Become a Member
Opinion

Will all this wailing over the wall end in tears for the ultra-Orthodox?

With no Haredi parties in the government, the fight for egalitarian prayers at the Western Wall is about to become much more significant

November 12, 2021 17:29
wall.JPG
5 min read

There was nothing unique in last Friday’s clash at the Western Wall between the Women of the Wall group and a mob of about two thousand ultra-Orthodox men trying to prevent them from holding their monthly Rosh Chodesh prayers. It was the same scene that has recurred on the first morning of every Hebrew month for decades now.

At most, it gets a brief mention on the radio bulletins and in the papers next day a few lines. However, there was one key difference this time.

The media was out in force, expecting a parliamentary punch-up. In recent months, the newly elected Labour Knesset Member Gilad Kariv, who is also a rabbi of the Reform movement, had been using his MK’s immunity to bring a Torah scroll to the wall, and then handing it over the partition to the women to use for their prayers.

It was a way to circumvent Orthodox-dominated Western Wall Authority, which has a regulation forbidding people to bring their own Torah scrolls to the Kotel (though this isn’t uniformly enforced) but only provides them in the men’s section.