Objective coverage of church-state and religious liberty developments, with extensive links to primary sources.
Tuesday, March 20, 2007
New Rabbinic Court Judges Appointed In Israel Amidst Controversy
In Israel yesterday, according to the Jerusalem Post, 15 new judges were appointed to vacancies in rabbinic courts amidst strong criticism by women's rights organizations who say the new judges will not be sympathetic to the problem of women whose husbands refuse to grant them a divorce. Twelve of the 15 new judges are haredi (ultra-Orthodox Jews). A modern Orthodox member of the selection committee and 2 members from the Israel bar association walked out of the meeting when the committee refused to appoint more non-haredi judges. Opponents blame Justice Minister Daniel Friedmann, saying that he could have suspended the meeting until a compromise was worked out. However, new appointment had already been delayed for 4 years as justice ministers have refrained from convening the selection committee because of political power struggles. Haaretz says that many of the 15 judges appointed are relatives of politicians, public figures or veteran rabbinic court judges, and only one has a background in law. (See prior related posting.)