July 27, 2010 by Steve
JPost.com Israel
By JONAH MANDEL
07/25/2010 03:03
Reform, Masorti movements halt petitions to enable talks.
The agreement for an all-around moratorium on the legal actions that could change the status quo of conversions in Israel seems to be accepted only by liberal Jewish groups, while the haredi Shas and United Torah Judaism parties, which supported Israel Beiteinu MK David Rotem’s conversion bill in its recent Knesset Law Committee vote, were not part of such a deal.
Rotem, too, said that he was not a party to any such understanding.
The Prime Minister’s Office announced late on Thursday night that the Reform and Masorti (Conservative) movements in Israel had agreed to a nearly six-month freeze on their High Court of Justice petition demanding state recognition of non-Orthodox conversions conducted in Israel. In return, the announcement continued, the government would halt the legislative process on the conversion bill for that period.
The deal was hammered out by cabinet secretary Tzvi Hauser, at the behest of Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu, “to find any way to preserve the unity of the Jewish people.”
According to the agreement, there will be no change in the status quo until January 1.
In the interim, Jewish Agency Chairman Natan Sharansky will head a team including members of the non-Orthodox movements and of the government, to create the authority that would complete the legislation on the topic.
“The changes in the conversion laws should be reached through broad understanding, to prevent a schism in the Jewish people. Unity is a primary national interest, and I am determined to preserve it,” Netanyahu said.
Rotem had tried in the recent Knesset summer session to pass a law that would give present and former municipal rabbis the authority to conduct conversions, including for people who live outside their municipalities, but critics feared that the wording of the bill could strengthen the Chief Rabbinate, change the legal status of non-Orthodox conversions in Israel and affect the eligibility of such converts to citizenship under the Law of Return. Netanyahu was recently subject to massive pressure from the non-Orthodox movements and the Jewish Federations of North America to halt the bill’s progress until further dialogue.
“We appreciate the premier’s decision to use all his influence to keep the conversion bill, which bore the danger of splitting the Jewish people, from being voted on in the Knesset session,” said Yizhar Hess, director of the Masorti Movement in Israel. “We accepted the premier’s suggestion to convene for negotiations on formulating the conversion bill in such a way that wouldn’t split the people. With a heavy heart, we agreed to freeze the High Court petitions, which deal with delicate and intricate personal cases, to enable a quiet, professional process, based on mutual trust.”
Rabbi Gilad Kariv, head of the Reform Movement in Israel, lauded the premier “for preventing significant harm to the unity of the Jewish people, and giving precedence to acts of dialogue over unilateral, aggressive legislation.
“The movements’ acquiescence to freeze the High Court procedures, a move far from being taken for granted, is proof that the non-Orthodox movements in Israel and abroad believe in the necessity of dialogue,” Kariv said. “We hope the appropriate ways to solve the severe conversion crisis in Israel will be found, along with the recognition of the pluralistic nature of the Jewish people.”
Jerry Silverman, president of the Jewish Federations of North America, welcomed the agreement as “significant.”
“We truly support this process of a dialogue table, which allows the participants time to discuss this important issue appropriately and reach a solution that protects the bonds between Israel and the Diaspora,” Silverman said. “We are also thrilled that Natan Sharansky will be leading the process.”
A spokesman for Shas said on Friday morning that his movement was not part of any such deal and did not accept it. Shas Chairman and Interior Minister Eli Yishai reiterated in this weekend’s Yom Leyom newspaper the importance Shas sees in passing Rotem’s bill.
MK Uri Maklev’s spokesman reiterated that his party, UTJ, had only supported the bill because of the resistance it was facing from the Reform movement, and not because of its inherent acceptance of the legislation.
We are not surprised that the prime minister didn’t involve us in these talks, nor do we expect to be part of them, Maklev said.
Rotem told The Jerusalem Post that he was not party to the understandings, and did not know if he would participate in the planned talks. The Knesset was on a recess until October, and no legislation could be advanced anyway, Rotem said.
July 27, 2010 by Steve
(19/07/2010)
By Donniel Hartman
The recent debate about conversion in Israel has brought to the fore an important question for Israeli society. Let’s leave aside for now whether the proposed legislation in fact constitutes a change in policy toward Conservative and Reform conversions in the United States, or whether it will be at all helpful in facilitating conversion in Israel for the roughly 300,000 non-Jewish citizens. I believe that the answer is “No,” in either case, and the debate is more about politics than substance. The question remains, however: To what extent must Israel take into account the beliefs, concerns, and ideologies of those who do not live in Israel?
