Israel – Bennett Pledges To Repair Israel-Diaspora Relations In Letter To Reform Rabbis

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    Diaspora Affairs Minister Naftali Bennett. (Photo Credit: EPA/ABIR SULTAN)Israel – Diaspora Affairs Minister Naftali Bennett sent a letter on Thursday to rabbis of the Reform and Conservative movements in North America pledging to improve ties between Israel and the Diaspora.

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    The letter came against the background of ongoing tensions surrounding non- Orthodox prayer at the Western Wall.

    Bennett wrote that a newly constructed prayer platform at the southern end of the Western Wall for non-Orthodox services could serve as a stepping-stone to reinvigorate Israeli-Diaspora ties.

    “I view this as an opportunity to open a new page in the Israeli-Diaspora relationship and I call on you to join me as we work to settle our differences, put them behind us and move forward as a single and unified people,” the minister wrote in a missive that will be delivered to Reform and Conservative rabbis in North America via their Israeli counterparts.

    “My ultimate objective is to improve Israel’s ties with all Jewish communities in the Diaspora,” he continued. “Please view this letter as an invitation to turn to me when you encounter problems and difficulties in the future.”

    Observing criticism of the prayer space, which is located in the Robinson’s Arch area south of the main plaza, Bennett acknowledged that “it is not perfect” but said he wished to provide an immediate, albeit temporary, solution for the non- Orthodox prayer at the Western Wall during the High Holy Days.

    He expressed support for the “Sharansky Plan,” a set of proposals drafted by the Jewish Agency chairman, Natan Sharansky, that was hailed by the Reform and Conservative movements as a breakthrough in their demands for equal prayer rights at the Western Wall.

    The Women of the Wall prayer rights group denounced the newly constructed prayer platform earlier this week as being inconsistent with the proposals made by Sharansky and accused Bennett of seeking to distance the group from the main plaza.

    And Bennett said when announcing the prayer space that his intention was to have the current plaza as it is currently known officially recognized as a place solely for Orthodox prayer.

    This would run counter to an April ruling by the Jerusalem District Court which reinterpreted existing laws to allow the members of Women of the Wall for the first time in its 25-year history to legally wear prayer shawls, tefillin and practice any other Jewish custom freely at the main Western Wall prayer area.

    Separately, a government committee headed by cabinet secretary Avichai Mandelblit is expected to deliver its recommendations for the site in the coming weeks, although it is believed that they will not be as far-reaching as Sharansky’s plan.

    “What happened to the Jewish Temple 2,000 years ago serves as a warning for us today.

    While we might have differences, we need to work together to solve them while remembering that we are one nation,” Bennett observed later in his letter. “Let us put our hands together and unite as a single nation ahead of the New Year so we can fulfill our historic role as a light unto the nations.”

    Institutions of the Conservative Movement issued the following joint statement: “The United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism, the Rabbinical Assembly and the Masorti movement in Israel received the letter from Minister Naftali Bennett with great encouragement and appreciation.

    We share Minister Bennett’s feelings and hope that this new year will be a year in which we turn the page on the relationship between the Diaspora and Israel, as well as between Jews with different views in Israel, on matters of such crucial importance to all of us, particularly the freedom of all to express their Judaism according to their own conscience.

    “We look forward to the completion of the Mandelblit Report as well as to continued discussions regarding the full Sharansky Plan at the Kotel.”

    In response, the Conservative movement expressed it’s appreciation for Bennett’s letter, saying it was very encouraging.

    “We share Minister Bennett’s feelings and hope that this new year will be a year in which we turn the page on the relationship between the Diaspora and Israel, as well as between Jews with different views in Israel, on matters of such crucial importance to all of us, particularly the freedom of all to express their Judaism according to their own conscience,” the Rabbinical Assembly, the United Synagogue of Conservative Judaism and the Masorti movement in Israel wrote in a joint response to Bennett.

    “We look forward to the completion of the Mandelblit Report as well as to continued discussions regarding the full Sharansky Plan at the Kotel.”

    Content is provided courtesy of the Jerusalem Post


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    9 Comments
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    GottaHaveEmunah
    GottaHaveEmunah
    10 years ago

    Mechutzif !! And how about repairing the damage you did with the Orthodox Jewish community??? Shame on you!!!

    sheepheadsbayyid
    sheepheadsbayyid
    10 years ago

    great make sense since since they are the majority of jews

    10 years ago

    REFORMers just don’t get it!!

    Sometime in the mid 1800’s some whackadoodles, Jews who were tired and/or ashamed of Judaism (today we call them self-hating Jews) decided to Reformulate the Jewish religion so that it would be more to their liking. First they did away with Jewish tradition. Then they threw out Halacha along with the Torah. Then some decided that you don’t have to believe in G-D. Then they made up their own religion of social “justice” based on their misinterpretation of “Tikun Olam” and they called their newly formulated religion “Reform Judaism”. Every year the self proclaimed leaders of this phony group get together at a ‘convention’ to decide what new laws will be enacted and what old laws will be tweaked so that it conforms to their way of doing business…….Oh, I mean religion.

    Unfortunately, the Reform leaders – men, women and transvestites alike, who call themselves Rabbi’s, lie to their followers & congregants. They tell them that “G-d didn’t write the Torah, men & women wrote the Bible” & “Those stories from the Torah are fables” & “You don’t have to eat only kosher or observe Shabbos – Those are old laws.”

    Reform is not Judaism.

    Reb Yid
    Reb Yid
    10 years ago

    If he cant even repair relations among Israelis, how’s he going to repair relations between Israelis and Americans? Even his current strategy of telling everyone what they want to hear doesn’t seem to be working.

    10 years ago

    This Bennett guy is pandering to the masses. He is a dangerous and misguided politician. Eretz Yisroel is a complex subject. It is not yet a Jewish State but a State of Jews in a state of confusion.

    There doesn’t seem to be ‘black & white’ answers to the many questions here.

    Tayku……………We should see Moshiach in our time.

    sheepheadsbayyid
    sheepheadsbayyid
    10 years ago

    Every year the self proclaimed leaders of this phony group get together at a ‘convention’ to decide what new laws will be enacted and what old laws will be tweaked so that it conforms to their way of doing business…….Oh, I mean religion.

    oh you mean like the ultra orthodox who meet to come up with the churmrah of the day