AxisMundi Jerusalem
Inside Israel and the Palestinian Territories
from FaithWorld:
Sex abuse claims against famed rabbi grip Israel
Ultra-orthodox Jewish men praying in the Old City of Jerusalem, 11 March 2008/Yiorgos Karahalis
Israeli police said on Friday they were looking into allegations of sexual abuse against one of the country's most famous and politically influential rabbis, in a case that has triggered dramatic headlines this week.
Mordechai Elon -- known as "Rabbi Motti" by viewers of his popular TV show and by many young men in the West Bank settler movement -- has vehemently denied the accusations by a group of fellow rabbis who say their aim is to combat sexual harassment by authority figures.
But that has not stopped a wave of soul-searching, which has some parallels with recent turmoil in the Roman Catholic church. At issue is the power of charismatic clerics over young people in their care, as well as questions about the extent to which religious communities should regulate their own affairs without involving the Jewish state's secular authorities.
A Justice Ministry spokesman said the attorney-general had asked police to consider whether there was sufficient evidence to mount a formal criminal investigation, after the organisation Takana alleged Elon had broken a promise made to fellow rabbis some years ago to limit his contacts with young men and youths.
Jerusalem’s ultra-Orthodox Jews take on Intel
In recent months, ultra-Orthodox Jews in Jerusalem have taken to the streets in protest over businesses operating on Saturday – the Jewish Sabbath when ritual law bans Jews from working. At times, the demonstrations have even turned violent, like a conflagration in July over a parking lot near the Old City. Most of the ultra-Orthodox ire has been directed at the Jerusalem municipality.
Until now.
Last week, the Shabbat Strife took a surprising turn with some ultra-Orthodox taking aim at the world’s biggest electronic chip maker for keeping their new Jerusalem plant open on the Jewish day of rest. Though the building is located in an industrial park on the outskirts of the city, it is nearby a religious neighborhood that strictly observes the Sabbath laws.
Intel’s new electronic chip plant was inaugurated on Nov. 15, and the company said it would operate on Saturdays in accordance with its business needs and Israeli law. This announcement drew hundreds of angry ultra-Orthodox Jews who gathered outside the building. Some threw rocks at police trying to disperse the crowd.
Since last week’s outburst, representatives of the ultra-Orthodox community, with mediation from religious parliament member Uri Maklev, have been trying to reach an agreement with Intel. An aide to Maklev said a likely solution to the quarrel would be to keep the plant open on Saturdays, but allow only non-Jews to work.
Rabbi Yosef Shalom Elyashiv, a leading Jewish sage, is expected to okay the deal. But Israeli radio is already reporting that not all of the ultra-Orthodox will be satisfied.
Pete, thats exactly why the plant wasn’t built in a Muslim country
Collective Punishment in Religious Jerusalem Neighborhoods?
Much ink has been spilled about the riots of Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) Jews in Jerusalem over the past several weeks (See our article on that here). Among some sources, there’s a note of disdain for this sector of Jewish population, seen as being contemptuous of the state of Israel while making up the largest portion of the country’s welfare recipients.
So I was a bit surprised to see one group rise to defend the Haredim this week –left-leaning bloggers. A few critiques were posted about Israel’s Jerusalem municipality’s reaction to Haredi riots. Philip Weiss, in his blog Mondoweiss, calls the police treatment of Haredim “bigotry.” And Jerry Haber, of the Magnes Zionist blog, began his latest entry saying, “I tend to distrust news reports about Haredim the same way I distrust news reports about Palestinians; both are hated sectors in Israeli society (though the haredim that participate in the state are much more privileged.)”
Not only bloggers took issue with police treatment of Haredi communities. Haaretz, Israel’s left-leaning daily, had an editorial condemning Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat’s “collective punishment against Haredim”. They criticised his decision to halt municipal services to two ultra-Orthodox neighborhoods, Mea She’arim and Geula in response to the street violence. Barkat said this was done for safety reasons, to prevent attacks on municipal workers.
Arguing that only a slim minority out of “tens of thousands” of residents participated in rioting, the Haaretz editorial says that “for the municipality to declare war on an entire community will only further inflame passions and push Jerusalem’s ultra-Orthodox community into a “them or us” stance toward the authorities … [Barkat] must strive to be a unifier and conciliator … Law enforcement is important, and he must insist on it. But he must not engage in populist hooliganism of his own.”
