Subscribe to Print Edition | Fri., July 25, 2008 Tamuz 22, 5768 | | Israel Time: 02:47 (EST+7)
Haaretz israel news English
web haaretz.com
  Back to Homepage
Rosner's Domain
Diplomacy
Defense Jewish World Opinion National
Print Edition
Car Rental
Books Haaretz Magazine Business Real Estate Easy Start Travel Week's End Anglo File
The ball is in the secular public's court
By Yair Sheleg
Tags: conversion, Israel

The issue of conversion is ostensibly no longer in the headlines, but it still figures prominently on religious Zionism's agenda. The proposal to establish religious courts to serve as an alternative to those of the Chief Rabbinate comes up repeatedly in various conversations. An interesting question is why the disputes on the issues of shmita (the sabbatical year) and conversion, which set off harsh reverberations this year, provoked a far stronger reaction than that aroused by the religious courts' long-term harassment of women who are refused a get - a religious decree of divorce.

The answer is apparently related to the fact that the religious Zionist rabbis have a more consolidated viewpoint on these issues than on the issue of women denied a get. So the ultra-Orthodox insistence on enforcing the more stringent view is striking religious Zionism on a very sensitive nerve - not only farmers or converts are being harmed, but a religious worldview as well.

The idea of establishing alternative religious courts has potential, but there are many obstacles: It requires a long-term organizational and financial effort and an alternative system for registering marriages, which will include a promise to perform marriages for converts (the rabbinate will not recognize their conversion). Therefore, along with the attempt to establish an alternative system, we would do well not to give up the struggle for official governmental recognition of a lenient concept of conversion. An interesting and worthy trend of thought in this area can be found in the covenant drawn up a while ago by Prof. Ruth Gavison and Rabbi Yaakov Medan, a document that could solve most of the problems concerning relations between religion and the state.
Advertisement
On the question of "Who is a Jew," the two propose that Israeli law adopt a new definition: not "Jew," which is a term with a double meaning, both religious and national. Because of the double meaning the rabbinate demands exclusivity for the religious meaning. Instead, Gavison and Medan proposed "a member of the Jewish people," in other words, a definition of identity based specifically on nationality. According to their proposal, "a member of the Jewish people" would apply to anyone who is the child of one Jewish parent ?(father or mother?) as well as anyone who has joined the Jewish people and leads a Jewish lifestyle ((a sufficiently broad definition to include all the denominations of Judaism?).

This proposal gives all the parties most of what they want. On the one hand it solves the problem of those who want to be a part of the Jewish people without accepting the burden of observing all the mitzvot. On the other hand, it leaves in the hands of Orthodox Judaism the right to claim that it does not recognize these people as Jews when it comes to religion, and so will not marry them. This means, of course, that there is a need for a marriage arrangement for those who cannot marry in the rabbinate or are not interested in doing so. And in fact, the covenant provides for such an arrangement.

The proposal also has a public-relations advantage because of the very fact that Rabbi Medan is a signatory. Medan, the head of the hesder yeshiva in Gush Etzion, is an Orthodox rabbi who is not among the "Meimad liberals." Politically he belongs to the central stream of religious Zionist rabbis. Medan is strongly identified with the right, and was even among the rabbis closest to the Yesha Council during the struggle against the Gaza disengagement. Nobody can claim (as has often been maliciously claimed about rabbis identified as liberals) that he bends halakha or religious values to find favor in the eyes of the secular left. If he has signed the proposal, even its opponents will not be able to dismiss or overturn it.

So the main obstacle to implementing the proposal - and in effect, any solution to the complicated problems of conversion, women denied a get, and the other issues included under the heading "relations between religion and the state" - is the political veto of the ultra-Orthodox parties. Here the ball is in the secular public's court. Its willingness to accept coalitions in which the Haredim are not just satisfied with guaranteeing their rights (and even with receiving extra benefits), but demand for themselves a veto right that promotes a stringent halakhic approach, is in the end what is harming the farmers, the converts and women denied a get.

Religious Zionism today has a significant branch that is willing to deal with these issues courageously, and to propose reasonable solutions. But if the secular public continues to accept the Haredi coalition veto, there will be no chance to implement any of them.
Bookmark to del.icio.us  
 
The bigger apple
Study shows Tel Aviv is more expensive to live in than New York.
When bedbugs bite
After 40 years' absence, Israel braces for return of the bedbug.
 Read & React
Sen. Joe Lieberman praises pastor who said Holocaust was God's work
Responses: 126
Obama tells Haaretz: Two states for two peoples
Responses: 155
Ashkenazi in U.S.: All options are on the table regarding Iran
Responses: 86
Editorial: We need a U.S. leader unfettered by the Israel lobby
Responses: 78
Israel Harel: Shalit must be made a burden for Hamas, rather than an asset
Responses: 31


More Headlines
00:21 Obama to PM: Talks with Iran necessary to legitimize action
01:39 Shin Bet head Diskin: Cease-fire with Hamas unlikely to hold
00:20 AG: Olmert obstructing graft probes against him
22:27 Settler holds knife to IDF soldier's throat in West Bank riot
00:47 Tali Fahima: Zakariya Zubeidi is Israeli security service's whore
22:51 Cancer research center warns: Stay away from cell phones
02:31 When it comes to psychometric exam, Haredi Jews do it better
02:05 After two weeks' closure, IDF allows Nablus mall to reopen
01:13 Boy whose mother is suspected of selling him removed from U.K. family
23:45 Arab bloc rescinds proposal to have UN vote against Israeli settlements
22:51 Egyptian Facebook activists jailed for threatening national security
23:59 VIDEO / Another delay in Katsav sex crimes indictment as case transferred
15:36 Jewish World/Unwilling flag wavers?
19:10 Pop singer Aviv Gefen pens new ballad calling to free Shalit
Previous Editions
Special Offers
Advertisement
Fattal Hotel Chain
Perfectly located hotels on best resorts of Israel.
Israel's Premier Real Estate Website
www. israel-property.com
Dan Hotels Israel
Live the Legend & experience an Unforgettable Summer Vacation
Yossi Avrahami Presents:
New Luxurious Projects in North Tel Aviv & Eilat
Holyland Park
Jerusalem Apartment Tower World Class Luxury
Your vacation starts here
Israel Travel Center Guaranteed Lowest Rates
Hebrew Summer courses
From $39.95
ISRAEL BONDS Build Israel
Israel bonds - a multi-purpose way to celebrate Israel's 60th
Eldan Rent a Car
Israel's leading car rental company offers you a 20% discount on all online reservations
Junkyard
Junk a car - get free towing nationwide and a tax-deductible receipt
Home | TV | Print Edition | Diplomacy | Opinion | Arts & Leisure | Sports | Jewish World | Underground | Site rules |
Real Estate in Israel | Travel to Israel with Haaretz | Hotels Israel | Restaurants Israel | Tourist attractions Israel | Shops Israel
birthright Israel | Search engine marketing
Haaretz.com, the online edition of Haaretz Newspaper in Israel, offers real-time breaking news, opinions and analysis from Israel and the Middle East. Haaretz.com provides extensive and in-depth coverage of Israel, the Jewish World and the Middle East, including defense, diplomacy, the Arab-Israeli conflict, the peace process, Israeli politics, Jerusalem affairs, international relations, Iran, Iraq, Syria, Lebanon, the Palestinian Authority, the West Bank and the Gaza Strip, the Israeli business world and Jewish life in Israel and the Diaspora.
© Copyright  Haaretz. All rights reserved