Rabbinical Court (Israel)

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

The Rabbinical courts are part of the Israeli legal system, which operates religious courts in parallel to the civil court system. The system, inherited from the previous British mandate system, grants religious courts jurisdiction over personal status matters such as marriage and divorce.[1] Such courts exist for the recognized religious communities in Israel, including Muslim courts, Christian courts, and Jewish Rabbinical courts. These courts adjudicate personal status according to their respective religions, Jewish law in the case of Rabbinical courts.

The lobby of the former Great Court in the Heichal Shlomo in Jerusalem

Structure[edit]

The body responsible for the rabbinical courts is the administration of the rabbinical courts. At the head of the rabbinical court system is the Great Rabbinical Court of Appeals in Jerusalem, headed by one of the two chief rabbis of Israel. Since 2013, the Great Rabbinical Court of Appeals is headed by Rabbi David Lau, who also serves as President of the Great Rabbinical Court.

There are twelve local Rabbinical courts in Israel, in Jerusalem, Ariel, Ashdod, Haifa, Tel Aviv, Rehovot, Safed, Petah Tiqwa, Netanya, Tiberias, Ashqelon and Be'er Sheva.

Jurisdiction[edit]

Civil marriage is not available under the laws of the State of Israel, and the Rabbinical courts are granted exclusive jurisdiction over the marriage of Jewish citizens. The non-religious aspects of divorce proceedings, such as child custody, child support, visitation rights and division of property can also proceed in civil courts. This leads to the phenomenon of a "jurisdiction race" - where a party that believes their case will be viewed more favorably by one of the courts rushes to file in that jurisdiction, preventing the other one from acting.

The courts also have jurisdiction over matters of conversion to Judaism.

In February 2023 a bill was proposed in the Knesset to provide rabbinical courts with the same arbitration authority as civil arbitration, such that rabbinical courts could act as arbitrators in civil matters based on religious law if both parties so choose. According to the Bill, parties may elect to have their claims heard by the rabbinical courts instead of through the civil judiciary, including in instances where one of the parties is not of the Jewish religion.[2]

Criticism[edit]

Critics say that the Rabbinical courts are biased against women and lack any women judges, so their authority should not be expanded.[3] Critics state that there are cases in which a husband may require the wife to consent in advance to using rabbinical courts in the event of a future divorce, preventing the wife's ability to use the civil system.[4]

See also[edit]

References[edit]

  1. ^ Bentwich, Norman. "The Legal System of Palestine under the Mandate". Middle East Journal. 2 (1): 33–46.
  2. ^ "Knesset advances bill to expand power of state-run rabbinic court system". www.timesofisrael.com. Retrieved 2023-02-27.
  3. ^ חמדת (2023-02-19). "מכתב ארגונים - לא לאשר את הרחבת סמכויות בתי הדין - מרכז רקמן מרכז רקמן". מרכז רקמן (in Hebrew). Retrieved 2023-03-09.
  4. ^ "לא מבזבזים זמן: ועדת השרים צפויה לאשר היום הרחבת סמכויות לבתי דין רבניים". המקום הכי חם (in Hebrew). 2023-02-19. Retrieved 2023-03-09.

External links[edit]