The Jewish Chronicle

Chief ’s concern over ‘divisive’ Dweck affair

- BY SIMON ROCKER

THE CRISIS surroundin­g the senior rabbi of the S&P Sephardi Community, Rabbi Joseph Dweck, deepened this week after one of the UK’s most influentia­l strictly Orthodox figures questioned his fitness to serve as a rabbi.

The interventi­on by Rabbi Shraga Feivel Zimmerman, the spiritual head of the Gateshead Community, follows last week’s denunciati­on of Rabbi Dweck’s “empty and heretical” words by Israel’s Sephardi Chief Rabbi, Yitzchak Yosef.

As SPSC leaders tried to find a way to deal with the escalating dispute over their rabbinic leader, Chief Rabbi Ephraim Mirvis — who has been advising them — broke his silence to say he was “extremely concerned”, describing the affair as “divisive and damaging”.

Rabbi Dweck has been at the centre of a controvers­y since giving a lecture on homosexual­ity last month, in which he said that while the Torah forbade sexual intercours­e between two men, there were ways in which two men could love each other.

He also said that he believed society’s acceptance of homosexual­ity was a “fantastic developmen­t for humanity.”

On Wednesday the SPSC said that Rabbi Dweck enjoyed the full support of its board but that he had decided to step aside from the day-to-day activity of the Sephardi Beth Din.

In a letter in Hebrew to rabbinic colleagues, Rabbi Zimmerman said after listening to many recordings of lectures given by Rabbi Dweck “it is clear he is not equipped to rule on halachah, due to his limited knowledge, weak halachic reasoning skills and lack of training.”

One could not rely on his rulings in Jewish law, the Gateshead leader said, “and he is not fit to serve as a rabbi”.

Another critic said concerns about Rabbi Dweck went beyond the lecture and centred more generally on his approach to Jewish law and interpreta­tion of the Torah. “There is a whole plethora of problems,” said Rabbi Dov Levy, of Porat Yosef, a synagogue set up by Moroccan Jews in London which is unaffiliat­ed to the SPSC. He accused Rabbi Dweck of “not really understand­ing” rabbinic sources and failing to check them properly in his lectures on issues such as Shabbat observance.

Last week Rabbi Dweck travelled to Israel to intercede with Rabbi Yitzchak Yosef — who is the uncle of his wife, Margalit — following a letter from the Sephardi Chief Rabbi which criticised ideas “in opposition to the foundation­s of our faith in the holy Torah”.

But the Israeli Chief Rabbinate said Rabbi Yosef had not met Rabbi Dweck.

In a lecture at his synagogue last Thursday, Rabbi Levy said “if that letter is not retracted, it’s no longer viable for him to be in his position”. The letter was “like a headshot”, he said. If it stood, “it finishes the whole business.”

Rabbi Yosef is understood to have asked a leading rabbi in London to convene a panel to review the criticism of Rabbi Dweck and decide if any action should be taken.

That rabbi is believed to be Dayan Yisroel Lichtenste­in, head of the Federation Beth Din, but the Federation did not respond to requests for confirmati­on.

Meanwhile, Chief Rabbi Mirvis met SPSC leaders earlier this week to advise on how to resolve the crisis. He has also been in contact with Rabbi Dweck.

In his first public statement on the affair, Rabbi Mirvis voiced concern “about the public fallout from the dis-

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