Hostname: page-component-5c6d5d7d68-ckgrl Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-08-23T13:13:43.509Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

The Israeli Millet System: Examining Legal Pluralism Throuh Lenses of Nation-Building and Human Rights

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  19 March 2012

Get access

Abstract

Israel still maintains the personal status system (millet) that it inherited from the Ottoman Empire under which the courts of fourteen ethno-religious communities are granted exclusive jurisdiction over matters of marriage and divorce and concurrent jurisdiction with the civil courts in regard to such matters as maintenance and inheritance. But, why Israel, as a highly centralized and democratic polity, has maintained the old millet system which applies different laws to people from different ethno-religious backgrounds and holds men and women to different legal standards? And, how has such a plural application of law affected fundamental rights and freedoms of Israeli citizens? In brief, the Article argues that Israel utilized the old millet system in the nation-building process as an instrument of vertical segmentation and horizontal homogenization. However, the system has encountered with some serious challenges in producing its intended goals. This becomes particularly visible when we take a closer look at the field of human rights where individuals constantly challenge the legitimacy of Stateimposed religious laws, and seek to advance rights and liberties which are denied to them under the current system by engaging in various strategies of resistance.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © Cambridge University Press and The Faculty of Law, The Hebrew University of Jerusalem 2010

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

1 According to Article 51 of the Palestine Order in Council (1922), matters of personal status mean “suits regarding marriage or divorce, alimony, maintenance, guardianship, legitimation and adoption of minors, inhibition from dealing with property of persons who are legally incompetent, successions, wills and legacies and the administration of the property of absent persons” Wright, Martin, British Colonial Constitutions, 1947, at 118 (1952).Google Scholar However, for the purposes of the Israel Law Review present study the scope of the term is exclusively confined to the matters of marriage, divorce, succession, and maintenance of spouses and children.

2 According to the Second Schedule to the Palestine Order in Council, the following communities were officially recognized by the Mandatory regime in addition to the Sunni Muslim community: the Eastern (Orthodox) Community, the Latin (Catholic) Community, the Gregorian Armenian Community, the Armenian (Catholic) Community, the Syrian (Catholic) Community, the Chaldean (Uniate) Community, the Jewish Community, the Greek Catholic Melkite Community, the Maronite Community, and the Syrian Orthodox Community, see id. at 127.

3 Layish, Aharon, The Heritage of Ottoman Rule in the Israeli Legal System: The Concept of Umma and Millet, in The Law Applied: Contextualizing the Islamic Shari'a 128 (Bearman, Peri et al. eds., 2008).Google Scholar

4 In this Article I treat the legal regime that Israel inherited from the Ottoman Empire in the field of personal status as a foremost example of legal pluralism. Legal pluralism is a social phenomenon that can be observed in situations where more than one normative order exists in the same socio-legal space (e.g., religious or customary courts with parallel jurisdictions in the field of family law). Legal pluralism can take various forms and shapes (e.g., deep legal pluralism, state-law pluralism etc.). Elsewhere I refer to the type of plurality that exists in the Israeli personal status system as formal plurality, a variant of State-law pluralism. Having said this, however, one should be also aware that in some instances a legal system which seems pluralistic to an outside observer may not present itself as such to its “suject de droit” or the individual who is subject to its jurisdiction. For example, for an Israeli Muslim who wants to file for divorce there is only one choice of jurisdiction which is the shari'a court (in case of alimony, child support etc., however, the possibility of forum shopping between civil and Islamic courts may be available). This is, to a great extent, also true for the Jewish sector (even though the ultra-Orthodox may forum shop between their institutions and State-run rabbinical courts). See Sezgin, Yüksel, A Political Account for Legal Confrontation Between State and Society: The Case of Israeli Legal Pluralism, 32 Studies in L., Politics, & Soc'y 199 (2004)Google Scholar; Sezgin, Yüksel, Theorizing Formal Pluralism: Quantification of Legal Pluralism for Spatio-Temporal Analysis, 50 J. Legal Pluralism & Unofficial L. 101 (2004)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Vanderlinden, Jacques, Return to Legal Pluralism: Twenty Years Later, 28 J. Legal Pluralism & Unofficial L. 149–57 (1989)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Hofri-Winogradow, Adam S., A Plurality of Discontent: Legal Pluralism, Religious Adjudication and the State, 26 J. L. & Religion 101–33 (2010).Google Scholar

