Israel agrees to recognize non-Orthodox rabbis (WASHINGTON POST) By Michele Chabin| Religion News Service JERUSALEM, ISRAEL 06/04/12)
Source: http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/on-faith/israel-agrees-to-recognize-non-orthodox-rabbis/2012/05/31/gJQAPRXB5U_story.html
WASHINGTON POST
WASHINGTON POST Articles-Index-Top
Publishers-Index-Top
JERUSALEM — When activist Anat Hoffman learned that the Israeli
government had agreed to pay a state-funded salary to several non-
Orthodox rabbis — something their Orthodox counterparts have been
receiving for decades — she recited the Shehechiyanu, an ancient
blessing of thanks that Jews intone on special occasions.
“This was the first time the government called a non-Orthodox person —
or a woman —’a rabbi’” said Hoffman, who heads the Jerusalem-based
Israel Religious Action Center (IRAC), the activist arm of Israel’s
Reform Jewish movement.
The government’s landmark decision on Tuesday (May 29) comes seven
years after Hoffman’s agency petitioned Israel’s highest court to
recognize Miri Gold, a Detroit-born Israeli Reform rabbi, as a bona
fide spiritual leader.
Until now, Israel’s Reform and Masorti (Conservative) movements,
which together have about 250 rabbis and around 100 congregations,
have received no official recognition of their leaders or
institutions. In 2011, the government allotted the Orthodox movement
$450 million; the Conservative and Reform movements received $60,000.
This financial inequality, coupled with the government’s refusal to
recognize non-Orthodox conversions and weddings performed in Israel,
has sparked fireworks between successive Israeli leaders and American
Jews.
That’s why Reform, Masorti and many modern-Orthodox Jews consider the
precedent a victory. And it’s why Israel’s strictly Orthodox
religious establishment, which has government-empowered authority
over all matters related to Judaism, is livid.
Under the agreement, the government acceded to Orthodox demands not
to pay Gold and 15 other rabbis in outlying communities from the
Ministry of Religious Services budget. In addition, the decision
stipulates that the rabbis’ religious rulings would pertain only to
their Reform and Masorti communities.
Even so, traditional Jews clearly feel threatened by what they
consider non-Orthodox watered-down Judaism. Ya’acov Margi, the
Orthodox Minister of Religious Services, threatened to resign over
the issue.
Nissim Ze’ev, an ultra-Orthodox parliamentarian, called the
decision “harmful to the soul of the Jewish people” and said he may
introduce legislation to define what a rabbi is using strictly
Orthodox criteria.
Not all religious people are upset by the precedent.
Rabbi Dov Lipman, an activist who can best be defined as ultra-
Orthodox in a modern, open-minded sort of way, believes
the “increasingly extreme” religious establishment brought this
development upon itself.
“The extremist (political) parties are largely to blame because their
policies have led people to the search for official alternatives,”
Lipman said.
These policies include the continuation of a decades-long military
exemption for ultra-Orthodox Jews; refusal to automatically accept
even Orthodox conversions performed abroad; and escalating efforts to
marginalize women from public events on the grounds that their
presence could lead to improper mingling of the sexes.
While no one expects Israel’s volatile religious landscape to change
overnight, “this is a breakthrough not only for Israelis but for
American Jewry,” said Rabbi Julie Schonfeld, the executive vice
president of the New York-based Conservative movement’s Rabbinical
Assembly,
Sounding hopeful, Hoffman said the decision “opens up a whole world
of diversity in how Judaism is expressed. It’s leveling the playing
field a bit, and says there’s more than one way to be Jewish.
Hopefully make Israelis more aware that they have options.”
Hoffman hopes media coverage of Rabbi Gold’s story will help IRAC
during its next High Court battle: for official recognition of
community rabbis who serve towns and cities.
Until then, she said, it will continue to be an uphill battle for
Israel’s non-Orthodox Jews.
“First there are the Jews who say,’The synagogue I don’t go to should
be Orthodox,’” she said. “Second, why would someone cross the street
to go to a Reform or Conservative synagogue, where they have to pay
for a rabbi, when they can attend an Orthodox synagogue that receives
government funding?”
Speaking from her home on Kibbutz Gezer, a collective community, Gold
said she was “a bit shocked” when informed that the government now
recognizes her as a “rabbi for the Reform community” — with a salary
to boot.
“Now we have to see how it will be implemented,” she said with
guarded optimism. “This isn’t the end of the struggle.”
Copyright: For copyright information, please check with the
distributor of this item, Universal Uclick. (© 2010 The Washington
Post Company 06/04/12)
Return to Top
MATERIAL REPRODUCED FOR EDUCATIONAL PURPOSES ONLY