Pindrus Returns to Knesset as Eichler Appointed Deputy Communications Minister; Eichler Decries “Terrible Cruelty”
MK Yisroel Eichler was appointed on Monday as Deputy Minister of Communications and subsequently resigned his Knesset seat under the Norwegian Law, paving the way for the return of former MK Yitzchok Pindrus to parliament.
Following his appointment, Eichler delivered remarks that focused on the shocking incident earlier in the day in Yerushalayim’s Romema neighborhood. He sharply criticized the judicial system, saying the tragedy was “a result of the terrible cruelty of the legal system,” which, he argued, had stripped chareidi families of daycare subsidies and denied tens of thousands of children from families of Torah learners access to licensed daycare frameworks.
Eichler said that during his tenure as chairman of the Knesset Labor and Welfare Committee, he repeatedly warned over the past year of the grave dangers posed by canceling daycare arrangements. He said he demanded passage of daycare legislation, but his warnings “went unheeded,” adding: “Regarding the judicial system in this context—your hands spilled this blood.”
Addressing criticism leveled at him in recent days, Eichler said that “the gates of Gehennom were opened in the panic channels,” accusing media outlets of branding him anti-Zionist and an enemy of the state. He dismissed the accusations as unsurprising, saying that for 45 years he has fought what he described as the delegitimization of the chareidi public and the incitement against chareidi children in Israel. He also rejected claims that he lacks experience in communications, noting that he has long been active across the media spectrum.
Eichler further denied allegations that he used sweeping derogatory language against the secular public, calling such claims “a systematic, Bolshevik lie.” He said he consistently targets those who incite and persecute the chareidi community without generalizing about entire populations, adding that if he trusted the courts, he would file a defamation suit over the accusation.
Responding to claims that he is anti-Zionist, Eichler said his critics “do not know what Zion is or what Eretz Yisrael is.” He recounted his family’s deep roots in Yerushalayim spanning some 160 years, describing ancestors who immigrated with self-sacrifice during the Ottoman era. He also told a family story in which his great-grandfather sought refuge with Rav Avraham Yitzchak Hakohein Kook after entering the country without papers, quoting Rav Kook as saying that a Jewish child seeking refuge “is not a criminal,” and that Eretz Yisrael is his mother.
Eichler added that, as part of his ideology of settling the land, he helped establish neighborhoods and communities at a young age, including chareidi communities in Ashdod, questioning how such actions could be labeled anti-Zionist. He concluded by saying that the chareidi public loves all who love Zion and Yerushalayim, regardless of differing views, while opposing those who hate Zion and Yerushalayim, whom he described as a small and dwindling minority.
The political move followed an arbitration ruling tied to a rotation agreement between Degel HaTorah and Agudas Yisrael within United Torah Judaism. The panel of rabbinic arbitrators ruled that Eichler was required to resign to allow Pindrus to return to the Knesset. According to party sources, Eichler’s appointment as deputy minister enabled the transition via the Norwegian Law, resolving the dispute without further escalation.
{Matzav.com}