Category Archives: Progressive Halakhah

Domestic Abuse, Divorce, and Progressive Halakhah

In our last post, we urged Israel’s Chief Rabbinate to put some halakhic muscle behind its moral condemnation of domestic abuse. If the Chief Rabbi is incensed at the thought of Jewish husbands battering their wives, he should do everything he can to advocate that those husbands be required – and coerced by all acceptable legal means – to issue divorces.  Under the current consensus Orthodox halakhic opinion, when a wife sues for divorce on the grounds that her husband is abusive, the Israeli rabbinical courts, which adjudicate divorce law for Jewish citizens, are not empowered to coerce him to issue a get (divorce document). She therefore remains legally bound to him, unable to remarry and rebuild her shattered life until he agrees on his own accord to divorce her.

But does that consensus reflect what Jewish law actually says? Continue reading Domestic Abuse, Divorce, and Progressive Halakhah

Conversion? What Conversion?

Rabbis and Bitul Giyur

Another day, another outrage from the ḥaredi rabbinate. This time, it’s a decision by a Jerusalem beit din (rabbinical court) annulling a conversion to Judaism which took place over thirty years ago. The conversion, in other words, legally never happened. You can read the details here (and here, in Hebrew). One of the more sordid of these is that the head of the beit din, Rabbi Ḥayyim Yehudah Rabinowitz (that’s him in the middle of the picture), is currently embroiled in charges of corruption surrounding his conduct of the court.  Continue reading Conversion? What Conversion?

The Israeli Conversion Crisis and Progressive Halakhah

The latest round of the conversion wars in Israel is more than simply politics, the attempt to entice ḥaredi parties into a razor-thin Knesset majority. When we look at it closely, we find a case of progressive halakhah at work, an example of how rabbis not at all associated with the progressive Jewish movements can nonetheless utilize progressive halakhic thinking to solve problems and to relieve human suffering. Continue reading The Israeli Conversion Crisis and Progressive Halakhah

An Invitation

Welcome to our new blog! Our goal at the Freehof Institute for Progressive Halakhah is to consider issues of halakhah from a liberal perspective and to explore how halakhah and halakhic thinking might contribute to the enrichment of liberal Jewish observance. If you share our commitment to the enduring connection between the halakhic tradition and liberal/progressive/Reform Judaism, please consider this an invitation to join in the discussion. Continue reading An Invitation