Dissolve the Chief Rabbinate | ישראל היום

Dissolve the Chief Rabbinate

The tensions created by the ultra-Orthodox Chief Rabbinate within Israeli society have ‎extended to the Diaspora and are now undermining relations with the Jewish state.‎

Ironically, this is taking place at a time when many Israelis are returning to their spiritual roots. ‎Although Tel Aviv remains outwardly a hedonistic secular city, the secular Ashkenazi outlook ‎that dominated Israeli society is in decline, and even setting aside haredim, Israelis today have ‎become increasingly more traditionally inclined and religiously observant. ‎

The past decades have witnessed the emergence of observant Jews at all senior levels of ‎society. There has been a dramatic revolution in the Israel Defense Forces with national-‎religious soldiers now occupying senior positions, assuming roles in combat units parallel to ‎what their kibbutz predecessors did in the early years of statehood. There is even a thirst for ‎spiritual values among secular Israelis, accompanied by a major revival of the study of Jewish ‎texts. ‎

Yet simultaneously, there is revulsion and rage at the corruption, extortion and political ‎leverage imposed by powerful haredi political parties and their rabbis.‎

Unfortunately, the ultra-Orthodox rabbis have effectively exploited their political leverage to ‎assume control of the Chief Rabbinate, which, ironically, they themselves have always ‎despised. ‎

Current Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi David Lau and his Sephardi counterpart, Chief Rabbi Yitzhak ‎Yosef, represent the antithesis of the Chief Rabbinate created 90 years ago by Rabbi Abraham ‎Isaac Kook, who strove to unite the nation. They stand in sharp contrast to earlier occupants ‎such as Chief Rabbis Yitzhak Herzog and Ben-Zion Meir Hai Uziel, who were great scholars, ‎passionate Zionists, and always sought to blend Judaism with compassion and worldliness.‎

The current incumbents are narrow-minded bureaucrats completely dominated by the most ‎extreme ultra-Orthodox elements who seek to impose their stringent religious interpretations ‎upon the entire nation.‎

Today these rabbis are creating significant tensions throughout Israeli society by their lack of ‎compassion and the inflexibility in which they administer issues relating to personal status. As a ‎monopoly, they are able to wield their power and ignore the current conditions facing Jews in ‎a modern Jewish state and instead they impose the most rigid interpretations.‎

Our rabbinic sages were innovative and practical. Take for example the biblical cancellation of ‎debts in the Sabbatical year. The great rabbinic scholar, Hillel the Elder, saw the hardship that ‎this would cause and, with his Sanhedrin, issued the famous prozbul, which circumvented the ‎law -- and which is still in place today in a modern state and enables the banking system to ‎function. More recently, the heter mechira was instituted by our rabbis in the late 19th century ‎as a solution to the biblical requirement that the land lie ‎fallow every seven years -- to assist the agricultural sector, including the majority of kibbutzim, ‎that would have suffered economic hardship. These are examples of rabbinic creativity and ‎leadership.‎

The late Chief Rabbi Ovadia Yosef displayed similar courage and leadership when he effectively ‎closed the debate on immigrants from Ethiopia, deeming them to be halachically Jewish on the ‎basis of historic grounds.‎

The 300,000 Russian Israelis who are the children of immigrants from mixed marriages pose ‎fewer halachic obstacles than the Ethiopian Jews. Taking into account the history and the ‎Soviet persecution of Judaism, there is little doubt that a courageous and learned rabbi could ‎find halachic precedents that, at the very least, would both encourage and create means of ‎easing the process of conversion for these grown children of Russian immigrants. They ‎contribute toward and share in the burdens of defending the Jewish state and currently face ‎severe problems and humiliation from rabbis when wishing to marry.‎

Indeed, the revered former Chief Rabbi Uziel actively encouraged and eased conditions for the conversion of children of mixed marriages; ‎although not halachic Jews, he regarded them as Zera Israel -- the seed of Israel -- a separate category from gentiles. ‎

Regrettably, a rabbi of Uziel's stature and courage has yet to emerge. ‎Indeed, the haredi inflexibility and determination to deter conversions extends to marriage ‎and divorce with similar rigidity, bureaucratization and lack of compassion. While the ‎moderate Tzohar rabbis are conducting halachic weddings for nonobservant couples that ‎highlight the positive and joyful aspects of a traditional wedding, their numbers are limited and ‎the Chief Rabbinate attempts to exclude them from officiating beyond the confines of their ‎congregations. ‎

