
CONVOY PROTEST ROUNDUP: Nationwide Convoy Protest Brings Israel to a Standstill as Gedolim Address Imprisoned Yeshivah Students Through Prison Loudspeakers
What organizers described as the largest vehicle protest in recent memory brought major highways across Israel to a near standstill on Tuesday, as tens of thousands of participants rallied against the arrest and imprisonment of bnei Torah. The demonstration, known as the “Convoy Protest,” drew participants from across the spectrum of the chareidi community and culminated in dramatic scenes outside Prison 10, where recorded messages from leading Torah authorities were broadcast directly to incarcerated yeshivah students and avreichim.
Within minutes of the protest’s launch, its impact was being felt nationwide. Traffic congestion spread across major roadways, media outlets devoted extensive coverage to the demonstrations, and many workers reportedly left their jobs early in anticipation of the disruptions. Participants said the message was unmistakable: the Torah community would not remain silent in the face of efforts to imprison those dedicated to Torah study.
One of the most striking aspects of the protest was the rare display of unity among Israel’s various chareidi factions. Chassidim affiliated with Agudas Yisrael, the yeshivah community following the guidance of Rav Moshe Hillel Hirsch, and large segments of the Sephardic Torah community all took part. Organizers credited the involvement of Rav Moshe Maya, the senior member of the Moetzes Chachmei HaTorah, with helping bring broad Sephardic participation and the support of Shas representatives.
Heavy traffic jams were reported throughout the country as convoys moved along highways and major intersections. In many locations, participants held Minchah minyanim on roadsides and in the midst of protest gatherings. At the same time, several confrontations were reported between protesters and secular motorists, including verbal altercations and physical incidents that organizers described as acts of hostility toward the demonstrators.
Authorities sealed off access routes leading to Prison 10, deploying large numbers of police officers to prevent thousands of protesters from approaching the facility. Unable to reach the prison itself, organizers erected powerful sound systems near the area and broadcast messages of support, protest, and inspiration toward the prison grounds.
Recorded addresses from leading Torah figures echoed through the area, carrying words of encouragement to those being held behind bars for refusing military service. Protest organizers said the messages were intended to strengthen the imprisoned bnei Torah and remind them that the broader Torah world stood firmly behind them.
Rav Meir Tzvi Bergman delivered an emotional message directed to the detainees.
“I want to join and strengthen the young men who were arrested because they sit and learn Torah. ‘Praiseworthy are you for having been seized because of Torah.’ You are giving strength to the entire future of Klal Yisrael.”
The elderly rosh yeshivah repeated his words with visible emotion, again emphasizing that the imprisoned students were providing encouragement and inspiration to the entire Jewish people.
Former Sephardic Chief Rabbi Rav Yitzchak Yosef also addressed the prisoners, speaking with evident pain about the arrests and emphasizing that the protest was not only on behalf of full-time Torah scholars but also against what he described as broader persecution of observant Jews.
“We ask all the authorities—we do not rely on those who are in politics, their right hand is a false right hand—we do not rely on the authorities. We ask them: Leave the Torah scholars alone, leave the Sephardic Torah students alone.”
Following additional songs and prayers, Rav Shmuel Betzalel, rosh yeshivah of Porat Yosef and a member of the Moetzes Chachmei HaTorah, delivered a fiery address.
“Those who are distant want to abolish the holy Torah. They do not understand what the Jewish people are. And you prisoners, prisoners of the holy Torah, who are imprisoned for the sanctification of Hashem’s Name—Hashem is with you, mighty heroes. You will bear your imprisonment with pride, and all the public that came to identify with the holy Torah—Hashem should bless them all, to sustain the Jewish people. Without the holy Torah, the Jewish people do not exist, and they want, G-d forbid, to erase the Torah of our forefathers and the nation itself.”
He also addressed the prisoners directly.
“I turn to the avreichim and the young men who are behind bars in the prisons: Preserve the spirit of true yiras Shamayim that you maintained within the holy yeshivah. At the same time, let your spirits and hearts be uplifted through the ways of the holy Torah. Feel, feel that the Holy One, Blessed is He, is with you—that you are prisoners and representatives of the entire Torah world and of the Torah itself.”
The crowd also listened to a recorded blessing from Rav Yaakov Meir Shechter, one of the senior figures of the Breslov community.
“Be strong and courageous. The Holy One, Blessed is He, will help. Fortunate are you… with all your strength, fortunate are you in this world and the next.”
Rav Moshe Berezovsky, rosh yeshivah of Slonim, likewise spoke of the spiritual significance of the arrests.
“The courts and governmental authorities placed you in prison in order to break your desire to remain faithful to the Holy One, Blessed is He, and to His Torah. We do not abandon the source of our life, even if it requires self-sacrifice. Rabbi Akiva also taught us the way—to sacrifice oneself with joy. All my life I was distressed, wondering when I would have the opportunity to fulfill this. Thank G-d that the wicked among Israel are not yet killing us for learning Torah, but they are trying to harass us, humiliate us, and treat us like criminals because we wish to learn Torah and remain faithful to the Holy One, Blessed is He, and His holy Torah.”
Rav Yitzchak Moshe Erlanger delivered an impassioned message rooted in the story of Rabbi Akiva’s defiance of Roman decrees against Torah study.
“Fortunate are you for having been seized because of Torah. I ask the Master of the Universe to give me the right words to say. The Gemara tells us: ‘The wicked kingdom decreed that the Jewish people should not engage in Torah.’ The Roman government decreed that the Jewish people should not study Torah. Pappus ben Yehudah came and found Rabbi Akiva gathering crowds publicly and studying Torah. Rabbi Akiva simply ignored all of those decrees and continued gathering the masses and teaching Torah.”
Throughout the gathering, organizers recited the names of all those currently imprisoned, along with the names of their mothers, for prayer. Special prayers were also offered for R’ Amram Markowitz, an avreich and father of two young children who reportedly lost consciousness while in prison.
As the protest concluded late Tuesday night, organizers hailed the demonstration as a historic success, pointing to the nationwide disruption, the unprecedented unity among disparate chareidi groups, and the powerful messages delivered to those imprisoned as evidence that the Torah community had made its voice heard across Israel.
