Aviad Yehiel Hollander’s 2014 article, “Halachic Multiculturalism in the IDF: Rulings of Official Religious Authorities in Israel Concerning ‘Women’s Singing,’” remains an indispensable analysis of the evolving relationship among halacha, military sovereignty, and multicultural governance in the State of Israel. Many observers first read the 2011 walkout as a narrow dispute over religious sensitivities during military ceremonies. Hollander shows it differently. Beneath the surface lies a conflict over jurisprudential method, institutional authority, national identity, and the sociological future of the Israel Defense Forces. The episode of religious officer cadets leaving a ceremony featuring female vocalists was never about music alone. It exposed competing theories of how halacha engages transformed social conditions and competing visions of what the IDF ought to become.
Hollander’s central achievement is his refusal of the binary frame through which most journalists read such controversies. Press coverage reduced the affair to liberal egalitarianism versus religious conservatism, women’s rights versus clerical patriarchy, secular modernity versus reactionary Orthodoxy. Hollander instead reconstructs the internal logic of the halachic debate. He shows that the disagreement between Rabbi Yonah Metzger (b. 1953) and Rabbi Eyal Krim (b. 1957) is not a quarrel over whether the classical prohibition of kol isha exists. Both rabbis accept the Talmudic and halachic prohibition on women’s singing. Both accept that the issue imposes legal constraints. Both support exemptions for religious soldiers under at least some conditions. The dispute concerns something deeper. It asks whether transformed sociological conditions count as legitimate halachic data, whether state institutions carry independent religious significance, and whether military cohesion can become a substantive halachic value capable of reshaping the practical application of inherited categories.
More than a decade later, the article reads almost as prophecy. The tensions Hollander identifies have only intensified amid the rise of Hardal influence, expanding Haredi integration debates, controversies over gender-integrated service, and the constitutional crisis around military burden-sharing after October 7. The IDF increasingly serves as the primary arena through which Israeli society negotiates the meaning of “Jewish and democratic.” The women’s singing controversy now appears not as an isolated episode but as an early sign of a much larger struggle over the sociological constitution of the Israeli state.
The dispute begins with a halachic question rooted in classical Jewish sources. The Talmudic assertion that “a woman’s voice is ervah” had long generated debate over the permissibility of men hearing women sing. The modern military context introduces complications absent from classical discussions. Military ceremonies are not nightclubs or theaters. They are state rituals carrying mourning, memory, hierarchy, cohesion, and collective symbolism. The question becomes whether these contextual features alter the halachic application of the prohibition.
Rabbi Metzger answers largely in the negative. His jurisprudence operates through what one might call preservationist formalism. Metzger relies on narrow interpretations of canonical legal authorities such as the Shulhan Arukh of Rabbi Yosef Karo (1488–1575). He acknowledges minority leniencies developed across the halachic tradition, including distinctions between solo and group singing, or between intentional and incidental hearing, but he rejects their practical applicability. For Metzger, these leniencies remain marginal academic possibilities, not operative norms. The military ceremony does not differ from other settings where the prohibition applies. Soldiers attend on purpose. The singing forms part of the central event. The prohibition holds.
Underneath Metzger’s method lies a broader theory of religious integrity. His focus stays directed at the inner spiritual condition of the observant soldier. The primary question is whether religious subjects can preserve fidelity to halachic norms within potentially compromising environments. Institutional cohesion, social symbolism, and secular perceptions remain secondary. Hollander observes that Metzger reads ceremonies as cultural performances rather than as socially constitutive rituals. He sees little reason to modify inherited prohibitions because the setting is military rather than civilian.
Rabbi Krim approaches the problem through a different jurisprudential orientation. He is not simply more lenient. He operates with a different account of how halacha interacts with social reality. One might call his approach sovereignty-oriented jurisprudence. Unlike preservationist formalism, this method treats transformed sociological conditions as legally relevant facts capable of reshaping the application of inherited categories.
Krim revives obscure minority opinions, including the writings of Rabbi Aharon de Toledo, who argued in Divrei Hefetz that the prohibition depends primarily on the listener’s intention to derive sexual enjoyment from the singing voice. Krim distinguishes between aesthetic appreciation and erotic stimulation, between solemn ceremonies and atmospheres of levity, between intentional sensual enjoyment and incidental participation in collective ritual. He reinterprets earlier decisors such as Rabbi Yehiel Yaakov Weinberg (1884–1966), arguing that permissive rulings on mixed singing in Sridei Aish reflect not a narrow technical exception but a broader sensitivity to social context and institutional necessity.
Most important, Krim incorporates modern sociological transformation into halachic reasoning. Hollander highlights Krim’s argument that women’s increased public visibility has altered the experiential and psychological assumptions underlying earlier prohibitions. In a society where women routinely occupy public space alongside men, hearing female voices no longer automatically produces the erotic charge presumed by prior generations. The prohibition’s practical application can be reconsidered without formally abolishing the prohibition.