5 These three communities are: the Druze Community (1957), the Evangelical Episcopal Church (1970), and the Bahai Community (1971); see Ramadan, Moussa Abou, Judicial Activism of the Shari'ah Appeals Court in Israel (1994–2001): Rise and Crisis, 27 Fordham Int'l L.J. 255 (2003)Google Scholar; Goldstein, Stephen, Israel: A Secular or a Religious State?, 36 Saint Louis U.L.J. 145 (1992)Google Scholar; Shava, Menashe, Matters of Personal Status of Israeli Citizens Not Belonging to a Recognized Religious Community, 11 Isr. Y.B, Hum. Rts. 239–47 (1981)Google Scholar; Martin Edelman, Courts, Politics, and Culture in Israel 51 (1994).

6 Sezgin, Yüksel, Legal Unification and Nation Building in the Post-Colonial World: A Comparison of Israel and India, 8 J. Comp. Asian Dev. 273 (2009).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

7 Mamdani, Mahmood, Citizen and Subject: Contemporary Africa and the Legacy of Late Colonialism 67 (1996)Google Scholar; Benton, Lauren A., Law and Colonial Cultures: Legal Regimes in World History, 14001900, at 127 (2002)Google Scholar; Merry, Sally Engle, Colonizing Hawai'i: The Cultural Power of Law 113–14 (2000).Google Scholar

8 de Soto, Hernando, The Mystery of Capital: Why Capitalism Triumphs in the West and Fails Everywhere Else (2000)Google Scholar; Poggi, Gianfranco, The State: its Nature, Development, and Prospects (1990)Google Scholar; Galanter, Marc, The Modernization of Law, in Modernization, The Dynamics of Growth 153–65 (Weiner, Myron ed., 1966)Google Scholar; Kelsen, Hans, General Theory of Law and State (1945)Google Scholar; Weber, Max, Weber, Max on Law in Economy and Society (1954)Google Scholar; Migdal, Joel S., Strong Societies and Weak States: State-Society Relations and State Capabilities in the Third World (1988)Google Scholar; Berman, Harold Joseph, Law and Revolution: The Formation of the Western Legal Tradition (1983)Google Scholar; Shapiro, Martin M., Courts, A Comparative and Political Analysis (1981).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

9 Mamdani, supra note 7; Bennett, T. W. & Vermeulen, T., Codification of Customary Law, 23 J. Afr. L. 206–19 (1979)Google Scholar; Smith, Donald Eugene, India as a Secular State (1963)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Allott, A. N., et al., Introduction, in Ideas and Procedures in African Customary Law (Studies presented and discussed at the eighth international African seminar at the Haile Sellassie I University, Addis Ababa, January 1966) 1 (Gluckman, Max ed., 1969)Google Scholar; Cotran, Eugene, Integration of Courts and Application of Customary Law in Tanganyika, 1 E. Afr. L. J. 108–23 (1965)Google Scholar; Favali, Lyda & Pateman, Roy, Blood, Land, and Sex: Legal and Political Pluralism in Eritrea (2003)Google Scholar; Bennett, T. W. & Peart, N. S., The Dualism of Marriage Laws in Africa, in Family Law in the Last Two Decades of the Twentieth Century 145 (Bennett, T. W. ed., 1983)Google Scholar; Molyneux, Maxine, The Law, the State and Socialist Policies with Regard to Women: The Case of the People's Democratic Republic of Yemen 1967–1990, in Women, Islam, and the State 237 (Kandiyoti, Deniz ed., 1991)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Prinsloo, M. W., Pluralism or Unification in Family Law in South Africa, 23 Int'l & Comp. L. J. S. Afr. 324–36 (1990)Google Scholar; Seidman, Robert B., The State, Law and Development (1978)Google Scholar; Joseph, Suad & Najmabadi, Afsaneh, 2 Encyclopedia of Women & Islamic Cultures (2003).Google Scholar

