The first appeared in Yediot Aharonot (24/10/01).
Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, one of the foremost halakhic
authorities in the world and spiritual leader of
the Shas party, related in his weekly sermon to
Reform women who pray while wearing a tallit. He
talked about Michal, daughter of King Saul who put
on tefillin every day (Eruvin 96a) even though women
are exempt from wearing tefillin. He explained that
the Sages did not excommunicate her because they
knew that she did so for the sake of Heaven.
Not like these wicked women, the Reform, who
do everything in order to bash Judaism
they
should be wrapped in a tallit and buried.
This provocative statement is surprising for four
reasons:
Avtalyon said: Oh Sages, be careful about
what you say lest your students misunderstand
your words (Avot 1:11).
Secondly, we can assume that Rabbi Yosef has never
met or talked to women who wear tallitot. To call
them wicked and to impugn their motives is to transgress
the prohibition of being hoshed biksheirim (suspecting
worthy people of sinning Yoma 19b).
Thirdly, whether he intended to or not, Rabbi Yosef
was inciting Jews to commit violence against or
even murder other Jews during the very week when
we commemorate the sixth anniversary of the Rabin
assassination which taught us what can happen when
Jewish leaders incite violence. Murder is obviously
forbidden by Jewish law, but Resh Lakish says that
even a person who raises his hand against
his friend, even if he does not strike him, is called
wicked (Sanhedrin 58b).
Finally, it is absolutely permissible for Jewish
women to wear a tallit. Many of the early Sages
thought that women are required to wear tzitzit
(Menahot 43a). Rabbi Shimon (ibid.) and others ruled
that women are exempt from tzitzit and the medieval
authorities followed his opinion. Nevertheless,
many medieval authorities ruled that women may wrap
themselves in a tallit and recite the blessing,
while others ruled that women may wear a tallit
without a blessing. Indeed we know of many women
who wore tzitzit in the past including the wives
of Rav Yehudah (Menahot 43a) and Rav Amram Hassida
(Sukkah 11a), Bruna in 15th century Mainz and a
whole slew of wives and daughters of Chassidic Rebbes.
Most opposition to women wearing a tallit stems
from the R. Jacob Moellin (d.1427) who says that
it appears like haughtiness, but there
is no Talmudic basis for this statement. Thus it
is perfectly permissible for women to wear a tallit
and this custom is growing more and more common
among Orthodox, Conservative and Reform women.
The second story appeared in Maariv (26/10/01).
Rabbis Elyashiv, Fisher and Wozner, three leading
Haredi authorities, ruled that a family of 25 Cohanim
(priests) may not fly over the cemetery in Holon
because the plane itself and the airspace between
the cemetery and the plane do not separate the Cohanim
from the impurity emanating from the cemetery. They
ruled that the Cohanim in question should wrap their
entire bodies in hermetically sealed plastic bags.
The Cohanim in question obtained black body bags
from an organization which deals with the bodies
of those killed by terrorists. El Al agreed to the
passengers wearing the body bags and the stewardesses
will explain to them how to wrap themselves in the
bags.
Once again, this brand new stringency is totally
unnecessary since many rabbis have ruled that it
is permissible for Cohanim to fly and, in any case,
since the advent of airplanes a century ago no rabbi
has come up with such a strange suggestion.
Unfortunately, the two rulings mentioned above
exhibit some of the typical characteristics of Haredi
rabbinic rulings in Israel: a disdain or even hatred
of Conservative or Reform or secular Jews; a constant
move towards greater and greater stringency which
our ancestors could never have imagined; and a tendency
to make statements and rulings which are a hillul
Hashem (a desecration of Gods name) which
cause non-observant Jews to scoff at Judaism and
Jewish law.
These types of rulings stem from the fact that
these rabbis are ruling for their own constituencies
without regard for the entire Jewish people. They
also stem from the fact that they have spent many
years studying rabbinic texts, but never studied
secular studies (most did not graduate from high
school), nor served in the army nor do they have
daily contact with non-observant Jews.
The solution is to train rabbis who study Talmud
and Jewish law, as well as a wide range of Jewish
and secular studies and who view their primary role
as drawing all Jews closer to Judaism. That is the
goal of rabbinic education at the Schechter Institute
of Jewish Studies of the Masorti/Conservative Movement.
Unfortunately, there is no modern Orthodox rabbinical
seminary in Israel which requires its students to
earn academic degrees and to work out in the field
with the Israeli public at large.
In 1933, a serious attempt was made to transfer
the modern Orthodox Rabbinical Seminary from Berlin
to Jerusalem, but the plan was thwarted by Rabbi
Chaim Ozer Grodzensky, the leading Haredi rabbi
in Vilna. The result was that Israel has many rabbis
who think that we should bury Reform women
who wear a tallit or fly in body bags. Israel
desperately needs a modern Orthodox rabbinical seminary
which combines Jewish and secular studies with a
commitment to Zionism and serving the entire Jewish
people.