بیا_برده_من_باش" #خاخام_اسرائیلی#"
‘#Come_be_my_slave’ — #Israeli_rabbi
در_آکادمی_نظامی_می گوید#
#at_military_academy_says
فلسطینی_ها_باید_بخاطر_منافع_خود_به_بردگی_گرفته_شوند#
#Palestinians_should_be_enslaved_for_their_own_good
#BneiDavid_religious_college_rabbis
خاخام_دانشکده_مذهبی_بنی_دیوید#
تهیه و ترجمه عنوان از: پیمان پایدار#
The rabbi’s undated comments on slavery were first reported in April but in much-abridged form. The full comments were lately published by Nehorai.
There’s more – plenty more – where this came from, but presumably, you’ll have dinner sometime, so I’ll spare you.
Bnei David (or as I prefer to call them, Bnei Eli; those of you with a biblical education may get the joke*) is considered the flagship of the National-Religious education system. The college was created in the late 1980s when rabbis noted with alarm that yeshiva students who join the army often “take off the yarmulke” and become secular, and “the sector” loses votes, souls, and money. Eli was the first of the “military colleges”: the point is to subject ex-yeshiva boys to another year of indoctrination, so they’ll be “strengthened” when they join the army. As part of the deal with the army, these cadets – who join the army a year later in life than other Israelis– are trained by the colleges to become officers. The format was considered successful both by the army and the rabbis, and many other such colleges were created; a small minority of them are secular. Bnei David’s founder, Eli Sadan, won the Israel Prize (the highest civil honor) in 2016, mostly due to his work in Bnei David.
In the last two years, many embarrassing quotes by Bnei David rabbis were exposed.
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