10 Bennett & Peart, supra note 9; Joseph, Suad, Elite Strategies for State-Building: Women, Family, Religion and State in Iraq and Lebanon, in Women, Islam, And the State 176200 (Kandiyoti, Deniz ed., 1991)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Joseph, Suad, Civic Myths, Citizenship and Gender in Lebanon, in Gender and Citizenship in the Middle East 107 (Joseph, Suad ed., 2000)Google Scholar; Brubaker, Rogers, Nationalism Reframed: Nationhood and the National Question in the New Europe (1996)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Butenschøn, Nils A., State, Power and Citizenship in the Middle East, A Theoretical Introduction, in Citizenship and the State in the Middle East: Approaches and Applications 3 (Butenschon, Nilis A., Davis, Uri & Hassassian, Manal S. eds., 2000)Google Scholar; Chesterman, John & Galligan, Brian, Citizens Without Rights: Aborigines and Australian Citizenship (1997)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Marx, Anthony W., Contested Citizenship: The Dynamics of Racial Identity and Social Movements, in Citizenship, Identity and Social History 159 (Tilly, Charles ed., 1996)Google Scholar; Smooha, Sammy & Järve, Priit, The Fate of Ethnic Democracy in Post-Communist Europe (2005)Google Scholar; Yiftachel, Oren, Ethnocracy: The Politics of Judaizing Israel/Palestine, 6 Constellations 364 (1999).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

11 Samuel, Edwin, The Ottoman Legacy to Israel, 2 Jew. J. Soc. 219 (1960).Google Scholar

12 Migdal, Joel S., Through the Lens of Israel: Explorations in State and Society (2001).Google Scholar

13 Kimmerling, Baruch, The Invention and Decline of Israeliness: State, Society, and the Military 6970 (2001)Google Scholar; Sachar, Howard Morley, A History of Israel: From The Rise of Zionism to our Time (2002)Google Scholar; Segev, Tom & Weinstein, Arlen Neal, 1949, The First Israelis 95–116 (1986)Google Scholar; Sassoon, David M., The Israel Legal System, 16 Am. J. Comp. L. 411 (1968).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

14 Sezgin, Yüksel, Can the Israeli Status Quo Model Help the Post-February 28 Turkey Solve Its Problems?, 4 Turkish Stud. 47 (2003).Google Scholar

15 Strum, Philippa, Women and the Politics of Religion in Israel, 11 Hum. Rts. Q. 486 (1989)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Abramov, S. Zalman, Perpetual Dilemma: Jewish Religion in the Jewish State 157–63 (1976)Google Scholar; Mittleman, Alan L., Fundamentalism and Political Development: The Case of Agudat Yisrael, in Jewish Fundamentalism in Comparative Perspective: Religion, Ideology, and the Crisis of Modernity 216 (Silberstein, Laurence J. ed., 1993).Google Scholar

16 Strum, Philippa, The Road Not Taken: Constitutional Non-Decision Making in 1948–1950 and Its Impact on Civil Liberties in the Israeli Political Culture, in Israel: The First Decade of Independence 85 (Troen, S. Ilan & Lucas, Noah eds., 1995).Google Scholar

17 Friedman, Menachem, The Structural Foundation for Religio-Political Accommodation in Israel: Fallacy and Reality, in Israel: The First Decade of Independence, supra note 16, at 5761.Google Scholar

18 Harris, Ron, Historical Opportunities and Absent-Minded Omissions: On the Incorporation of Jewish Law, in Nascent Israeli Law, in Both Sides of the Bridge: Church and State in Early Israel 42 (Bar-On, Mordechai & Zameret, Zvi eds., 2002) [in Hebrew].Google Scholar

19 Friedman, supra note 17, at 65.

20 Id at 79.

21 Triger, Tzvi, Remembrance of Laws Past: Israel's Adoption of Religious Marriage and Divorce Law as a Means for Reviving the Jewish People's Lost Manliness, in Trials of Love 175 (Naveh, Hannah & Ben-Naftali, Orna eds., 2005)Google Scholar [in Hebrew].

