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Ultra-Orthodox lockdown disobedience could cost Netanyahu

Angry over the ultra-Orthodox and their riots against the nationwide lockdown, Israeli voters are turning against Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu.

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Ultra-Orthodox Jewish protesters clash with Israeli security forces during the enforcement of the coronavirus emergency regulations in Jerusalem's ultra-orthodox neighborhood of Mea Sharim, on Jan. 26, 2021. — AHMAD GHARABLI/AFP via Getty Images

On Jan. 18, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu made a late-night phone call to the home of 93-year-old Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky in Bnei Brak. What Netanyahu wanted was for Kanievsky to make sure all ultra-Orthodox schools shut down and remain closed even if the nationwide closure is prolonged. It was his second call to the rabbi’s home in less than 10 days.

Kanievsky is considered one of the top leaders of the ultra-Orthodox public, but until recently, he had been a relatively anonymous figure to the general, secular Israeli public. Only in the past year did Kanievsky become familiar to all Israelis, and not in a positive way. This rabbi is the one who instructed Heredi boys schools to open religious primary schools during the lockdowns despite government orders to the contrary. To many Israelis, the defiance of the Lithuanian leader in the ultra-Orthodox stream expressed the great power wielded by the ultra-Orthodox over the prime minister of Israel.

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