It seems that every government in Israel faces this core dilemma at some point: choosing between the agendas of its coalition partners for whom liberal Judaism is either irrelevant or a convenient punching bag around which to rally its supporters, and Israel’s supporters around the world.
Israel and world Jewry today are at a crossroads in which each, while often reflecting and representing very different populations, political interests, and Jewish beliefs, have to decide whether we are going to continue to function as a religion with one nation and one people, or whether we are going to proceed alone.
For world Jewry, the key question is not whether they are willing to take a leap of faith and support every policy decision, legislation, or action taken by the Israeli government, Knesset, or society. The question is whether they are willing to take a leap of loyalty in which their commitment to Israel as a critical and essential part of their modern Jewish lives is strong and secure.
Such a commitment, far from demanding agreement, in fact encourages debate and criticism. It requires a commitment to Israel not as it is, but as it ought to be, and a willingness to invest in creating such an Israel. It requires a deep caring, whereby, in times of failure and in times of need, they stand by staunchly and work to build and sustain an Israel that they can respect and love.
We Israelis, despite brash statements to the contrary, yearn for and need that love. The problem on our part is that we are often not willing to do what is necessary to sustain and support it. We think all that we need to do is to wave the military “crisis du jour” to rally the troops and reap financial and political dividends.
Israel, as the homeland of the Jewish people, can no longer claim a self- evident, essentialist argument for its necessity for the future of Jewish survival, or for that matter its birthright as the leader of world Jewry and world Judaism. The future of the relationship between Israel and world Jewry is not dependent on claims of necessity but rather of meaning and importance. Jews in many places around the world, particularly in North America, have created a home and a vibrant and vital Judaism for themselves. If Israel is to have a role in their lives, it must earn it. To earn it, Israel must be a place where religious pluralism and diversity reign. It must be a place where the various Judaisms of the Jews have footholds and a place of respect. It must be a place where our foreign and military policies are morally and Jewishly defensible. It must be a place where the impact of our policies on world Jewry is an integral part of our political deliberations. It must be a place which strives to represent the best of what the Jewish people stand for.
Such a place will emanate an energy and creative light that will attract loyalty and sustained love in good times and in bad, in times of agreement and in times of disagreement.
It is time to stop bemoaning the chasm which is being torn in the foundation of our people and begin the task of reestablishing this foundation anew. The first steps in doing so are to avoid moves which deepen the growing alienation that threatens to spin out of control. World Jewry must be very careful and certain about the battles it chooses to fight and the criticism it levels. It must be careful not to allow its own political denominational politics to lead it into confrontations that are more about form than substance. Israel, for its part, has to avoid language and policies that are both hurtful and harmful to our relationship and must not only avoid doing new harm but actually begin to repeal the harms of the past and begin instituting policies of healing.
It is time to reclaim our shared loyalty and commitment and join together in building an Israel which can serve as the cornerstone for our love.
Rabbi Dr. Donniel Hartman is President of the Shalom Hartman Institute in Jerusalem.
July 23, 2010 by nicola
Dear friends,
Many messages of congratulations and thanks have gone out to the members of the worldwide Reform community over the last few days. At the risk of repetition, I want to add my own.
ARZENU was included on the conference calls with the other leaders of the Reform and Conservative streams in Israel and North America, and the leaders of the federations of the United States, which co-coordinated the response to the Conversion Bill. This is a most appropriate recognition of the roles that each constituent ARZENU organization around the world has played in the struggle to prevent the Conversion Bill from being presented to the Knesset.
I hope you all appreciate that the leverage which was brought to bear on the Labour Party in Israel during this struggle, to give active support for our position, was much strengthened by the relationship which has developed between ARZENU and Labour, within the Siah at the Congress and beyond. It is fair to say that that relationship made a major contribution to the result which was achieved. The basis of that relationship was, in large part, I am told, the strength of ARZENU through the Congress mandates and in our actions at the Congress, together with World Union and with our constituent organizations including of course the Israel Movement for Progressive Judaism.
