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[1]I have finally got my Wikipedia page to work!![edit]

3000 years of Jewish history[edit]

Shaye J. D. Cohen

Class is on Tuesdays and Thursdays

Women of the Wall's position[edit]

The Women of the Wall have consistently claimed that there is no single "custom of the place" and that their right to pray is a religious freedom enshrined in Israeli law. They believe the Western Wall is a religious site as well as a national site and therefore belongs to the entire Jewish population. Their efforts to challenge the current customs at the Wall and break the ritual status quo continues as they believe that the Wall is a holy place for all Jews. They repeatedly stress that the group is not Reform Jews, but come from all affiliations and that their conduct strictly adheres to Orthodox Jewish Law and that their prayer is genuine and not a political stunt.[1] Their central mission is to "achieve the social and legal recognition of our right, as women, to wear prayer shawls, pray and read from the Torah collectively and out loud at the Western Wall."[2]  The women have made progress and as of 1988, the women have held occasional, uninterrupted prayer services wearing tallitot and tefillin.[2]


Arrests[edit]

Women detained for wearing prayer shawls; photo from Women of the Wall

In their struggle for civil rights and religious freedom, members of the group have been willing to engage in civil disobedience and become "prisoners of conscience.".[3]

Several members of the group have been arrested for acts that Women of the Wall members say are legal under the Supreme Court ruling. Nofrat Frenkel was arrested for wearing a tallit under her coat and holding a Torah in November 2009.[4] She was not charged, but she was barred from visiting the Wall for two weeks.[5]

The group's leader, Anat Hoffman, was interrogated by the police in January 2010, fingerprinted, and told that she could be charged with a felony over her involvement with Women of the Wall. The questioning concerned WOW's December service, during which Hoffman said she did not do anything out of the ordinary.[6]

On July 12, 2010, Hoffman was arrested for holding a Torah scroll. She was fined 5,000 NIS and given a restraining order according to which she was not allowed to approach the Kotel for thirty days.[7]

On October 16, 2012, Hoffman was arrested again. She was accused of singing out loud and disturbing the peace, and was released from police custody the following day.[8] The following morning Lesley Sachs and board member Rachel Cohen Yeshurun were detained for "disturbing public order."[9] Hoffman described the ordeal: “In the past when I was detained I had to have a policewoman come with me to the bathroom, but this was something different. This time they checked me naked, completely, without my underwear. They dragged me on the floor 15 meters; my arms are bruised. They put me in a cell without a bed, with three other prisoners, including a prostitute and a car thief. They threw the food through a little window in the door. I laid on the floor covered with my tallit. I’m a tough cookie, but I was just so miserable. And for what? I was with the Hadassah women saying Sh’ma Yisrael.”[10]

On February 11, 2013, ten women who were part of WOW, including two American rabbis, were detained for praying at the wall and “as a result of them wearing the garments that they’re not allowed to wear specifically at that site.”[11] The women were barred from returning for 15 days.

 On April 11, 2013, five women were detained for allegedly goading and offending other worshippers. They were subsequently released by Judge Sharon Larry-Bavili without restrictions as she ruled that the female worshippers did not instigate the disturbance, but rather it was the male and female Orthodox protestors countering them that initiated it. [12][13]

In April 2013, a group UK Progressive rabbis protested to the Israeli ambassador calling threats to arrest women saying Kaddish "shocking."[14]

On July 17, 2015, Women of the Wall board member Rachel Cohen Yeshurun was arrested by police in the prayer section of the Kotel after smuggling in a Torah Scroll to the Kotel in the early morning before the Rosh Hodesh service began.[15][16]

[17]

History[edit]

WOW Torah Reading

Twenty-five years after the founding of WoW, a poll by the Israel Democracy Institute in May 2013 found that about half of the Israel public supports the Women of the Wall, and that men (51.5%) are more inclined to support the women’s prayer group than women (46%) The poll was conducted by Professor Tamar Hermann, who noted that Women of the Wall received highest levels of support from educated, secular, Ashkenazi Israelis.[18] However, the group was not always met with support from the majority of Israelis, as it is today.

