New era in Chief Rabbinate: Rabbi Yitzhak Yosef and Rabbi
David Lau have were elected Wednesday evening as Israel's next Sephardic and
Ashkenazi chief rabbis, respectively. Rabbis David Stav and Shmuel Eliyahu made
it to the second place.
The announcement was made by the chairman of the board
electing the chief rabbis and Deputy Ministry for Religious Affairs Eli
Ben-Dahan after the votes of 147 board members were counted.
The new chief rabbis will replace Sephardic Chief Rabbi
Shlomo Amar and Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi Yona Metzger, and will hold their new
posts for the next 10 years.
Lau is the son of former Ashkenazi Chief Rabbi and Tel
Aviv's Chie Rabbi Israel Meir Lau, and Yosef is the son of former Sephardic
Chief Rabbi and Shas spiritual leader Ovadia Yosef.
The elections followed a long and heated race. Six candidate
made it to the final stage: Rabbis Lau, Stav and Yaakov Shapira, who competed
for the title of Ashkenazi chief rabbi, and Rabbis Yosef, Eliyahu and Zion
Boaron, who run for the position of Sephardic chief rabbi.
Officials from Habayit Hayehudi said that despite the loss
of the candidates affiliated with religious-Zionism to the haredi rabbis, party
leader Naftali Bennett is more determined than ever to implement reforms in
Israel's religious services.
"Bennett is the minister for religious affairs, and in
the very near future he will promote a long line of significant reforms in
kashrut, marriage, the consolidation of the position to one chief rabbi and
more," a party member said.
Bennett himself said, "The election campaign
highlighted the need for significant changes in the Rabbinate."
Bennett and his party leaned toward Rabbi David Stav,
founder of the Tzohar movement. Rabbi Stav came in second in the race for
Ashkenazi chief rabbi. "The revolution has already begun," Bennett
said, citing what he saw as changes in the way religious councils are
formulated.
Shas Chairman Aryeh Deri told Ynet that "from now on
there is no Shas and no Habayit Hayehudi. The Rabbinate is no place for political
battles – that is what the Knesset is for."
Regarding the rivalry with Habayit Hayehudi, Deri said:
"Unfortunately political strife still exists between us. There was a hard
battle in which ministers and MKs took part, but that is all behind us now. I
offered them to go for a compromise months ago, but they chose to go another
way."
Voting began at 3 pm, with Jerusalem Mayor Nir Barkat and
Tel Aviv Mayor Ron Huldai among the first to vote.
"I am in favor of a Zionist rabbi for the State of
Israel," said Barkat, referring to candidates David Stav and Shmuel
Eliyahu. He added that he wished success to anyone elected. "We will
embrace him and work together," he said.
Huldai used the opportunity to call for an annulment of the
double role and for the election of just one chief rabbi, either Ashkenazi or
Sephardic.
During the voting, dozens of activists of the Tag Meir
movement held a protest outside against Rabbi Shmuel Eliyahu over his controversial
statements against Arabs, which led Attorney General Yehuda Weinstein to
declare that he was "unsuitable" for the position of chief rabbi.
Rabbi Israel Meir Lau said the protests provide that the
public was interested in the Rabbinate and that it was still relevant for the
State of Israel.
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