Reconstructionist Judaism Offers Egalitarian Divorce
Options
In addition to the
traditional get (bill of divorce)
granted by the husband, Reconstructionism offers a woman-initiated get and a
mutual get.
By Rabbi Margot Stein
Reprinted with
permission from Reconstructionism
Today, Summer 2001.
A conscientious and spiritually complete divorce process is…
preferable to one that takes place almost exclusively in lawyers' offices, and
many Reconstructionist Jews have employed the get, a Jewish bill of divorce, to help achieve this sense of
completion.
A get is an official religious document terminating a
marriage. It is written and delivered under the supervision of a rabbi and in
the presence of a beit din, a
rabbinic court of three rabbis. Two additional witnesses are present to sign
the document. Traditionally, the get can only be initiated by the husband and
received by the wife. This has given rise to the painful situation of agunot, chained women. An agunah is a
woman whose husband withholds a get in order to prevent her remarriage, extort
money, coercively gain custody of children, or otherwise manipulate his former
spouse's life.
The Reconstructionist movement has responded to this
injustice by instituting three types of get ceremonies for those seeking a
Reconstructionist divorce. The first type is parallel to the traditional get,
which the husband initiates and delivers to the wife. The second
Reconstructionist get allows the wife to initiate and deliver it to her
husband. The third option is a get that is mutually initiated by both partners
and delivered to each other with complete equality. These options are also
available for gay and lesbian couples.
Guidelines of the Reconstructionist Rabbinical Association
suggest that the officiating rabbi make it clear that a Reconstructionist get
is not equivalent to an Orthodox get in the eyes of the Orthodox movement (and
some members of the Conservative movement), both here and in Israel, and to
make clear to the divorcing couple their range of Jewish options and the Jewish
implications of their choice. Some rabbis encourage couples to undergo both
procedures--the Orthodox get to fulfill any halakhic
(legal) requirements that may arise in the future, and the Reconstructionist
get to satisfy any number of personal needs. These needs might include the
achievement of a sense of spiritual completion and separation from the former
spouse; exercise of control over one's personal status; and ritualization of
the divorce in a contemporary religious context to achieve community recognition
of the couple's changing status.
Reconstructionist get options enable one or both partners to
attain spiritual closure, whether or not they have the cooperation of their
former partner. It also allows couples who are able to cooperate with one another
to create a meaningful ceremony, perhaps in the company of a few friends and
witnesses, in order to begin the healing process.
Rabbi Margot Stein is
director of communications and marketing for the Jewish Reconstructionist
Federation.