The move represents a jurisprudential innovation. The real divide between Metzger and Krim is not over legal conclusions but over whether sociology counts as halachic data. Metzger treats the inherited legal category as insulated from changing social perception. Krim treats social transformation as relevant to the category’s operative meaning. Krim introduces a form of halachic legal realism. Law cannot apply mechanically apart from the social world its subjects inhabit.
Such reasoning places Krim within a broader Religious Zionist transformation of halachic consciousness associated with figures like Rabbi Shlomo Goren (1917–1994). In classical diaspora halacha, the surrounding state existed largely outside covenantal religious life. Sovereignty-oriented Religious Zionism alters the framework. Once the Jewish state becomes partially sacralized, state institutions acquire independent religious significance. The army stops functioning as an external framework where religious individuals operate. It becomes an expression of Jewish collective destiny and national holiness.
Hollander recognizes this when he discusses Rabbi Rafi Peretz’s (b. 1956) claim that “the honor of the IDF” and “the honor of the Torah” are interconnected. The phrase is not rhetorical flourish. It reflects a theological anthropology of sovereignty. Military cohesion, national unity, and institutional legitimacy become substantive religious values rather than pragmatic concerns. For Krim and Peretz, preserving army solidarity is part of the halachic enterprise.
This distinction reveals the institutional character of Krim’s jurisprudence. Metzger’s concern centers on the integrity of the individual religious subject. Krim’s concern centers on the integrity of the sovereign collective institution. Metzger asks how observant soldiers can preserve spiritual purity within secular environments. Krim asks what interpretation might let a diverse citizen army keep functioning as a shared national framework.
These questions produce different conceptions of multiculturalism. Metzger’s model leans toward accommodation through separation. Religious soldiers should be excused from participation in problematic events even if visible differences emerge between groups. The army can tolerate behavioral pluralism because preserving religious integrity outweighs symbolic uniformity. Krim’s model leans toward accommodation through reinterpretation. Halachic elasticity should be deployed wherever legitimately possible to minimize visible fragmentation and preserve collective participation. Unity becomes a religious good capable of justifying interpretive creativity.
Hollander identifies the dispute as part of the IDF’s larger transformation away from the classical Zionist “melting pot” paradigm. Early Zionist ideology cast the military as an engine of national homogenization. Jews from radically different diasporic cultures might be forged into a unified Hebrew collective through shared labor, language, ritual, and sacrifice. The army served as a civic religion generating common identity.
By the early twenty-first century, the ideal had eroded. Israeli society had segmented into distinct subcultures with divergent moral vocabularies, educational systems, media ecosystems, and religious commitments. The IDF increasingly operated not as a homogenizing institution but as a negotiated coalition structure attempting to preserve minimal solidarity across deep internal differences.
The women’s singing controversy reveals the fragility of this arrangement because military ceremonies occupy a uniquely symbolic role within national life. Shared songs, memorial rituals, and public commemorations are not peripheral activities. They are the rites that reproduce collective identity. When groups begin leaving ceremonies, requesting exemptions, or operating under differentiated rules, the symbolic unity of the institution comes under strain.
This is why the controversy generates such emotional intensity relative to its surface content. The argument was never about whether a female soloist might sing at a memorial event. It concerned whether the IDF would remain a common civil religion or evolve into a federation of semi-autonomous tribes sharing a chain of command while operating under increasingly divergent normative systems.
Hollander grasps that the military rabbinate’s categorization of ceremonies already reflected a de facto multicultural settlement. “Official ceremonies” required participation. “Other ceremonies” allowed partial accommodation. “Social activities” mandated broader exemptions. This bureaucratic differentiation tried to balance competing goods: institutional unity, religious conscience, women’s dignity, and operational function.
Over time, the differentiation has expanded. Dedicated Haredi military tracks now operate under highly specialized conditions including gender segregation, religious supervision, modified training environments, and reduced female presence. Religious Zionist combat units possess distinctive internal cultures and rabbinic influences. Secular units operate by different social assumptions. The IDF resembles a multicultural federation more than a culturally unified republic in uniform.
The post–October 7 environment intensified these forces. The war temporarily revived rhetoric of collective solidarity and shared sacrifice. It also magnified tensions over military burden-sharing, especially regarding Haredi conscription. As the Israeli state attempts to integrate larger numbers of ultra-Orthodox recruits, questions once considered marginal now become constitutional in scope. Can a liberal-democratic military sustain deeply illiberal subcultures within its ranks? Can a sovereign institution maintain symbolic unity while operating under increasingly differentiated moral regimes?
