Jerusalem - The Knesset plenum ratified an amendment to the Core Curriculum Law on Monday night, which will allow ultra-Orthodox (haredi) Jewish schools to be exempt from the requirement to teach core-curriculum courses in English, math, and science. The vote passed with 41 lawmakers voting in favor and 28 voting against.

The new law, which essentially overturns legislation ratified by the previous government that made such classes mandatory for schools to receive government funding, drew the ire of Knesset members in the opposition.

“Last night, the Israeli government sold out the future of Israeli children and took away the opportunity for a whole generation to support itself with dignity,” read a statement by the Yesh Atid party that had initiated the previous legislation. “Anyone sitting in this government realizes that they have stolen from those children their basic tools for livelihood and integration into the labor market.”

The Yesh Atid party led efforts in the previous government to implement several reforms affecting the ultra-Orthodox community in education, employment, and national service. The ultra-Orthodox parties who were sitting in the opposition at the time, vehemently protested against the party and its leader, MK Yair Lapid, to no avail.

Zionist Union MK Ksenia Svetlova released a statement of her own on Tuesday, accusing the current coalition of hindering progress for approximately 50,000 ultra-Orthodox children who will be affected by new Core Curriculum Law .

“Today, around 40 MKs ruled against Israeli children,” she charged. “Success is only possible through knowledge, but the coalition voted against growth, prosperity and equality.”

The Core Curriculum Law grants Education Minister Naftali Bennett, chairman of the Jewish Home Party, sole discretion over the provision of funds for ultra-Orthodox educational institutions. Although Bennett had been a focal partner with the Yesh Atid party in the previous government, his party expressed its supported for the Core Curriculum Law that was proposed by the ultra-Orthodox parties.