And who said rabbis don’t watch TV?
In an episode right out of The Sopranos, two rabbis have
been arrested by the FBI for allegedly running a mafia-like scheme to beat up
husbands who refuse to give their wives a get (Jewish divorce). The rabbis were
particularly creative in the alleged torture they used. If you thought
circumcision was tough, try a cattle prod to the genitals. As rabbi Mendel
Epstein allegedly said in a wiretapped conversation, “We take an electric
cattle prod.... You put it in certain parts of his body and in one minute the
guy will know.”
I’ll say.
It’s safe to assume that an electric shock to places where
the sun don’t shine will get a man to sign just about anything, from a bill of
divorce to the whereabouts of Jimmy Hoffa’s remains.
But far from being comedic, the story of the
rabbis-who-brutalize-husbands-who-chain-their-wives in marriage has been
extremely damaging here in the US, and not just because these rabbis come
across as criminal and crazy. Rather, the infusion of money into the story –
with $10,000 allegedly being necessary to obtain a Jewish court’s approval and
another $50,000 for muscle to beat up the spouse – has made the whole thing
sound like a money-making racket.
Now, that may not be fair to the rabbis involved, whose
intentions might be noble. But even the desire to help a chained wife does not
justify violence and breaking the law. We rabbis, at most, use our hands to
gesticulate during speeches. Not to beat people up.
And yet, the chained wife remains one of the most vexing
problems in organized Jewish life. So let’s examine the possible remedies.
Firstly, it is a husband who, in Jewish law, grants a
divorce because, as in marriage itself, it reflects the natural gravitation of
the masculine to the feminine. It is still men who ask wives to marry them and
it is men who must grant the divorce. But we Jews are not Catholics. We allow
not just the annulment of marriages but actual divorce. Marriage is not a
prison sentence and no-one should be incarcerated in a loveless or abusive
relationship.
Jewish courts are meant to protect the interests of a woman
by pressuring a husband to grant a divorce when a wife wants out. If counseling
has failed and the marriage cannot be retrieved, we don’t force a wife into a
cell called matrimony.
And here is where the system has failed. In Israel, where
Jewish and secular law can intersect, it’s easy to throw a recalcitrant husband
in jail for refusing to grant a get.
Here in the US it’s much more challenging.
Still, there are plenty of remedies open to our community
that mystifyingly have not been fully embraced. A recalcitrant husband can be
shamed by having his name published in newspapers and billboards. He can have
his synagogue membership revoked and be barred from entry, even on the High
Holy Days. He can be refused an aliya (call-up) to the Torah. He can be
ostracized by the community, barring him from all communal events, including
weddings and Bar Mitzvahs, and, as a last resort, he can be excommunicated.
What we understandably can’t do is put electrodes on his
genitals.
But why haven’t our rabbis employed the totally legal remedy
of shaming these men?
Why isn’t there a concerted effort to punish these husbands
by publicly exposing them?
Where is the rabbinical will that will bring about a
halachic way?
Granted, the cattle-prod-to-the-nether-regions gang might be
taking the whole thing to an extreme. But if we’re going to condemn them – as
we should – must we not propose a legal alternative?
Or will we choose the safe route of condemning only the
rabbis who have at least made an effort – albeit a highly illegal and violent
one – to remedy the problem rather than the mercenary husbands who are
responsible in the first place.
Everyone in the Orthodox community knows some woman who has
suffered without a get, the victim of a husband’s shakedown or abuse. Maybe he
used the get to obtain custody of the kids or to minimize his alimony payments.
Perhaps his intention was making his wife’s life as miserable as he feels his
is.
But one way or another, he used Jewish law in a manner it
was never meant to be used, namely to blackmail a woman. And the rabbis watch
and do next to nothing. Then we wonder why these things end in some horrible
story like the cattle prod, grossly embarrassing the Jewish community and
demonstrating the ossification, rather than the modern relevance, of Jewish
law.
If we don’t want Judaism to become Boardwalk Empire, we need
to find peaceful, legal, yet effective means to punish those in our community
who would rob a woman of the gift of renewed companionship after a failed
marriage.
By SHMULEY BOTEACH
The author, “America’s Rabbi,” has been named by The
Washington Post and Newsweek as “the most famous Rabbi in America” and was the
winner of the London Times Preacher of the Year competition at the millennium.
A recipient of The American Jewish Press Association’s Highest Award for Excellence
in Commentary, he has just published The Fed-Up Man of Faith: Challenging God
in the Face of Tragedy and Suffering. Follow him on Twitter @RabbiShmuley.
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