I believe that ARZENU’s strength within the WZO together with the World Union and the Israel Movement, in numbers and actions, also strengthened our hand in dealing with Kadimah over the course of the last few days. Kadimah was able to more fully appreciate the strength of Reform as a potential partner in the future.
We should also be very proud of the work of our friends and partners in the IMPJ and IRAC over the days of the struggle against the Bill. It was clear during the conference calls that the leadership of the Israel Movement was respected by all and indeed was key in this struggle. As Diaspora Reform Jews we were extremely well served by our Israeli colleagues. Todah raba raba.
The partnership of Reform organizations during the last few days was inspiring. Rabbi Danny Allen the Executive Director of ARZA (U.S.) and Rabbi Saperstein the Chair of the RAC both travelled to Israel, and worked tirelessly there with the leadership on the ground. The commitment and team effort of all of the Reform leadership as well the Conservative and Federation leadership during the calls coordinated by Rabbi Kleinman was simply irreplaceable.
It is my real pleasure to thank all of the leadership of the ARZENU constituent organizations for the work which was done around the world, often in partnership with the World Union, the URJ and many others. The mobilization which took place was astonishing - and effective. Kol hakavod.
And on all of our behalves I thank Dalya for her support in sharing information through email and through the website, to keep us all informed. Again, todah!
This struggle is not over. There will be many others ahead in the battle to create a more pluralistic Israel. We will continue to strengthen the ties within ARZENU and between all of the branches of the Reform Movement, including with our partners in Israel. It is heartening, at a time of such challenge, to see how effectively and with what vision we can work together.
Shabbat shalom
Joan Garson
President, ARZENU
July 20, 2010 by nicola
Good morning,
It is with a mixture of pleasure and relief that we share the news that MK David Rotem has withdrawn the controversial amendments to the Law of Conversion - for the time being at least.
Although it is sad that it was such a negative issue that prompted people around the world to speak up in opposition, it does provide some important lessons. The first is that we cannot assume that Israeli politicians will always act in a manner aimed at benefitting Israel or Klal Yisrael - we need to be vigilant in monitoring events and acting when we believe something detrimental to the Jewish world is being proposed.
The second thing is to realise how much we can achieve when we act in unity with our brothers and sisters around the world. We must build on this initial success and work even harder to support the work of the WUPJ and the Israel Movement for Progressive Judaism in their work to make Israel the egalitarian and pluralistic democracy dreamed of by Herzl and described in the Declaration of Independence.
Although this Bill has been withdrawn for now, there is a strong possibility that it will be re-introduced after the High Holydays unless we maintain the pressure on the Government of Israel to make sure that it is totally withdrawn. Please maintain your support for us over this important matter and consider asking those Jewish organisations that you support what their stand on this issue is. Ask if their leadership sent a letter of support, and if not - why not?
The UPJ was proud to add its voice of condemnation for the bill, which was reported as the lead story on the Australian Jewish News online edition (to ready the story, go to: www.ajn.com.au - under “News - National”).
Best wishes,
Ian Samuel
Chair, ARZA Australia
David Robinson
President, Union for Progressive Judaism
Rabbi Jeffrey Kamins
Chair, Moetzah (Rabbinic Council)
Steve Denenberg
Executive Director, Union for Progressive Judaism
July 19, 2010 by nicola
| Dear Friend,
We have reached the critical moment and we need your help. The Israeli Knesset will vote in the next 72 hours on a bill that would fundamentally change the Law of Conversion and further concentrate power with the Chief Rabbinate.
Since the bill was voted on by a Knesset committee seven days ago, the response from Reform Jews in the U.S., Canada and around the world has been unprecedented. Literally tens of thousands of emails, faxes and phone calls have poured in to Prime Minister Netanyahu’s office in Jerusalem. Reporters in the Washington Post, the Jerusalem Post, Haaretz, and scores of local Jewish newspapers have documented the expression of outrage over this bill that gives control over conversions to the Israeli Chief Rabbinate, under the control of the ultra-Orthodox. This delegitimization of Reform and other conversions is an affront to each of us.
The Union for Reform Judaism and the entire Reform Movement has acted decisively to meet this challenge. Today, the Religious Action Center’s Director Rabbi David Saperstein, and ARZA Executive Director Rabbi Danny Allen joined the team already in Israel to lobby Cabinet and Knesset members against this bill. In meetings with top Israeli officials and Diaspora leaders, we are making clear the message that the Jewish world is united against this bill.
