Summary of Definitions on Who is a Jew?
by Barbara Weill, WZO, Jerusalem, 1987, revised 1997
Citizenship and ethnic community
Israeli nationality is uniquely characterized by its division
into two concepts: citizenship and ethnic community.
"Citizenship" in fact corresponds to the western definition of
nationality, conferring all the rights and obligations of the
members of a State, without distinction of sex, ethnic community
or religion.
The concept of "ethnic community" is a specifically Israeli notion
which consists in the inscription on the individual's identity
card of the religion to which he or she belongs: Jewish, Moslem,
Christian or Druze. Alongside the rights and obligations incumbent
on all citizens, the members of the different communities are
subject to those applying to their specific groups (for marriage
and divorce, for instance, they appear before their own courts).
It is possible to acquire Israeli nationality, even without being
Jewish, if the conditions determined by the law are fulfilled:
several years' residence in Israel, or birth to an Israeli father
or mother, a pledging of loyalty to the State of Israel, etc.
These dispositions may be resumed in the following diagram:
| NATIONALITY |
CITIZENSHIP |
ETHNIC COMMUNITY |
| (Israeli) = |
(Israeli) + |
(Jewish, Moslem, Druze, Christian) |
| |
|
|
N.B.: 'Nationhood' or 'nationality' is closer to the Hebrew term
('LE'OM'). We have however employed the term 'ethnic community',
since the concept of 'Le'om' does not correspond to the western
connotation of 'nationality' and may lead to confusion.
The Law of Return
The Law of Return applies only to individuals belonging to the
Jewish ethnic community.
The Law of Return, passed in 1950 and amended in 1954 and 1970,
stipulates that "Every Jew has the right to settle in Israel as
an oleh". This means that Jews have a preferential status, since
Israeli nationality is automatically accorded to them on request
and if their Jewish status is recognized by the authorities. Assistance
is also accorded to help them settle in Israel.
Two notorious cases highlight the contradictions which sometimes
emerge between the civil and the religious conception of Jewish
identity in Israel.
The Rufeisen - Brother Daniel -Case
Oswald Rufeisen, a Polish Jew, converted to Christianity during
World War II, and became a monk named Brother Daniel. After the
war, he applied to immigrate to Israel, requesting to be registered
as belonging to the Jewish community and to settle in Israel under
the terms of the Law of Return. His request was refused by the
registration office, and subsequently his petition to the Supreme
Court in 1962 was rejected.
Consulted by the Court, the Chief Rabbi of Israel confirmed that
Brother Daniel must be considered Jewish. Nonetheless the judge
refused to accord Jewish nationality to any individual who had
been born Jewish but who had voluntarily converted to another
religion. This decision was based not on any legal criterion but
on a criteria of public opinion (subsequently to become law).
In the words of Judge Berensohn: "An apostate Jew cannot be considered
Jewish in the sense understood by the Knesset in the Law of Return
and in the popular acceptation of today."
The Shalit Case
Commander Shalit, a Jewish, non-believing navy officer born in
Israel, married a non-Jewish, Scottish woman. When the registration
offices refused his request to register his two children as Jewish,
he appealed in 1970 to the Supreme Court which supported his claim,
and ruled that according to the Law of Return, his children were
to be registered as belonging to the Jewish ethnic community.
Who is a Jew in Israel?
In the Rufeisen case, a man considered Jewish halachically is
not accepted as Jewish under Israeli civil law. On the other hand,
the Shalit children are considered Jewish under civil law, but
not by the Halacha.
The definition of Who is a Jew is thus very problematical and
one of the basic bones of contention in the opposition between
the religious and secular parties today.
· The religious and ultra-Orthodox parties demand that the Law
of Return be amended to correspond to the halachic definition
of Who is a Jew. It may however be argued that if the Law of Return
accepts a broader definition than the halacha, it is because Israel
also has the vocation of a national home, a refuge for the Jews
of the whole world, Jews sometimes subjected to antisemitic persecutions
even when they are not recognized as Jews halachically (as was
the case in Nazi Germany).
· The secular parties would like to see the creation in Israel
of a civil status independent of the religious authorities. In
particular, they argue for the institution of civil marriage which
would allow the resolution of the problem of mixed marriages.
Here it may be objected that such a step would endanger the Jewish
character of the State of Israel.
In practice, certain population categories are specifically affected
by these contradictions: namely, immigrants who are recognized
as Jewish by the Registry Office and not by the Halacha -
- in particular, immigrants who have a Jewish father but a
non-Jewish mother, and
- immigrants who have converted to Judaism, particularly outside
Israel, by synagogues not recognized by the Chief Rabbinate
of Israel (Reform and Conservative Synagogues, for instance).
All these are eligible for citizenship as Jews under the Law of
Return but cannot contract a religious marriage in Israel.
The Future of Judaism
At first glance, this appears to be a purely Israeli problem,
but it does also concern the Diaspora. If there are henceforth
two definitions of the Jew, one national and the other religious,
the distance between these two definitions may become wider in
the future. A situation may be reached where the Jews of the Diaspora
will not recognize Jews coming from Israel as Jews and vice versa.
What will remain of the unity of the Jewish people?
In addition, there is a preference for the right to self-definition
of personal status in the West in general, which opposes any form
of externally defined formulae.
There is also a positive side to this question: the granting of
'Jewish nationality' to individuals for whom the Jewish religion
and tradition have no meaning, makes it possible to save the Jewish
identity of people who were heading for total assimilation. Likewise,
this attempt at a 'secular' definition may open the way for a
broadening of the concept of Who is a Jew.
Bibliography
- Le caractere juif de l'Etat d'Israel, Professeur Claude
Klein, Editions Cujas.
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