Criminal complaint filed against Chief Rabbi for incitement

Conservative rabbis file criminal complaint against Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar for incitement • Amar urged Orthodox rabbis to protest a Supreme Court ruling allowing the government to pay salaries of non-Orthodox rabbis.

צילום: Yoav Ari Dudkevitch // Sephardi Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar opposes state funding of Conservative and Reform community rabbis.

Two Conservative rabbis filed separate criminal complaints against Sephardi Chief Rabbi Shlomo Amar on Wednesday for allegedly inciting against them and their movement, according to a report by the Jewish Telegraphic Agency.

JTA reported that at a meeting of Orthodox rabbis on Tuesday in the Chief Rabbinate's building in Jerusalem, Amar called on Orthodox rabbis to protest the state's agreement to recognize non-Orthodox community rabbis and in a letter asked them to pray for "an end to the plans of the destroyers and saboteurs of Judaism."

In response to the Amar's statements, Rabbi Mauricio Balter, president of the Israeli Conservative Movement Rabbinical Assembly, and Conservative Rabbi Avinoam Sharon reportedly filed their complaints with the police.

According to JTA, more than 100 rabbis participated in the meeting called by Amar, including Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi Yona Metzger, and rabbis from the Religious Zionist movement.

"They are trying to the uproot the foundation of Judaism. This is an attempt to tear the Jewish people into two nations. It's a danger without a remedy," Amar was quoted as saying.

During the meeting lead by Amar, Conservative and Reform rabbis gathered outside the Chief Rabbinate building to demonstrate against it, according to the Times of Israel.

In a historic move, Attorney-General Yehuda Weinstein informed the High Court of Justice on May 29 that the state will begin paying the salaries of Conservative and Reform rabbis employed by small municipalities and rural communities.

The Israeli government has always funded the salaries of neighborhood, regional and municipal Orthodox rabbis. The High Court's decision this year reiterated its 2006 decision to fund non-Orthodox rabbis. Their salaries will be paid not by the Religious Services Ministry, which is headed by an ultra-Orthodox Shas minister, but by the Culture and Sport Ministry. At this stage, the decision is limited to small agricultural communities and kibbutzim, and will not be implemented in large cities.

In 2005, the Israel Religious Action Center petitioned the High Court on behalf Rabbi Miri Gold of Kibbutz Gezer, demanding that the state provide equal funding for non-Orthodox religious services is a community chooses such. At the time, the court suggested using the title "Rabbi of a non-Orthodox Community" for Reform and Conservative rabbis and is expected to provide a ruling on the issue in the near future.

The petitioners pointed out that the announcement by Weinstein constitutes a historical precedent for the non-Orthodox movements and the public they serve, whom they claimed have suffered from a discriminatory lack of funds for their religious services.

Rabbi Gilad Kariv, executive director of the Reform movement in Israel, said, "This is a first step, but an important one, on the way to equalizing the status of all religious sects in Israel."

Religious Services Minister Yakov Margi (Shas) said he was opposed in the past and is still opposed to employing non-Orthodox rabbis. Margi said that if he is forced to pay the salaries of non-Orthodox rabbis, he will ask Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, the Shas spiritual leader, to permit him to resign as religious services minister.

In later comments, Margi took his attacks on non-Orthodox religious streams a step further, by saying "the Reform movement is guilty of hundreds of years of assimilation."

"The Reform think that they're bringing in a new spirit to Judaism, but in practice it is an evil wind," Margi told Army Radio.

In a reaction to Margi's statement, executive director of the Hiddush organization, attorney Rabbi Uri Regev said, "Only in the Israeli reality can a minister of religion announce he will continue to oppose the law and the attorney general's instructions."

Science and Technology Minister Rabbi Daniel Hershkowitz (New National Religious Party) was also outraged by Weinstein's announcement and said, "It is not possible that decisions concerning the Jewish identity of the state will be in the hands of attorney-generals and government clerks. Just like they can't determine who is worthy of an academic degree, they should similarly not be permitted to determine who is worthy of the title 'rabbi.'"

Rabbi Aharon Leib Shteinman, who has been leader of Ashkenazi ultra-Orthodoxy since Rabbi Yosef Shalom Elyashiv fell ill in February, instructed Ashkenazi rabbis not to participate in the campaign against the non-Orthodox movements.

Shteinman said the cause was a lost battle, comparing the Reform movement to the Biblical plague of frogs in Egypt. Whenever the frogs were killed, he said, more would sprout in their place. Shteinman pointed out that the ultra-Orthodox face more urgent problems, such as the impending Tal Law alternative.

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