By Professor Paul Eidelberg
Before setting forth the record of judicial despotism of Israel’s Supreme Court under its president, judge Aharon Barak, it will be worthwhile to mention a judicial ruling of one of the greatest Talmudists, Ra’avad (Rabbi Avraham ben David of Posquires, 1125-1198). Ra’avad held that a Beth Din may never revoke the decision of a previous Beth Din once its latter ahs taken hold and spread throughout Israel.
In the last two months of 1998, Israeli courts, handed down three precedent-setting rulings that contain the seeds for fundamental change in Israel’s way of life. The first was a decision of the Supeme Court, sitting as the High Court of Justice, that forced the religious councils in Jerusalem and Kiryat Tivon to seat representatives of the Reform and Conservative movements. The second was a decision of the Jerusalem Labor Court which ruled that kibbutz shopping centers could remain open to the public on Shabbat. This ruling drastically changed a situation in which only selected places of "cultural activity" such as theaters and cinemas were permitted to operate on Shabbat. The third and most significant decision was one in which the High Court of Justice declared the long-established system of army deferments for yeshiva students “illegal.” (See The Jerusalem Post, December 18, 1998, p. 16.)
This third decision, from a legal perspective, was utterly untenable and merely reflected the personal predilections of the Barak court. Jerusalem Post columnist Evelyn Gordon explains as follows:
. Yet from a legal perspective, it was untenable - and for a body whose job
is to uphold the law, to degrade it into no more than the justices' whim of
the moment is ultimately far more damaging than any good the decision might
produce. For if the nation's chief interpreters of the law feel no need to respect
it, how can ordinary people be expected to do so? To say that last week's decision
was not based on law may sound far-fetched.
One of the court's most stunning achievements in recent years has been its success
in persuading the public that it is merely interpreting existing law, rather
than creating it. A glance at the history of this particular issue, however,
shows how spurious that claim is. The court has discussed yeshiva deferments
many times.
As far back as 1970, a petitioner complained that the defense minister was abusing
his discretion by granting wholesale deferments to yeshiva students. The court
at that time said this was a political question and therefore not justiciable
(appropriate for judicial decision). In 1981, a similar petition was filed.
Once again the court found the issue non-justiciable: It lacked legal criteria
by which the justices could decide, the court wrote, and it was a public issue
that should be settled by non-judicial bodies. In 1986, the court ruled on the
issue again. This time, a panel led by current Supreme Court President Aharon
Barak decided the issue was justiciable.
No law had been passed in the interim to provide new legal criteria - but there
were new justices, with a different legal philosophy, which held virtually no
question inappropriate for the court to decide. Yet even this court dismissed
the petition on its merits, saying the deferments were a legal and reasonable
use of the defense minister's powers. And what has changed in the intervening
12 years? Again, no new law has been passed.
The justices themselves said the important difference was numerical. In 1986,
there were 17,017 yeshiva deferments - 5.4 percent of that year's eligible draftees.
By 1998, there were 28,772 deferments, or 8% of eligible draftees.
That quantitative change, Barak wrote, created a qualitative change whereby
it was no longer reasonable to let the defense minister decide - an explicit
decision by the Knesset was needed. It is hard to imagine a flimsier argument
than one that says 5.4% and 8% are qualitatively different. THE ruling becomes
even more incredible, however, when one considers the fact that the Knesset,
far from being silent, has discussed this issue several times.
Only this July, the house rejected three bills to limit yeshiva deferments.
It is true that the Knesset never explicitly authorized such deferments, but
it expressed its opinion amply by rejecting all efforts to change the status
quo. The real change that occurred between 1986 and 1998 had nothing to do with
either the number of yeshiva deferments or the law.
The difference was simply that in 1986 the court could not have gotten away
with such a ruling - but in 1998 it could. In 1986, the court was still operating
in the climate of judicial restraint created during its first four decades of
existence. The idea that it could - much less should - make major policy decisions
was foreign to the Israeli public.
Not only were political issues considered non- justiciable, but the now ubiquitous
"public petitioner" was unknown. Until the mid-1980s, only someone
directly harmed by a government decision could petition the court against that
decision. Since then, the law has not changed, but the court has created a new
norm: Anyone can petition the court on anything at all, and no issue is beyond
its purview.
Over the past 12 years, the court has declared MKs unfit to be ministers or
deputy ministers, revoked an Israel Prize, reversed attorney-generals' decisions
not to indict, and struck down the closure of a street on Shabbat - all with
no backing in explicit written law, but merely on the grounds that these actions
were "unreasonable." Twelve years ago, the court found wholesale draft
deferments for yeshiva students reasonable. Last week, it found them unreasonable
- though no new law had been passed. But if the law is no more than what 11
men and women consider "reasonable" at a given moment, why should
it command our obedience? And if law is supposed to be made by our elected representatives,
why should an unelected justice's ideas of reasonability have any more power
than those, for instance, of Rabbi Ovadia Yosef? Decisions like the one made
last week lay the court open to these kinds of questions.
And in the long run, such questions are far more dangerous to Israeli democracy
than yeshiva draft deferments.