22 Rejwan, Nissim, Israel in Search of Identity 106 (1999)Google Scholar; Rosée, Séverine, et al. , Community of Citizens: on The Modern Idea of Nationality 103 (1998).Google Scholar

23 Rafael, Eliezer Ben, Jewish Identities: Fifty Intellectuals Answer Ben Gurion (2002).Google Scholar

24 Karayanni, Michael M., The Separate Nature of Religious Accommodations for the Palestinian-Arab Minority in Israel, 5 N.W. J. Int'l Hum. Rts. 41 (2006).Google Scholar

25 Harris, supra note 18, at 21–54; Treitel, Andrew, Conflicting Traditions; Muslim Shari'a Courts and Marriage Age Regulation in Israel, 26 Columbia Hum. Rts. L. Rev. 419 (1995)Google Scholar; Peled, Alisa Rubin, Debating Islam in the Jewish State: The Development of Policy Toward Islamic Institutions in Israel 3 (2001).Google Scholar

26 Jones, Clive & Murphy, Emma, Israel: Challenges To Identity, Democracy and the State 125 (2002).Google Scholar

27 Yanai, Nathan, The Citizen as Pioneer: Ben-Gurion's Concept of Citizenship, 1 Isr. Stud. 128 (1996)Google Scholar; Kimmerling, Baruch, Between the Primordial and Civil Definitions of the Collective Identity: Eretz Israel or the State of Israel?, in Comparative Social Dynamics: Essays in Honor of S.N. Eisenstadt 263–64 (Cohen, Erik et al. eds., 1985).Google Scholar

28 Klein, Claude, A Jewish State or a State for Jews?, 7 Jerusalem Q. 42 (1978)Google Scholar; Friedman, Menachem, The State of Israel as a Theological Dilemma, in The Israeli State and Society: Boundaries and Frontiers 188 (Kimmerling, Baruch ed., 1989)Google Scholar; Safran, Nadav, Israel, The Embattled Ally 207 (1981).Google Scholar

29 Almog, Oz, The Sabra: The Creation of the New Jew (2000).Google Scholar

30 Shafir, Gershon & Peled, Yoav, Citizenship and Stratification in an Ethnic Democracy, 21 Ethnic & Racial Stud. (1998)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Kretzmer, David, The Legal Status of the Arabs in Israel 5066 (1990)Google Scholar; Lustick, Ian, Arabs in the Jewish State: Israel's Control of A National Minority 58–9 (1980)Google Scholar; Oppenheimer, Jonathan, The Druze in Israel, as Arabs and Non-Arabs: An Essay on the Manipulation of Categories of Identity in a Non-Civil State, in Studies in Israeli Ethnicity: After the Ingathering 270 (Weingrod, Alex ed., 1985).Google Scholar

31 Woods, Patricia J., Gender and the Reproduction and Maintenance of Group Boundaries: Why the “Secular” State Matters to Religious Authorities in Israel, in Boundaries and Belonging: States and Societies in the Struggle to Shape Identities and Local Practices 236 (Migdal, Joel S. ed., 2004).Google Scholar

32 Woods, Patricia J., Judicial Power and National Politics: Courts and Gender in the Religious-Secular Conflict in Israel 61 (2008).Google Scholar

33 Triger, supra note 21, at 205–07; Friedman, supra note 17, at 61.

34 Segev & Weinstein, supra note 13, at 252; Abramov, supra note 15, at 194.

35 See The Rabbinical Courts Jurisdiction (Marriage and Divorce) Law, 1953, S.H. 165.

36 Triger, supra note 21, at 196–207; Eliash, Ben Zion, Ethnic Pluralism or Melting Pot? The Dilemma of Rabbinical Adjudication in Israeli Family Law, 11 Isr. L. Rev. 351 (1983).Google Scholar

