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Jonathan Rynhold

ByJonathan Rynhold, Jonathan Rynhold

Opinion

Partnership minyanim: The slope is not so slippery

January 10, 2017 10:46
2 min read

After umpteen invitations, the Ashkenazi chief rabbi of Israel, David Lau, finally visited our shul in Modiin, a couple of years ago. Nothing strange about that you might think, after all Rabbi Lau lives in Modiin and ours is an Orthodox community. But in actual fact his visit was surprising because ours is a partnership minyan. Men and women sit separately, but women read from, and get called up to the Torah. They also lead parts of the service, including Kol Nidrei on Yom Kippur. 

Despite the cosmic confluence of circumstance involving a chief rabbi and a partnership minyan, the sky did not fall in; thousands of Israeli children did not convert to Christianity, nor alas did President Obama bring peace to the Holy Land.

Perhaps none of these things transpired because Rabbi Lau was not actually present for the service; instead giving a sermon following its conclusion. This recalls the custom of some Orthodox synagogues where the batmitzvah girl addresses the community at the end of the proceedings, rather than earlier, when the rabbi usually speaks.

Rabbi Lau opened by briefly mentioning his well-known opposition to partnership minyanim. He then promised to deliver a Torah lesson that had “absolutely nothing to do with this”. The thrust of his message was that not everything that is halachically permitted is religiously desirable.