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"Where Did They Go?"

"They Abandoned Us to the Extremists": Haredi Draft Aid Groups Accuse Politicians of Total Neglect

Haredi draft aid organizations erupt in fury at coalition lawmakers • Claim they're left to collapse financially while extremist groups gain influence | 'MK Yaakov Asher is the worst offender' (Haredim)

Yeshiva student
Yeshiva student (Photo: Elazar Feinstein)

The mainstream haredi aid organizations that have proliferated over the past three years to assist yeshiva students facing draft enforcement are now warning of imminent financial collapse - and they're pointing fingers directly at the coalition politicians who claim to represent the Torah world.

In a series of explosive interviews, senior figures from multiple aid groups told Kikar HaShabbat that they've been left to fend for themselves without funding, recognition, or even basic respect from haredi lawmakers. The result, they warn, is that yeshiva students are increasingly turning to extremist organizations for help, precisely the outcome the mainstream establishment sought to prevent.

"We've reached a breaking point," declared one senior aid organization official who spoke on condition of anonymity. "We can't survive with the volume of cases flooding in, and we're getting zero support. What's happening is that everyone is falling into the hands of the extremists, because there's no other option."

From Fringe to Mainstream: The Aid Organization Explosion

The proliferation of haredi draft aid organizations represents a dramatic shift in the community's response to military service. For over a decade, such groups existed primarily on the fringes, serving the Jerusalem Faction and certain extremist Hasidic courts whose members refused to register at draft offices on religious grounds. The mainstream haredi public, following rabbinic guidance, generally complied with registration requirements and had little need for such services.

That calculus changed sharply over the past three years as haredi politicians failed to pass draft legislation and the Supreme Court imposed sanctions on the yeshiva world. Suddenly, mainstream Lithuanian and Sephardi yeshiva students found themselves facing arrest and prosecution. The established Vaad HaYeshivos proved unable to handle the crisis, forcing each political party to establish its own aid apparatus.

Degel HaTorah launched Ezram U'Maginam. Shas created Chayei Olam. Shlomei Emunei Yisrael established Magen U'Moshia. The Gur Hasidic dynasty opened Vaad HaPoeil. Meanwhile, Agudas Bnei HaYeshivos, the first organization to gain broad support including from prominent Sephardi rabbis like Rabbi Moshe Tzadka, continued expanding its operations.

"MK Yaakov Asher Is the Worst"

The aid groups' frustration centers on what they describe as a fundamental disconnect: haredi politicians delegated the crisis to them but provided neither funding nor political backing. Sources familiar with the organizations' operations confirmed that while figures like Moshe Gafni and Aryeh Deri know how to channel resources when they choose to, basic support for yeshiva students has been conspicuously absent.

"Forget about money - though that's also critical for our survival," one senior figure stated. "Where's the basic respect? We saw Deri visit yeshiva students for the first time only when he knew elections were months away. The other haredi politicians barely show up at all. Every yeshiva student knows that in the end, the one who will save him is extremist leader Rabbi Tzvi Friedman, because he has effective aid organizations that will fight for every student."

The harshest criticism was reserved for United Torah Judaism MK Yaakov Asher, who chairs the Knesset Finance Committee. "The worst is MK Yaakov Asher," declared one aid organization official. "We've seen zero engagement from him on this issue, as if it doesn't concern him at all. All the MKs at least pretend to care — with him, we don't even feel that. It's painful."

The criticism carries particular sting given that Asher was tasked with leading efforts to pass draft legislation, an initiative that has thus far failed to produce results. "At minimum, he should show respectful engagement," the source added. "Unfortunately, even that isn't happening."

The American Fundraising Mission

The financial desperation has driven Vaad HaYeshivos chairman Rabbi Chaim Aharon Kaufman to launch a fundraising tour in the United States, seeking donations to finance educational campaigns in yeshiva halls. Aid organization officials view this as symptomatic of a broken system.

"The fact that Rabbi Kaufman has to fly to America to raise money for basic educational outreach is not a normal situation," one source noted. "MKs need to wake up immediately, before they find themselves facing a broken trough."

The organizations emphasized that certain Hasidic groups maintain their own support networks and don't require external aid. But Lithuanian and Sephardi students, the very constituencies the coalition parties claim to represent, are being left vulnerable. "There are many Hasidic courts that don't need aid organizations because they manage differently," explained one official. "But Lithuanian and Sephardi students are truly abandoned. The arrests so far have been mainly Sephardi, but soon we'll start seeing Lithuanian students arrested too, and we simply don't have the capacity to help so many without substantial support from the parties."

The broader concern is political as well as practical. As mainstream aid groups struggle, students are gravitating toward the well-funded extremist organizations that have operated for years. "Why should a yeshiva student have to turn to Arnovsky, Vispish, Bloy and similar names?" demanded one source, referencing figures associated with the Jerusalem Faction. "Because he knows they're the only ones who will actually help him. This should have been our responsibility, the mainstream's responsibility."

The situation has created what sources describe as a dangerous vacuum. "Everything is falling on us and we can't survive," stated one aid group official. "What's happening is that everyone is falling into the hands of the extremists, because there's no other option. The representatives have abandoned us to the extremists. Yeshiva students don't interest them."

As tensions escalate between haredi lawmakers and the Attorney General over enforcement policies, and as rabbinic leaders publicly urge politicians to stand firm, the aid organizations warn that the infrastructure meant to support the community through this crisis is on the verge of collapse — potentially driving the very students they sought to protect into the arms of the most radical elements of haredi society.

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