What must Orthodox rabbinate do for recognition?
By SHALOM HAMMER
06/20/2012 06:26
Rabbis have no right approaching religiosity as one would approach a business.
Rabbis (illustrative) Photo: REUTERS
Those who pursue the rabbinate as a career confront a certain amount of cynicism
from the broader Jewish community, who, to this day continue to insist that
being a rabbi is not a job for a nice Jewish boy. Twenty-six years ago when I
informed my grandmother that I was going to study to become a rabbi she
responded by insisting that I really did not know what I was doing with my
life.
I often contemplated the roots of this negativity and came to the
conclusion that it was an issue of practicality; it is difficult to achieve
financial security working on the salary of a rabbi. A few days ago I came
across an article in Forbes Israel titled “Meet Israel’s richest rabbis,” which
revealed that this assertion was not necessarily true. The article began with
the premise that “giving out blessings proves to be a lucrative business” as the
“rabbi industry” bankrolls over NIS 1 billion a year, followed by a list of the
10 richest rabbis in Israel whose fortunes span anywhere from NIS 30 million to
over NIS 1 billion. What’s more, the article claims that the rabbis’ activities
are difficult to monitor and therefore not always reported to the tax authority,
which can give rise to much higher estimates than what was actually
reported.
Don’t get me wrong, I believe that rabbis have every right to
make a good living, in fact I am all for it and would love to experience it one
day.
However, one who recognizes the value and integrity which the
rabbinate should represent must also recognize that the terms “rabbi” and
“industry” should never mix. When giving blessings is coined a lucrative
business, then there is something fundamentally wrong and religiously inept with
an institution which is supposed to embody modesty, integrity and spiritual
substance; particularly an Orthodox rabbinate which claims to be authentic and
therefore privy to exclusive halachic authority in Israel.
PERHAPS IT was
not a coincidence that the expose of the rabbis’ salaries was revealed around
the same week that Attorney-General Yehuda Weinstein accepted the legitimacy of
rabbis from non- Orthodox communities following a long struggle by Reform and
Conservative rabbis to be recognized officially and authoritatively by the State
of Israel. The ramifications of this so-called recognition remains to be seen
but as an Orthodox rabbi – while I reject the Conservative and Reform platforms
and although I believe that the Orthodox voice can, and should, remain the sole
authority in Israel with regards to Jewish law – I recognize that there is a
price you pay for waving the banner of halachic legitimacy; one which demands
moral and ethical standards of pristine behavior and one which the Orthodox
rabbinate has yet to achieve.
The official Orthodox rabbinate in Israel
exhibits a lack of diplomacy and sensitivity particularly towards many secular
Jews who may not understand nor at this point wish to understand religious law,
but are nonetheless subject to it. For example, a secular Israeli who wants to
marry must register at the rabbinate of their local municipality and pay a
considerable fee to a rabbi who they are usually unfamiliar with and who they
may meet for the first time at the wedding. This same rabbi will often coarsely
ask for payment immediately following the ceremony as he hurriedly leaves the
hall. Many times this is the first and last contact the secular Jew will have
with an Orthodox rabbi and it can leave the impression that “giving blessings
can prove to be a lucrative business.”
RABBIS MUST adopt diplomacy and
sensibility as much as they consider halachic discourse; they have no right
approaching religiosity as one would approach a business. I firmly believe that
had the official Orthodox rabbinate of Israel been more sensitive in their
dealings with Conservative and Reform Jews and their rabbis, by interacting with
them, discussing issues with them and inviting them to partake in various forums
and even certain official ceremonies, this entire call for recognition may never
have surfaced. Instead the official Orthodox rabbinate continues to suffer from
its irrelevance as it is not recognized by the haredi sector, remains
ineffective in the nationalreligious circles and is perceived as intrusive by
secular Israelis.
The author, a rabbi, teaches at Yeshiva Hesder Kiryat
Gat and serves as a lecturer under the Harel Division for the IDF. He is also an
author and lecturer on Israel, Religious Zionism and Jewish
education.
www.rabbihammer.com