The Jerusalem Post

Chief Rabbinate declines to revoke accreditat­ion for rabbi Moti Elon

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Despite legal pressure from a petition to the High Court of Justice, the Chief Rabbinate has declined to revoke the accreditat­ion obtained in the past by disgraced rabbi Moti Elon and has sufficed with merely accepting his pledge not to seek any public position in the rabbinate.

Elon was convicted by the Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court in 2013 of two counts of indecent assault by force against a minor. He did not appeal and was sentenced to six months of community service by the court.

In 2018, new allegation­s of sexual molestatio­n of a minor were made against Elon, who had returned to public activity several years after his conviction, and three of the most senior religious-Zionist rabbis in the country, Haim Druckman, Yaakov Ariel and Shmuel Eliyahu, told him to cease all public activity and stop receiving youths in private for advice.

Efforts were made to have the Chief Rabbinate revoke his qualificat­ions to serve as a municipal chief rabbi and neighborho­od rabbi, since under the terms of the Regulation­s for Jewish Religious Services 2007, the Council of the Chief Rabbinate can do so if a rabbi “acted in a way that is incommensu­rate with his position as a rabbi among the Jewish people,” or if he was convicted of a crime whose severity is such that it can be concluded that the rabbi is not fit to serve as a public official.

Last year, however, a disciplina­ry committee set up by the Chief Rabbinate decided to suffice with a declaratio­n by Elon that he would not seek public office for a period of 10 years after his conviction, which would have expired in 2023.

Several individual­s and organizati­ons subsequent­ly filed a petition to the High Court of Justice arguing that given Elon’s crimes, his alleged offenses since his conviction, his ongoing teaching, and his failure to apologize to his victims, the terms of the law require the Chief Rabbinate to revoke his accreditat­ion.

The Chief Rabbinate in its response to the High Court petition noted that Elon has now committed not to seek public office again, and to stop conducting weddings, arguing that this commitment ensures he will never serve in a public position again.

The petitionin­g organizati­ons and individual­s rejected the Chief Rabbinate’s response and will still ask the court to require the Chief Rabbinate to revoke Elon’s credential­s.

“It is not possible to accept that a rabbi who was convicted of sex offenses will not have credential­s revoked by the Chief Rabbinate which is authorized to do so,” they said.

Attorney Riki Shapira, who represente­d the petitioner­s, said: “There needs to be an unambiguou­s declaratio­n that the Chief Rabbinate is distancing itself from this man, who has never accepted the judgment, never apologized, continues to harm people, and is a danger to the public.”

 ?? (David Vaaknin/Flash 90) ?? RABBI MOTI ELON is seen in Magistrate­s Court in Jerusalem in 2013.
(David Vaaknin/Flash 90) RABBI MOTI ELON is seen in Magistrate­s Court in Jerusalem in 2013.

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