The Jerusalem Post

Sharansky defends PM over Kotel spat

Netanyahu betrayed Diaspora over Western Wall, religious life, Lavie says

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Chairman of the Jewish Agency Natan Sharansky publicly defended Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu over his handling of the Western Wall resolution crisis, saying that despite the ongoing failure to implement the deal, attacking him would not resolve the problem.

Sharansky was speaking at a conference of the Knesset Religion and State Lobby on Tuesday dealing with Israel-Diaspora relations, and in particular, the failure to implement the resolution to create a state-recognized pluralist prayer section at the southern end of the Western Wall

“We have to remember that it was the prime minister who initiated this entire discussion, he has invested a lot of energy in this… It won’t help us to attack the prime minister [on this issue],” said Sharansky.

He said that Netanyahu had told him recently that he would not end the current government over such an issue, and that doing so would not help anyway, because any new government that would be formed would have haredi parties in the coalition that would still veto the resolution.

Sharansky did speak out, however, against the vitriolic attacks of haredi ministers against non-Orthodox Jews, saying that every such comment wastes the hundreds of millions of shekels the Jewish Agency and the state invests in strengthen­ing the connection between Israel and the Diaspora.

Yesh Atid MK Elazar Stern had earlier spoken out harshly against the prime minister, stating that efforts to find a compromise had stopped and that he was therefore “fed up” hearing about meetings with the prime minister.

“Meetings with the prime minister don’t advance anything,” said Stern, adding that he tells leaders of the progressiv­e Jewish denominati­ons to tell Netanyahu not to come their various conference­s or meetings.

Speaking more broadly, Stern criticized the stance of the Chief Rabbinate on issues such as conversion and marriage, saying that it had alienated the Israeli public and as a result “imported” issues such as assimilati­on and marriage outside of the rabbinate to Israel.

“The Israeli public and the Jewish Diaspora look at the kind of Judaism the state presents, its conversion­s, marriages and divorces… and say that if this is Judaism, they don’t want any part of it,” said the MK.

Sharansky was also critical of the Chief Rabbinate and the religious establishm­ent over Jewish life-cycle issues, and pointed to what he said was “the irony” of a recent statement by the chief rabbinate in which it specifical­ly referenced Ivanka Trump, and said that it does see her conversion as valid.

He noted that Rabbi Haskel Lookstein was the person who converted Trump, yet in a high-profile case this year the Supreme Rabbinical Court declined to recognize another convert of Lookstein’s who immigrated to Israel and tried to register for marriage.

Rabbi Seth Farber, director of the ITIM religious services lobbying group, noted that the chief rabbinate has now establishe­d a committee of five rabbis from the Council of the Chief Rabbinate and the Supreme Rabbinical Court to draft criteria for the recognitio­n of conversion­s from abroad, but was dubious as to whether any of the rabbis on the committee had any understand­ing or connection to Diaspora Jewry.

Yesh Atid MK Aliza Lavie was similarly critical of the state’s policies towards Diaspora Jewry, saying that the religious establishm­ent made decisions on such issues without taking into Jewish leaders and communitie­s outside of Israel.

“Therefore in the Diaspora they feel that the State of Israel doesn’t count them. This is the price of the rift in relations, and this is the price of the prime minister’s betrayal of Diaspora Jewry,” said Lavie.

Rabbi Ronen Luvitz, president of the Ne’emanei Torah Va’Avodah religious-Zionist lobbying group, said that the Orthodox, Reform and Conservati­ve denominati­ons need to unite in order to fight “extremism,” saying that Judaism in Israel was “exclusiona­ry and not inclusive,” and that “the condescens­ion of the Chief Rabbinate towards Diaspora Jewry is a fundamenta­l problem.”

 ?? (Office of MK Aliza Lavie) ?? PARTICIPAN­TS FOCUS on the state of Israel-Diaspora relations at conference of the Knesset Religion and State Lobby yesterday.
(Office of MK Aliza Lavie) PARTICIPAN­TS FOCUS on the state of Israel-Diaspora relations at conference of the Knesset Religion and State Lobby yesterday.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel