Thursday, February 17, 2022

Divorcee Permitted By Tel Aviv Beis Din To Marry Cohen After Former Husband Declares He Is LGBTQ

 https://vinnews.com/2022/02/15/divorcee-permitted-by-tel-aviv-beis-din-to-marry-cohen-after-former-husband-declares-he-is-lgbtq/

The Tel Aviv Rabbinical Court accepted the woman’s claim that if she had known of her husband’s homosexual inclination, she would never have married him – and ruled that her agreement to marriage was meaningless and the marriage was a “Mekach Taus”, a mistaken transaction. Dayan Cohen said in his ruling that he would not have accepted such a claim in order to permit a married woman to marry someone else but since the woman had already received her divorce, the concept of Mekach Taus can be used to enable her to marry a Kohen.

5 comments :

  1. Interesting. Did rav Moshe ever address this particular problem? ( homo / mekach /Cohen)?

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  2. he had a case of homosexuality that he didn't require a get
    Not sure why this is a reason specifically for cohen

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  3. she already had the Gett from from the husband, so the issue was not eishes ish. The issue was whether she could marry a Cohen, being a divorcee. It is annulling the kiddushin, in order to say she was never married - hence presumably can marry the cohen.

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  4. Do you get this Halachic "logic"?

    According to the article, Dayan Cohen said, that he would NOT have nullified the woman's marriage, on the basis of a claim of “Mekach Taus”, that if she had known of her husband’s homosexual inclination, she would never have married him.

    I take that to mean, that evidently, he feels that such a “Mekach Taus” claim is NOT sufficient, to retroactively annul a marriage.

    Yet, strangely, he's perfectly comfortable to employ this very same “Mekach Taus” claim, in order to enable her to marry a Kohen, by retroactively annulling her marriage, and declaring that her receipt of a Get was unnecessary.

    Why would he be comfortable sanctioning a situation, which potentially involves a Torah prohibition every single time the couple is together?

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  5. He's being machmir on eishes ish.
    As I edited my comment, not sure if you saw what I quoted from r rakeffet. He says he's surveyed the Talmudic mentions of mekach taut, and that each time it comes with a Gett.
    A Gett was already provided, so where is the problem with his annulment?
    Is a kohen required to marry a betulah? Did the homo even fulfil his marital obligations? Are we required to know, or do we make a chazakah that he didn't?

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