https://forward.com/news/national/325878/chained-wife-tamar-epstein-divorce-kosher/
The decision to allow Epstein to remarry ignited a firestorm within
the Orthodox community. Opponents of the decision are making it clear
that Epstein and any future children she may have will not find
acceptance in the Orthodox community of which she considers herself a
part.
“The woman is considered married for all purposes and is forbidden
for any other man until a religious court rules otherwise,” Rabbi Aharon
Feldman, head of Baltimore’s Ner Israel Rabbinical College, wrote in an
open letter he addressed to fellow rabbis and religious leaders. “In
the meanwhile, she must leave her second ‘husband,’ and if she has
children, they will be considered bastards until relieved by a religious
court.” Under traditional Jewish law, children classified as bastards —
mamzerim in Hebrew — are not allowed to marry other Jews who are born to women considered to be legitimately married.
The breakthrough came earlier this fall, when a rabbinic authority in Philadelphia issued a heter,
or permission, that annulled Epstein’s marriage based on the claim that
Friedman was mentally ill at the time the couple married. The identity
of this rabbinical authority was not disclosed, but according to several
ultra-Orthodox websites it was likely to have been Rabbi Shmuel
Kamenetsky, head of the Talmudical Yeshiva of Philadelphia. In the past,
Kamenetsky has worked to resolve Epstein’s situation.
Although the unnamed rabbinical authority was not provided with any
professional mental evaluation of Friedman’s condition, the rabbi ruled
that had Epstein known of these mental issues in advance, she would
never have married Friedman, and therefore the marriage is annulled and
Epstein is free to remarry. Annulment, while existing in traditional
Jewish law, is a very rare procedure, and according to a source in the
Orthodox community, it has never been used in modern times.
Epstein’s marriage to Adam Fleischer in a traditional Jewish ceremony
in Memphis was officiated by Rabbi Nota Greenblatt, who is the head of
the city’s Orthodox umbrella organization, Vaad Hakehilloth, and is a
well known halachic authority.
The controversy that ensued centered on interpretation of religious
law rather than on Epstein’s right to be released from her husband. Even
those critical of the unusual halachic procedure were, for the most
part, sympathetic to Epstein’s plight. They reiterated their call for
Friedman to issue a religious divorce.
All parties involved declined to discuss the permission given to
Epstein for her subsequent marriage, stating it was a private, personal
issue.
Not exactly Kosher, but can't happen to notice her black clothes she is wearing in compliance with misatef shchorim. Maybe this was the reference in the so called Heter *Mutar" by "Sod H' lireiov" psak.
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