In openly
displaying his homosexuality while serving as an Orthodox rabbi, Ron Yosef has
broken a major taboo in the closed religious world that he inhabits.
Although
May 17 is to be marked International Day Against Homophobia, the biblical
stance on homosexuality remains clearly laid out in Leviticus, one of the five
books of the Torah, which says that the sexual act between two men is an
“abomination.”
But 38-year-old
Yosef, who holds an Orthodox rabbinical diploma, believes it is possible to be
“both gay and observant.”
He first
became aware of his sexual orientation in his early 20s, with the realisation
forcing him away from the faith and into the welcoming arms of secular Tel
Aviv, the gay capital of the Middle East.
But it
didn’t last long.
He soon
realised his faith meant too much to him, and he returned to the fold, taking
the road less travelled by many of his peers in the same situation.
“By the age
of 30, I was finally at peace with myself after deciding I could be both
Orthodox and gay even though many observant people in the same situation had
left the religious world,” he told AFP.
In 2008, he
set up a website to help others in his situation which soon turned into an
organisation known as HOD, the Hebrew acronym for “Orthodox Jewish
homosexuals.”
“We wanted
to educate the religious community about this phenomenon and offer a solution
to people who are both gay and religious, by letting them reconcile their
double identity,” he explains.
A year
later, Yosef became the first — and still is — the only Orthodox rabbi to come
out, in an interview with Uvda, one of Israel’s leading investigative
journalism programmes.
Three years
later, he could finally say he had “broken the wall of silence in the religious
world.”
More than
6,000 people have turned to HOD since it was set up with the goal of initiating
“a public dialogue in the religious community, among its leaders, its rabbis…
that would lead to an improvement of the social situation of the religious
homosexual man, within the religious society.”
“We are
pioneers who are walking an unpaved path, who are part of the religious
community, and who wish to remain part of it. We do not give up on our
religious identity, nor do we wish to abandon our homosexual identity,” the
association’s website says.
Although
his group has won the support of more than 150 Orthodox rabbis, Yosef is not
always welcomed within religious circles.
“Since I
came out in 2009, I have been threatened but overall, I was surprised by the
welcome I received in religious circles,” he said.
Today he
lives in a religious neighbourhood in the northern coastal resort town of
Netanya, where he gives courses in Judaism and looks after his flock of around
50 families that attend the synagogue where he serves.
“I was
ready to resign my post when I first came out about my homosexuality, but they
decided to keep me on,” he smiles.
But rabbis
who try to “cure” observant Jews of their homosexuality make him angry.
One such
group, Atzat Nefesh, was set up in 2001 by Rabbi Shlomo Aviner, a leading
figure within the religious Zionist movement.
The group
bills itself as a hotline for people looking to change their sexual behaviour
or orientation and offers help to those struggling with “contradictory
homosexual tendencies in order to bring them back to the right path,” its
website says.
“I’m not
asking the rabbis to authorise what is forbidden but to find answers for those
who want to stay religious,” says Yosef, who believes Atzat Nefesh is a
“dangerous” organisation.
Unlike
other religious gay groups, members of HOD don’t participate in pride parades.
“We want to
integrate ourselves into (religious) society without pushing our sexual
differences in people’s faces, but while being accepted by all,” Yosef
explains.
Although he
lives with his partner, who is also Orthodox, they do not go out in public
together as a couple, and Yosef says the life of some homosexuals who live in
communities ironically “resembles the ultra-Orthodox Jews who live in ghettos”
because of the resultant reclusiveness.
“I’m not
ashamed of my sexual identity, but there’s a difference between that and
systematically bringing it up,” he says.
- HOD website: http://www.hod.org.il/?en=1 (English and Hebrew)
- Atzat Nefesh: http://www.atzat-nefesh.org/index.php (Hebrew)
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About the Challenges of Being a Gay Man – Oct 23, 2010 (Saint Germain channelled by Alexandra Mahlimay and Dan Bennack) - “You see, your Soul and Creator are not concerned with any perspective you have that contradicts the reality of your Divinity – whether this be your gender, your sexual preference, your nationality – or your race, ethnicity, religious beliefs, or anything else.”
"The Akashic System" – Jul 17, 2011 (Kryon channelled by Lee Carroll) - (Subjects: Religion, The Humanization of God, Benevolent Design, DNA, Akashic Circle, (Old) Souls, Gaia, Indigenous People, Talents, Reincarnation, Genders, Gender Switches, In “between” Gender Change, Gender Confusion, Shift of Human Consciousness, Global Unity,..... etc.) - (Text version)
“ … Spirituality (Religions)
Number one: Spirituality. The systems of spiritual design on your planet are starting to change. This is not telling you that certain ones are going to go away. They're simply going to change. Some of the largest spiritual systems, which you would call organized religion on the planet, are shifting. They're going to shift away from that which is authority on the outside to authority on the inside. It will eventually be a different way of worship, slowly changing the rules while keeping the basic doctrine the same.
The doctrine of the Christ has always been to find the God inside. The teachings were clear. The examples of the miracles were given as an example of what humans could do, not to set a man up for worship as a God. So when that has been absorbed, the teaching of the Christ can remain the teaching of the Christ. It simply changes the interpretation. …”


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