Gital Dodelson
Gital Dodelson is quite likely America’s most
famous agunah. In recent weeks, the 25-year-old Orthodox law student has jumped
to the headlines of major media outlets because of her struggle to force her
ex-husband, Avrohom Meir Weiss, to give her a Jewish divorce, or get. On
Tuesday, Dodelson’s enthusiastic and increasingly well-mobilized supporters
noted a key victory as ArtScroll Publishing confirmed that Weiss’s father and uncle
had taken unpaid leaves of absence from the prestigious publishing house. On
the heels of their successful public pressure campaign, Dodelson’s supporters
are now turning their sights toward the prestigious Yeshiva of Staten Island,
publicly shunning the yeshiva’s leadership for allowing Weiss to continue to
study there.
Dodelson’s story reached unprecedented national prominence
last week, when the New Jersey resident published a detailed account of her
10-month marriage and ensuing almost-four-year-long struggle to obtain a get
from Weiss in the New York Post, a newspaper with a daily circulation of a
half-million readers. Since then, her story has been retold to millions of
readers in the pages of the London-based Daily Mail and on the website of the
popular US-based Newsweek.
“This step I’m taking is difficult but necessary,” Dodelson
explained to the New York Post. “I’ve decided to go public with my story after
exhausting every other possible means. The Orthodox are fiercely private, but I
am willing to air my dirty laundry if it means I can finally get on with my
life.”
Dodelson’s backers have taken extreme measures as well. In
recent months, over 2,000 people signed on to an Internet petition calling on
ArtScroll to fire Weiss’s father and uncle who both serve as editors at the
publishing house. On Tuesday, an organization established to advocate for
Dodelson’s right to receive a get published an email confirmation that Weiss’s
father and uncle had taken leave of absence from the ArtScroll Publishing House
under intense public pressure.
According to an email published by Dodelson’s supporters,
Rabbi Meir Zlotowitz — a student of Avrahom Meir Weiss’s illustrious
great-grandfather Rabbi Moshe Feinstein and one of the founders of ArtScroll —
wrote that neither Weiss’s father, Rabbi Yosaif Asher Weiss, nor his uncle
Rabbi Yisroel Weiss, “will be drawing salaries from ArtScroll.”
Three days after Dodelson’s New York Post article, the two
wrote to Zlotowitz, telling him that they “do not wish to distract ArtScroll
Mesorah from its holy work to which we have dedicated ourselves for a quarter
century.” It was for that reason, they said that they would leave the
publishing house “until this situation is resolved.”
But together they may have resigned from ArtScroll, the
Weisses also continue to defend the actions of Avrahom Meir Weiss, arguing that
“the campaign of slander leveled against our families, including the heinous
desecration of G-d’s Name recently perpetrated by the Dodelson family, are
based on untruths and lies.”
The letter confirmed Dodelson’s supporters’ fears — even the
very public removal of the Weisses from ArtScroll was insufficient to pressure
the family into delivering Dodelson’s get. But with over 13,000 “likes” on a
Facebook page in support of Gital and a victory under their belt, the campaign
to “Free Gital” will now target the Yeshiva of Staten Island.
“We have confirmation from a trusted party that the
ArtScroll board heard us loud and clear, and they did exactly what we asked of
them,” wrote one of the activists who run the “Free Gital” Facebook page. “It’s
now time to move on from ArtScroll and put our focus on the Yeshiva of Staten
Island, where Avrohom Meir Weiss is in Kollel, despite the Kol Koreh stating
that he should not be allowed.”
The kol koreh – a general proclamation issued by respected
religious figures — called upon community institutions, including explicitly
the yeshiva run by his grandfather, Rabbi Reuven Feinstein, to shun Weiss until
he gives Dodelson a get.
No such action has been taken. Now, Dodelson’s supporters
are calling the Staten Island Yeshiva to ask for Weiss’s removal — a difficult
request for a yeshiva run by his mother’s family. As an additional step,
supporters are being encouraged via Facebook to work to disinvite the yeshiva’s
head from guest appearances at local synagogues. Supporters have already
contacted a Highland Park, New Jersey, synagogue that is expected to host
Feinstein this Saturday night, asking it to withdraw its invitation to
Feinstein.
Dodelson left her husband a month after having the couple’s
son, telling her parents that her husband’s controlling and belittling behavior
had become unbearable. Rather than turn to the rabbinical courts, Weiss
responded by filing for full custody of their infant son in a civil court while
sidestepping the Beit Din. Although the two are legally divorced in the civil
courts, Dodelson is still married to Weiss according to religious law. Repeated
attempts at arbitration have failed, and Dodelson has said that in their last
attempt, Weiss demanded that she renounce custody of their son and pay Weiss
over $300,000 in exchange for her get.
Weiss’s family has dismissed Dodelson’s allegations as
false. In an interview with the Staten Island Advance, Weiss’s father said that
the family “is horrified by the vitriol, lies and hate that permeate Gital’s
article” in the New York Post, an article that he described as “full of
misinformation and outright fabrications, as well as untruths.”
timesofisrael.com
timesofisrael.com
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