Israel Tries to Resolve "Who Is a Jew?"
In Israel some
believe that Orthodox control of conversion is impeding efforts to convert
immigrants from the Former Soviet Union.
By Janet Mendelsohn Moshe
Like so many questions in Judaism, the quandary of "Who is a Jew?" has many answers.
According to traditional Jewish sources, if a person is born
to a Jewish mother, he is Jewish, regardless of faith or religious observance.
A more liberal interpretation accepts patrilineal descent as well, and if a
child is born to a Jewish father who is married to a non-Jewish woman, and the
couple raises the child in a Jewish home, then liberal Jewish interpretation
would accept that child as Jewish.
In Israel, the question of "Who is a Jew?" is
especially important as there is no separation between church and state.
Weddings as well as funerals are either Jewish, Christian, or Muslim. The issue
has become even more timely as 250,000 immigrants from the Former Soviet Union
(FSU) who are not Jewish according to halakhah
(Jewish religious law) are now living in Israel. These immigrants were accepted
under the Law of Return, which allows any prospective immigrant with at least
one Jewish grandparent or with a Jewish spouse to be registered as a Jew for
purposes of citizenship. These immigrants, therefore, are "Jewish" by
nationality, but not according to religious law.
Barred From Lifecycle Events
Because in Israel these newcomers are not considered
halakhic Jews--even though they oftentimes experienced anti-Semitism in the
FSU--they cannot be married by a rabbi or be buried in a Jewish cemetery. Civil
marriage options, such as a proxy wedding by mail or a trip to Cyprus can be
arranged, yet they feel themselves ostracized. Especially poignant testimony to
their fringe status are the stories of immigrant soldiers, killed during
military service in the Israel Defense Forces, who died for their country but
must be buried in the non-Jewish section of the cemetery.
Because of their problematic social status as well as for
spiritual reasons, hundreds of these immigrants yearly are looking for options
of conversion through the Reform, Conservative, and Orthodox movements. But although the Israeli Supreme Court ruled
that a person who has undergone a Reform or Conservative conversion abroad must
be registered as Jewish, liberal conversions performed in Israel are not
recognized by the Orthodox rabbinate (which is concerned that people who
convert through the liberal movements have not taken upon themselves full
observance ot the mitzvot, or
commandments, thereby invalidating their conversions).
As a result these immigrants who face obstacles to lifecycle
events find themselves in a bewildering situation, with little space to
maneuver. Adding a national dimension to the personal plight of these
immigrants are the fears of some that, in combination with the growing
population of Israeli Arabs, the existence of this large body of non-Jewish FSU
immigrants may threaten Israel's existence as a Jewish state.
Yet the very groups likely to initiate an organized effort
to convert this mass of people--the liberal movements--have had their hands
tied. Even though in 1995 the Israel Supreme Court claimed that for the purpose
of citizenship and registration as Jews, no basis existed to discriminate
against those converted by non-Orthodox clergy, non-Orthodox converts are not accepted as Jewish in matters of
personal status like marriage, divorce, and burial.
The Ne'eman Commission
But pressure for a solution continues. In 1998 the Jewish
Agency established a committee, chaired by Prof. Yaacov Ne'eman, to decide how to
deal with these immigrants who live with the Israeli people and want to be a
part of the Israeli people but find the path to conversion fraught with
difficulty. The Ne'eman Commission decided that a conversion institute would be
established jointly by members of the Reform, Conservative, and Orthodox
movements. Teachers would come from all three streams, but the actual
conversion would be left to the Orthodox courts.
And so the Institute for Jewish Studies was born, which
today offers 500 classes to help encourage Jewish study as well as conversion.
These classes educate both Jews and non-Jews (often there is little difference
in the knowledge of the two groups). The final step of conversion, however, is
moving slowly and is bottlenecked, with only a few hundred FSU immigrants being
converted annually.
In another attempt to deal with the FSU immigrants, the
Jewish Agency in 2003 launched an accelerated conversion program at Israeli
absorption centers in Eastern Europe whose rabbinic conversion courts (batei din) are staffed by Orthodox
rabbis who are not accepted by the Israeli Chief Rabbinate. The actual
conversions will follow an intensive four-week educational program.
Despite these efforts on the conversion front, the liberal
movements believe that the question of
"Who is a Jew?" is a time bomb and is widening the gap between
native Israelis and immigrants. The seemingly unyielding religious
establishment quashes the interest of the immigrants in Judaism, and veteran
Israelis harbor distrust of the newcomers. In short, the two groups are fearful
of each other.
Interestingly enough, years ago, former Sephardic Chief
Rabbi Ovadia Yosef initiated a lenient conversion process for the Falash Mura
in Ethiopia. Assuming that this population in Ethiopia was not Jewish according
to halakhah, but knowing that they lived as Jews, Rabbi Yosef decided that the
conversion of these people must be a national task. Perhaps as a society,
Israel needs to help today's newcomers today find their path to Judaism as
well.