Dei'ah veDibur - Information & Insight
  

A Window into the Chareidi World

18 Adar 5767 - March 8, 2007 | Mordecai Plaut, director Published Weekly
NEWS

OPINION
& COMMENT

OBSERVATIONS

HOME
& FAMILY

IN-DEPTH
FEATURES

VAAD HORABBONIM HAOLAMI LEINYONEI GIYUR

TOPICS IN THE NEWS

POPULAR EDITORIALS

HOMEPAGE

 

Produced and housed by
Shema Yisrael Torah Network
Shema Yisrael Torah Network

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

NEWS
Knesset Addresses Complaint by Students Banned from Praying at Ohel Shem High School

By Eliezer Rauchberger

"The government education system in the State of Israel is lacking. A child in the government education system in the State of Israel is not allowed the pray Minchah in an empty room."

MK Rabbi Gafni issued these remarks during a discussion in the Knesset plenum when he submitted a question to Education Minister Yuli Tamir regarding a recent incident in which students at Ohel Shem High School in Ramat Gan were banned from praying on the school grounds during their afternoon break.

Minister Tamir said that the principal had not forbidden them to pray, but had only asked them to go to the nearby beis knesses. "They wanted to pray in a place not designated for that, thereby disrupting school life during the studies and the break," claimed Tamir.

The Education Minister backed the principal's move, saying that the principal also reported that despite "the fact that he was sending them to a properly set-up prayer place, they were [praying in the school] in a provocative manner. Students have to coordinate this type of activity with the principal and they did not do this."

Tamir's use of the word "provocative" in the context of tefilloh incensed Acting Knesset Chairman MK Majalli Whbee (Kadima), who said, "This is the first time I've seen people going to pray and engaging in provocation in order to pray. I say this as a statement of fact. I'm not familiar with such a thing."

MK Rabbi Moshe Gafni responded to the remarks, saying that the Education Minister had not investigated the incident but merely heard the principal's version and not the students' version of what happened and replied to the question in his name. "This response to the question is simply irrelevant, and I'd prefer not to use harsher terms."

Rabbi Gafni said that he had looked into the matter and he found that there had been a request by a group of students to hold tefillas Minchah during the lunch break. They did not want not to leave campus to avoid missing classes. "To daven Minchah there is no need for a properly set-up prayer location," said Rabbi Gafni. "You can stand in the back of an empty classroom, and this is what they did. A teacher at this school went and yanked out a child in the Jewish education system in the middle of Shemoneh Esrei."

MK Yaakov Margi (Shas) called on Tamir to retract her statements rather than supporting "a startling move by a school principal." He said all sorts of activities take place in the school yard, including activities that should not take place, and it does not stand to reason for prayer to be prohibited and called `a provocation.'"

MK Rabbi Shmuel Halpert said, "What took place at Ohel Shem School borders on a scandal the likes of which have not been seen in the State of Israel. Students enter a peripheral room and not a classroom during their break and not during class time and want to pray Minchah. In comes the principal and drives them out. Where has such a thing happened — attacking students and kicking them out of an unused room? What was their sin? What harm did they cause? How can such a thing take place? And the Education Minister still judges such a principal favorably and defends him?"

In response, Minister Tamir said that the original question did not touch on pulling students out physically or disturbing their prayers. "You asked me whether it was forbidden for the students to pray. I gave you an explanation and I continue to stand behind what I said: that the students had been given an opportunity to pray at another place nearby."

In light of the exchange Rabbi Gafni asked the Education Minister to inquire into the students' complaint they had been pushed for praying. If physical force was indeed used, she said, "I will reprove the principal in no uncertain terms."

 

All material on this site is copyrighted and its use is restricted.
Click here for conditions of use.