37 Porat-Martin, Hedva, Rabbinical and Civil Courts in Israel: A Dual Legal System in Action (PhD Thesis, University of California, 1979).Google Scholar

38 Abramov, supra note 15, at 195–96; Rubinstein, Amnon, Law and Religion in Israel, 2 Isr. L. Rev. 386 (1967)Google Scholar; Bentwich, Norman, The Legal System of Israel, 13 Int'l & Comp. L. Q. 244 (1964)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Chigier, Moshe, The Rabbinical Courts in the State of Israel, 2 Isr. L. Rev. 156–59 (1967).Google Scholar

39 Triger, supra note 21, at 201; Johnson, Paul, A History of The Jews 552 (1987).Google Scholar

40 Edelman, supra note 5, at 122; Safran, supra note 28, at 203; Lustick, supra note 30, at 132–34; Kanaaneh, Rhoda Ann, Birthing the Nation: Strategies of Palestinian Women in Israel 140 (2002)Google Scholar; Pappé, Han, An Uneasy Coexistence: Arabs and Jews in the First Decade of Statehood, in Israel: The First Decade of Independence 643, (Troen, S. Ilan & Lucas, Noah eds., 1995)Google Scholar; Shepherd, Naomi, Ploughing Sand: British Rule in Palestine, 1917–1948, at 245 (2000).Google Scholar

41 Firro, Kais, The Druzes in the Jewish State: A Brief History 94 (1999).Google Scholar

42 Id. at 101.

43 Segev & Weinstein, supra note 13, at 66; Oppenheimer, supra note 30, at 268; Firro, supra note 41, at 179–80; Quigley, John B., The Case for Palestine: an International Law Perspective 136 (2005).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

44 Lustick, supra note 30, at 133.

45 The most recent example of Israel's exclusionary policies is the 2003 Citizenship and Entry into Israel Law that denies spouses of Israeli citizens and permanent residents who are married to Palestinians from the Occupied Territories the opportunity to acquire Israeli citizenship or residency rights, while the foreign spouses of the Israeli citizens are automatically granted citizenship if they are Jewish, see: Watch, Human Rights, Israel: Family Reunification Ruling is Discriminatory (2006), http://hrw.org/english/docs/2006/05/18/isrlpal3403.htm.Google Scholar

46 Right at this point, the question that comes to mind is whether there ever was an attempt to abolish the old millet system and build a uniform and secular system of family law in its place. The answer, in short, is “no.” Still, it is highly possible that some people around Ben-Gurion, who were staunchly secularist or concerned with the growing theocratic tendencies of the regime, have entertained such ideas. At least two of these individuals were probably Pinhas Rosen and Haim H. Cohn, who both served as Ministers of Justice in the Ben-Gurion and Sharett governments. Rosen noted in the introduction to the Draft Succession Law of 1952 that he hoped that the draft law would one day fit into the framework of a comprehensive Civil Code. Similarly, Cohn once told Prof. Strum in an interview that despite his repeated attempts to raise the subject of civil family courts, Ben-Gurion persistently rebuked his attempts, and never contemplated the creation of a system of secular courts in place of the existing millet structure as a serious policy alternative. In short, it can be said that even though some bureaucrats and cabinet members may have entertained such radical ideas, these were never adopted or even considered as a viable policy option by the ruling elite. Eisenman, Robert H., Islamic Law In Palestine And Israel: A History of the Survival of Tanzimat and Shari'A in the British Mandate and the Jewish State 196–99 (1978)Google Scholar; Yadin, Uri, The Law of Succession and Other Steps Towards a Civil Code, in Studies in Israel Legislative Problems 120 (Tedeschi, Guido & Yadin, Uri eds., 1966)Google Scholar; Strum, supra note 16, at 85–87; Radzyner, Amichai & Friedman, Shuki, The Israeli Legislator and Jewish Law—Haim Cohn between Tomorrow and Yesterday, 29 Iyunei Mishpat 223 (2005)Google Scholar [in Hebrew].

