Jerusalem – Orthodox Rabbi Announces Candidacy For Chief Rabbinate

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    Rabbi David Stav, a graduate of Yeshivat Mercaz HaRav, is the rabbi of the town of Shoham. Rav Stav is a co-founder and the chairman of the Tzohar Rabbinical Organization. In 1998, Rabbi Stav co-founded the Hesder Yeshiva in Petach Tikva with Rabbis Cherlow and Piron. Rabbi Stav teaches in Metivta, a women's seminary in Bar Ilan University. He is the spokesman for Rashei Yeshivot Hesder across Israel .Jerusalem – Rabbi David Stav, chairman of the national-religious rabbinical association Tzohar, announced Wednesday night, via a YouTube video, that he would be standing as a candidate for the position of chief rabbi of Israel.

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    Stav’s long-awaited announcement has been expected since last August, when Tzohar began a campaign to prompt the chief rabbinate to adopt a more modern approach to the Jewish life in the country. The election of the new Ashkenazi and Sephardi Chief Rabbis will take place in June.

    The appointments are made by secret ballot of a 150-member selection panel in which is comprised of representatives from the government, the Knesset and regional religious councils. The majority of the current members are considered haredi, but this could change after the elections. Tzohar has frequently taken issue with the rabbinate’s approach to the general public and founded its flagship free-of-charge marriage program to provide an alternative to what it describes as “Israel’s strict rabbinic bureaucracy.”

    The chief rabbi positions have been filled by haredi rabbis for many years. The last chief rabbis to be considered national-religious were Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu and Rabbis Avraham Shapira, who left office in 1993.

    During the four-and-a-half minute video, Stav said that during the 17 years of Tzohar’s activities, the organisation had come to realise that, “a great danger is forming in front of our eyes to the very existence of the Jewish people here in the state.”

    Stav was referring to the growing numbers of young couples who go abroad to get married in civil ceremonies instead of in religious marriages in Israel. According to CBS data, approximately one third of secular Jewish citizens who get married, wed in civil marriages abroad. The phenomenon presents a problem to the future of Orthodox Jewish marriage since proof is required before marrying that a person is Jewish, which is usually provided by presenting the halachically mandated wedding certificate of each spouses’ parents. “So we are creating, by our own hands, two people here within the next decade or two: one a Jewish nation, religious or traditional, the second a non-Jewish Israeli nation,” Stav claimed. “There is no greater or significant destruction than this phenomenon.”

    Tzohar largely blames the rabbinate for the decline in Jewish marriage in Israel due to what it describes as its unwelcoming and bureaucratic modus operandi. Stav said that every year more and more Israelis “recoil from the belittling attitude,” of the rabbinate, and the “fear of the rabbinate’s divorce process,” The rabbi said that for this reason, as well as increasing divisions between religious and secular communities in Israel, and and the disconnection of many people from Judaism and tradition led Tzohar to demand “a deep and substantial change to the chief rabbinate to return it to the path of embracing people.”

    Content provided as courtesy of The Jerusalem Post


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    15 Comments
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    itzik18
    itzik18
    11 years ago

    What would be wrong with a non-Jewish Israeli nation?

    my4amos
    my4amos
    11 years ago

    Why would anyone what for a non-Torah Jew to occupy, admittedly meaningless, office of the Chief Rabbi?

    11 years ago

    I like this guy already, without really knowing much about his hashkafah. Any rav who would use the internet to announce his candidacy for chief rav of EY is a real gadol in a contemporary sense by rejecting the backward arguments from some ill-informed rabbonim who have tried to “assur the internet” and failed miserably in their efforts.

    ProudMO
    ProudMO
    11 years ago

    Rav Dovid Stav is a tremendous talmid chacham as well as someone passionate about bridging the gaps we have with other Jews and showing off the beauty of Orthodoxy, all Orthodoxy. He has dedicated his life to the Jewish people and is from a rabbinic family, including his brother who is a Rebbe in one of the top hesder yeshivos and was a talmid muhak of Reb Shlomo Zalman. He would be a true light to the position of the chief rabbi which has been tainted by corruption and suspicion for so long.

    cbdds
    cbdds
    11 years ago

    I am an American that got married to an Israeli in EY. The hoops I was pushed through before the rabanut would permit my wedding was amazing. I come from a frum family, most grandparents died in WW2. The hunt for proof of jewish yichus was interesting.
    The absurd part was the interview which went on for hours. I was, at that time, barely fluent in modern hebrew but totally unable to communicate with the Persian Rav that was assigned to me. To this day I have no idea what he asked me. When it was over my Kallah was waiting and asked me what he asked me for so long. My answer, “I have no idea” was classic, everybody there laughed.