“After spending decades debating and legislating the matter of Who is a Jew, it is time the Knesset attempts to understand and define what Judaism really is,” said emcee Jackie Levy at the first-ever Jewish Identity Day, marked by the Knesset on Tuesday.
Knesset convenes for first-ever Jewish Identity Day
“After spending decades debating matter of Who is a Jew, it's time Knesset attempts to understand, define what Judaism really is,” says Jackie Levy.
By JONAH MANDEL • Jerusalem Post
“After spending decades debating and legislating the matter of Who is a Jew, it is time the Knesset attempts to understand and define what Judaism really is,” said emcee Jackie Levy at the first-ever Jewish Identity Day, marked by the Knesset on Tuesday.
Consisting of a special plenary session, committee meetings, an art exhibition and a closing session attended by Knesset Speaker Reuven Rivlin, government ministers and MKs, with pertinent musical interludes by popular entertainer Koby Oz, Jewish Identity Day was the brainchild of the Tzohar rabbinic organization and a highlight of its Tzohar Legislation Project.
The project is a forum that aims to provide MKs with a Jewish context as they undertake legislation. Together with MK Zevulun Orlev (Habayit Heyehudi), the forum organized a day that would focus on the role of Judaism and Jewish values in the lawmaking process.
In a statement issued ahead of the event, Rabbi David Stav, founder and chairman of Tzohar, said the Legislation Project “can serve as the ultimate guidepost in making Israel an international role model of integrity and values,” and had been “welcomed with open arms” by MKs from just about all parliamentary factions.
“Our objective is to show that values centered around Judaism and Jewish identity must become more imbedded in how Israel operates as a society,” Stav said, adding that “there is nowhere better to highlight this than in our national lawmaking body.”
Rivlin used the day’s closing session to announce the addition of an expert on Jewish law to the Knesset’s advisory staff, “thus taking a significant and practical step forward in integrating Hebrew law and its frequent influence on our legislation....
There is no way to separate Israel’s Judaism from its being democratic. And we can’t follow those, even within this house, who try to prove the failure of this complex identity.”
In his own address, Orlev chose to stress the importance of education and dialogue in reaching an understanding over the state’s Jewish character.
“The way to reach this dialogue is first of all to know – to learn what Judaism is,” the MK said. “We should never reach a situation in which ignorance outdoes heresy.”
He was alluding to a famous statement by Second Aliya ideologue and educator Berl Katzenelson (1887–1944), who lamented the fact that the secular Zionist movement wanted to raise a generation of knowledgeable heretics, but instead produced a generation of ignoramuses.
Orlev is hoping to pass a law that would widen the criteria of state funding to Torah institutions, enabling non-haredi groups to receive money like ultra-Orthodox yeshivot do.
One of the more interesting issues taken up as part of Jewish Identity Day was the situation in which the Interior Ministry refuses to grant citizenship to people the Chief Rabbinate has recognized as Jews, because the ministry does not recognize them as such.
The Knesset’s Internal Affairs and Environment Committee heard about the plight of Hungarian- born Judith Weitzman, whose great-grandmother converted to Christianity in Europe under duress. Like the rest of her siblings, Weitzman maintains a Jewish lifestyle, and when she wished to marry an Israeli, both the Chief Rabbinate and the Tiberias Rabbinical Court decreed her to be Jewish, and the regional rabbi of the Golan Heights conducted the wedding ceremony. Yet the Interior Ministry refuses to recognize her as a Jew, and therefore refuses to grant her citizenship.
Ministry representatives at the hearing said they could not convey the ministry’s position since similar cases were currently under consideration by the High Court of Justice. Committee chairman David Azoulay (Shas) called for senior ministry officials to meet with the Chief Rabbinate and members of the rabbinic court system to reach a reasonable policy that would prevent such scenarios.
The idea to have this "Jewish Identity Day" comes from Tzohar and its head, Rabbi David Stav.
Here is what Stav said yesterday about a related subject – the right of rabbis to teach "Torah" things like, well, the slaughter of Arab babies by the IDF, because those babies will grow up to be our enemies:
"A democratic society cannot prosecute rabbis for offences pertaining to freedom of expression, let alone criminal offenses."
The rabbi said that he has been in contact with senior officials at the State Prosecutor's Office for some time and has told them it would be wrong to arrest Rabbi Lior.
"Would they have issued an arrest warrant against Rabbi Ovadia Yosef who said something about Shulamit Aloni?" he pondered. "It is impossible that an arrest warrant in the State of Israel be issued against rabbis for expressing their opinions, when they do not intend or incite to break the law.
"The attempt to turn any rabbinical comment – whether I agree with it or nor (and in this case I don't) into a legal matter is wrong in the democratic and moral sense, and foolish in the practical and public sense."
Exactly how Stav can say he knows Lior didn't "intend" to braek the law or incite anyone to murder is beyond me.
The book Lior endorsed clearly ruled that Arab babies can and probably should be killed, and Lior has not backed away from this.
What Stav is doing, I believe, is saying that because Lior himself did not tell soldiers to murder Arab babies, he has not incited anyone to violence.
But this is false. Lior endorsed the book with contains that ruling and, again, he refuses to back away from either.
So Lior intends what the authors intend, and the book makes that intent clear – murder.
The Knesset doesn't need workshops on Jewish identity.
What the Knesset needs is what the country needs: total separation of religion and state.
May it happen now.