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Why Israeli Grantees Oppose a New Law Expanding Rabbinical Courts’ Power

March 26, 2026

A 2018 ceremony for regional rabbinical court judges in Israel. (Kobi Gideon/GPO via Wikimedia Commons)

Kobi Gideon / GPO Israel via Wikimedia Commons

This week, at a late-night session while Israel was under missile attack, the Knesset passed a law giving all-male rabbinical courts the power to arbitrate in civil matters. (It already had power to rule in marriage and divorce cases.) Several Hadassah Foundation grant recipients, including the Rackman Center for the Advancement of the Status of Women and Israel Women’s Network (IWN), fought hard to prevent the law’s passage and will seek to repeal it. Only 16 percent of Israeli women support this law; in a wide-ranging presentation to the Hadassah Foundation board on several pressing challenges facing women, IWN CEO Tal Hochman explained why this new law is so problematic. (We recommend you watch the entire presentation, but the section on this law begins at 13:10.)

 

 

In a Facebook post, the Rackman Center explained that the law is dangerous because “it’s about creating a parallel judicial system, without transparency, without appeal and without civil criticism. A system not committed to the principles of equality and human rights.”

Below are a few recent news articles about the law.

As Tal Hochman noted in her presentation, the new law is one of many examples highlighting the importance of bringing more women around decision-making tables.

Recent News

Israeli High Court Affirms Women’s Rights to Serve in Combat

News and Time-Sensitive Opportunities from U.S. Grant Recipients

Beyond the War: Critical Issues Facing Israeli Women

A Seat at the Seder Table — and the Decision-Making Table

Hadassah Foundation Welcomes Inaugural Fellows and 2 Other Accomplished Women to Board

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