The Pluralist Podcast - with Orly Erez-Likhovski and Rabbi Josh Weinberg

An Insider’s View of the Haredi World with Dr. Yakir Englander

1 h 1 min · 25 de jun de 2026
Portada del episodio An Insider’s View of the Haredi World with Dr. Yakir Englander

Descripción

Israel’s Haredi crisis is about more than IDF enlistment. In this episode of The Pluralist Podcast, Rabbi Josh Weinberg and Orly Erez-Likhovski speak with Dr. Yakir Englander — a scholar, educator, and community bridge-builder who grew up inside Israel’s Haredi community, later left it, served in the IDF, and has spent much of his life working across Jewish, Israeli, and interfaith communities. To learn more about Yakir’s work or to connect with him directly, visit: https://yakirenglander.com/about/ [https://yakirenglander.com/about/] Subscribe to The Pluralist Podcast for more conversations from both sides of the ocean about Israel, democracy, Jewish life, and religious freedom. If this conversation matters to you, please consider supporting IRAC’s work to defend democracy, equality, religious freedom, and pluralism in Israel: https://apzprxtx.donorsupport.co/page/FUNKCDJMHLM [https://apzprxtx.donorsupport.co/page/FUNKCDJMHLM] As Israel approaches elections, the place of Haredi society has reached a boiling point. Mass protests over army service are disrupting daily life, while the political system continues to avoid a real solution. At the same time, the debate over Haredi integration touches some of the deepest questions facing Israel: shared civic responsibility, women’s rights, equality, education, religious freedom, and the rule of law. Yakir helps us understand Haredi society from the inside — not as a slogan, demographic threat, or political bloc, but as a complex community with different leaders, different fears, different relationships to the state, and growing numbers of Haredim seeking a more modern path. For Orly and IRAC, the question is not only whether Haredim can become more integrated into Israeli society. It is whether Israel can make that integration possible without sacrificing the liberal democratic values that protect us all. If integrating Haredi men into the army requires pushing women out of sight, what happens to female soldiers? If opening academia to Haredi students requires gender-segregated programs, what happens to female lecturers? And if public funding continues to support schools that refuse to teach core subjects, what kind of future are we building — for Haredi children, and for Israel as a whole? This is a conversation about Haredim, democracy, responsibility, fear, power, and the possibility of a shared future.

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