BBC News, 25
April 2013
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| The Women of the Wall say they have the right to pray out loud at the holy site |
Related
Stories
Jerusalem's
district court has upheld a ruling that Israeli security forces were wrong to
arrest women who were praying at the Western Wall.
The ruling
comes after five women were arrested at the wall, one Judaism's holiest sites,
earlier this month.
They were
part of a movement seeking to overturn a 2003 High Court ban on women
performing religious rituals which Orthodox Jews say are reserved for men.
Police had
appealed against an earlier ruling that the arrests were illegal.
The Western
Wall - a relic of the Biblical Temple compound - currently has separate
sections where men and women are allowed to pray.
For several
months, a group of women, dubbed the Women of the Wall, have held prayers in
the female side, wearing traditional shawls and reading aloud from the Torah.
'Liberated
the wall'
This has
sparked outrage and protests from Orthodox groups, who say women should not
perform the rituals.
On 11
April, five of the women were arrested and charged with disturbing the peace. A
lower court had dismissed the charges and the women were freed, but the police
appealed against this.
But on
Thursday, Judge Moshe Sobel rejected the appeal, saying that the 2003 "did
not ban the Women of the Wall from praying in any particular place" and
that there was no "reasonable suspicion" that the women had broken
laws relating to holy sites, Haaretz news agency reports.
He said
police concerns that the women's actions could create a public disturbance was
not grounds for arrest, as they had shown no signs of violence or being a
security threat themselves.
Anat
Hoffman, who chairs the women's group, said the ruling had "liberated the
Western Wall for all Jewish people".
"We
did it for the great diversity of Jews in the world, all of whom deserve to
pray according to their belief and custom at the Western Wall," Haaretz
quoted her as saying.
There was
no immediate comment from police.
Correspondents
say the dispute over the wall has become a symbol of the greater tensions in
Israeli society between ultra-Orthodox Jews who abide by a very strict
interpretation of Jewish law, and more modern Jewry.
"Perceptions of God" – June 6, 2010 (Kryon channeled by Lee Carroll) (Subjects: Quantum Teaching, The Fear of God, Near-death Experience, God Becomes Mythology, Worship, Mastery, Intelligent Design, Benevolent Creator,Global Unity.... etc.) (Text version)
“.. For centuries you haven't been able to think past that box of what God must be like. So you create a Human-like God with wars in heaven, angel strife, things that would explain the devil, fallen angels, pearly gates, lists of dos and don'ts, and many rules still based on cultures that are centuries old. You create golden streets and even sexual pleasures as rewards for men (of course) - all Human perspective, pasted upon God. I want to tell you that it's a lot different than that. I want to remind you that there are those who have seen it! Why don't you ask somebody who has had what you would call a near-death experience?
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| The ultra-Orthodox make up 10 percent of Israel’s population of 7.5 million, but are increasing rapidly amid a growing backlash to the privileges and subsidies long granted to the ultra-religious. (Rina Castelnuovo for The New York Times) |


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