Write to the ambassador


By moshetzarfati2
January 20, 2010
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I have just been asked to pass on the following letter from Pro-Zion about the arrest and interrogation of Anat Hoffman to Ron Pros-Or, the Israeli ambassador. I believe that anyone concerned about the drift towards Orthodox fundamentalism in Israel should sign it and send it to the embassy.
Anat Hoffman, Executive Director of IRAC, and one of the founders of Women of the Wall, was interrogated by police for her actions at the Kottel. Anat is being investigated for committing a felony, with her
only crime as praying, reading from a Sefer Torah, and wearing a Talit.
Amazingly, the police overlook the violent abuse that this group receive for exercising what is surely their right. If you agree that this is an injustice, please find attached a pre-drafted letter and
send it to His Excellency Ron Pros-or, Ambassador of Israel. It is important that as Progressive Jews in the UK we show our support to our Progressive friends in Israel and let the Israeli Government know that we in the Diaspora would like to see an end to this Religious discrimination. Please find the time and send the letter.

His Excellency Ron Pros-or

Ambassador of Israel

2 Palace Green

London

W8 4QB

Dear Mr Ambassador,

On behalf of the Jewish people fighting for religious pluralism in Israel, I am outraged that one of our leaders, Anat Hoffman, was interrogated and fingerprinted by Jerusalem police on January 5th, 2010. Police told Hoffman, Executive Director of the Israel Religious Action Center and leader of Women of the Wall, that she may be charged with a felony for violating the rules of conduct at what many consider to be Judaism's most sacred site.

Hoffman's interrogation came less than two months after the November 18th, 2009 arrest of the Women of the Wall member Nofrat Frankel for wearing a talit and holding a Sefer Torah.

We will not tolerate this discrimination and abuse to continue among our own people. Women are treated as second-class citizens at a holy and historic place that has great symbolic importance for all Jews.

If this were to happen in any other country in the world, the Jewish community would be up in arms. Israel is the rare democracy today that tolerates and even endorses religious discrimination against Jews.

Make no mistake: What appears to be a growing religious crisis in Israel is as much a threat to Israel's survival as are the external threats, and perhaps more so. Israel has shown that she can protect herself from armies and terrorists. Protecting herself from religious extremism may be Israel's biggest challenge--a challenge that cannot and must not be ignored by those who care about Israel's soul.

Please pass on our message to the Israeli government: the Kotel is the beating heart centre for the whole of the Jewish people, and not an Ultra-Orthodox synagogue. The arrest and intimidation of women praying at the Wall must stop. The Wall must become a place where all Jews can pray and connect spiritually to Israel.

Yours Sincerely,

COMMENTS

Jon_i_Cohen

20 January, 2010 - 10:31

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More left-wing nonsense! from one of the resident Trolls.

"A woman should not wear a man's belonging, a man should not wear women's clothing because it is disgusting to Hashem your G-d to do this". (Devarim 22:5)

Women are not the same as men - they have different roles within Judaism.

Women can pray at the Kotel, no one has a problem with that, they must not, however, dress as men, that is the prohibition.


Yvetta

20 January, 2010 - 11:10

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As a woman, a feminist (albeit somewhat mellowed) and a Progressive Jew, I agree with the letter's sentiments - up to a point.
The overseas shul - I suppose I should say the temple - to which I belonged for many years (I was briefly on its board) used to call up far more women than men, and in my salad days I thought this was unbearably sexist in the Reform context. But then things went overboard. Women started to don tallitot and kippot, something I never did myself; it was enough, for me, to be able to sit alongside male worshippers, and to have the honour of the occasional aliyah. I realised that wearing ritual accoutrements associated with men might upset and alienate many of the older male congregants, and I had no wish to distress them or be party to something that might cause a schism. I knew that once I'd donned a tallit (let alone a kippah), I'd have committed a radical act, from which there was really no turning back. The last time I visited that overseas shul on Shabbat (in 2006), women were clad not merely in smart trouser suits (something I'd never done) but in casual tops and bottoms (not a way to honour the Sabbath imo). The privilege of having mixed seating should preclude males and females acting like lovebirds during services; unfortunately, such distractions were not uncommon.
Anyway, I'll need to mull over this one very carefully, Moshe! My heart says "yes" but my head stills my hand ...


Jonathan Hoffman

20 January, 2010 - 11:27

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Surely one must defer to the most observant person within visibility. Presumably Anat Hoffman would not turn on a light on Shabbat if she was in the house of someone who is strictly shomer shabbat. It is simply bad manners.


moshetzarfati2

20 January, 2010 - 11:56

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The Western Wall, Jonathan, is for all Jews, not just the Orthodox. By arresting women for praying as they wish at the Wall, Israel is becoming more like Iran, Sudan or Afghanistan. That is what must be stopped if Israel wants to be considered to be a democracy.

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