One in three women in the process of getting a divorce in
Israel is subject to threats for a "get" (Jewish divorce) refusal and
financial or other extortion on the part of her husband, according to a survey
conducted by the Geocartography research institute for the Rackman Center for
the Advancement of the Status of Women at Bar-Ilan University.
The figures are even more alarming in the religious and
ultra-Orthodox sector, where every other woman is threatened with a
"get" refusal or blackmail. One in four women in the process of a
divorce is concerned that she will be forced to make compromises and
concessions in exchange for the "get."
The survey was conducted among a sample group of 320 Jewish
women aged 30 something, who underwent divorce procedures (including women who
are divorced today, women who got divorced in the past, separated women who
underwent divorce procedures and women who are in the process of getting a divorce
now).The sampling error is up to 5.5% at a 95% accuracy rate.
The sampling group represents all women who underwent
divorce procedures in Israel, and a calculation of the data revealed that
77,000 women were exposed to threats of a "get" refusal or extortion
during their divorce, out of the 220,800 women who underwent and are undergoing
divorce procedures in Israel.
According to the survey, the phenomena of blackmail and
threats against women seeking a divorce have long become a norm in Israel.
About 70% of divorced women believe the agreement they signed will harm them,
saying they only signed it after being subject to extortion and threats by
their husbands during the separation.
Woman suffers more in complicated divorce
The figures were presented at the Agunah Summit held last
month in New York University in the presence of representatives of Jewish
communities worldwide, as well as Justice Minister Tzipi Livni and former
Supreme Court President Dorit Beinish.
Prof. Ruth Halperin-Kaddari, head of the Rackman Center,
says the survey points to "a blatant and serious violation of basic human
rights
in Israel," noting that the frequency of the phenomenon has
increased in a troublesome rate in the past decade.
The survey's findings reveal a disturbing picture: Many men
in Israel take advantage of the need for a religious divorce at the Rabbinate
in order to improve their position in the divorce agreement.
Recent years have seen men demand concessions – sometimes
far-reaching – from their wives in exchange for the divorce, while receiving
the backing of the rabbinical court. In 40% of cases in which the divorce
process was long and complicated, the final agreement was found to be
significantly biased in favor of the men.
The survey also found a strong link between the couple's
level of education and religiousness and the use of extortion measures for a
divorce. The more religious and less educated the couple – the higher the
woman's chances to be subject to threats of "get" refusal and
blackmail.
Husband sets absurd conditions
Prof. Halperin-Kaddari says the main reason for the use of
blackmail as a way to improve a man's position in the divorce agreement stems
from the rabbinical courts' current halachic policy.
"Their tool is the 'divorce given under duress,' which
I see as a complete distortion of Halacha," she says. "The idea
behind this concept is that if the husband raises certain conditions which the
court sees as 'reasonable,' the woman must meet them, otherwise it they will
see it as a problematic 'get' from a halachic point of view – a divorce granted
without real intention."
How absurd can the conditions set by the husband be?
Halperin-Kaddari presents a ruling issued by the rabbinical court in the past,
in which the agreement included a demand that the woman would not eat a certain
kind of food or wear a certain piece of clothing.
"It's really the height of absurdity, and the court
reneged on its decision in this case, yet it's important to see the extents this
could reach, with food or personal nutrition becoming part of a ruling for all
intents and purposes."
Halperin-Kaddari says the most common phenomenon is reducing
alimony. "It goes as far as a case in which the husband demanded that
alimony for two children be reduced from NIS 1,100 (about $300) to only NIS 700
($190), in exchange for a divorce."
'Prenups don't provide full protection'
According to Halperin-Kaddari, some of the conditions a
husband can impose on his wife, with the full backing of the court, include
giving up on private or shared property and moving all issued under discussion,
including custody and visitation rights, from the family court to the
rabbinical court.
"This is allegedly about religious autonomy, and so the
civil court cannot interfere," Halperin-Kaddari says. "The High Court
cannot really solve the situation either, and the result is that women in
Israel are subject to an intolerable situation of extortion, and a basic human
right of freedom and liberty is grossly violated."
She further notes that standard prenuptial agreements which
have become common in recent years do not provide sufficient protection against
the phenomenon.
"I still recommend signing them, but one must know that
it does not offer full protection. A husband can open the signed agreement
today, and even demand that it be canceled as a condition for a divorce – and
the rabbinical court will allow it."
So how many women are there in Israel who have been refused
a divorce? Even in light of the survey's findings, that question is at the
heart of the dispute between women's organizations and the rabbinical courts.
The reason for the huge differences in numbers stems from the definition of
"get refusal."
While the survey defines every women experiencing threats or
extortion in exchange for a divorce as a woman refused a 'get' or at least in
danger of being refused a 'get,' according to the rabbinical courts divorce
recalcitrant are seen as husbands who were ordered by the court to grant their
wives a divorce and refused – and there are very few of those.
Earlier this year, the rabbinical courts issued a report
with their own figures, which revealed that in 2012 alone husbands were defined
as "divorce recalcitrant" in only 80 cases out of thousands of divorce
cases handled by the rabbinical courts every year.
Courts: Survey based on subjective feelings
The Rabbinical Courts Management said in response to the
survey's findings that "the courts use modern methods to force a husband
or a wife to grant a divorce or accept a divorce in cases of illegal refusal.
In these cases, a 'get' is given within a month in the vast majority of cases.
"Clear and unequivocal factual data – rather than
public opinion polls – were submitted to the Knesset's Constitution Committee
which convened about two months ago to monitor the implementation of the law
upholding divorce rulings."
The Rabbinical Courts Management expressed doubts over the
scientific accuracy of the survey, saying that it was based on "the
subjective feelings of the sample group's participants in regards to the
rightness of the divorce's legal proceedings.
"Those who commissioned the survey ignored the basic
need to inquire on the feelings of men taking part in the process, as well as
the feelings of those whose case is discussed by the family court."
The rabbinical courts defined the survey as "completely
groundless" and as a "biased poll whose conclusions were
pre-commissioned," calling it a "cynical attempt to create a
propaganda machine against the rabbinical courts. It undermines basic legal
principles by vilifying the judges' work and judgment."
The Rabbinical Courts Management went on to blast the
Rackman Center, wondering whether any ulterior motives were involved in the
survey as it was published in English, "including an attempt to raise
funds abroad to promote the agenda of those who commissioned the survey."
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