Noam (Hebrew: נעם, lit. 'Pleasantness'; officially known as Lazuz)[2][5] is a far-rightOrthodox Jewish, Religious Zionist political party in Israel, officially established in July 2019 by an extremely conservative faction in the Religious Zionist community inspired by rabbiZvi Thau and his Har Hamoryeshiva. The party's main goal is to advance policies against LGBT rights, and against what its backers call "the destruction of the family".[2]Avi Maoz, the party's leader, was elected to the Knesset in 2021, and is the party's sole representative.[6][7]
History
Noam was founded in July 2019.[8] Its basis is in rabbi Zvi Thau and his Har Hamoryeshiva. Thau and his followers believed that The Jewish Home, then led by Rafi Peretz, and Tkuma, led by Bezalel Smotrich, hadn't sufficiently advanced Jewish values, particularly in the realm of opposition to LGBT rights, protection of the Shabbat as a day of rest, and the protection of the Orthodox conversion process. Following Thau's disappointment with the Union of the Right-Wing Parties, he and his followers decided to form the Noam party. While Thau is the party's spiritual leader, rabbi Dror Aryeh became the party's political leader.[9] Another student of Thau involved in the creation of the party was rabbi Shlomo Aviner. He said that: "The party will fight against the destruction of the family, against the destruction of conversion, against the destruction of Shabbat, against the destruction of the Western Wall, and against the use of deviant content in the IDF and the Education Ministry."[2]
The Noam party was reported to be in talks with the Otzma Yehudit party, which had recently split from the United Right, for a possible joint run. Thau endorsed the joint ticket, marking the first time he had explicitly endorsed a political party.[10] On 28 July, Noam and Otzma Yehudit agreed to run on a joint list for the September 2019 Israeli legislative election.[3] The agreement between Noam and Otzma Yehudit was dissolved on 1 August 2019 because Noam disagreed with Otzma having secular Jewish candidates.[11] Noam filed to run alone,[12] before withdrawing from the race on 15 September.[13]
Noam argues that public sector entities, including the Ministry of Education and the IDF, have been infiltrated by what their 2019 platform refers to as "radical liberal agendas", "LGBT and Reform organizations", and "foreign entities ... promoting a liberal and feminist worldview".[25] The party advocates for what it terms "traditional family values", opposes same-sex marriage and LGBT rights, and additionally supports stricter restrictions during the Sabbath and granting more authority to the Chief Rabbinate of Israel,[25] with Maoz stating in 2022 that Noam will "... introduce a fourth branch of government, the Chief Rabbinate".[26]
Controversies
The party released a video under the comment: "An entire country is going through conversion therapy. The time has come to stop it." In the video, a mother, father, and son go to vote on election day in September, and the family is bombarded with LGBT and Reform imagery. Once they reach the voting booth, the mother writes on her voting slip, "Let my son marry a woman", while the father writes, "Let my grandson be Jewish".[27] The video was removed by YouTube for violating its terms of use.[2]