
Advertisement
June 28, 2011 | 1:15 am
Posted by Bob Goldfarb
Following the legalization of gay marriage in New York State, Maariv columnist Shmuel Rosner reflected yesterday on the prospects for such a thing in Israel. He refers (in Hebrew) to a seemingly obscure ruling by the Israeli Supreme Court two weeks ago that directed the Interior Ministry to recognize a proxy marriage considered valid in El Salvador. As Rosner sees it, this may open the door to the legal validity in Israel for thousands of marriages performed outside the authority of the Rabbinate. He thinks a secular coalition in the Knesset, bolstered by a shift in public opinion, could extend this to gay couples in a few years.
Today comes a report in Haaretz that suggests it may not be so easy. The non-Jewish partner in gay couple from Baltimore was denied immigrant rights despite their Canadian marriage. Some details:
The Law of Return stipulates: “A Jew’s rights and an immigrant’s rights ... are also imparted to the child, grandchild and partner of a Jew, except in the case of a Jew who willingly converted to another religion.” Attorney Nicky Maor, director of the Legal Aid Center for Olim, says if the couple were a man and woman, there is no doubt they would both have received Israeli citizenship. “The only reason the Interior Ministry doesn’t know how to handle it is that they’re gay,” Maor said. “The Law of Return says ‘partner,’ not husband and wife. There is no definition preventing recognition of same-sex partners.”
Attorney Dan Yakir, of the Association for Civil Rights in Israel, believes the High Court will grant Alvarez citizenship if asked to rule on the issue. “It’s a question the courts haven’t dealt with yet,” he says, “whether ‘partner’ in the Law of Return also applies to a same-sex partner. In view of the court rulings that have equalized the rights of same-sex couples and in view of the constitutional right for equality, it is obvious that the Law of Return must be interpreted as applying to same-sex couples, and that means an immigrant’s partner must be given citizenship.”
Given the impenetrable administration of Israel’s Interior Ministry, this flap may say more about bureaucratic caution than about Israeli policy towards gays. Time will tell.
Bob Goldfarb, the president of the Center for Jewish Culture and Creativity in Los Angeles and Jerusalem, also blogs regularly for eJewishPhilanthropy.com.

8.28.11 at 12:46 am | A protest movement is being shaped by members of. . .

8.6.11 at 1:24 pm | On Amos Oz and the nostalgic past

8.2.11 at 10:19 am | Creative teens are recognized alongside athletes. . .

7.22.11 at 7:56 am | The Russell Tribunal goes to South Africa to pass. . .

7.4.11 at 1:56 am | Joseph Cedar's new film shows what can happen. . .

7.1.11 at 1:36 am | A historic synagogue near Tel Aviv's beach. . .
8.6.10 at 10:32 am | Evgenia Citkowitz: daughter of a Brooklyn. . . (8)

6.22.11 at 1:29 pm | In an era when human rights are paramount, Jews. . . (7)

6.21.11 at 4:04 pm | “What matters more—the acreage of where we. . . (2)



We welcome your feedback.
Your information will not be shared or sold without your consent. Get all the details.
JewishJournal.com has rules for its commenting community.Get all the details.
JewishJournal.com reserves the right to use your comment in our weekly print publication.
August 2011
July 2011
June 2011
March 2011
December 2010
September 2010
August 2010
July 2010
June 2010
May 2010
April 2010
| |||||||||