Friday, July 30, 2021

Lebai Yahudi pandai lepak

Canberra Times:

Israeli Ultra-Orthodox men urged to work

 

Israel's government is looking to push more Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men into work.

Israel's government is looking to take advantage of a rare political opportunity to push more Ultra-Orthodox Jewish men into work to boost the economy, a measure that could pit powerful religious leaders against politicians.

By 2065, Israel's "haredi" community is expected to make up 32 per cent of Israel's population, up from 12 per cent now, according to official estimates.

Only about 50 per cent of Ultra-Orthodox men work. The other half study religious texts in seminaries, and the Bank of Israel and economic leaders have warned of long-term strains on the budget if they are not integrated into the workforce.

"Raising the employment and labour productivity rates of the ultra-Orthodox population, especially men, are issues of strategic importance to per capita GDP, labour productivity, and reducing income disparities between the ultra-Orthodox and the rest of society," The Bank of Israel told Reuters.

But for much of the last 12 years, two ultra-Orthodox parties provided support to former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu's ruling coalition, effectively preventing any change.

Now no Ultra-Orthodox parties are in government, and Finance Minister Avigdor Lieberman is a determined secularist. Haredi men, says Lieberman, should "earn a decent living that is not based on allowances and handouts".

He has already fired his first shot; a plan that would require both parents being employed to receive state subsidies for child daycare.

Haredi politicians have roundly attacked the proposals. Moshe Gafni, head of the United Torah Judaism party, called Lieberman "evil".

Many Ultra-Orthodox families are large, and are often supported by women, of which 78 per cent hold jobs.

The Haredi community and some analysts have urged the government to not enact policies that may ultimately backfire and force women out of the workforce at the expense of men.

Eitan Regev, deputy chief executive of the Haredi Institute for Public Affairs, sees poor pay as an obstacle to rapid integration - many Ultra-Orthodox men cannot command high salaries as they never studied English, maths and science.

"If job opportunities are created and the proper training is given so that the entry wages are high enough to compensate for what they will lose -- like Torah study -- then they will enter the labour market," Regev said.

State support for the Haredim and exemptions from military service have long been an irritant to many Israelis.

But the new government's wafer-thin majority may prevent Lieberman implementing reform - Prime Minister Naftali Bennett may need Haredi parties to join his coalition if others abandon it.

One crucial sector is high-tech industries. Around 10 per cent of university students studying technology are Ultra-Orthodox, and 10,000 Haredim work in the sector, 7000 of them women.

Moshe Friedman, whose organisation Kamatech works to integrate his fellow Haredim into the tech sector and help them start businesses, said they could fill the vacancies that high-tech firms are advertising.

"I see a lot of young Haredim who want to join the workforce and technology industry. They are coming to us by the thousands," Friedman said, adding that the government "needs to just help them with better education and better training."

Australian Associated Press


3 comments:

  1. Same-same in Malaysia.

    Many Ultra-Conservative Muslim men have no gainful economic contribution to the nation.

    Their only training and qualification is on Islamic studies and texts.

    A few of the lucky ones with a silver tongue can be successful preachers, some more enterprising types can make a living trading "Halal" or "Muslim" products, often just repackaged items made by pork eating China.

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  2. What a fine example for others to follow. These Ultra-Orthodox Jews don't practice "Women's Equality" But "Women's Superiority".

    Women On Top ha ha ha...men stay at home.

    Ultra-Orthodox Jews allow their women to be educated and go to work and earn high salaries. Not like certain religions who don't allow their girls to attend even primary school, work, drive cars or even wander outside the house without a male relative chaperone. Instead they marry off their daughters as soon as they reach puberty and then become baby making machines. And their women folk have to tolerate polygamous marriages and husbands with insatiable desires ha ha ha.

    These Ultra-religious Jews study the Torah day and night but they don't become terrorists. Have we heard any Hasidic Jew suicide bomber, or do they potong kelapa or crash jet airplanes into tall buildings? Do they go around using weapons and taking over countries like Taliban in Afghanistan? No, they just quietly study their Torah and let their womenfolk get the limelight while they Serve and Obey Yahweh.

    And they don't go around TIPU-ing or forcing people to ikut their religion like some people do in Sabah and Sarawak.

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  3. Sounds very much like the madrasahs where many aspire to be preachers.

    The surprising thing is that Israel, despite this "obstacle" is a very advanced country.

    However, we should not pretend we can reach Israel's progress and inventiveness. Our madrasahs are churning a different breed of blood suckers.

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