Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Monday, June 14, 2010
Israel's High Court Voids Special Payments To Married Yeshiva Students
Israel's Supreme Court today struck down a provision in the country's Minimum Income Guarantee Law that assures special financial benefits for married kollel yeshiva students but does not give comparable stipends to students studying in secular institutions. The current law gives benefits to married couples who do not work, who have three or more children and who do not own an automobile. Around 10,000 students currently receive these payments. Haaretz, Jerusalem Post and YNet News all report on the 6-1 decision by the Court. Supreme Court president Dorit Beinisch's majority opinion said that the special treatment of kollel students violate basic principles of equality. It ordered that the provision for these payments be removed from the 2011 State Budget. Interior Minister Eli Yishai of the religious Shas Party criticized the ruling as discriminatory against the haredi (strictly Orthodox) population and said legislation would be introduced to restore the stipends. Today's opinion came in a case originally filed ten years ago by Arnon Yekutieli, a proponent of secular rights and a former deputy mayor of Jerusalem. He died in 2001