Should government assist Orthodox Jewish women whose husbands have refused to grant them a religious divorce ("get")? Known as an "agunah", a woman who has not received a get from her husband is precluded from remarrying under Jewish law. In Canada, the Supreme Court has agreed to hear an appeal in a case of a woman seeking damages from her husband for withholding a get. Before they married, Jessel (Jason) Marcovitz of Montreal signed an agreement that if a civil divorce was granted in his marriage to Stephanie Bruker, he would appear before a rabbinic court to grant his wife a get. When Jessel refused for 15 years to carry out this agreement, Stephanie sued in civil court. The trial court awarded Stephanie $47,500 in damages for breach of contract. However in September 2005, a Quebec appellate court held that civil courts could not enforce a contract that requires an individual to engage in a religious act. (See prior posting.) Today's Canadian Jewish News reports that the Canadian Civil Liberties Association is intervening in the appeal to the Supreme Court because of the importance of the case in deciding how religious practices and obligations are treated by the courts.
Meanwhile, in Israel a committee of the Knesset has created an advisory committee that will focus on the plight of the agunah. Arutz Sheva reported yesterday that the parliamentary Committee for the Advancement of Women has created the committee to consult with the Chief Rabbinate, rabbinical courts, advocacy organizations and Knesset members.