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Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

ByShoshanna Keats Jaskoll, Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

Opinion

Refusing divorce should be as unkosher as a pig

More needs to be done to stop men refusing divorces to their wives, says Shoshanna Keats Jaskoll

March 21, 2019 12:01
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3 min read

I met Orly a year ago. At kilometre 16 of a 22 km hike to raise awareness for agunot — women trapped in Jewish marriage. We walked side by side, lamenting the impact of the rocky desert floor on our aching city feet. I was there as an activist. Orly was there as an agunah. As we walked, she revealed that after five years of refusing to give a get, (Jewish divorce), her husband disappeared. She hadn’t seen him in five years. Still technically his wife and raising their children alone, she was unable to remarry or move on in any real way. When we parted, I told her that at next year’s hike, I hoped to see her as a free woman.

“Next year’s hike” took place earlier this month. Orly was there, but she was not free. Another year had passed and she was still with Yad La’Isha, the organisation that arranged the hike and provides legal representation to women like Orly. Three hundred women walked together, some current and former agunot, others journalists and many there to support the cause.

Yad La’Isha is one of several organisations working to change the phenomenon of agunot. Their strategy is to work within the state religious courts, making change from inside. Some bodies, such as the Centre for Women’s Justice, work around the system, using civil law or independent religious courts to free agunot. Others, such as the International Young Israel Movement, ORA, and the London School of Jewish Studies, work within the community, encouraging the signing of prenuptial agreements that can prevent get refusal.

Change doesn’t come easily to laws made thousands of years ago. The very idea that a woman can be trapped in marriage is rage- inducing and yet, here we are. The good news is that the concerted efforts of organisations and activists, together with awareness and action on the part of the community, are changing reality for agunot.