How can you help? If you have not yet done so, contact Prime Minister Netanyahu and add your voice to the chorus of those who reject this effort to divide the Jewish people. Tell the Prime Minister to stop the conversion bill and assure the vibrancy of Jewish life in Israel and around the world. We have made great strides in the last week; your input is vital as we enter the final days of decision.
For more information on this issue visit http://urj.org/israel/rotem. We look forward to working with you on this issue that speaks to the very heart of what it means to be a Reform Jew.
L’Shalom, |
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Rabbi Eric Yoffie
President |
Peter Weidhorn
Chairman of the Board |
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Contact Prime Minister Netanyahu Today! |
July 19, 2010 by nicola
Op-Ed Contributor
The Diaspora Need Not Apply
By ALANA NEWHOUSE
Published: July 15, 2010 - The New York Times
WHO is a Jew? It’s an age-old inquiry, one that has for decades (if not centuries) provoked debate, discussion and too many punch lines to count — all inspired by what many assumed was the question’s essential unanswerability. But if developments this week are any indication, the Israeli parliament, the Knesset, might soon offer an official, surprising answer: almost no one.
On Monday, a Knesset committee approved a bill sponsored by David Rotem, a member of the nationalist Yisrael Beiteinu party, that would give the Orthodox rabbinate control of all conversions in Israel. If passed, this legislation would place authority over all Jewish births, marriages and deaths — and, through them, the fundamental questions of Jewish identity — in the hands of a small group of ultra-Orthodox, or Haredi, rabbis.
The move has set in motion a sectarian battle that is not only dividing Israeli society but threatening to sever the vital connection between Israel and the American Jewish diaspora.
The problem is not simply that some of these rabbinical functionaries, who are paid by the state and courted by politicians, are demonstrably corrupt. (To take the most salacious of a slew of examples, an American Haredi rabbi who had become one of the most powerful authorities on the question of conversion resigned from his organization in December after accusations that he solicited phone sex from a hopeful female convert.) Rather, it is that the beliefs of a tiny minority of the world’s Jews are on the verge of becoming the Israeli government’s definition of Judaism, for all Jews.
It is hard to exaggerate the possible ramifications, first and foremost for Jewish Israelis. Rivkah Lubitch, an Orthodox woman who is a lawyer in Israel’s rabbinic court system, painted a harrowing picture of the future in a recent column on the Israeli Web site Ynet.
“Even if you didn’t go to register for marriage, and even if you didn’t go to a rabbinic court for any reason, and even if you didn’t pass by a rabbinic court when you walked down the street — the rabbinic court can summon you, conduct a hearing about your Jewishness and revoke it,” she wrote. “In effect, the entire nation of Israel is presumed to be Not-Jewish — until proven otherwise.”
Why are the rabbis doing this? The process is not being driven, as some say, by a suspicion of new converts — they’re simply a wedge issue. Nor is it, as others argue, a reaction to the influx of Russian Jews, who when they seek permission to wed in Israel are often asked for evidence that their families were registered as Jews in the old Soviet Union.
No, what is driving this process is the desire of a small group of rabbis to expand their authority from narrow questions of conversion to larger questions of Jewish identity. Since what goes for conversion also goes for all other clerical acts, only a few anointed rabbis will be able to determine the authenticity of one’s marriage, divorce, birth, death — and every rite in between.
And lest one imagine that this is just another battle between the more progressive Reform and Conservative denominations and the more observant Orthodox, it must be noted that the criteria used by the rabbinate are driven by internal Haredi politics, not observance. According to the Jewish Week, at one point the number of American rabbis who were officially authorized by the Israeli rabbinate to perform conversions was down to a few dozen. Even if you are Orthodox — and especially if you are Modern Orthodox — your rabbi probably doesn’t make the cut. (Don’t believe it? Go ask him.)
Given that the conversion bill is the latest in a series of similarly motivated efforts, it seems almost useless to note that the stringent approach to Jewish law that the Israeli rabbinate promotes bears little connection to the historical experience and religious practice of the majority of Jewish people over the past two millenniums. It will do little good, too, to point out that it is well outside the consensus established by Hillel — arguably the greatest rabbi in all of rabbinic Judaism and whom, as Joseph Telushkin argues in a forthcoming book, was willing to convert a pagan on the spot, simply because he’d asked.