Women of the Wall was founded in December 1988 at the first International Jewish Feminist Conference in Jerusalem.[19] On December 1, 1988, during the conference, Rivka Haut organized a group of multi-denominational women to pray at the Western Wall. 70 women carried a Torah scroll to the Western Wall, and Rabbi Deborah Brin led a prayer service for them.[20] Francine Klagsbrun was the one chosen to carry the Torah at the head of the group, making her the first woman to carry a Torah to the Western Wall.[21] When the conference ended, a group of Jerusalem women led by Bonna Devora Haberman continued to meet at the Kotel and formed Women of the Wall to assert their right to pray there without hindrance.[22] Women of the Wall has fought a legal battle asserting a right to conduct organized prayer at the Kotel and challenging government and private intervention in its efforts. After demanding police protection, the government was given nine months to make arrangements that would allow them to pray unhindered. At the end of this period, the Ministry of Religion ruled that only prayer according to the "custom of the place" was to be permitted and that "the sensitivities of other worshippers" must not be offended.[23] The Women of the Wall then petitioned the Supreme Court to recognize their right to pray at the Wall. A temporary ruling was given which stated that the status quo should be enforced until they reached a final verdict.[23]

The struggle has led to two Israeli Supreme Court decisions and a series of debates in the Knesset. In its first decision, on May 22, 2002, the Supreme Court ruled that it is legal for Women of the Wall to hold prayer groups and read Torah in the women's section of the main Kotel plaza undisturbed. Four days later, Haredi political parties including Shas introduced several bills to overturn the decision, including a bill that would have made it a criminal offense for women to pray in non-traditional ways at the Western Wall, punishable by up to seven years in prison.[22] In response MK Naomi Chazan said "What have we become? Afghanistan? Iran?"[24] Although the bill did not pass, the Israeli Supreme Court reconsidered its earlier decision. On April 6, 2003, the Court reversed itself and upheld, 5-4, the Israeli government's ban prohibiting the organization from reading Torah or wearing tallit or tefillin at the main public area at the Wall, on the grounds that such continued meetings represented a threat to public safety and order.[25] The Court required the government to provide an alternate site, Robinson's Arch.[26] Plans to construct a small prayer site at Robinson's Arch were unveiled in October 2003. WOW leader Anat Hoffman reacted harshly to the plan. "Now we're going to be praying at an archeological site, at an alternative site for the Jews of a lesser degree."[27] The site was inaugurated in 2004.[28]

Until recently, it was illegal for them to do so under Israeli law.[29]

In December 2012, following pressure from non-Orthodox US Jews,[30] Natan Sharansky, the chairman of the Jewish Agency for Israel, was asked by the Prime Minister to find a solution to the dispute.[31][32] In response to the detentions at the wall in February 2013, Sharansky said “When I listen to the very partial presentation, I am fully with them — when I listen to the other side, I have to accept that they also have logic. We do have to find a solution in which nobody will feel discriminated against."[33] In April 2013, Sharansky suggested constructing a third, egalitarian prayer center at the Wall that is identical in size and standing to the plaza currently controlled by the Orthodox Jews. This attempt was endorsed by the government to solve the controversy of the wall, but in actuality, this arrangement would have led to the emergence of a new conflict. Instead of ending the quarreling by granting women full rights to worship at the existing wall, the women would have had to fight for recognition among the public at their new area. The area for the women would have been located in what is known as the Robinson's Arch site.[34]

