Khaleej Times

Israel scraps plan for mixed prayer at Western Wall in Jerusalem

- AFP

a terrible day for women in Israel when the PM sacrifices their rights while kowtowing to a handful of religious extremists. Anat Hoffman Chairwoman of Women of the Wall

occupied jerusalem — Israel’s government on Sunday cancelled a landmark deal to create a space for women and men to pray together at the Western Wall, angering activists who have fought for the change for years. Women and men currently must pray separately at Jerusalem’s Western Wall under strict interpreta­tion of Jewish law.

The deal to alter rules at one of Judaism’s sites was called off following pressure from ultra-Orthodox Jewish parties in Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s right-wing coalition.

Ultra-Orthodox coalition members Shas and United Torah Judaism said on Sunday that Netanyahu had accepted their position to “freeze” the plan, a move that “reflects the will of most of the nation that seeks to safeguard the Western Wall’s sanctity and status”.

Progressiv­e Jewish activists had long sought to change the rule in the face of strong opposition from the ultra-Orthodox establishm­ent, which oversees religious activity at the Western Wall.

In what was hailed a “historic” deal, Israel’s cabinet had in January 2016 approved a plan to create a third section at the Western Wall where women and men would be allowed to pray together.

The new prayer section would not have been under the control of the ultra-Orthodox establishm­ent, which opposed it and managed to prevent its implementa­tion until this point.

Sunday’s vote by the cabinet effectivel­y cancelled the deal.

The decision was a “de-facto cancellati­on of the plan,” the parties said in a joint statement, noting it could only be changed by a further government decision.

The freeze was welcomed by Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi David Lau as an amendment to the earlier “mistaken” decision, while critics described it as a “capitulati­on” that would damage ties with the Jewish world beyond Israel, most of which is not Orthodox. A key figure in crafting the compromise plan to create the mixed prayer space expressed his “deep disappoint­ment” at Sunday’s decision to cancel it.

Natan Sharansky, chairman of the Jewish Agency, a quasi-government­al agency that works to bring Jewish immigrants to Israel, said the move would “make our work to bring Israel and the Jewish world closer together increasing­ly more difficult”.

Anat Hoffman, the chairwoman of Women of the Wall, which has pushed to change rules at the site for years, called it “a terrible day for women in Israel when the PM sacrifices their rights while kowtowing to a handful of religious extremists”. —

 ??  ?? Jews pray at the Western Wall in the Old City of Jerusalem .—
Jews pray at the Western Wall in the Old City of Jerusalem .—

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