And it doesn’t help to argue that giving the ultra-Orthodox rabbinate total control over Jewish practice will destroy religious life in Israel just as surely as clerical control hurt the Church of England and the Catholic Church in Spain and France. Or that the Zionist founders, from Herzl to Jabotinsky to Ben-Gurion, all believed passionately in the unity of the Jewish people and the need for a secular state.
But perhaps a more practical rallying cry will work: If this bill passes, future historians will inevitably wonder why, at a critical moment in its history, Israel chose to tell 85 percent of the Jewish diaspora that their rabbis weren’t rabbis and their religious practices were a sham, the conversions of their parents and spouses were invalid, their marriages weren’t legal under Jewish law, and their progeny were a tribe of bastards unfit to marry other Jews.
Why, they will wonder, as Iran raced to build a nuclear bomb to wipe the Jewish state off the map, did the custodians of the 2,000-year-old national dream of the Jewish people choose such a perverse definition of Jewish peoplehood, seemingly calculated to alienate supporters outside its own borders?
And, they will also wonder, what of the quiescence of diaspora Jewry? Many American Jews understandably see Israel as under siege and have not wanted to make things worse; they imagined that internal politicking over conversions and marriages was ephemeral, and would change. But the conversion bill is a sign that this silence was a mistake, for it has been interpreted by Israeli politicians as a green light to throw basic questions of Jewish identity into the pot of coalition politics.
The redemptive history of the Jewish people since the Holocaust has rested on the twin pillars of a strong Israel and a strong diaspora, which have spoken to each other politically and culturally, and whose successes have mutually reinforced the confidence and capacities of the other. Neither the Jewish diaspora nor Israel can afford a split between the two communities — a dystopian possibility that, if this bill passes, could materialize frightfully soon.
Alana Newhouse is the editor in chief of Tablet Magazine, which covers Jewish life and culture.
July 16, 2010 by nicola
Dear Friends of IRAC,
Thank you for your impressive response to our call for action on the Conversion Bill. Your emails and letters are pouring in. More than 3,600 people have sent letters directly through the RAC site, and just today, we delivered over 7,000 signatures on 350 pages directly to Prime Minister Netanyahu’s door.
Yesterday a group of IRAC lawyers and lobbyists organized an incredible day of advocacy in the Knesset for the President of the Jewish Federation of North America, Jerry Silverman, and the President of United Jewish Communities of Metro West, Max Kleinman. They had 34 meetings, including meetings with Minister of Defense Ehud Barak, Minister of Welfare Isaac Herzog, Minister of Communication Moshe Kahlon, and dozens of other Members of Knesset. Jerry stated very clearly our opposition, and members from all factions were eager to hear our position on how this will create a major division between Israel and the Diaspora. Our presence had a big impact, and coverage in the Israeli news is skyrocketing.
The Israeli government is blown away by our collective efforts - never before have they seen such high level lobbying activity from an Israeli social change organization on behalf of Diaspora Jewry. We at IRAC are blushing with all of the praise being given to our advocacy efforts. In honor of our lobbyist Loren Poris, all donations made on-line to IRAC for the rest of the month of July will be designated to our public policy and advocacy department. Click here to donate.
Right now things are heating up. We have every reason to believe that the bill will be moving forward to a vote this Wednesday. Once it passes a first reading, it will be incredibly difficult to prevent a second and third reading and then the proposal will become law.
After our extensive lobbying efforts, we now know that there are 37 MKs in favor of the law and 49 against. The rest - 16 Likud MKs and 5 Kadima MKs - are still not committed. Many of the Likud MKs claim that they will vote however the Prime Minister tells them to, while others are even less committed.
We know that Prime Minister Netanyahu has the capability to stop this vote. The fact that the Prime Minister is prepared for the proposal to be tabled for a first reading is a clear sign in itself that despite his statements in public, he is still not ready to take the real steps needed to prevent the passing of the law.
We at IRAC are currently focusing all of our resources on blocking this bill. With all of our work around the clock - and your energetic opposition - we are becoming more and more optimistic each day. We are so close to putting this dangerous bill to an end - but we still need your help.
More than ever, the pressure is on. If you have not yet sent a letter or a fax, please do so now. Your efforts are critical - and the need to share your opposition with your friends, family, and congregants has never been more important.
