Ultra-Orthodox Jews Protest Women of the Wall at Western Wall

AtlantisEmpire
Published on Nov 6, 2021
Ultra-Orthodox Jews today clashed with police at the Western Wall in Jerusalem as thousands protested against a Jewish women's group that holds monthly prayers there.

The 'Women of the Wall' group has campaigned for equality of worship at the wall — one of Judaism's holiest sites — for decades.

Israel's religious institutions are dominated by the ultra-Orthodox, who are opposed to any changes at the site, where men and women pray in separate areas.

The dispute has sharpened since the swearing-in of a new government in June pushed Israel's ultra-Orthodox parties into the opposition.

A newly elected lawmaker who is also a Reform rabbi has used his parliamentary immunity to bring Torah scrolls into the women's section in defiance of rules enforced by the ultra-Orthodox administrators of the site.

Police set up metal barricades and deployed in large numbers to hold back the mostly male protesters, who blew whistles and occasionally surged forward only to be pushed back.

The women carried empty mantles used to cloak Torah scrolls to protest the prohibition on bringing the scrolls themselves into the women's section.

Anat Hoffman, the founder of the group, said they are 'fighting for equality and religious pluralism and justice.'

'We cannot read from the Torah in the women's section in 2021,' she said. 'Why not? Why the hell not?'

The protests were called for by ultra-Orthodox leaders, including Aryeh Deri, head of the Shas party.

In a tweet on Friday that was shared by former Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, Deri called on his supporters to come out 'so that heaven forbid this holy place is not desecrated.'

Gilad Kariv, a Reform rabbi and newly elected parliament member from the center-left Labor party, had planned to bring a Torah scroll into the site for the women to use but called off his visit at the request of Israeli President Isaac Herzog, who sought to prevent conflict at the site.

Netanyahu had shelved plans for an egalitarian prayer space at the wall in 2017 under pressure from the ultra-Orthodox parties who are politically allied with him.

The move infuriated adherents of more liberal strains of Judaism to which most Jews in North America adhere.

The dispute has been a major point of friction between the two largest Jewish communities in the world, in Israel and the United States.

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