In March 2013, three women MKs used their parliamentary immunity to don prayer shawls and join the Women of the Wall in a show of support after 10 women had been arrested the previous month. MK Stav Shaffir (Labour) said, "I usually do not wear a tallit, but it is my honor and duty to stand here and protect the rights of all Jews from around the world to pray as they desire and believe." Tamar Zandberg (Meretz) said: "I demand to enter. The extremist stream's interpretation of the Holy Places Law is unacceptable to me, and I refuse to leave the prayer shawl outside. I am a secular woman but I identify with these women's struggle for freedom of expression and religion." Subsequently, a number of MKs condemned their actions. MK Aliza Lavie (Yesh Atid), who herself supports the right of the women to assemble, said she was "shocked" that fellow MKs decided to blatantly disobey the law and ignore Supreme Court rulings. MK Miri Regev (Likud) called the MKs attendance a "provocation" and referred to the groups "anarchistic actions" which had "turned into a national sport among the extreme Left in Israel." MK Uri Ariel (Bayit Yehudi) called the women radicals and suggested that their "gross violations” at the site may lead to civil war.[35][36][37]

In May 2013, after bowing to pressure from non-Orthodox diaspora Jews, the government issued a directive for the legal dispute to be solved. A subsequent Appellate Court ruling gave permission[38] for the Women of the Wall to hold services at the site after deciding that their prayer and ritual were not against the "local custom" and since the women did not use physical or verbal violence, they could not be held responsible for any resulting disturbances. The Rabbi of the Western Wall, however, continues to view their presence as a provocation.[39]

They have the support of large American non-Orthodox denominations, which view the issue of women's rights to pray at the Wall as a high-profile opportunity to promote gender-egalitarian Jewish prayer, which most Israelis have never experienced.[40] They also want to remove the control of the holy site from the hands of the Western Wall rabbi.[41]

The arrests have been criticized by groups promoting religious pluralism in Israel. The Central Conference of American Rabbis (CCAR), condemned the arrest of Anat Hoffman and called it a "desecration of God's name."[42]

In October 2014, Women of the Wall launched a campaign to encourage girls to have their bat mitzvah services at the Kotel. Unlike most diaspora Jewish girls, Israeli Jewish girls typically do not celebrate a Bat Mitzvah by reading from their Torah portion. The ad campaign features girls wearing prayer shawls and holding a Torah scroll in front of the wall. The ad, placed on Israeli buses, has the caption, "Mom, I also want a bat mitzvah at the Kotel!" The Western Wall Heritage Foundation, which is controlled by the Orthodox and oversees events at the wall, not only runs a business of bar mitzvahs for boys that has excluded girls from their offerings, but has refused to permit women to carry Torah scrolls at the wall.[43] Several of the campaign ads were soon vandalized in Orthodox neighborhoods.[44] The ad campaign received international publicity when religious extremists carried out violent attacks in Jerusalem. About fifty Jewish men in the ultra-Orthodox neighborhood of Mea Shearim engaged in hurling rocks and slashing tires of public buses carrying ads for the egalitarian services for girls.[45] On October 24, 2014 a Bat Mitzvah was celebrated by the group at the wall using a miniaturized Torah scroll which they smuggled in. Although the women have won the legal right to pray in their fashion at the wall, Rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz, the Supervisor of the Western Wall, has refused to allow the women to use the Torah scrolls distributed in the men's section or to bring their own. The group said that a reading from the Torah scroll in the women's section was an historic event.[46]

On December 18, 2014 Women of the Wall held a women’s candle lighting at the Kotel. For Hanukkah every year a giant menorah is erected in the men’s section of the Western Wall and each night of the eight nights of the festival, male rabbis and male politicians are honored, while women are kept at a distance, where they are barely able to see the ceremony. At the Women of the Wall ceremony, women brought their personal menorahs. They invited Jews around the world to light a candle for WoW on the third night of Hanukkah.[47] Wow sent a letter to Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu requesting a large menorah also be erected in the women's section just as there is one in the men's section, but Netanyahu simply forwarded the letter to Western Wall rabbi Shmuel Rabinowitz, who accused WoW of ulterior motives of trying to change the customs at the Wall. Responding to Rabinowitz' accusation, Anat Hoffman noted: "In his letter, Rabbi Rabinowitz speaks of bringing together and uniting the nation, and yet his actions exclude and discriminate against women as if women are not part of the same nation. Since he was chosen for this public position, Rabinowitz has never invited Women of the Wall or any other women to participate in the ceremonies or to be honored with the lighting of a candle at the Kotel on Hanukkah, despite the fact that women are obligated equally to men in this religious act.” Initially, the personal menorahs the women brought to the Kotel were confiscated, but they were returned when police were called.[48][49]

