Gideon Levy Let's Face the Facts, Israel Is a Semi-theocracy

Between Stockholm and Tehran, Israel of 2009, with its many religious attributes, is closer to Tehran.

Gideon Levy
Gideon Levy
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Gideon Levy
Gideon Levy

The storm over remarks made by Justice Minister Yaakov Neeman is in many respects a tempest in a teapot, which has for a long time taken on holier aspects than it seems. Neeman wants Torah law, or in other words, he wants Israel to be a country governed by Jewish religious law, halakha. In any event, Israel is already a semi-theocracy. The Israelis who were frightened by the minister's remarks and who love viewing their country as liberal, Western and secular are forgetting that our life here is more religious, traditional and halakhic than we are prepared to admit.

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