Rabbi Peretz was very against Halakhic rulings that are overly stringent, and insisted on the importance of all Jews following the law as stated by
Maran Bet Yossef to the letter. He rejected religious
Anti-Zionism, maintained the importance of physical exercise and secular studies (English, Math, Science, etc.), and insisted on the value of not just focusing study on
Talmud, but also on
Miqra,
Hebrew Grammar, and more. He also adamantly defended learning the
Peshat as the ideal method (for learning Miqra, Talmud, etc.) as opposed to
analytical or
Pilpul oriented schools of thought. He viewed all of these positions as the way things were always done by the
Jews of the Middle East and the way he was raised and taught in Morocco. == References ==