Attended my first flash mob
event last night. It was a quickly organized rally protesting Anat Hoffman's arrest at the Kotel [The
Western Wall--a retaining wall from the Second Temple built during
Herod's reign] last Tuesday evening for leading the Hadassah women in
reciting shma while wearing a tallit [prayer
shawl].
The incident raised a lot of anger
among Diaspora Jews. The USCJ [United Synagogue for
Conservative Judaism] organized a global flash mob for 13:00 EDT.
Her arrest raises a number of issues
for me the way Israel addresses religious pluralism, the role/place of
the Kotel in Israeli/Jewish affairs and separation of religion
and state (aka "Church-State" issues).
While the specific facts, details
of exactly what occurred are difficult to know, it
seems fair to say that:
- Anat Hoffman was wearing a tallit (against
the strict understanding of the law),
- the police have been, of last, actively arresting women
for wearing a tallit during the monthly Women of the Wall
[WOW] prayers (they meet every Rosh Hodesh),
- Anat Hoffman and WOW are interested in 'pushing
the envelope' as far as possible with women's prayer activity at the Kotel,
provoking haredi sensibilities to change the "status
quo",
- the Israeli police are not "the best and the
brightest" among security forces and thus can act in appropriate
ways,
- the police took their orders from the Rabbi of the
Kotel (with the acquiescence of the political and higher up police
officials) as opposed to engaging their own discretion,
- the police unnecessarily roughed up Anat Hoffman,
- the haredim [ultra-Orthodox Jews] have
"captured" the effective control of the Kotel through coalition politics,
their regular use of the area (as opposed to other groups who don't come
every day) and playing the mythological historical card that the
area was always a place of (only) strict Orthodox halakhic practice.
They expect to fully dictate the rules of usage for
all visitors.
Instead of the Kotel serving
as a reminder of the Temple and its role of creating peace (among the nations),
it's become a battle site to work out Israeli and Jewish issues surrounding the
Jewish life and practice. Instead of a place to express religious feelings it's
a place to exercise political power. Whatever awe the remnant of the (Second)
Holy Temple evokes among its visitors, it has become
an awful experience to pray there. It's a place I generally avoid
visiting.
The place belongs to the entire Jewish
People. As such, provisions need to be made to ensure that every Jew,
regardless of their religious orientation, has a place to show
their reverence for the site. Under Israeli control/administration, the plaza
behind the Wall itself was expanded to accommodate almost any size
group. The State [of Israel] holds its annual Remembrance Day
ceremony there, the army has its induction ceremony for the Paratroopers there,
and until recently many other groups held ceremonies there too.
Within the last few
years, some of the plaza has been taken over by the expansion of
the mehitza [divider between praying men and women].
From a place that historically had no physical divider between men
and women (see pictures of the Kotel from the late 1880s and
pre-1948) to a place where men and women are actively discouraged
mingling by obsequious "ushers" and "rules of conduct"
issued by the Rabbi of the Kotel. Religious demands have encroached upon
public space.
With the haredi political parties
effectively holding the balance of power in successive Israeli governments,
government officials including top bureaucrats (and the Courts)
have acquiesced to their (unreasonable) demands and a mostly secular
public has remained generally apathetic to demanding changes to make the system
less biased. The long term haredi hegemony has displaced a
Zionist rabbinate/bureaucracy with a haredi one that respects
less non-haredi views and behaviors.
What does this mean?
First of all, there's a growing
disconnect between the "believers" and the "non-believers"
and little effort or mass of people seeking to close the gap. This encourages
greater alienation and disrespect of The Other. Instead of
discussions where people speak WITH each other, there are arguments where
people scream AT each other.
The mixing of religion and politics
means that sanctity acquires a secular identity and secular
issues take on religious connotations. Mudslinging becomes an activity with
"holy mud" and realities and meanings lose any sense of
clarity.
Coming to the Kotel and
discussing its use becomes an exercise of talking to a wall. Instead of a
unifying experience with other Jews and Jewish history it has become an
exercise in separation and alienation. An expression of triumphalism
among individuals. A zero-sum gain for all (or no one).
When I talk to the Wall, I want G-d
to listen and if I speak loud enough to have others respond to my plea instead
of hearing my own echo.
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