"This is much more than anger, than insult, than sharp controversy. This is bubbling, burning hatred. Deep disgust of a public," Novick wrote. But he continued: "Every time a haredi public representative repeats the lie that they are not enlisting because 'the army is not ready,' or the lie that the State of Israel is persecuting Torah study, or the lie that there is agreement on enlisting marginal youth, and every time the 'pure Torah scholars' riot in the streets or go out on their criminal 'between the semesters' vacationm this hatred intensifies. And unfortunately, and painfully, this hatred is becoming more and more justified."
The comments sparked outrage in the haredi community, with critics noting that Novick appeared to be legitimizing hatred against an entire religious community based on political disagreements over military service.
The Political Context
The escalating tensions come as Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has reportedly promised haredi coalition partners that emergency legislation freezing draft arrests will advance through the Knesset next week.
Meanwhile, the haredi community remains mobilized. The Eidah Chareidis issued an emergency directive earlier this week ordering the closure of all kollelim under its authority and mobilizing thousands of avreichim to prison gates across Israel in what leaders termed a "war of excommunication with self-sacrifice."
Whether Seidoff's organization will follow through on its threat to blockade Bnei Brak before Shabbat remains to be seenm but the rhetoric alone signals how deeply the confrontation has fractured Israeli society along religious and secular lines.
Further updates to follow.