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A new hope for 'chained women'

The JC Leader - January 17, 2019

January 16, 2020 13:28
Hebrew religions marriage agreement stock photo
1 min read

Force for divorce

An ongoing outrage within Judaism has been the inability — or, if one is being less charitable, refusal — of the Batei Din to think creatively enough to resolve the issue of agunot, or ‘chained women’.

Various methods within the community have been tried to shame into decency those husbands who refuse to grant a get, such as posters and adverts showing their faces. But these have proved far from sufficient an answer.

Now it seems that a breakthrough has come from outside. The news that one agunah has taken out a private prosecution under the relatively new ‘coercive control’ legislation is a breakthrough.

It will not work in every case (not least because of the cost), but the fear of a criminal conviction appears in this case to have worked. This is proving to be a vital and necessary piece of legislation, with this just the latest example of its usefulness in dealing with abusive and controlling behaviour.

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