The term "halachic state"[a] (Hebrew:מְדִינַת הֲלָכָהMedīnat Hălāḵā) refers to a sovereign state that endorsesJudaism in an official capacity and governs byJewish religious law.[1] It has been a subject of discussion amongOrthodox Jews, particularly with regard to modernIsrael, which, although aJewish state, is not classified as a theocracy. A number of Israeli politicians who identify as Orthodox have publicly voiced their support for Israel's transformation into a halachic state, but this position has not gained significant traction in the country's legal system or among the majority of Israeli society.
| All Israeli Jews | Yes | 76% | ||
| No | 20% | |||
| Haredi("ultra-Orthodox") | Yes | 58% | ||
| No | 36% | |||
| Dati(Orthodox) | Yes | 79% | ||
| No | 17% | |||
| Masorti(traditional) | Yes | 80% | ||
| No | 15% | |||
| Hiloni(secular) | Yes | 76% | ||
| No | 21% | |||
| % of Israeli Jews who say Israel can be both a democracy and a Jewish state (Pew 2016).[2] | ||||
| All Israeli Jews | Democracy | 62% | ||
| Halakha | 24% | |||
| Haredi("ultra-Orthodox") | Democracy | 3% | ||
| Halakha | 89% | |||
| Dati(Orthodox) | Democracy | 11% | ||
| Halakha | 65% | |||
| Masorti(traditional) | Democracy | 56% | ||
| Halakha | 23% | |||
| Hiloni(secular) | Democracy | 89% | ||
| Halakha | 1% | |||
| % of Israeli Jews who sayhalakha (Jewish religious law) or democratic principles should be given preference if there is a contradiction between the two (Pew 2016).[2] | ||||
An opinion poll released by thePew Research Center in March 2016 found high support among religious Jews for a halachic Israel: 89% ofHaredi Jews and 65% ofnon-Haredi Orthodox Jews supported basing Israel's legal code on theTorah and Jewish religious law; while only 23% oftraditionalist Jews and 1% ofsecular Jews supported such a move.[3] At the time, Haredi Jews constituted 8% of all Israelis, non-Haredi Orthodox Jews constituted 10%, traditionalist Jews constituted 23%, and secular Jews constituted 40%.[2] However, there was a majority agreement among all Jewish groups that Israel could be both aJewish and democratic state.[2] When asked whether they would prefer democratic principles or Jewish religious law if the two ever came into conflict, 62% of all Jews combined favoured democratic principles. Further, preference for Jewish religious law was very high among Haredi Jews (89%) and very low among secular Jews (1%).[2]
Menachem Mendel Schneerson advocated the transformation of Israel into a halachic state even before the coming of theHebrew Messiah.[4]
Following thePLO'sDeclaration of Independence in theWest Bank and theGaza Strip on 15 November 1988, a movement emerged among someKahanists advocating for a separate and halachic "State of Judea" to be established in the West Bank in the event thatIsrael no longer occupied it. Kahanist parties have been outlawed by Israel and designated as terrorist entities by theUnited States andCanada, but followers of the ideology continue to exist in relatively smaller numbers across variousIsraeli settlements, and the idea has intermittently re-emerged in the aftermath of significant political developments in theIsraeli–Palestinian conflict, such asIsrael's disengagement from the Gaza Strip in 2005.
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In 2009, Justice MinisterYaakov Neeman stated that "step by step, Torah law will become the binding law in the State of Israel. We have to reinstate the traditions of our forefathers, the teaching of the rabbis of the ages, because these offer a solution to all the issues we are dealing with today". He later retracted his statement.[1] According to 2002Israel Prize winnerNahum Rakover, who received theYakir Yerushalayim prize for his research on the use of Jewish law in the legal system,[5] Neeman's opinion was nothing new. He said that the idea is supported in the Foundations of Law Act, passed in 1980, which encourages judges to use Jewish law in their decisions.Yitzhak Kahan, former president of theIsraeli Supreme Court, recommended that Jewish law be implemented even in cases of an existing precedent, although his opinion was not accepted, and former justice ministersShmuel Tamir andMoshe Nissim advocated teaching judges and lawyers Jewish law to provide them with the necessary knowledge to implement the law.[1]
In June 2019,Tkuma leaderBezalel Smotrich campaigned for theMinistry of Justice, saying that he sought the portfolio to "restore the Torah justice system".[6] Prime MinisterBenjamin Netanyahu distanced himself from the comments, and appointed openly gay MKAmir Ohana to the post.[7]
In August 2019, Smotrich stated: "We [Orthodox Jews] all would want the State of Israel to be run according to the Torah and Jewish law, it's just that we can't because there are people who think differently from us, and we have to get along with them."[8][9][10]
In 2014, Israel's cabinet advanced theNation-State Bill, which defined Israel as "the nation-state of the Jewish people" and also said that Jewish law would be a "source of inspiration" for the Knesset. This was seen by some non-Orthodox Jews as a step toward enforcing Orthodoxhalakha as the law of the land.[11] However, the final version of the law did not include this proposed clause.