Agunot: A Different Kind of Hostage
Agunot are women who have not received a Jewish divorce
from their husbands and hence are forbidden to remarry.
By Robert Gordis
In a Jewish divorce,
the husband has sole authority to grant a bill of divorce (get), and if he refuses, the wife may not
remarry. Because biblical law allows polygamy, even though a medieval rabbinic
prohibition banned it, the husband may technically take a second wife, meaning
the absence of a get has no practical bearing on the husband's ability to
remarry. The following article is excerpted from "A Different Kind of
Hostage," originally published in Moment
magazine. Reprinted here with permission from the estate of Robert Gordis.
The most agonizing moral challenge confronting Jewish law in
modern times is nearly 2,000 years old. It is the plight of the agunah, "the chained wife,"
which has troubled Jews through the centuries. No one who has read Chaim
Grade's powerful novel The Agunah will
soon forget its tragic heroine, whose husband has left her and refuses to give
her a get (Jewish divorce), so that
she can never remarry.
A Problem Since Biblical Times
Actually, the novel describes only one of several categories
of agunah. Fundamentally, the pathetic situation of these women stems from the
fact that the rabbinic interpretation of Deuteronomy 24:1-4 places the
initiative for the issuance of a get solely in the hands of the husband. The
tragedy has been immeasurably compounded in modern times by the erosion of
authority in the Jewish community, so that the community itself is now
powerless to compel the husband's obedience.
The problem has a long and painful history. The ancient and
medieval rabbis were highly sensitive to the woman's undeserved suffering and
sought every conceivable method of freeing the agunah from her chains. Thus,
the Talmud went so far as to rule that if the woman herself had evidence that
her husband had died, her unsubstantiated testimony would be acceptable and she
would be declared a widow, free to remarry.
The radical character of this decision becomes clear if it
is recalled that this ruling sets aside three fundamental principles of halakhah [Jewish law]--first, the
rabbinic rule that a woman is ineligible to testify as a witness; second, the
biblical law that two witnesses are required to establish valid evidence;
third, the rabbinic principle "adam
karov etzel atzmo"--"every person is close and partial to
himself"--and, therefore, his testimony on a case in which he is involved
is invalid. Nonetheless, the rabbis accepted the woman's sole testimony as a
witness.
Furthermore, the rabbis in medieval and modern times left no
stone unturned in searching for the missing husband and in the effort to
persuade him to issue a Jewish divorce to his abandoned wife.
It is clear from the sources that customary law, as
practiced over a period of 10 centuries in Egypt and Palestine, employed
far-reaching procedures to compensate for the women's legal inability to
dissolve a marriage. These provisions dealt not only with the problem of
abandonment; they also made it possible for the woman to demand and receive a
divorce when she found her marriage intolerable. In fact, documents have
survived that indicate that in some cases it was sufficient for the wife to
come to the court and declare, "Lo
erhemeh"--"I do not love him"--in order for the judges to
compel the husband to issue a divorce.
Problem Becomes Insoluble as Jewish Community Loses Power
The problem of the agunah was relatively soluble as long as
Jewish tradition retained its authority and the Jewish community had the power
to enforce its decisions. This condition prevailed everywhere during the Middle
Ages and, until our own century, in Eastern Europe. And because it did, there
were extralegal procedures, such as public opinion and social ostracism, that
could be used to secure the husband's compliance. In addition, the court could
impose a herem (excommunication),
which meant total isolation for the offender. Generally, the threat sufficed to
bring the husband into line.
Nevertheless, the responsa--the
legal decisions of the great rabbinic authorities of the Middle Ages--include
many cases of unfortunate women chained to a recalcitrant or nonexistent
spouse.
The breakdown of the Babylonian center about the year 1000
C.E., and its replacement by a multiplicity of independent communities in North
Africa, Spain, France, Germany, Italy, and Eastern Europe, led to a general
fragmentation of authority that created many areas of local jurisdiction. The
power of individual rabbinic leaders to compel obedience was now
correspondingly reduced. The frequent uprooting of Jewish communities, the mass
migrations and the transplantation of individuals, accompanied by the deaths of
countless individuals through natural disaster, famine, or massacre,
substantially increased the number of agunot. In spite of all ameliorative
efforts, the lot of the agunah remained an unhappy one.
Beginning with the second half of the 18th century, the
Enlightenment and the Emancipation wrought havoc with the traditional pattern
of Jewish life. The admission of Jews into political citizenship, civic
equality, and economic opportunity was directly and explicitly linked to the
surrender of the authority of Jewish traditional law and to the loss of the
legal status of the Jewish community, which now became in effect a voluntary
association with no coercive power.
In some quarters today, both the Emancipation and the
Enlightenment are decried as totally evil, though one sees little evidence of a
wholesale stampede to turn in citizenship papers and return to the ghetto. (The
only possible exceptions are some Hasidic groups that have never left it.) The
fact is that both modern movements brought substantial benefits to Jews and
Judaism--but they exacted a heavy price, in the form of assimilation and
alienation.
The rapid growth of secularism and the establishment of
civil marriage and divorce in nearly all Western countries coincided with the
mass migration of millions of individuals from one country to another. These
factors gave rise to a large increase in the number of agunot. Women loyal to
Jewish tradition were, of course, the chief victims.
Categories of Agunot
In sum, four principal categories of the agunah have emerged
in modern times and are on the increase:
1. A man divorces his wife in the civil courts and possibly
even remarries, but refuses to give his wife a get, either because of malice or
greed. All too often the husband tries to extort money from his wife in
exchange for the get.
2. A man disappears without leaving a trace, so that he is
not available to issue the divorce that halakhah demands. During the early
decades of the 20th century , when mass Jewish immigration to the United States
from Eastern Europe reached its height, Yiddish newspapers published a regular
feature, "The Gallery of Missing Husbands," asking readers to help
locate the errant spouses. Together with photographs, there would appear
pathetic pleas for help from the deserted wives.
3. The man is lost in military action or dies in a mass
explosion. In modern war, combatants are often blown to bits. Where there is no
hard evidence that the soldier is dead, the wife becomes an agunah, since
halakhah has no such category as "declared" or "legally"
dead.
During the Russo-Japanese war of 1905, some great Russian
rabbis visited the troops before they left for the front and persuaded the
Jewish soldiers to issue a get al tenai,
a "conditional divorce," so as to free their wives from the status of
agunah should the men fail to return. But obviously this temporary procedure,
however helpful in individual cases, did not meet the growing dimensions of the
problem.
4. Not strictly a case of "desertion" but similar
to it is the rarer case of a childless widow who, according to halakhah,
requires halitzah (release) from her
husband's brother before she can remarry. [Biblical law requires her
brother-in-law to marry her to perpetuate the dead husband's "name"
by providing his wife with a child. The ceremony of halitzah releases the widow
from this obligation.] This situation has also served as an occasion for
extortion.
Dr. Robert Gordis
(1908-1992) taught for over half a century at the Jewish Theological Seminary
of America as Professor of Bible and Rapoport Professor in the Philosophies of
Religion. He served as a congregational rabbi and as editor of Judaism: A
Quarterly Journal. Among his many books
are Love and Sex and Dynamics
of Judaism: A Study in Jewish Law.