Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Wednesday, January 04, 2006
Israeli Religious Parties Reject Religious Affairs Changes
Today's Jerusalem Post reports on a proposal to reduce Israeli national government involvement in Religious Affairs and increase local control of Religious Councils. The Ne'emanei Report was presented earlier this week to the chairmen of three leading Israeli political parties. It suggested that synagogues, funded by a voluntary religion tax, should employ the local rabbi and provide basic educational services and a place of worship. Services that individual synagogues could not provide, such as marriages, burials, ritual baths and kashrut supervision, would be provided by one or more national unions of synagogues. Leaders of the major religious parties, Shas and NRP, rejected the proposal, saying that it would be a first step toward separation of religion and state. National Religious Party chairman Zevulun Orlev said, "Religious services must remain an intrinsic part of the state. This is fundamental to the definition of Israel as a Jewish democratic state."