Gital Dodelson
NEW YORK – Gital Dodelson, the “chained” woman featured on
the front page of the New York Post last fall, says she has received a get, or
religious writ of divorce, from her husband.
The announcement appeared Wednesday afternoon on a Facebookpage dedicated to helping Dodelson obtain a get and was confirmed by a
publicist who has worked with the Dodelson family.
In a story than ran in the Post on Nov. 4, 2013 and in
subsequent media interviews, Dodelson detailed her struggle to obtain a
religious divorce from her ex-husband, Avrohom Meir Weiss, whom she had
divorced in civil court in August 2012.
According to traditional Jewish law, or halachah, a woman
must obtain a get from her husband to be considered divorced; women whose
husbands deny them a get are called agunot, or chained wives.
Shira Dicker, the publicist who has worked with the Dodelson
family in their public campaign to compel Weiss to give the get, said the
pressure finally worked.
“The community pressure really just began to multiply, and
then something changed,” Dicker told JTA.
Dodelson’s claim of having received the get could not be
independently verified with Weiss, who is a great-grandson of the late Orthodox
luminary Rabbi Moshe Feinstein.
Dicker said Dodelson will continue to advocate for the
countless Orthodox women chained to recalcitrant husbands.
“The family wants to remain as aguna advocates,” Dicker
said. “It doesn’t end with Gital’s get.”
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