In a charged session that laid bare Israel's deepest cultural fault lines, the Knesset plenary voted 56-43 Wednesday to advance Basic Law: Torah Study in a preliminary reading, following an emotional address by United Torah Judaism chairman MK Moshe Gafni that traced the history of Torah learning through centuries of Jewish persecution.
The vote marks a significant victory for the haredi parties, who had issued an ultimatum to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu: advance the Torah law or face a legislative freeze on all coalition business. Netanyahu spent the previous 24 hours working to secure the necessary votes, ultimately delivering the majority his ultra-Orthodox partners demanded.
Gafni's speech, delivered with visible emotion, invoked the Warsaw Ghetto, the yeshivas of Shanghai during the Holocaust, and the Jewish communities of Morocco to argue that Torah study has been the anchor of Jewish survival across millennia. "After the destruction of Europe, the State of Israel took upon itself to raise Torah study from the dust," Gafni declared. "We propose to properly enshrine in a Basic Law the great value of Torah study."