And to all of our friends in Europe, South America, Asia, and Australia - we need to let the Israelis know that this is an issue important to Jews all over the world, not just in North America.
For those from North America, please click here to send a letter to the Prime Minister now, or beginning on Sunday telephone him at + 972-2-6408457 or send a fax at + 972-2-6496659.
For those from outside North America, click here to sign our petition, or even better create a separate email by personalizing our attached letter and copying and pasting the address: PM_ENG2@pmo.co.il into a new email message.
If you’re up for being a nudnik, wait until Israeli offices are open on Sunday and Monday and email, call, or fax these MKs who we know for sure are in favor of the law. Send them a personal message or the attached message telling them that Diaspora Jewry will not stand for this delegitimization. Please copy and paste the email addresses below into a new email message to send.
Reuven Rivlin (Likud): rrivlin@knesset.gov.il; phone: +972-2-6753444; fax: +972-2-6496193
Otniel Schneller (Kadima): oschneller@knesset.gov.il; phone: +972-2-6408383; fax: +972-2-6496742
Carmel Shama (Likud): kshama@knesset.gov.il; phone: +972-2-6408109
Miri Regev (Likud): mregev@knesset.gov.il; phone: +927-2-6408178
Gila Gamliel (Likud): ggamliel@knesset.gov.il; phone: +972-2-6408463
Please do whatever you can to help up prevent this proposal from passing. It will set back religious pluralism in Israel immeasurably and will cause a terrible rift between Israel and the Diaspora, a rift that we cannot afford. The time to act is now.
L’Shalom,
Anat Hoffman
P.S. Click here to become a fan of our new Facebook page “Stop the Conversion Bill: Keep Israel a Home for ALL Jews,” and get regular updates and pass the message on to more people.
Dear _____ ,
We write to request your immediate intervention to prevent passage of the legislation being brought forward by MK David Rotem.
We are deeply concerned about the intention to grant the Chief Rabbinate sole control over conversion in Israel. Such legislation would be an open attack on the legitimacy of non-Orthodox Jewry, which composes the majority of world Jewry.
While we are supportive of efforts to create greater accessibility to conversion courts in Israel, the overall impact of the Rotem Bill will set back these efforts. Should this bill be enacted, it will exacerbate a widening gap between Diaspora and Israel communities, which we are working very hard to avoid.
Therefore, we believe it is imperative that you, as a leader of Israel, and as one who cares deeply about the well-being of Klal Yisrael, intervene and urge immediate withdrawal of this bill.
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July 15, 2010 by nicola
Dear friend,
As promised, we are trying to keep you fully informed about the developments with regard to the proposed changes to the Law of Conversion.
Please follow this link to read an article published yesterday on j-wire: Progressive and Reform Judaism facing Orthodox Control
Rabbi Uri Regev, head of Hiddush, has written an article in which he provides a detailed explanation of why the proposed changes are so unacceptable (click here to read the article: http://arza.org.au/?p=707).
Further, the statement and call to action from the World Union for Progressive Judaism: http://arza.org.au/?p=708.
JTA published an article “Opponents alarmed as Israeli conversion bill moves ahead” which can be read at: http://www.jta.org/news/article/2010/07/13/2740030/opponents-of-conversion-bill-hope-to-keep-it-in-holding-pattern.
All of this - and much more - can be found on the ARZA Australia website: www.arza.org.au.
July 15, 2010 by Steve
14 JULY 2010 | 3 AV 5770
Dear Friends,
Now is the time to act - for your sake, for the sake of your children and grandchildren. In a place in which all Jews should find safe haven, Israel, our legitimate rights as modern Jews are being threatened by pending legislation in the Knesset. A small minority of ultra-orthodox Jews are threatening to delegitimize all forms on non-ultra orthodox practice by changing the laws of conversion. We need you to make your voice heard and tell Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu that he must act to prevent a potential rift between Israel and the Jews throughout the world. Please send the attached letter to the Prime Minister. We would also appreciate if you would send a letter to your local Israeli Ambassador
MK David Rotem’s bill could be brought before the Knesset in the next several days, unless we can get the Prime Minister to stop it. Rotem’s bill would place responsibility for supervising all conversion courts on the Chief Rabbinate - effectively making conversions performed by Reform and Conservative rabbis (and other non Ultra-Orthodox rabbis) within and outside Israel illegitimate. Further, this bill would require all converts to accept "the yoke of the mitzvot according to Halacha (Jewish Law)," i.e. to live an orthodox lifestyle. For detailed background information, please click here.
