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Judaism

While the Schools Bill may be dropped, the battle over yeshivot is set to continue

Education Secretaries may come and go but moves to force religious institutions to teach secular subjects are still on the cards

October 31, 2022 16:39
Schools Bill demo
4 min read

The last place you’d expect to find a group of Chasidim in their shtreimels and bekishes on Chol Hamo’ed Succot was on a protest outside Parliament. But the very fact that they took to the streets during the intermediate days of a festival shows how strongly felt was the cause: it is, one of the leaders of the action said, “an existential struggle”.

This month’s Succot outing was the latest in a series of demonstrations in Westminster against the government’s plans to regulate yeshivot, which have been included as part of the Schools Bill.

The demonstrators may gain temporary respite because the Bill is expected to be shelved any day and may already have been, had it not been for the latest spin of the prime ministerial merry go-round. New Education Secretary Gillian Keegan is the fifth to hold the post this year.

The Bill's likely suspension has nothing to do with the yeshivot, however: proposals to govern academies ran into controversy with those who believed they gave too much power to the Education Secretary, which led to a large section of the Bill being ditched earlier. Still,the educational press has suggested that the planned crackdown on unregistered institutions is likely to be re-introduced in spring and one peer who has closely followed discussions in the Lords told the JC that this part of the Bill will come back “at some point”.