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Sunday, May 19, 2013

Proposal: Rabbis Cannot Take Payment for Weddings


The Ministerial Committee for Legislation will discuss a proposal Sunday that would bar rabbis employed by the state from taking money for performing marriage ceremonies in the areas in which they serve as rabbis.

The proposal, put forth by MKs Shuli Moalem Refaeli and Motti Yogev of the Bayit Yehudi (Jewish Home) faction, would forbid rabbis from charging money for conducting weddings for residents of the region by which they are employed.

Currently, rabbis who are employed by a local Religious Council (Moatza Datit) are not allowed to charge for conducting wedding ceremonies between residents of the specific community that they serve, but may charge for marrying two residents of the greater area served by the council by which they are employed.

Moalem-Refaeli and Yogev explained that under the existing law, “The rabbi of a particular neighborhood would be unable to charge money for conducting a wedding for a couple living in that neighborhood, but that rule would not apply if he conducted a wedding for a couple from a different neighborhood that is served by the Religious Council which pays his salary.”

“He is getting a salary for, among other things, providing this exact service,” they argued.

The Jewish Home party has stressed the need for reform in the Rabbinate in its elections campaign and subsequent Knesset activity.

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