The Jerusalem Post

Liberman: Coalition must vote against haredi conversion bill

‘This is a law that will divide the Jewish people’

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Yisrael Beytenu chairman Avigdor Liberman has demanded that coalition ministers vote down a bill on Jewish conversion being advanced by the haredi parties.

The ultra-Orthodox parties’ legislatio­n would grant the Chief Rabbinate a total monopoly over conversion in the country.

Liberman expressed strong opposition to the bill on Thursday, and insisted that such issues be discussed within the coalition and agreements be reached before the bill could be allowed to advance.

The bill is set to come before the Ministeria­l Committee for Legislatio­n on Sunday for passage to the Knesset, but Yisrael Beytenu has demanded that the members of the committee vote down the proposal.

The party’s faction chairman, MK Robert Ilatov, has also demanded that the legislatio­n be discussed first in the special committee on religion and state affairs, establishe­d when Yisrael Beytenu joined the coalition last year.

A clause of the party’s coalition agreement stipulates that all legislatio­n on religion and state be deliberate­d and agreed upon first in the special committee before being advanced in the legislativ­e process.

Officials from the Likud, Bayit Yehudi and Kulanu parties were all reticent to comment on how their ministers would vote in the committee on Sunday.

Efforts are also afoot to postpone a vote on the bill, The Jerusalem Post learned.

Yisrael Beytenu is extremely sensitive to the issue of conversion, given the approximat­ely 330,000 immigrants from the former Soviet Union who are not Jewish according to Halacha, many of whom are represente­d in the Knesset by Yisrael Beytenu.

Liberman has personally backed the independen­t Giyur Ke’halacha Orthodox conversion court, which the new haredi legislatio­n is trying to stymie. The court utilizes less stringent criteria and methods for its conversion­s in order to convert large numbers of the immigrant community.

Giyur Ke’halacha has already converted nearly 400 people since it began operations at the end of 2015.

“This is a law that will divide the Jewish people, and does severe injury to Diaspora Jewry and the community of immigrants,” Liberman said on Thursday night after it became clear that the bill was on the agenda of the ministeria­l committee on Sunday.

He said the Jewish people would “lose hundreds of thousands of our people” should the law pass, meaning immigrants from the former

Soviet Union and their children who might be interested in converting.

“We will strongly oppose this law, which not only is illogical, but will also harm immigratio­n to Israel, will be lamented for generation­s and will set Israel back by decades,” said Liberman.

A spokesman for his party said Yisrael Beytenu would be demanding that the members of the Ministeria­l Committee for Legislatio­n vote down the bill on Sunday.

He declined, however, to say whether or not the party would appeal the bill to the full cabinet if it is passed in the ministeria­l committee.

The legislatio­n is a government bill that has been advanced by Shas and United Torah Judaism through the Interior Ministry, which is controlled by Shas chairman and Interior Minister Arye Deri.

The bill states explicitly that it is designed to reverse the new legal situation created by a ruling of the High Court of Justice in March 2016, which de facto granted the right of citizenshi­p to Orthodox converts who were not citizens and who converted through independen­t Orthodox rabbinical courts and not through the State Conversion Authority.

This ruling was a blow to the Chief Rabbinate and the religious establishm­ent and set a precedent whereby it was possible to envision a situation where the Chief Rabbinate would be forced to recognize non-state Orthodox converts for the purposes of marriage.

The bill is also explicitly aimed at preemptive­ly overcoming a possible High Court ruling on a similar, pending case, which could see Reform and Conservati­ve converts given state recognitio­n like non-state Orthodox converts were last year.

Jewish Agency Chairman Natan Sharansky has strongly criticized the proposed legislatio­n and called on Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu to stymie the bill.

Like Liberman, Sharansky has also personally backed the Giyur Ke’halacha conversion court seeing it as an effective way of dealing with the conversion crisis. •

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? AVIGDOR LIBERMAN
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) AVIGDOR LIBERMAN

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