The Knesset plenum on Tuesday passed into law a bill to allow hospitals to ban chametz, or leavened foods, during the weeklong Passover holiday that begins on the evening of April 5.
Forty-eight Knesset members voted in favor and 43 voted against the proposal that is intended to reverse a Supreme Court ruling from April 2020 according to which hospitals could not enforce a similar law.
According to the law, chametz instructions as determined by hospital managers will be published on the hospital website and signs will be posted in the facility. Employees will also be informed of the religious instructions.
A related law was in place for more than three decades until it was struck down by the Supreme Court, sitting as the High Court of Justice, in 2022 when it ruled on a petition by a secular group that hospitals could not require security guards to search visitor’s bags for chametz during the holiday.
Professor Aviad Hacohen, who represented Israel’s Chief Rabbinate in the case, slammed the High Court ruling. Hacohen said the ruling would “turn the last place where Jews, Arabs, ultra-Orthodox and secular Israelis enjoy good relations—both as patients as staff—into a place of controversy. This will have widespread effects on keeping kosher in public.”
Following last April’s ruling, then-Health Minister Nitzan Horowitz of Meretz set off a political firestorm when he wrote a letter to hospitals ordering them to allow chametz on Passover. That led to the resignation of MK Idit Silman, who was then in the Yamina Party and was the coalition whip. Her resignation caused the coalition to lose its majority in the Knesset and triggered an early election. Silman now serves as environment minister as a member of the Likud Party.
Halachah, Jewish religious law, forbids the eating or ownership of leavened products during the holiday, in keeping with the story of the Exodus from Egypt.