In April 2015 Women of the Wall participated in reading from a full-size Torah scroll at the organization's service at the Western Wall. One hundred Torah scrolls are kept for the use of the men's side of the Western Wall and male supporters of Women of the Wall passed a Torah scroll across the barrier into the women's section for Women of the Wall's service. |[50] Eyewitnesses reported that as women were reading from the scroll, several ultra-Orthodox men physically attacked WoW's male supporters and then entered the women's section in an unsuccessful attempt to retrieve the Torah scroll. Police intervened and stopped them. Following the Torah reading service, WoW members in the women’s section danced with the scroll.[51]“This is the first time that Women of the Wall can stand up and be counted as a part of the public,” proclaimed Anat Hoffman, the chair of WoW. “Nothing you could say could tear me away from my Torah." Rabbi Shmuel Rabinovitch, the head of the rabbinic authority of the Western Wall, called the women's Torah reading a provocation and said "the Israel Police and employees of the Western Wall had to work hard in order to avoid bloodshed.”[52]

In January 2016, the Israeli Cabinet approved a plan to designate a new space at the Kotel that would be available for egalitarian prayer and which would not be controlled by the Rabbinate. Women of the Wall welcomed the decision.[53] A group calling itself Original Women of the Wall, which includes founding members of WoW and which contends that WOW has broken away from the original and on-going charter of the group. Original Women Of the Wall does not agree with the compromise and said its members will continue to hold prayer services at the Western Wall, praying as is their custom, with prayer shawls and tefillin.[54] Palestinian Minister of Waqf and Religious Affairs Youssef Ideiss protested that the proposed egalitarian prayer section at the Western Wall violates the status-quo agreement governing the area.[55]

In March 2016 MK Meir Porush was reprimanded by the Knesset ethics committee in 2016 because they determined that he “deviated radically and blatantly from the accepted way to express oneself in the Knesset or what is appropriate for an MK.” In a speech before the Knesset Porush said that the Women of the Wall should be "thrown to the dogs."[56] The committee noted that such “scornful” remarks would be “deplored harshly” had they been spoken about Jews by any other government outside Israel.[57] Porush responded by saying that if ”Women of the Wall” refrained from eating non-Kosher food, he would apologize to them.[58]

