Sydney Beth Din

Last updated
Sydney Beth Din
Religion
Affiliation Judaism
StatusActive
Location
Location Bondi Beach, Sydney
State New South Wales
CountryAustralia
Architecture
Date established1904/1905 [lower-roman 1]
Completed1885
Website
https://www.bethdin.org.au/

The Sydney Beth Din is a beth din located in Sydney, Australia. [2]

Contents

History

The beth din was founded in 1885, and revamped into its current status in 1904. [lower-roman 2] The reorganisation permitted greater independence - prior to this, conversions had to be accepted by the chief rabbi in London for approval. [3] Tensions were present with the Jewish community in neighbouring Melbourne. [4]

Israel Porush served as a leader of the beth din [5] from 1940 until 1975, and had also served as a chairman during the re-establishment of the Melbourne Beth Din. [6] During his tenure, the congregation expanded, and he oversaw the opening of a war memorial centre in 1956. [7] Porush later authored a book in 1972 about his time as chairman - writing that under his tenure, [8]

The ministry too, has been greatly expanded with many qualified leaders (...) A full Beth Din of experienced Dayanim had been functioning for years.

Rabbi Freedman, a Mizrachi Zionist, had also temporarily served on the court alongside him from 1956 until his retirement in 1965. [9]

After a recommendation from the beth din in March 2020, Sydney synagogues suspended their services. Rabbi Moshe Gutnick stated, [10]

“We’re taking a very strong stance, stronger than the government’s in terms of gatherings. We’re better safe than sorry.”

Activities

The Beth Din is responsible for conversions. The Sydney Beth Din are one of the few in the world that is approved to perform conversions by the Israeli Chief Rabbinate. [11] In 2008, it was estimated that the beth din does between 30 and 50 conversions a year. [12]

The beth din also processes gett divorces, and answers personal and ritual queries from local communities and around the globe. [13]

The beth din appointed Rabbanit Judith Levitan as the first woman in Sydney to become an Orthodox rabbi in May 2020. It was also stated Moshe Gutnick was aware and supportive of the course. [14]

The beth din was also key in the process of granting a gett divorce to Zebulon Simantov, the last Jew out of Afghanistan. [15]

Criticism

The beth din was criticized for ostracizing an Orthodox rabbi, Menachem Kaminetsky, in Melbourne, after it issued a nidui (ostracization) against him. [16]

Leaders of the beth din, faced criticism in 2018, when they informed a member of their congregation into approaching them to resolve a commercial business dispute in the Beth Din in accordance with Jewish law, in replace of a secular court. [17]

The beth din was criticized in 2021 in an investigation from the NSW Jewish Board of Deputies, which called for reformation. The report stated: “SBD had needlessly diminished the reputation of Judaism in the Jewish and broader community.” [18] Rabbi Moshe Gutnick stated that “an opportunity for real collaboration has been lost” in reaction to the report's findings. [19]

Conversely, however, some, such as Keith Thompson, have discussed whether or not the Australian government is violating freedom of religion in their perceived interference in the beth din. [20]

Notes

  1. The beth din's website states it was established in 1905, though some sources state it was in 1904. [1]
  2. See the article's notes

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