabbis, presumably including Barazovsky, and told the court that in a conflict between the laws of Torah and those of men, the divine decrees must prevail.The response raised Levy’s ire.“I don’t know of any legal obligation for court rulings to receive the approval of some rabbi or another,” said Levy, who is himself religious. “I’m terrified by the fact that a rabbi instructs his community to act against a court verdict.”In the ruling on imprisonment later in the day, the justices alluded to the fact that the parents gave precedence to their rabbis over the court, and repeated what they had said more than once during the hearing: “There is no need to note that our verdict is not subject to, or stipulated by, the approval of any exterior factor.”The court had ruled that the physical separations in the Beit Ya’acov that had been built to accommodate the hassidic track that the Slonim parents had initiated and in which some 70 girls studied, were illegal.But once the barriers were removed, the parents refused to return their girls to the school unless the rest of the pupils’ parents agreed to a very stringent code of conduct and attire – an initiative that didn’t succeed.As a result, at the instruction of Barazovsky, the alternative-track parents tried to send their daughters to schools outside Emmanuel, an effort that was stymied by the Education Ministry.Green told Radio Kol Hai before the court’s decision was publicized that it was not clear why the parents should be held in contempt of court, since the original petition by Lalom and Noar Kahalacha was not against the parents, but against the Independent Education Center (Hinuch Atzma’i), the network under which the school operates.The Independent Education Center, following the original court ruling, had ordered all the parents to return their girls to the school.The notion of holding the parents in contempt of court, Green said, had only come after the court summoned them for testimony, and if the charge of contempt was not applicable to the original defendant, it should not be used against the parents.Meanwhile, attempts are intensifying within the haredi world to reach understandings on issues relating to ethnic discrimination in Independent Education Center schools throughout the country, as the issue has flared up several times over the past 20 years.An agreement, those involved say, might prevent future instances of the court “meddling” in haredi education, as some perceive it.
Emmanuel parents ordered to jail
Hassidim say they won’t obey ruling to send daughters to school.
The planned Thursday procession to prison is expected to galvanize the haredi street into a massive show of support for the hassidim and against the High Court. Deputy Education Minister Meir Porush (United Torah Judaism) has already announced that he will set up his office outside the walls of the prison on Thursday.Yoav Lalom, who, with the Noar Kahalacha nonprofit organization, filed the original petition, wouldn’t comment on the court ruling.Levy, who headed the judicial panel, had suggested to the parents in the morning hearing that the girls return to the school for the remaining two weeks of the term, and try to work out a solution over the summer vacation.The parents’ attorney, Mordechai Green, then consulted with rabbis, presumably including Barazovsky, and told the court that in a conflict between the laws of Torah and those of men, the divine decrees must prevail.The response raised Levy’s ire.“I don’t know of any legal obligation for court rulings to receive the approval of some rabbi or another,” said Levy, who is himself religious. “I’m terrified by the fact that a rabbi instructs his community to act against a court verdict.”In the ruling on imprisonment later in the day, the justices alluded to the fact that the parents gave precedence to their rabbis over the court, and repeated what they had said more than once during the hearing: “There is no need to note that our verdict is not subject to, or stipulated by, the approval of any exterior factor.”The court had ruled that the physical separations in the Beit Ya’acov that had been built to accommodate the hassidic track that the Slonim parents had initiated and in which some 70 girls studied, were illegal.But once the barriers were removed, the parents refused to return their girls to the school unless the rest of the pupils’ parents agreed to a very stringent code of conduct and attire – an initiative that didn’t succeed.As a result, at the instruction of Barazovsky, the alternative-track parents tried to send their daughters to schools outside Emmanuel, an effort that was stymied by the Education Ministry.Green told Radio Kol Hai before the court’s decision was publicized that it was not clear why the parents should be held in contempt of court, since the original petition by Lalom and Noar Kahalacha was not against the parents, but against the Independent Education Center (Hinuch Atzma’i), the network under which the school operates.The Independent Education Center, following the original court ruling, had ordered all the parents to return their girls to the school.The notion of holding the parents in contempt of court, Green said, had only come after the court summoned them for testimony, and if the charge of contempt was not applicable to the original defendant, it should not be used against the parents.Meanwhile, attempts are intensifying within the haredi world to reach understandings on issues relating to ethnic discrimination in Independent Education Center schools throughout the country, as the issue has flared up several times over the past 20 years.An agreement, those involved say, might prevent future instances of the court “meddling” in haredi education, as some perceive it.