  1. ^ Cohen, Shaye. From the Maccabees to the Mishnah. etc.
  2. ^ Reiter, Yitzhak (Winter 2016). "Feminists in the Temple of Orthodoxy: The Struggle of the Women of the Wall to Change the Status Quo". Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies. 34: 81–82.
  3. ^ Chesler & Haut 2003, pp. 56–57: "But we might also have to go outside both the legal and political system. Would women be willing to do civil disobedience, get arrested? A[nat]: Absolutely! We are hoping that Shas actually passes the bill that would put us in jail for seven years. P[hyllis]: You would sit in jail for seven years? A: We have quite a few women who are willing to become prisoners of conscience. P: Prisoners of conscience . . . A: If the police weren't ready to arrest us for six months, do you think they'd arrest us for seven years? If they did, it would be very good for us, both legally and in terms of media support. Imagine what Amnesty International will do with this!"
  4. ^ "Police Arrest Woman Praying at the Western Wall". ynet.
  5. ^ "The 'Crime' of Praying with a Tallit, and a Plea for Tolerance: First Person". The Jewish Daily Forward. 24 November 2009.
  6. ^ "Women of the Wall Leader Interrogated by Police". The Jewish Daily Forward. 6 January 2010.
  7. ^ "Police arrest Women of the Wall leader for praying with Torah scroll". Haaretz.com. 12 July 2010.
  8. ^ Women of the Wall website
  9. ^ "3 women arrested while praying at Western Wall in 24 hours".
  10. ^ Sharon, Jeremy. "Police arrest Women of the Wall leader for singing." Jerusalem Post. 17 October 2012. 25 October 2012.
  11. ^ Rudoren, Jodi (11 February 2013). "Women Praying at Western Wall in Jerusalem Are Detained". New York Times. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  12. ^ Reiter, YItzhak (Winter 2016). "Feminists in the Temple of Orthodoxy: The Struggle of the Women of the Wall to Change the Status Quo". Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies. 34: 89.
  13. ^ Reiter, Yitzhak (Winter 2016). "Feminists in the Temple of Orthodoxy: The Struggle of the Women of the Wall to Change the Status Quo". Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies. 34: 89.
  14. ^ Rocker, Simon. (April 11, 2013). UK rabbis tell Israel: let women pray at the Wall, Jewish Chronicle.
  15. ^ Shimoni, Rebecca (2015-07-18). "Women of the Wall member arrested at Western Wall with Torah". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 2017-01-13.
  16. ^ 1:19 pm (2015-07-17). "Leader Arrested with a Torah in the Women's Section". Women of the Wall. Retrieved 2017-01-13.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  17. ^ Shimoni, Rebecca (2016-06-07). "Police hold Women of the Wall leader for 'smuggling Torah'". The Times of Israel. Retrieved 2017-01-13.
  18. ^ "Poll: Half of Israelis support Women of the Wall". Haaretz.com. 13 May 2013.
  19. ^ Skinner Keller, Radford Ruether & Cantlon 2006, p. 584
  20. ^ Judy B. "Women of the Wall founding Rabbi Deborah Brin - Nahalat Shalom".
  21. ^ "Francine Klagsbrun | Jewish Women's Archive". Jwa.org. 2009-03-01. Retrieved 2015-09-07.
  22. ^ a b Szymkowicz, Sarah. "Women Of The Wall". Jewish Virtual Library.
  23. ^ a b Starr Sered 2010, p. 636
  24. ^ Israeli Women Defy Custom, Say a Prayer for Equality, June 5, 2000.
  25. ^ ""The Israeli Supreme Court Denies Women The Right to Pray at the Western Wall", Findlaw. April 23, 2003".
  26. ^ "Backers of women's prayer at wall weighing options after court ruling, Jewish Telegraph Agency, April 6, 2003". Jewish Telegraphic Agency.
  27. ^ Krieger, Hilary Leila; Izenberg, Dan (31 October 2003). "Women of the Wall Wail Over New Prayer Site". The Jerusalem Post.
  28. ^ Sharon, Jeremy (22 May 2012). "Police Detain Women at Kotel Over Prayer Shawls". The Jerusalem Post.
  29. ^ Challenging Traditions at the Heart of Judaism, New York Times, December 21, 2009. "After a lengthy legal battle, the court ultimately ruled against the women in the interest of public order. Consequently, it is illegal for them to read aloud from the Torah or to wear prayer shawls openly by the wall."
