Women of the Wall

Court bans Torah bag searches at Western Wall

It represents a significant legal victory by groups seeking to liberalise Jewish worship at the site, several promoters of that cause have said. But the authority that runs the site said the ruling vindicates its policies.

Members of the Women of the Wall, Conservative and Reform Movements hold Rosh Chodesh prayers at the Western Wall. Photo: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90
Members of the Women of the Wall, Conservative and Reform Movements hold Rosh Chodesh prayers at the Western Wall. Photo: Yonatan Sindel/Flash90

(TIMES OF ISRAEL) – Guards at the Western Wall may not search for Torah scrolls or books in the belongings of visitors entering the holy site, but orderlies may continue to enforce rules against unauthorised use of scripture, a Jerusalem court has ruled.

The Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court’s ruled last Wednesday on a lawsuit filed in 2021 by Anat Hoffman – the executive director of the Israel Religious Action Centre, or IRAC, the legal arm of the Reform movement in Israel – and Tamar Gottlieb, vice-chair of the Women of the Wall egalitarian prayer group.

It represents a significant legal victory by groups seeking to liberalise Jewish worship at the site, several promoters of that cause have said. But the authority that runs the site said the ruling vindicates its policies.

IRAC filed the lawsuit on behalf of two women whose bags were searched, allegedly discriminatively, as part of the steps that the authority managing the site has taken to restrict certain types of worship that don’t conform with Orthodox practices, including reading aloud from the Torah by women.

Orly Erez Likhovski, IRAC’s executive director, called the ruling “a clear step toward freedom of religion in Judaism’s holiest site”. It also stops “searches that have taken place illegally for many years now”, she told The Times of Israel.

The lawsuit was filed against the regulations and practices of security guards employed by the Western Wall Heritage Foundation, which is responsible for running the site. The foundation has instructed guards to search for Torah scrolls as a response to the attempts of activists, especially from the Women of the Wall group, to use them in egalitarian Torah readings at the site, especially on Rosh Chodesh, the first day of the Hebrew month. Activists carrying scripture have been denied access to the site in the past.

The judge ordered the foundation to conduct searches “without discrimination on the basis of gender, religion, affiliation and religious view” and to adhere to the law, which permits searches to be conducted to address security and safety concerns. However, according to the ruling, the Western Wall rabbi, who works for the Chief Rabbinate, and the Western Wall Heritage Foundation are authorised to enforce the code of conduct of the site, which precludes vocal prayer by women.

Yizhar Hess, a vice-chairman of the World Zionist Organisation representing the Masorti Movement’s Mercaz faction, said in a statement, “[The court’s ruling] restores sanity to the security checkpoints at the Kotel … Instead of focusing on searching for weapons and explosives, the Kotel rabbi’s security guards have long searched for Torah scrolls, heaven forbid a woman read from the Torah and ‘endanger public security’. This absurdity has now come to an end.”

In a statement, a spokesperson for the Western Wall Heritage Foundation insisted it has adhered to the law and said it will continue to do so.

 

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