The majority of the world’s Jews are not orthodox; we cannot allow our religious rights to be abrogated by a small minority.
Next week, Jews around the world will commemorate Tisha B’Av, a day of great sadness. On that day, the Temple that once stood in the heart of Jerusalem was destroyed. While history records that the destruction occurred at the hand of our enemies, our tradition teaches that our enemies were able to prevail because the Jewish people were consumed by sinat chinam - baseless hatred. Factions and disagreements within the community made us vulnerable to attacks from without. Today, history seems poised to repeat itself, unless we ACT.
The World Union for Progressive Judaism has been actively involved in this issue from the outset, and we are proud of the fact that our regions and communities around the world have already sent powerful messages. This is not just an issue for the Progressive / Reform community - we are joined in this campaign by Conservative, Masorti, Reconstructionist Jews and Federations around the world. Now is the time for every individual Jew to make a difference and be heard.
L’shalom,

_____________________________________________

Sincerely,
World Union for Progressive Judaism
July 15, 2010 by Steve
By Rabbi Uri Regev, Advocate
President & CEO of Hiddush
1 Av 5770
July 12, 2010
"Jerusalem was only destroyed because they zealously applied the strict letter of the Law [Torah] and not going beyond the letter of the law." (Babylonian Talmud, Bava Metzia 30B)
1. The proposed conversion law [formally titled: The Chief Rabbinate bill (Amendment – Powers in Matters of Conversion), 5770-2010] in the formulation presented today to the Knesset Constitution & Law Committee is the worst and most damaging in the sequence of conversion bills that MK Rotem, who chairs the Committee, has proposed. It represents an unsavoury surrender to the rabbinical establishment and the ultra-Orthodox politicians. The proposal is designed to expand the authority of the Chief Rabbinate and undermine conversions done by the major religious movements within the Jewish people. It pretentiously claims to facilitate easier access to conversion for new immigrants and halt the increasing trend to nullify conversions after the fact on the grounds of non observance of commandments. This proposal does not solve the problems faced by new immigrants, and it puts at risk Israel’s strategic interests, by jeopardizing the cooperation and solidarity with Diaspora Jewry. It places Israel on an inevitable collision course with most Jews of the world today – and represents an unfortunate example for highly objectionable legislation. It may have started with good intentions, but after passing through the ultra religious political mill it has become an appalling bill which must be rejected outright.
2. In article 1 the authority of the chief rabbinate is expanded, by granting it “responsibility over conversion in Israel". This authority never been granted to the Chief Rabbinate, and it is in clear contradiction with consistent rulings of the Supreme Court, which negated the authority of the Chief Rabbinate over conversion matters that are not tied directly to issues of personal status. This expansion contradicts the principle of “Freedom of Religion and Conscience” promised in Israel’s Declaration of Independence, and the desire of the majority of Israeli Jews to see religious life here firmly based on pluralism and equality of all streams of Judaism.
3. The article’s language worsened in comparison to the draft that was presented to the Knesset Committee in March. It now states explicitly that the authority of the Chief Rabbinate "will not harm conversions that were done by the Special Rabbinical Courts that were appointed by virtue of government decisions and Rabbinical Courts that operate according to law". In his recent visit to the US and in meetings with heads of the Jewish federations and the non Orthodox Jewish streams, Rotem stated that the formulation of the Bill that was presented in March,[the language of which stated that the “Responsibility of the Chief Rabbinate over conversion would not diminish the rights of other authorities to conduct conversion in Israel according to any law"] provided for continuation of the recognition of Reform and Conservative conversions. We doubted his statements on this issue that were aimed at silencing criticism from the non-Orthodox movements against the proposed law. Now it is patently clear that this was never the intention, and that the new legislation attempts to undermine the continued recognition of these conversions, and is intended to enable the Ministry of Interior to argue before the Supreme Court that the legal situation has changed and that non-Orthodox conversions, which do not fall within the new language of the “exemptions” to the authority of the Chief Rabbinate, may no longer be recognized.
