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Satmar Rebbe: Voting Forbidden According To Torah (Full Speech)

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Published on Jan 20, 2013

Jerusalem - Thousands of haredi men and women gathered at Kikar Shabbat in Jerusalem's ultra-Orthodox Mea Shearim neighborhood to greet and listen to the Grand Rabbi of the Satmar hassidic dynasty Rabbi Zalman Leib Teitelbaum on Sunday night.

The massive gathering was called to demonstrate against participation in Tuesday's general election, and the thousands of attendees were told not to vote in the upcoming ballot.

Satmar is a fiercely anti-Zionist hassidic group and its leaders view any interaction with the State of Israel as prohibited, due to the secular foundations of its laws and an interpretation of a Talmudic passage which they say forbids Jews from setting up a sovereign state in the Land of Israel before the arrival of the Messiah.

The protest was organized in conjunction with the equally anti-Zionist Eda Haredit communal association, and the leading rabbis of the organization also addressed the crowd.

Festive lights were festooned along Mea Shearim Street and in Kikar Shabbat, while banners with celebratory verses from the Bible were strung across the main square and its approaches to welcome the rebbe.

Huge signs declaring that voting in the election is forbidden according to the Torah accompanied the more joyful decorations.

Rabbi Teitelbaum, who lives in New York, arrived in Israel on Sunday afternoon, and was provided with a police escort on his way to Jerusalem.

As well as to protest the elections, the Satmar Rebbe is also in the country for the wedding of one of his granddaughters.

The spiritual leader of the non-hassidic haredi world Rabbi Aharon Leib Shteinman, along with the Grand Rabbis of the Viznitz and Belz hassidic groups among others, have in contrast repeatedly called on their followers to vote in the upcoming elections, saying that do so is a religious obligation.

The Haredi rabbinic leadership has repeatedly declared this election to be a time of religious emergency due to proposed legislation they see as threatening to the ultra-Orthodox world, lifestyle and interests.

Proposed legislation to rescind the mass exemptions from military service which full-time yeshiva students were able to claim until last August is one of the leading issues of concern for the haredi leadership.

Content provided as courtesy by The Jerusalem Post.

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