47 Sezgin, Yüksel, How to Integrate Universal Human Rights into Traditional and Religious Legal Systems, 60 J. Legal Pluralism & Unofficial L. 5 (2010).CrossRefGoogle Scholar

48 Dadoo, Suroya, Love and Marriage in Israel: Palestinian and Non-Orthodox Israelis Need Not Apply, 23 Washington Report on Middle East Affairs 19 (2004).Google Scholar

49 Cohen, Asher & Susser, Bernard, Israel and the Politics of Jewish Identity: The Secular-Religious Impasse 110–21 (2000).Google Scholar

50 Personal interview with the former Member of Knesset Ronny Brison of Shinui Party (Jerusalem, Feb. 2005). Mr. Brison was the major sponsor of a civil marriage and divorce bill that eventually failed in the Knesset (Israeli Parliament). As a concession to the religious parties, the draft bill did not include the words of “marriage” (nissuim) and “divorce” (gerushim) as these were considered religious ceremonies solely conducted by the rabbinical authorities. Instead, the bill used words of “coupling covenant” (brit hazugiut) and “release from the covenant” (hatarat habrit) in place of marriage and divorce, respectively.

51 A woman denied a get by her husband is technically called mesorevet get (she who is refused a divorce) in Jewish law; yet the term agunah—a woman whose husband has disappeared without issuing a proper get—is much more commonly, albeit wrongly, used.

52 The Ministry of Interior Affairs maintains a list of certified mamzerim in Israel. As of 2004, the list contained the names of 92 Israeli citizens. Report on the Status of the Israeli Family 2004 (2004). For further information on legal consequences of bastardy in Israel, see Gross, Netty C., Fighting the Curse, Jer. Rep., Aug. 13. 2001, at 24–5Google Scholar, and Feldblum, Meir S., A Proposal for a Comprehensive Solution to the Agunah-Mamzer Problem, 19 Dinei Israel 203–17 (19971998)Google Scholar [in Hebrew].

53 Every year, an average of 15–18 Israeli men whose wives have refused or been unable (for reasons of mental illness) to accept the get receive rabbinical approval to take a second wife without being divorced from the first—despite the fact that there is a civil law forbidding bigamy, see Shalvi, Alice, Agunah-the Abandoned, Bet Debora (2001), http://www.bet-debora.de/2001/jewish-family/shalvi.htm.Google Scholar

54 The number of agunot in Israel is estimated to be between 8,000 and 10,000, see Fisher, Allyn, Feminists Challenge Divorce Laws in Israel: Cards Are Stacked in Favor of Men, San Francisco Chronicle, Jan 10. 1995Google Scholar, at A11.

55 Rabbinical Courts (Enforcement Of Divorce Decrees) (Temporary Measures), 1995 S.H. 139; See also Halperin-Kaddari, Ruth, Women in Israel, A State of Their Own 238 n. 38 (2004)Google Scholar (providing a background to the evolution of the law and temporary degrees).

56 Blecher-Prigat, Ayelet & Shmueli, Benjamin, The Interplay between Tort Law and Religious Family Law: The Israeli Case, 26 Arizona J. Int'l & Comp. L. 279 (2009).Google Scholar

57 Corinaldi, Michael, A Halakhic Solution for Women Whose Husbands Refuse Grant a Divorce: The Shunning Measure of Rabbeinu Tam, Jew. L. Watch 56 (2002).Google Scholar