Hollander’s concluding questions therefore appear prescient. He asks whether liberal Israeli society might prove as willing to reinterpret its own values as Krim is willing to reinterpret halachic categories. The question remains the central unresolved dilemma.
Krim’s jurisprudence shows remarkable elasticity. He revives minority opinions, reinterprets precedents, contextualizes prohibitions, and incorporates sociological change into legal reasoning. Many secular Israeli actors approach liberal equality norms with greater rigidity. Every accommodation granted to religious sensibilities risks appearing as symbolic exclusion of women or capitulation to illiberalism. Every assertion of universal egalitarian norms appears to many religious communities as coercive secularization.
The symmetry is often missed. Public discourse portrays religious actors as uniquely inflexible. Hollander’s analysis complicates that picture. Krim’s willingness to reformulate halachic application in response to institutional and sociological realities might exceed the willingness of some secular liberals to reconsider universalist assumptions for the sake of coexistence.
The tensions cannot dissolve through rhetoric. Full accommodation of strict Haredi norms might affect women’s participation, visibility, and authority within military spaces. Hollander acknowledges this. The question is not whether friction exists but what type of friction a democratic state can absorb without fragmenting into parallel societies or coercively assimilating minority subcultures.
The women’s singing controversy belongs within a larger global crisis confronting liberal democracies. Modern states contain communities operating by incompatible moral anthropologies. Liberal universalism assumes common civic norms applicable across all groups. Multicultural accommodation assumes differentiated practices and institutional flexibility. Militaries pose special difficulties because they depend on hierarchy, solidarity, and shared symbolic legitimacy in ways other institutions do not.
A university tolerates extensive cultural segmentation because participation remains voluntary and decentralized. A military based on conscription cannot easily function if groups reject common rituals, shared spaces, or mutual symbolic recognition. The IDF therefore becomes an unusually charged arena for negotiating questions that confront liberal democracies everywhere. How much differentiation can sovereign institutions tolerate before collective identity dissolves?
Hollander’s article treats these issues with methodological seriousness rather than ideological reduction. He approaches halachic reasoning as a sophisticated jurisprudential discourse shaped by institutional incentives, sociological conditions, theological commitments, and competing theories of statehood. He recognizes the dispute over kol isha as a contest among competing visions of sovereignty, multiculturalism, and collective identity within the Jewish state.
More than a decade on, the trajectory he identified has become unmistakable. The IDF operates through negotiated accommodations among divergent subcultures rather than through classical Zionist homogenization. Religious Zionist jurisprudence keeps trying to preserve institutional unity through interpretive elasticity. Haredi integration pressures keep expanding demands for differentiated environments. Liberal universalism keeps struggling to determine how much accommodation it can absorb without undermining its own normative foundations.
The women’s singing controversy endures because it condensed all these tensions into one symbolic dispute. It exposed the unstable intersection of halacha, sovereignty, gender, nationalism, and multicultural governance inside the last great integrative institution of Israeli civic life. Hollander saw earlier than most that the argument was never about songs. It was about the future sociological architecture of the Israeli state.
* Rabbi Eyal Moshe Krim (b. February 8, 1957) heads the Military Rabbinate of the Israel Defense Forces and holds the rank of brigadier general. He grew up in Givatayim in a family with Karlin Hasidic roots and studied at Yeshivat Bnei Akiva.
His path to the chief rabbi post runs through combat, not just the study hall. He entered the IDF as a paratrooper in 1975, became an infantry officer in 1985, and served as a platoon leader and company commander in the 202nd Paratroop Battalion. He took leave in 1981 to study at Mercaz HaRav. After the First Lebanon War, he commanded a detachment in Sayeret Matkal, the elite special forces unit. He continued reserve command duties as a lieutenant colonel from 1985 to 2005. From 1985 to 1994 he studied at Ateret Cohanim, where he received rabbinic ordination.
In 2006 he returned to active service at the request of Rabbi Avichai Rontzki, then IDF chief rabbi. He chaired the Shiluv HaRa’uy committee charged with implementing the 2002 IDF integration order on sexes and religions, then headed the Halacha department of the Military Rabbinate. That is the post he held when he wrote the responsum on women’s singing that Hollander analyzes.
In 2016 he was nominated to lead the Military Rabbinate. The nomination drew sharp opposition over remarks he had made in a 2002 “Ask the Rabbi” column suggesting that biblical permissions for wartime conduct might allow Israeli soldiers to rape non-Jewish women, along with statements opposing women in combat. The High Court froze the appointment until he submitted a written affidavit clarifying that he had never said, written, or thought that wartime rape was permitted for IDF soldiers, and apologizing for the way the earlier comments had been understood. He was sworn in as Chief Rabbi of the IDF in December 2016 and remains in the role.
He is regarded as a halachic authority on military matters and has continued to issue rulings on questions arising from the post-October 7 war, including body identification and burial under mass-casualty conditions.
