The Jerusalem Post

UK Sephardi leader seeks to quell furor over homosexuai­lty remarks

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The United Kingdom’s top Sephardi rabbi said he has “stepped aside from the dayto-day activity” of the country’s Sephardi rabbinical court amid a furor over his positive statements about homosexual­ity.

Joseph Dweck, who serves as senior rabbi at London’s S&P Sephardi Community, came under fire after saying at a lecture last month that societal acceptance of homosexual­ity is a “fantastic developmen­t” because it opened the door for a more loving society.

Dweck also said he had removed himself from the beit din (Jewish court) for now “to work with the wider rabbinic community to clarify my halachic teachings,” the UK Jewish News website reported.

The rabbi still has the “full support” of his synagogue board and membership, S&P President Sabah Zubaida said in a statement. Zubaida said “a great deal of the criticism has been based on misunderst­andings, some deliberate and some not.” He also said that Dweck “accepts that some of the criticism is justified and needs to be addressed within the wider rabbinical world.”

Earlier this week, Dweck canceled his annual summer job as scholar in residence at a major Sephardi summer institute in New Jersey.

“Unfortunat­ely, my recent lecture caused some issues that must first be dealt with,” he said. It is not known if he was asked not to come.

One of the British Orthodox community’s most influentia­l figures, Rabbi Shraga Feivel Zimmerman of Gateshead, said in a message to fellow rabbis that Dweck “is not fit to serve as a rabbi,” the London-based Jewish Chronicle reported.

Zimmerman also said that after listening to recordings of past Dweck lectures, “it is clear he is not equipped to rule on Halacha, due to his limited knowledge, weak halachic reasoning skills and lack of training.”

Dweck, who grew up in Los Angeles, received rabbinic ordination from Ovadia Yosef, the late Sephardi chief rabbi of Israel.

British Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis said Wednesday that he is concerned “about the public fallout from the dispute concerning Rabbi Joseph Dweck, which has been deeply divisive and damaging for our community.”

Mirvis said that Dweck must be “given the opportunit­y to address all matters directly” and that the Sephardic community “must try to do this away from the glare of publicity, which has already proved so harmful.”

(JTA)

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