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Friday, 19 April. 2024
 
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The Western Wall, the most sacred site in the Jewish faith, could be split into three equal sections – for men, women and mixed worshippers – in a compromise attempt to resolve a 24-year-long dispute over praying rights in Jerusalem's Old City.

The proposal has been made by Natan Sharansky, the chairman of the Jewish Agency, who was appointed by the Israeli prime minister, Binyamin Netanyahu, to find a solution to the dispute, following pressure from US Jews.

Sharansky has suggested extending the Western Wall plaza to include an area at the southern end, known as Robinson's Arch, where according to a high court ruling all worshippers may pray according to their beliefs. Two existing separate areas for men and women will be reserved for those observing orthodox tradition.

Women of the Wall, a feminist organisation that has been campaigning for the right to pray on equal terms to men at the site since 1988, is due to hold its next monthly protest early on Thursday, the first day of the new Hebrew month. Activists have clashed with police for wearing prayer shawls and reading aloud from the Torah, which are forbidden to women in ultra-orthodox custom.

The movement attracted global attention earlier this year when the US comedian Sarah Silverman tweeted in response to the arrests of her sister, Susan, and niece, Hallel: "So proud of my amazing sister and niece for their ballsout civil disobedience. Ur the tits #womenofthewall."

Susan Silverman, a reform rabbi, said afterwards that she was opposed to "the Haredi [ultra-orthodox] ownership of Judaism … The fact of the matter is that the Western Wall was hijacked by a small group."

Thousands of Jews pray every day at the Western Wall, the last remnant of the retaining wall of the Temple Mount, pushing scraps of paper bearing handwritten prayers into the cracks between its ancient stones. The rules governing worship are set by the Western Wall rabbi, Shmuel Rabinowitz. Men and women are forbidden from praying together; a small part of the main section of wall is cordoned off for women.

Sharansky told the website Ynet: "The court has ruled that the place of prayer for the Women of the Wall and others is at Robinson's Arch, but they have said – and rightfully so – that the conditions there are unsuitable, and therefore the arrangement is non-egalitarian.

"According to our recommendations, the access will be the same, 24 hours a day, on the same level, with a shared entrance, and no one will be able to say that they are being sent to a second-class place."

Despite reservations, government ministers, US Jewish leaders and the Western Wall rabbi broadly supported the proposal as a way of ending the dispute, he added.

Rabbi Rabinowitz told Army Radio: "Of course I want everyone to pray according to tradition, but I won't interfere. And if these things are done outside of the area of the Western Wall plaza, without offending others, in a way that can lead to a compromise and to tranquillity, I won't oppose it."

Anat Hoffman, founder of Women of the Wall, told the Jewish Daily Forward: "It's not everything we were hoping for, but we will compromise. You don't always have to be right, you have to be smart, and compromise is a sign of maturity and understanding what's at stake here."

The implementation of the proposal will need to be negotiated with the Waqf, the Islamic body which governs the site, known to Muslims as Haram al-Sharif. Revered in the Islamic faith, it is the home of the Dome of the Rock and the al-Aqsa mosque.

The plan may also raise concerns from archaeologists excavating in the area in which the plaza is likely to extend.

 
 
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