The Jewish Chronicle

Tel Aviv set to register same-sex partners

- BY ANSHEL PFEFFER

TEL AVIV City Hall is planning to become the first Israeli local authority to independen­tly register residents as couples, which allow the city to recognise same-sex relationsh­ips officially.

By Israeli law, the only marriages performed in the country that are officially recognised by the state are those carried out by religious authoritie­s.

For Jews, this means only those performed by Orthodox rabbis. Same-sex couples have managed to win limited rights in the courts, if they were married abroad or are living in a commonlaw marriage.

This means those in same-sex relationsh­ips cannot usually access municipal services as couples, since local authoritie­s rely on the Interior Ministry’s population register, which does not recognise their partnershi­ps. The new initiative in Tel Aviv seeks to bypass this, by registerin­g couples at a municipal bureaucrat­ic level for the first time.

Ittay Pinkas-Arad, the city council member in charge of LGBT affairs, explained: “Tel Aviv-Jaffa is saying for the first time clearly that equality is a basic municipal value and the new city registrati­on service means that all couples in the city have equal rights.”

Tel Aviv is one of a group of local authoritie­s in central Israel which last year challenged the right-wingreligi­ous coalition and launched a public transport service on Shabbat. This is a second major challenge to the status quo on state and religion. Until now the Orthodox state rabbinate has had a monopoly on personal-status matters, through its exclusive powers to perform marriage and divorce.

The Interior Ministry, which is controlled by the Strictly Orthodox Shas party responded in a curt statement saying that: “The registrati­on law in Israel clearly states that the authorised body is the population and emigration authority and not this or that local authority,” adding that “couples should be aware that the (Tel Aviv) registrati­on has no legal meaning as far as state institutio­ns are concerned.”

This is the second time Tel Aviv has challenged the status quo

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