Prominent religious-Zionist rabbi backs right-wing deal with Ra'am

Published date30 March 2021
Date30 March 2021
AuthorJEREMY SHARON
Publication titleJerusalem Post, The: Web Edition Articles (Israel)
His comments come as a debate has opened up in right-wing circles, including among the religious-Zionist community as to whether utilizing Ra'am's recent political flexibility to form a right-wing government and end the ongoing cycle of elections is something that can be ideologically tolerated.

Speaking on Channel 20, Shilat, dean of the Birkat Moshe Yeshiva in Ma'aleh Adumim, said that allying with the Arab Ra'am Party could "advance the national interest" and insisted that a government relying on Ra'am's support would not be beholden to party leader MK Mansour Abbas.

"This is not a love story, it is more pragmatic, but there is behind it a potential for something bigger," conceded the rabbi in reference to the enmity of the Israeli Right to the Arab political parties.

"We need to utilize this possibility, create an opening for some kind of trust with the Arabs among us," continued Shilat, emphasizing that "the closeness of Judaism and Islam on a philosophical level and in principle is great, much greater than Judaism and Christianity."

Shilat is a mainstream, politically right-wing leader of the religious-Zionist community, and with the election results creating another political stalemate, his comments highlight the possibility that the right-wing religious bloc could entertain the idea of allying with an Arab party for its own political purposes.

Despite the rabbi's remarks, most on the religious Right ideologically oppose the idea.

Rabbi Haim Druckman, perhaps the most...

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