While the nation's attention remained fixed on the escalating draft crisis and Iranian missiles streaking across Israeli skies Sunday night, hundreds of ultra-Orthodox extremists gathered in Jerusalem for an emergency assembly with a strikingly different focus: renewing their long-running battle against the city's light rail expansion.
The gathering, dubbed 'Hafkadati' (I Have Appointed), convened at the precise moment Iran launched its missile barrage toward Israel, demonstrating the extremist community's determination to maintain local campaigns regardless of national security crises or the intensifying debate over yeshiva conscription.
The assembly centered entirely on mobilizing opposition to the continued construction of the light rail along the Bar Ilan corridor, a major artery cutting through Jerusalem's haredi neighborhoods. Organizers framed the gathering as a critical moment to reinvigorate public resistance after months of relative quiet on the issue.






