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Judaism

Why women should be able to pray in peace

It is wrong to try to prevent women’s services at the Western Wall.

April 22, 2010 11:30
Police scuffle with a protester against a Women of the Wall service earlier this year

By

Sylvia Rothschild

4 min read

Women of the Wall (WOW) began in December 1988 when a group of 70 Jewish women from all streams of Judaism approached the Kotel with a Torah Scroll to conduct a prayer service. Some wore tallit, others did not. Although even at that service, there was some screaming and cursing from Charedi Jews both male and female, Rabbi Getz (the Kotel administrator of the time) did not stop the service, and was overheard telling a complainer "leave them alone, they are not violating halachah".

For 21 years, the Women of the Wall, who remain an independent group of religious women from across the Jewish spectrum, pray together within halachic confines at the Kotel every Rosh Chodesh. We do this not to be provocative or to make a feminist point to the outside world, but to pray in a place of deep meaning to the Jewish people, the place characterised as the "beating heart" of the Jewish world.

The core of the group resides in Jerusalem, but there are many women around the world who join them whenever they are in Israel. The group embodies religious pluralism in action and is a wonderful model of Israel-diaspora relations. There is much to learn from this group of gentle, spiritually exploratory women.

When I was last in Jerusalem over a Rosh Chodesh in 2009, I joined the WOW. The experience was both exhilarating and appalling, spiritually powerful and immensely saddening. We met in the very early morning at the Kotel, a small group of local women and visitors. Those of us who wear tallit were warned to wear them "differently" - swept over our shoulders like a pashmina rather than worn like a shawl.