The decision by Rabbis Nahum Rabinovitch, Shlomo Riskin, David Stav and others to establish ‎an independent rabbinic court that will perform Orthodox halachic conversions and authorize ‎more Tzohar rabbis to officiate is an attempt to rectify this. But it is being bitterly contested by ‎the Chief Rabbinate, which is backed by the haredi political parties.‎

Regrettably, progress made by the previous government to bring about changes on personal ‎issues such as conversion, marriage and divorce and integrating haredim into Israeli society ‎were nullified by the new government, now dominated by the haredi parties.‎

Over the past few years, the Chief Rabbinate has sought to determine the eligibility of ‎Orthodox rabbis outside Israel to conduct conversions and marriages, effectively extending its ‎authority beyond Israel and attempting to assume control of all Jewish life on a global basis. ‎Those not on their accepted list may find that the validity of the conversions or weddings at ‎which they officiated will be rejected by Israeli rabbinical courts.‎

Throughout the entire period of the Exile, rabbis recognized that there were many faces to ‎Judaism. Independent rabbinical courts were established in every community and there were ‎frequently bitter differences in interpretation between leading rabbis and sages. No rabbi or ‎rabbinical court could claim to be the final arbiter on religious issues. ‎

Yet the Israeli Chief Rabbinate is seeking to alter this and impose itself as the sole arbiter of ‎Jewish law throughout the Jewish world. In effect it is setting itself up as a Jewish Vatican -- ‎something utterly unprecedented in our history. ‎

In the current climate, many Orthodox rabbis, fearful of being criticized as tilting toward Reform, ‎tend to display their piety by adopting more extreme approaches and, as a consequence, the ‎Chief Rabbinate has succeeded in coercing some of the major Diaspora rabbinical associations ‎to accept its hegemony. ‎

This is heightening tensions between Israel and the Diaspora. The histrionic attacks by the Chief ‎Rabbinate against non-Orthodox groups, climaxing with Lau's recent condemnation of ‎Education Minister Naftali Bennett for visiting one of the leading American Conservative day ‎schools, is creating an upheaval.‎

There are of course fundamental issues concerning the revelation at Sinai and the halachic process ‎that will always distinguish Orthodoxy from other Jewish denominations. But in the current ‎religious climate, it is surely time to stop this internecine warfare. The greatest challenges ‎facing Orthodoxy, both in Israel and in the Diaspora, are the secularization of Jewish life and ‎the dramatic erosion of Jewish identity.‎

In this context, Conservative and Reform Judaism, despite their failure to stem intermarriage ‎and assimilation, not only promote belief in God, but encourage their adherents to retain some ‎Jewish traditions. ‎

Orthodox Jews are not compromising their own outlook or observance by reaching out and ‎encouraging non-Orthodox groups to become more traditional and observant -- rather than ‎constantly abusing them. ‎

In addition, despite the failure of many to adequately support Israel, even in the Reform ‎movement there are many rabbis and followers who remain passionate supporters of Israel. ‎But the ongoing tendency of the Israeli rabbinate to delegitimize them will make Israel forfeit ‎the support of major segments of American Jewry and provide encouragement to those post-‎Zionist elements seeking to create a Bundist type Judaism in which Israel plays no role.‎

In Israel itself, we should welcome the substitution of the current atheistic school education in ‎the secular stream with the Conservative TALI curriculum, which encourages belief in God and ‎provides children with a background of Jewish heritage.‎

To strengthen the Jewish religious revival that is occurring requires the dissolution or at least ‎significant limitation of the power of the Chief Rabbinate.‎

The vast majority (65%) of Israelis favor dissolution. The obstacles are the dysfunctional ‎political system and haredi retention of the balance of power in the government.‎

Bennett and the moderate majority of Habayit Hayehudi could well place themselves at ‎the vanguard of bringing about change. They would be making a major contribution on behalf ‎of religious Zionism for the well-being of the Jewish state and the entire Jewish people.‎

This requires a united approach by all the non-haredi parties, which has never been ‎forthcoming on this issue. Today, with Israel-Diaspora relations at risk of a dramatic decline ‎and the growing Israeli anger at the coercion imposed upon them, the need for reform or ‎dissolution of the Chief Rabbinate before a crisis erupts is urgent.‎

Isi Leibler's website can be viewed at www.wordfromjerusalem.com. ‎He may be contacted at ileibler@leibler.com.

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