Times of Israel Reform and Conservative conversions completed outside of the State of
Israel are accepted by the country’s Interior Ministry as grounds for
application for citizenship. On the other hand and quite confusingly,
only a select number of Orthodox rabbis abroad are authorized by the
Israeli chief rabbinate to sit on a conversion court for kosher Orthodox
conversions.
Further muddling the
who-has-a-right-to-convert-non-Jews issue, there are cases of Orthodox
rabbis who hold two pulpits — one abroad and one in Israel — who are
only authorized to adjudicate on conversions overseas.
In a step to rectify this conversion
confusion, the Jewish Agency’s Unity of the Jewish People Committee
proposed a resolution calling for the organization’s support for the
establishment of an independent conversion court at Wednesday
afternoon’s closing plenary in Tel Aviv of the summer Board of Governors
meetings. The resolution was adopted overwhelmingly by the full board. [...]
The proposal is framed as a way for interfaith families, as well as
individuals, to become fully integrated into the Jewish people through
conversion, and through the possibility of immigration to Israel. [...]
Well, here's another nice mess you've gotten me into!
ReplyDelete(http://www.stanlaurelandoliverhardy.com/nicemess.htm)
Good job Jewish Agency's Unity of the Jewish People Committee. I vote your name as "Most Ironic." Count me out of your People if you're counting non-Jews in.