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Power struggle leaves Israel without chief rabbis

Politics, nepotism and the role of women have left the country's top rabbinical offices vacant for the first time in its history

July 8, 2024 10:52
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Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi David Lau (left) and Sephardic Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef attend a ceremony selling hametz (food containing leavening) to Arab Israeli Mr Jaber before the upcoming Passover holiday in Jerusalem, April 4, 2023. (Yonatan Sindel/Flash90)

ByEtgar Lefkovits, Jewish News Syndicate

2 min read

An internal power struggle involving politics, nepotism and the role of women is delaying the selection of Israel's next chief rabbis, leaving the posts vacant for the first time since the establishment of the state, officials said on Sunday.

The delay—ostensibly over the appointment of women to the body that selects chief rabbis—also comes amid a power struggle within the ultra-Orthodox leadership. At the same time, the Supreme Court and the religious establishment that controls the Chief Rabbinate are clashing over issues of religion and state, including most recently ultra-Orthodox conscription.

The High Court of Justice ruled in January that women with sufficient knowledge of the Torah and halachah (Jewish law) may be considered rabbis for the purposes of membership in the 150-member Chief Rabbi Election Assembly.

The 80 slots allocated for rabbis have always been reserved for men only in keeping with the Orthodox worldview, and any change is viewed as anathema by the Chief Rabbinate.