4. Article 2 aims in part to expand the ranks of converting rabbis, in hopes that among the “City Rabbis” and the “Local Council Rabbis” there will be some with a moderate approach. The present draft adds an explicit condition to the validity of their conversions; that they “will be recognized …only if the conversion was conducted according to the religious requirements … after acceptance of the yoke of Torah and commandments according to Halachah”. Beyond the ridiculous nature of this condition, which implies that the Chief Rabbinate and the ultra Orthodox politicians entertain doubts as to whether the “City Rabbis” and “Local Councils Rabbis” will act according to Jewish Law, there is here a severe set of conditions in the most sensitive area of converting new immigrants. Namely - the law states that even conversions conducted in these new Orthodox rabbinical courts will be invalid if they do not sufficiently comply with the requirement to accept the "yoke of commandments". So long as the Chief Rabbinate does not publicly clarify to what extent it is prepared to adopt lenient rulings regarding the demand to accept the “yoke of commandments” from new immigrants – the new legislative exercise is doomed to failure from the outset. Everyone who deals with conversion knows exactly the nature of the challenge, and if Rotem and the Chief Rabbinate are not prepared to recognize the reality and reconcile with it – it is best they do not delude the new immigrant population and not push the State of Israel into a collision course with the Jewish People unnecessarily.
5. The present draft also includes a threat and sanctions against rabbis who serve on the “Special Rabbinic Courts” if they do not satisfy the chief rabbis as to requiring acceptance of the “yoke of commandments” by the converts. The Bill authorizes the chief rabbis to forbid these rabbis from continuing to officiate in conversions.
6. The proposed law professes to block the growing trend of retroactive nullification of conversions, whether by “Regional Rabbinic Courts” when adjudicating matters of personal status, or by City Rabbis who refuse to recognize lenient Orthodox conversions and do not approve weddings for these converts. Instead of drawing the logical conclusion and removing from Rabbinic Courts and City Rabbis the State exclusive authority, and basing their function on voluntary choice of those who accept their authority as in every other democratic society. The present Bill tries "to eat its cake and have it too." The Bill attempts to bypass the extreme rabbinic courts by instructing that to rule on the validity of past conversions you first have to refer it to the original court that conducted the conversion, and that appeals against its decisions will require approval of the president of the High Rabbinic Court. Likewise the Bill creates an alternative channel for convert marriages, by a member of the converting rabbinic court, instead of the “recalcitrant" City Rabbis. The time has come to recognize the truth – the politicization of religion and creation of an Orthodox monopoly has brought about the growing extremism and Haredization. . The answer is to abolish the monopoly – not establish an apparatus of "rabbinate B" to bypass "rabbinate A."
7. The proposed Bill makes it possible to nullify conversions if the converting rabbinic court, or a Rabbinic Court of Appeal, decides that the conversion "was conducted on the basis of misleading information". As is known, the candidate for conversion is required to promise before the rabbinic court to observe the commandments and give religious education to his/her children. There is no doubt but that those who wish to may easily nullify conversions after the fact, holding that the promise given the rabbinical court was not sincere. This is how “nullifiers” acted in the past, and they can continue to do so in the future.
8. Requiring the approval of the president of the High Rabbinic Court as a condition for nullifying conversions is a dubious block against this phenomenon. Rumour as to Chief Rabbi Amar holding a lenient approach have not been proven, and nothing has been heard from him directly and unequivocally as to his position regarding the vexing question of accepting the yoke of Torah and commandments by converts. But what is no less important is that in the best case scenario – this is a patchwork remedy that does not provide a real solution. Rabbi Amar will conclude his term in office in a few years, and there is no doubt but that the path of the Chief Rabbinate is leading to even more religious extremism. Therefore, there is no point in placing the matter in the hands of the president of the High Rabbinic Court to close up the gaping hole in this dam, and it is clear that nullification of conversions will continue.
9. Article 3 of the Bill changes the Citizenship Law in a way that reduces recognition of converts according to the Law of Return and the Citizenship Law, and creates a distinction between Jews-by-choice and Jews-by-birth. . This is an outrageous initiative, which contradicts Jewish tradition and particularly harms converts from abroad whose attraction to Judaism was enhanced by a visit to Israel. This is a most grievous change of the legal situation, which will hurt many converts and make them into “second class” Jews. [MK Rotem has announced, during the Committee meeting on July 12th, that he would remove this article from the draft]
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