Why
Israel's
right wing is gunning for nation's Supreme Court
Givat
Zeev, West Bank — Israel’s
government had long decreed that the Ayelet Hashachar synagogue, perched on a
hilltop on the outskirts of this settlement north of Jerusalem, was built illegally on Palestinian
land and should be demolished.
But
last week, as young men waited in the barricaded chapel to repel Israeli police
forces expected any day, protest banners hanging in the synagogue courtyard
pointed to a nemesis greater than the government: the Israeli Supreme Court,
which in October gave the government a Nov. 17 deadline to finally raze the
structure.
“The
High Court hates God,” one banner read.
The
heated rhetoric against the justices highlights what for months has been a rising
tide of opprobrium from nationalist activists, rabbis, and coalition
politicians toward the court, seen as one of the last bastions of defense for
civil rights in Israel. Even the justice minister is a strident critic.
The
Supreme Court building in Jerusalem
has been defaced with spray paint, its justices have been called accomplices to
terrorism, and one rabbi instructed followers to harass the court members in
the streets. For the first time a security detail has been assigned to protect
the court’s associate justices.
Democracy
activists say the debate over the court’s rulings has spilled over from a
reasoned critique of the decisions to attacks that approach the inflamed
rhetoric a generation ago that led to the assassination of Israeli Prime
Minister Yitzhak Rabin. Some believe the assault on the court is so heated that
it risks eroding a main pillar of Israel’s democracy.
“Although
voices of critique of the court are not new, the style, the degree of the
intensity, and inciting nature of expressions of politicians – including
politicians of the coalition – isn’t something we’ve heard before. This is an
escalation,” says Mordechai Kremnitzer, a law professor at Hebrew University
and a fellow at the Israel Democracy Institute.
“The
problem is to what extent this climate impacts the independence of the court, and
the image of independence: both are critical for the rule of law. The judges
must feel they are independent and they can rule according to conscience and
not out of fear. When the court comes under such attack, there are question
marks about this.”
Coalition
politicians have pushed for legislation allowing the parliament to reinstate
laws struck down by the court. They’ve also called for a reform of the
appointment process. Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has even suggested
establishing a separate court for issues of national security.
The
main flash points are rulings that roll back or curtail settlement expansion;
invoke Israel’s so-called
“Basic laws” on human dignity to overrule Israel’s defense establishment, or
strike down parliamentary laws promoted by the coalition. The standoff over the
Ayelet Hashachar synagogue has helped spur a spike in heated rhetoric.
The
government says the single-floor structure was built illegally, but for years
delayed carrying out its own demolition orders.
Synagogue
supporters have plastered posters at road junctions calling the court a
“hostile” opponent of the Jewish settlement. Prominent rabbis said razing
the synagogue would be a “desecration” and told police to refuse the demolition
orders. One rabbi even called on supporters to heckle the justices in order to
“embitter their lives.”
Religious
seminary students camping out in the synagogue last week held study sessions
and night-time dances to boost morale. Synagogue advocates in the courtyard
argued that the court discriminates against Jewish activists while being
lenient with Palestinians who build illegally. They also argue that laws of
Jewish religious law – “halacha” – should take prominence over the country’s
secular legal system.
“It’s
inconceivable that a Jewish court will destroy a synagogue. It isn’t legal,”
says Rabbi Doron Rozilio last Monday amid the demonstrators at the synagogue.
“God doesn’t permit it. The Torah doesn’t permit this. This is a Jewish state.
You can’t go against the law of the holy one.”
Another
activist at the synagogue faults the court for holding up home demolitions of
Palestinians accused of terror attacks. “They help the enemy by giving
legitimacy to carrying out attacks,” says Ariyeh Binyamin, a seminary
student. His remarks echoed Moti Yogev, a pro-settler legislator who also
said in July that the Supreme Court should be razed over decisions to tear down
structures in the settlements.
The
escalation began gathering momentum this year after the election victory of the
conservative Likud party and its right-wing allies. Emboldened, coalition
members have trained their sights on the court.
Justice
Minister Ayelet Shaked, of the same party as Mr. Yogev, has argued that the
court oversteps its authority in defiance of the will of the Israeli center-right
parliamentary majority.
Other
politicians accuse the court’s 15 justices – who are selected by committee
rather than appointed by the chief executive like in the United States –
of imposing liberal, secular, and pro-Palestinian values at the expense of
national security and the country’s Jewish character.
“Netanyahu
has a mandate from the people to rein in the Supreme Court,” says Yair Kartman,
an activist at the synagogue. “The Supreme Court doesn’t promote a nationalist
policy. It promotes a universalist policy, that emphasizes human rights. It
doesn’t advance the national interests of the state of Israel. It
promotes cosmopolitan, liberal, international interests.”
To
be sure, advocates for Palestinians and human rights take a different view.
They insist it almost always defers to security authorities in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip. Following the appointment
of more conservative justices in recent years, the court has handed down
rulings curtailing speech rights and property rights.
Despite
the heated attacks, the court remains the most trusted of Israel’s three
branches of government.
A
survey this year by the Israel Democracy Institute showed
62 percent of Israeli Jews and 63 percent of Israeli Arabs expressing faith in
the Supreme Court. However, trust in the court plummets as religiosity rises,
according to the survey.
“It’s
short-sighted, anarchist, and nihilistic to attack the court,” says Amnon
Rubinstein, a former education minister from the liberal Meretz Party and a law
professor at the Interdisciplinary
Center in Herzliya. “You
can attack a decision, but not the institution. It’s a very dangerous trend. To
demolish this is to demolish the common denominator which unites Israeli
society.”
Criminals
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