The Israeli government is trying to push the bill "restricting the adhaan" into the Knesset again, after its previous failure, amid criticism from the Arab legislators.
The daily "Israel Today" said Tuesday that Internal Security Minister Gilad Arad told the head of the parliamentary committee, Nissan Slomiansky, that the parties of "Likud" and the "Jewish House" and "Israel Our Home", to understand the draft law.
According to the newspaper, the understandings include not less than a fine of breaking the law of 10 thousand shekels ($ 2800), and expand the powers of police in the confiscation of loudspeakers in mosques.
Under the bill, the use of loudspeakers is prohibited from 11 pm to 7 am. Arab deputies have said in the past that this means targeting the ears of the dawn prayer specifically.
"These serious understandings between the parties to the right-wing coalition and against a fundamental human right, freedom of belief and worship and against the freedom to establish our religious rites, And its goal is therefore the exclusion of everything that is related to the identity of this country, even if the voice of the adhaan, which is a call to prayer in Arabic.
The deputies added that "the tightening of sanctions, as stated by these amendments, is a process of intimidation and intimidation of those who raise the adhaan and each muezzin, and this intimidation will not prevent us from our right to pray in the way we ordered our religion.
They stressed that "the law is part of the project sponsored by the right-wing government of Benjamin Netanyahu, and falls within the series of laws confiscating our right to express and highlight our cultural and national identity.
"As we have stood up and fought against this racist law along with our colleagues on the joint list, we will continue our just struggle against it in order to preserve our freedom of worship and our freedom to protect our national identity in our country," they said.
In January, the initiators of the bill tried to present it to the Constitution Committee for a first Knesset vote, but the Shas and Yahudut Torah parties announced their rejection.
Lest the bill fall into the parliamentary constitution committee, it was withdrawn from the research agenda.
It is not clear how Shas and Yahudut Torah will vote on the bill once it is presented to the committee, which is not yet clear.
The bill passed the preliminary reading in March 2017, thanks to the support of the coalition parties headed by Benjamin Netanyahu.
In addition to the preliminary reading last year, the bill needs to be passed by three readings, before it becomes law.