Israel moves to improve religious freedom – for Jews (CHRISTIAN SCIENCE MONITOR) By Joshua Mitnick TEL AVIV, ISRAEL 06/06/12)
Source: http://www.csmonitor.com/World/Middle-East/2012/0606/Israel-moves-to-improve-religious-freedom-for-Jews
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For the first time, Israel will begin funding rabbis from the Reform
and Conservative movements, which have long been shut out in a
country dominated by Orthodox Judaism.
Israel has always touted a national respect for freedom of religion
in a region where religious intolerance runs high. But ever since its
founding, the Jewish state has nonetheless sanctioned discrimination –
against Jews.
Orthodox denominations dominate the Israeli Rabbinate, own a virtual
monopoly on funding for religious institutions, and have a lock on
the clergy overseeing marriage, divorce, and conversions. Liberal
movements like Conservative and Reform Judaism have traditionally
been shut out.
But last week, in response to a Supreme Court petition calling for
equal funding of pulpit rabbis, Israel’s Attorney General said that
for the first time the state would begin paying salaries of clergy
from non-Orthodox denominations. Liberal Jewish groups hailed it as a
landmark in the campaign for wider pluralism, even though the
Orthodox religious monopoly on the state-funded rabbinate is still
intact.
"We’ve cracked the ceiling. This will merely be the beginning. It
will cause a snowball,” says Steven Beck, an official at the Israel
Religious Action Center which first brought the petition seven years
ago and plans to mount new legal challenges with last week’s
decision. “Finally in Israel Jews will be as free to practice their
religion as they do elsewhere.”
Alienating Americans?
At stake is not just competition for the hearts and minds of the
Jewish faithful in Israel, but also efforts to shore up US-Israeli
ties. The unequal treatment of Jewish denominations could help erode
Israel’s relationship with US by spurring alienation among American
Jews, many of whom identify with Reform and Conservative
denominations, say experts and Jewish groups.
"This is causing strain within the Diaspora," says Yossi Klein
Halevi, a fellow at the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem. "The
danger is that American Jewry is our most important source of
support, and the lack of full religious pluralism could become a
security threat to Israel if it undermines our relationship with
American Jewish community."
At the same time however, change is almost certain to prompt
resistance from the parliament’s influential Orthodox and ultra-
Orthodox religious parties, who have threatened to bring down
government over issues of religion and state.
Israel’s minister for religious services, Yaacov Margi, threatened to
resign before agreeing to pay the salary of clergymen he views as
apostates. A colleague from Mr. Margi’s party said the
decision “harmed the soul of the Jewish people.”
Alien religion
To be sure, the Reform and Conservative movements are not native to
Israel, and they still constitute a small minority of Israeli Jews.
Their followers only started immigrating to Israel in the 1960s and
70s, and their liberal version of Judaism was foreign to Israeli
Jews, who were either Orthodox or completely secular.
While such non-Orthodox movements worship freely without government
intervention, if those denominations want to hold rituals at a holy
site like Jerusalem’s Western Wall, they face restrictions by the
Orthodox authorities entrusted by the state with managing them.
And while Israel permits liberal groups to run state-funded magnet
schools that emphasize religious pluralism, they cannot get equal
access to funds to establish synagogues or schools. And while liberal
Jews are free to officiate at marriage ceremonies, weddings aren’t
officially recognized unless a state-sanctioned Orthodox rabbi is
present. The state will recognize a civil marriage from abroad before
it will recognize a non-Orthodox Jewish ceremony in Israel.
“On one hand there is freedom of religion for everyone, but on the
other side there are major obstacles to exercise freedom of religion:
The public money isn’t equal, and the state recognition isn’t given”
to liberal clergy, says Yedidia Stern, a law professor and fellow at
the Israel Democracy Institute. Mr. Stern, an Orthodox Jew, says he
believes that the state monopoly should be broke in favor of a "free
market" of religious assistance.
Supreme Court case
The Supreme Court case involved a petition for the state to pay the
salary of Miri Gold, a female Rabbi at a kibbutz ordained by the
Reform movement. The court pressed the state to justify why Ms. Gold
shouldn’t be paid for her work like other rabbis.
"We said, this is a democratic country. There’s no reason other
streams can’t be recognized," says Rabbi Gold. "On the ground [the
decision is] not that much, but in principle it’s a big thing."
The system of conferring state recognition on a select group of
denominations stretches back to the 19th-century Ottoman control,
when they gave official status to Jewish and Christian denominations
alongside Muslim communities.
The system was continued after World War I by the British, who didn’t
even recognize the Anglican Church for fear of upsetting an unwritten
(and rather inflexible) "status quo’" between the sides, says Eli
Lederhendler, a history professor at Hebrew University.
No separation of church and state here
Reform and Conservative Jews are "Jonny come-latelys" to Israel,
whereas Orthodox groups have been here for decades and have been
active in politics since their inception, according to Mr.
Lederhendler. He says that the liberal movements also make up less
than 1 percent of the population and only recently began seeking a
larger cut of state funds – which runs against the values of religion-
state separation the majority of them were raised on.
"They are shifting from an American paradigm of private observance to
an Israeli paradigm of bringing religion into the public square, and
that is what this is all about," says Mr. Lederhendler.
"They are saying, ´If freedom of religion means that all religious
groups are equally recognized, then we should be equally recognized,
too, and it´s not an issue is private conscience, it´s an issue of
public status."
But for many liberal Jewish leaders, their second-rate status is a
civil rights issue.
"I feel the discrimination all the time," says Rabbi Naama Kelsman, a
dean of the Reform’s Hebrew Union College seminary in
Jerusalem. "None of my weddings are recognized. We have to fight to
get anything beyond the minimum. They want to exhaust us, and depress
us, and we will not be moved." An earlier version of this story gave
the wrong formal name for the Israel Democracy Institute and has
since been corrected. (© The Christian Science Monitor. 06/06/12)
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