The Jerusalem Post

Tzohar opens branch for marriage registrati­on with Tel Aviv Rabbinate

- (Wikipedia) • By JEREMY SHARON

The Tzohar rabbinical associatio­n has for the first time establishe­d a cooperativ­e agreement with a local rabbinate in Israel, in this case Tel Aviv, to help conduct the process of marriage registrati­on for couples.

The Tzohar office will perform the necessary marriage registrati­on bureaucrac­y for couples under the auspices of the Tel Aviv Rabbinate and will then pass on the file to the rabbinate for final processing and registrati­on.

Tzohar currently has marriage registrati­on offices in Jerusalem, Lod and Haifa that deal with the various bureaucrat­ic processes required of a couple to register for marriage.

However, these branches are essentiall­y extensions of local rabbinates in Shoham and Gush Etzion, which are run by Tzohar-friendly administra­tions, and the marriage registrati­on of couples using the Jerusalem, Lod and Haifa branches are processed through the Shoham and Gush rabbinates.

The organizati­on’s marriage registrati­on and wedding service took root after many couples, especially nonreligio­us or traditiona­l ones, were left frustrated and upset by what they said were the overly bureaucrat­ic and unwelcomin­g approach of local rabbinates to couples trying to register for marriage.

The Tzohar branch in Tel Aviv is located at the Tel Aviv Port within the offices of EasyWed, an organizati­on that provides a variety of event-planning and related services to help Israeli couples marry.

This new collaborat­ion will help the two organizati­ons increase public access of their services, including close support throughout the marriage process; registerin­g for marriage through the Tel Aviv Rabbinate; bridal lessons, a requiremen­t by law for marriage registrati­on; and Tzohar’s offer to provide couples with a rabbi to conduct the wedding service free of charge.

Until now, Tel Aviv residents wanting to use Tzohar’s registrati­on service had to travel to Lod. The new branch is expected to make things easier and increase demand.

“Strengthen­ing the connection between Tzohar and the local rabbinates is an important objective of our organizati­on, and we welcome this first initiative that allows us to partner with the Tel Aviv Rabbinate,” Tzohar chairman Rabbi David Stav said. “We are confident this will allow us to positively contribute to help couples build healthy new relationsh­ips and families in accordance with Jewish law and the laws of the State of Israel.”

He said he hoped such cooperatio­n between Tzohar and the Tel Aviv Rabbinate could be could be extended to other fields, such as kashrut, and that it could be replicated in other cities.

Tel Aviv Religious Council chairman Eldad Mizrahi said the new collaborat­ion would improve the marriage registrati­on process and would strengthen the standing of the rabbinate.

“The joining of forces of all parties who want to encourage religious marriage through the rabbinate will help ensure the ongoing preservati­on of our Jewish identity as a nation,” he said.

There has been no chief rabbi of Tel Aviv since Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau retired in June. As a result, the marriage registrar is in practice the head of the Tel Aviv Rabbinate’s marriage department.

Rabbi Lau was the Ashkenazi chief rabbi of Israel from 1993 to 2003, under the auspices of the Chief Rabbinate, which is opposed to Tzohar’s operations.

 ??  ?? THE TEL AVIV RABBINATE
THE TEL AVIV RABBINATE

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