58 In fact, Halperin-Kaddari reports that from 1995 to 1999, only 163 restraining orders were issued against the recalcitrant husbands by the rabbinical courts. Of these, 76 came from the same rabbinical court in a single district, while the rest were produced by other rabbinical courts throughout the country, see Halperin-Kaddari, supra note 55, at 239. The recent figures released by the rabbinical courts administration are not any more encouraging, either. In 2006, of 942 unresolved get cases, only in 41 cases judges issued compulsion decrees against recalcitrant husbands, see Ratzlav-Katz, Nissan, Statistics Dispel Claims of ‘Thousands of Israeli Agunot (2007), Arutz Sheva, http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/122884.Google Scholar Sanctions against husbands were imposed in 44 cases in 2009 and in 73 cases in 2008. “Only six of the verdicts handed down in 2009 included arrest warrants for the husbands, as compared to 23 cases in 2008,” see Ettinger, Yair, Rabbinical Courts Softened Stance on Husbands Refusing Their Wives Divorce, Haaretz (2010), http://www.haaretz.com/hasen/spages/1145446.html.Google Scholar The leniency showed by the courts to recalcitrant husbands is mostly due to ultra-Orthodox judges' personal and ideological convictions about the superiority of men and unequal gender relations in Jewish law. As Ettinger notes, they view sanctions unfavorably and resort to them only in most extreme cases, “like those involving a violent, ill or sterile husband.”

59 Kraft, Dina, In Israel, Pressure Builds to Find Alternatives to Orthodox Marriage (2004), at http://www.interfaithfamily.com/site/apps/nl/conten2.asp?c=eKLSK5MLIrG&b=297411&ct=375135.Google Scholar

60 Shifman, Pinhas, Civil Marriage in Israel: The Case for Reform, in Jewish Family Law in the State of Israel 32 (Freeman, Michael D.A. ed., 2002)Google Scholar; Einhorn, Talia, Private International Law in Israel (2009).Google Scholar

61 Divorce of interfaith couples who married overseas is still subject to the Israeli law. The marriage has to be dissolved according to the legal mechanism laid out in the Law of Matters of Dissolution of Marriage (Jurisdiction in Special Cases), 1969. 573 S.H. 248.

62 Lifshitz, Shahar, The External Rights of Cohabiting Couples in Israel 37 Isr. L. Rev. (20032004)Google Scholar; Hofri-Winogradow, Adam S., The Muslim-Majority Character of Israeli Constitutional Law, 2 Middle East L. & Governance 61 (2010).Google Scholar

63 Personal interview with Rosenblum, Irit, Executive Director of the “New Family Organization” (Tel-Aviv, January 2005).Google Scholar

64 Personal interview with Boyden, Rabbi Michael, Director of the Rabbinic Court of the Israel Council of Progressive Rabbis (Tel-Aviv, January 2005).Google Scholar

65 For example, marriage contracts (ketubot, singular ketubah) of the Reform movement are significantly different from their Orthodox version. These contracts are written in Hebrew and have to be signed by both bride and groom, unlike the Orthodox ketubah, which is in Aramaic and signed only by the groom. The witnesses to the Reform ketubah could be either men or women, whereas the Orthodox only recognizes the testimony of men. Unlike the Orthodox contract, the Reform ktubah does not mention or specify a particular amount of cash gift (mohar) to be paid by the groom to the bride. Divorce proceedings and requirements are equally egalitarian, as both man and woman are required to release one another from the marital union while the Orthodox halacha bestows this right solely upon the husband.

66 Lynfield, Ben, Israel's Religious Split over the Time of Day, The Christian Science Monitor, Sept. 30, 2004, at 7.Google Scholar

67 Shindler, Julian, The Cure before the Malady? Pre-Nuptial Agreements and Jewish Divorce, LE'ELA, Sept. 1996, at 3538Google Scholar; Herring, Basil, Help for Agunot: Prenuptial Agreements, 30 Canadian Jewish News 14 (2000)Google Scholar; Na'amat, , Get Real with a Pre-Nup, Na'amat, Spring 2001, at 21Google Scholar; Weiss, Susan, Divorce: The Halakhic Perspective, Jewish Women's Archive (2009), http://jwa.org/encyclopedia/article/divorce-halakhic-perspective.Google Scholar Gross, Netty C., The Annulier, Jer. Rep., June 8. 1998, at 27Google Scholar; Hacohen, Aviad, Tears Of The Oppressed: An Examination Of The Agunah Problem, Background And Halakhic Sources (2004)Google Scholar; Novak, David, Annulment in Lieu of Divorce in Jewish Law, 4 Jew. L. Annual 188 (1981)Google Scholar; Aranoff, Susan, Freeing Agunot: The Rabbi Emanuel Rackman Beit Din, 4 Jofa J. 19 (2005).Google Scholar Westreich, Avishalom, Annulment of Marriage (Hafka'at Kiddushin): Re-Examination of an Old Debate (2008), http://www.mucjs.org/Annulment.pdfGoogle Scholar; Riskin, Shlomo, Hafka'at Kiddushin: Towards Solving the Aguna Problem in Our Time, 1 Tradition (2002).Google Scholar

