Rape and the Israel Defense Forces

Is the IDF less likely to rape than other occupying armies are?

Photo by Timon Studler on Unsplash

In 2002, Rabbi Eyal Karim was asked, “Is it allowed in our days for an IDF soldier, for example, to rape girls during a fight, or is such a thing forbidden?”

Because Karim is now the Chief Military Rabbi for the Israel Defense Forces, his answer matters enormously. It’s been translated into English in two ways. One is blunt:

Karim replied that, as part of maintaining fitness for the army and the soldiers’ morale during fighting, it is permitted to “breach” the walls of modesty and “satisfy the evil inclination by lying with attractive Gentile women against their will, out of consideration for the difficulties faced by the soldiers and for overall success.”

One is more ambiguous:

Rabbi Karim: …war removes some of the prohibitions on sexual relations (gilui arayot in the original — YZG), and even though fraternizing with a gentile woman is a very serious matter, it was permitted during wartime (under the specific terms) out of understanding for the hardship endured by the warriors. And since the success of the whole at war is our goal, the Torah permitted the individual to satisfy the evil urge (yetzer ha’ra in the original -YZG), under the conditions mentioned, for the purpose of…

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Comrade Morlock, aka Will Shetterly

If you’re losing an argument with me and are too proud to admit defeat, please feel free to insult me instead.