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Rebels Turned Enforcers

Shababnikim Season 3 returns tonight – and we're more than a little excited

Avinoam’s still juggling Haredi cool with big dreams, Meir’s hunting a shidduch with baggage in tow, and Leizer’s the chill glue holding it together.

Shababnikim Season 3
Photo: Courtesy of HOT and Dory media

Nearly four years after its last outing, Shababnikim storms back onto HOT screens tonight (March 17), with a third season that flips the script on its beloved rebel trio. Once the scourge of yeshiva authority, Avinoam (Daniel Gad), Meir (Israel Attias), and Leizer (Omer Perelman) now find themselves the ones wielding the rulebook, tasked with saving their original “Netivot Avraham” yeshiva from closure by taming a new crop of unruly students.

The twist doesn’t stop there. Gedaliah (Uri Laizerovitch), their bookish ex-comrade, steps into the spotlight as a Ministry of Religious Affairs inspector, channeling Season 1’s stern Rabbi Spitzer (Rotem Keinan) with a mission to shutter the yeshiva and slash its funds. It’s a role reversal that crackles with tension: the former anarchists wrestle with their new power, while Gedaliah’s rigidity threatens to undo their fragile redemption. After three episodes—screened for this review—the series recaptures Season 1’s lightning pace, razor-sharp dialogue, and the bittersweet clash of comedy and drama that made it a standout.

Shababnikim Season 3
Photo: Courtesy of HOT

At its core, Shababnikim remains a meditation on identity—Haredi rebels caught between community and self. Now in their late 20s, the trio’s crises evolve: Avinoam hunts for harmony as a modern Haredi, Meir navigates the shidduch world post-breakup, and Leizer bridges their chaos with quiet consistency. Laizerovitch shines as Gedaliah, his stern inspector a series-defining turn, while Shuli Rand’s Moti Brown steals scenes with raw depth, his chemistry with Keren Mor (as Leizer’s mother) enriching the family stakes. Newcomers like Shachar Tavoch inject fresh blood into a familiar fray.

One of the refreshing aspects of Shababnikim is its complex portrayal of the Haredi world. The series doesn’t pretend to be a precise documentary, but it succeeds in exposing the nuances of yeshiva boys’ lives and the internal tensions within Haredi society in a nonjudgmental way.

The term “shababnik” itself—slang for a Haredi youth who strays from accepted norms—became widely recognized in Israeli society thanks to the series, which has made the Haredi world accessible to secular viewers while offering Haredim a representation that has sparked both identification and critique, as reflected in community responses.

Season 3’s 11 episodes—including a war-themed outlier—promise to probe deeper, tackling a charged topic for characters outside Israel’s military orbit. If the opening salvo holds, this is Shababnikim at its best: a witty, unflinching lens on yeshiva life that’s hooked global fans since Season 1 hit Netflix in 2024. From outlaws to overseers, this crew proves it’s still got stories worth telling—and watching.

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