68 Phone interview with Dr.Kehat, Hannah, former chairwoman of “Kolech” (New York, April 2010).Google Scholar

69 Abramov, supra note 15, at 275–80; Israel, Benjamin J., The Bene Israel Of India: Some Studies (1984).Google Scholar

70 Hofri-Winogradow, supra note 62, at 55–6; Sezgin, supra note 4, at 222.

71 Shifman, supra note 60, at 98–99; Fogiel-Bijaoui, Silvie, Why Won't There Be Civil Marriage Any Time Soon in Israel? Or: Personal Laiw—the Silenced Issue of the Israeli-Palestinian Conflict, 6 Nashim: A Journal Of Jewish Women's Studies & Gender Issues 28 (2003)Google Scholar; Shochetman, Eliav, Civil Marriage in the State of Israel, in Jewish Family Law in the State of Israel, supra note 61, at 143–46.Google Scholar

72 Personal interview with the former Member of Knesset Ronny Brison of Shinui Party who introduced a failed civil marriage bill in the Sixteenth Knesset (Jerusalem, Feb. 2005).

73 For instance, Rabbi Eliyahu Ben-Dahan, the former Director General of the Rabbinical Courts of Israel, expresses his objection to the introduction of civil marriage and divorce in Israel in following words:

When the State of Israel was established, the intention was to establish a new state that would unify [the Jewish people], and turn them into a single body, into one people. If we were to behave in Israel such that personal law was not defined by halacha, we would create two peoples.

See Woods, supra note 31, at 237.

Along the same lines, in a personal interview in January 2005, Rabbi Shear Yishuv Cohen, the former Chief Rabbi of Haifa also told me:

If there was no religious monopoly of rabbinical courts, it would have been forbidden for some Jews to marry other Jews… [And that's why] I do not think that there should be a civil marriage. [But at the same time,] I am not afraid of [it]; I think, even if we have civil marriage in Israel, 99% of the people will still be married by rabbinical authorities and divorced at the rabbinical courts.

74 Sharon Shenhav was reelected for a second term in December 2005.

75 Shenhav, Sharon, Busting the Old Boys'Club, The Jerusalem Post, Dec 1. 2004, at 15.Google Scholar

76 Personal and phone interviews with Sharon Shenhav (Jerusalem, January 2005 and New York, April 2010)

77 Family Court Law, 1995, S.H. 1537, as amended by Amendment No. 5 of Nov. 14, 2001, S.H. 1810.

78 The following civil society organizations were the members of the coalition: Women Against Violence, the Association for Citizen's Rights in Israel, Israel Women's Network, “Kayan” (a feminist organization), Al Tufula Pedagogical Center, the Center for Family Development, and the Arab Association for Human Rights.

79 Shahar, Ido, Practicing Islamic Law in a Legal Pluralistic Environment: the Changing Face of a Muslim Court in Present-Day Jerusalem (PhD Thesis, Ben-Gurion University of the Negev, 2006).Google Scholar

80 Id. at l36.

81 Maha el-Taji, T., Arab Local Authorities in Israel: Hamulas, Nationalism and Dilemmas of Social Change (PhD Thesis, University of Washington, 2008).Google Scholar

82 Personal interview with Alemy-Kabha, Nasreen, Then Coordinator of the Working Group for Equality in Personal Status Issues (Nazareth, Jan. 2005).Google Scholar