  30. ^ Women of the Wall urge Jerusalem police to refrain from arrests at upcoming service, Haaretz, (April 10, 2013) "Under pressure from the non-Orthodox Jewish world, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu instructed Sharansky several months ago to draft .."
  31. ^ Rudoren, Jodi (December 25, 2012). "Israel to Review Curbs on Women's Prayer at Western Wall". The New York Times. Retrieved December 25, 2012.
  32. ^ Western Wall plan unveiled to resolve 24-year-old prayer rights dispute, (10 April 2013)
  33. ^ Rudoren, Jodi (11 February 2013). "Women Praying at Western Wall in Jerusalem Are Detained". New York Times. Retrieved 11 February 2013.
  34. ^ Reiter, Yitzhak (Winter 2016). "Feminists in the Temple of Orthodoxy: The Struggle of the Women of the Wall to Change the Status Quo". Shofar: An Interdisciplinary Journal of Jewish Studies. 34: 80.
  35. ^ Jeremy Sharon. MKs slam colleagues who joined Women of the Wall. Jerusalem Post. (March 12, 2013)
  36. ^ Gabe Fisher. Female MKs join Women of the Wall prayer service Times of Israel. (March 12, 2013)
  37. ^ Jonathan Lis. Female Israeli MKs join Women of the Wall; no arrests for first time in months. Haaretz, (March 12, 2013)
  38. ^ Women win the right to pray like men at Jerusalem's Western Wall, Robert Tait, Daily Telegraph, (April 25, 2013) "Women's rights campaigners won a potential landmark legal victory after a judge ruled that they should be allowed to pray at the Western Wall, Judaism's most sacred site, in a manner previously deemed only fit for men."
  39. ^ Response of the Rabbi of the Western Wall to the Women of the Wall’s Provocative Act
  40. ^ Women and Orthodox Waver Over Plan for Egalitarian Prayer at Western Wall, Nathan Jeffay, Forward, (May 10, 2013)
  41. ^ Women of the Wall: The Controversy Continues, Israel Movement for Reform & Progressive Judaism, (March 18, 2013) "In January, 2013, WOW, the IMPJ and IRAC joined other organizations in filing a petition with the High Court of Justice against the prime minister and the Western Wall Heritage Foundation, demanding that non-orthodox Jews and women receive equal representation for managing the Wall, and requested the court "remove the control of the holy site from the hands of the Western Wall rabbi."
  42. ^ "Reform Rabbis Issue Statement of Outrage at Israel's Arrest of Woman for Holding Torah at Western Wall". Marketwire.
  43. ^ "Women of the Wall bus ad campaign encourages bat mitzvahs at the Kotel". Haaretz.com. 13 October 2014.
  44. ^ "Women of Wall Push for Bat Mitzvahs at Western Wall". The Jewish Daily Forward. 13 October 2014.
  45. ^ "Ultra-Orthodox Jews attack Jerusalem buses over ad". Washington Post.
  46. ^ "Women of the Wall smuggle tiny Torah scroll to Western Wall for Bat Mitzva".
  47. ^ "'Light One Candle with Women of the Wall' (Dec 11) Women of the Wall" http://womenofthewall.org.il/2014/12/light-one-candle/
  48. ^ "Maltz, Judy 'Rabbi bans Women of the Wall's Hanukkah candle-lighting ceremony' (Dec 14, 2014) Haaretz"http://www.haaretz.com/jewish-world/jewish-world-news/.premium-1.631730
  49. ^ "Judy Maltz 'Sarah Silverman joins Women activists at Western Wall Hanukkah ceremony: Kotel security confiscates prayer group's menorahs, returned only after complaint lodged with police.' (18 Dec 2014) Haaretz"http://www.haaretz.com/news/national/1.632612
  50. ^ Women Read From Torah Scroll at Western Wall The Forward, 20 April 2015
  51. ^ Women defy Western Wall ban and read from full-size Torah Haaretz, 20 April 2015
  52. ^ In First, Women of the Wall pray with Full-Size Torah scroll The Times of Israel, 20 April 2015
  53. ^ "Israel Approves Prayer Space at Western Wall for Non-Orthodox Jews". The New York Times. 1 February 2016.
  54. ^ Original Women of Wall reject compromise at site The Jerusalem Post, Feb 12, 2016
  55. ^ Palestinians cry foul The Times of Israel, Feb 1, 2016
  56. ^ Knesset ethics panel reprimands haredi lawmaker who slammed Women of the Wall JTA, March 29, 2016
  57. ^ Knesset scolds MK for disparaging feminist prayer group The Times of Israel, March 29, 2016
  58. ^ Ethics Committee reprimands MK Porush for his remarks against "Women of the Wall" Knesset, March 29, 2016