In the meantime, many of us may be wondering why all this rioting started in the first place. Recently, journalist Matt Baynon Rees wrote on just this subject, suggesting that the situation is actually a “sign of good times in Israel. Here’s why: It shows that Israelis think there’s nothing worse to worry about.” Despite difficulties on the horizon, such as the Israeli-U.S. standoff over a settlement freeze, Rees argues that in comparison to the days of the Intifada, “these are easy times for Israel”.
Jerry Haber offers other reasons, ranging from a long-time psyche of victimisation among Haredim in Israel, to frustrations over the mayor’s decision to keep open a municipal parking lot on the Sabbath and the failure to stop Jerusalem’s gay pride parade. He also says that many Haredim don’t believe allegations by Israeli legal authorities that an ultra-Orthodox woman starved her child — accusations that touched off the urban violence (read more here).
Haber’s theory? “It’s vacation time for yeshiva bachurim [boys in religious school], and it’s hot outside. Those of us who have lived in Jerusalem for a long time … will recall that protests of this sort are a summer activity.”
What BS! Don’t you have anything more interesting to write about.
The “Shabbat Wars”–to be continued?
It’s hard to imagine that a quarrel over a municipal parking lot could not only lead to blows, but could possibly drag the Prime Minister into getting involved. At least, that’s what a member of the Labor party called for on Sunday, says the Jerusalem Post. Now, police are investigating threats to the Jerusalem mayor’s life.
This is the aftermath of the latest battle in the ongoing “Shabbat Wars” between ultra-Orthodox Jews and Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat over opening a municipal parking lot on Saturday, the Jewish Sabbath (See Reuters coverage of the big protests/rioting that happened Saturday here). Hundreds of ultra-orthodox Jews rioted against the opening, while around a thousand secular Israelis rallied on Saturday in support of the parking lot opening. Now a Jerusalem City Council representative is resigning over the issue, and the former police commander has condemned Barkat for “insisting on making the wrong decisions” (Read more here).
In spite of these ruffled feathers on the political scene, most of the coverage in the mainstream Israeli media has leaned towards supporting Jerusalem mayor Nir Barkat’s decision to open a Saturday lot. See this op-ed from Hanuch Daom with Yedioth Ahronoth, which criticizes “the sane elements within the Orthodox community who do not dare to face up [their ultra-religious counterparts] and say: Enough.”
This Jerusalem Post blog entry by McGill History Professor, Gil Troy, takes up a similar vein, calling on religious Jews to take up the parking lot cause along with secular Jerusalemites: “Leaving the fight to so-called “secular” Israelis exacerbates tensions. Alternatively, if religious and non-religious Jews stood together in this struggle, even while agreeing to disagree on other issues, it would reduce Israel’s growing polarization, wherein a Right-Left divide on security increasingly parallels a religious-secular divide regarding lifestyle, philosophy, pluralism and tolerance.” Troy calls on Orthodox Jews in communities outside of Israel (such as New York, London, and Paris) to threaten to withhold financial support for their brethren in Jerusalem if they continue to participate in the parking lot rioting.
What will next Shabbat bring? A Jerusalem city council member quoted says that most citizens of Jeruselm, ultra-orthodox or not, understand the need for the parking lot: “We will not let extremists dictate the future of Jerusalem”. And the deputy mayor says he expects the protests to cool down. We’ll know next week for sure…
PHOTOS: Baz Ratner, Darren Whiteside. Reuters, Jerusalem, June 27, 2009.
from FaithWorld:
Israel to fund Reform conversions to Judaism? Not so fast.
The latest front in the ongoing conflict in Israel between ultra-Orthodox Judaism and less observant movements -- the subject of a brief blog yesterday on Faithworld -- heated up with a front page article in the Jerusalem Post on Thursday that quoted an ultra-Orthodox parliament member calling Reform Jews, among other things, "trecherous backstabbers to Judaism".
The rather harsh, though not unprecedented, comments were reportedly made by Moshe Gafni from the religious United Torah Judaism party. Gafni is chairman of Israel's finance committee and was quoted in a phone interview following a high court decision that ordered federal funding of non-Orthodox Jewish conversions.
Gafni's office could not be reached to confirm the quote.
It's not clear if Gafni will have any influence in this specific ruling, but his promise to try to block any attempts to allocate funds could certainly take the quarrel up a notch.





