Tuesday, January 20, 2009

Israeli Rabbinical Court Questions Years-Old Conversion of Famous Rabbi's Son

Yesterday's Jerusalem Post reports that in Israel, an ombudsman has opened an investigation into the behavior of a Rabbinical Court judge who retroactively called into question the conversion to Judaism of Yossi Fackenheim, son of the famous Canadian academic and Reform Rabbi, Emil Fackenheim. Emil Fackenheim was a Holocaust survivor. His wife did not convert to Judaism until after Yossi's birth. Yossi was converted at the age of two by an Orthodox Rabbinical court in Toronto.

Rabbi Yissachar Dov Hagar, a judge on Jerusalem's Rabbinical Court, ruled during proceedings to finalize the divorce of Yossi and his wife that there was no need for a Jewish divorce because Yossi's original conversion was invalid. Apparently his decision was based on the fact that Yossi did not maintain an Orthodox lifestyle after his conversion. Rabbi Hagar attended the court session dressed in a Hasidic long coat and fur hat, and complained about non-Jews being anti-Semitic when he learned that Yossi was a Shakespearean actor. At the request of Fackenheim'ss attorney, the judge did agree to issue his wife a Jewish divorce decree, but added language stating that Fackenheim was not Jewish. However the court Administration said no official decision was made on the status of Fackenheim's conversion. Fackenheim is considering filing an appeal with the High Rabbinic Court or Israel's Supreme Court, but is concerned about endangering the validity of the conversion of his siblings if he presses the point.