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Female singing ban leads to legal action

April 21, 2016 10:29
Rabbi Julia Margolis

By

Simon Rocker,

Simon Rocker

1 min read

A long-running controversy over a ban on women singing at communal Jewish events in South Africa because of religious sensitivities has resulted in legal action.

Two orthodox Jews, along with the South African Centre for Religious Equality and Diversity (Sacred), have lodged a complaint of unfair discrimination against the South African Jewish Board of Deputies' Cape Council.

Women used to sing at commemorations of Holocaust Memorial Day and Israel Independence Day until an incident in 2005 when Chief Rabbi Warren Goldstein reportedly left a Yom Hashoah event early after a teenage schoolgirl sang.

According to strict interpretations of Jewish law, a man may not listen to a woman sing in public.

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