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HOSPITALITY,
NEW BABIES,
GET WELL,
SHIVA, ETC.
Minister's Talk
Angers Groups
Jerusalem (JTA) — The min-
ister in charge of religious
affairs drew criticism this
weekend for appearing
before the 11th convention of
Israel's Reform movement.
But Minister Uzi Baram
disappointed his audience by
saying that the quest by the
non-Orthodox movements
for official recognition is not
high on his agenda.
He said the tension bet-
ween the trends in Israel is
relatively small, and it is
therefore useless in his view
for the government to wage
a futile battle on the issue.
Mr. Baram's own situation
highlights the Labor coali-
tion's complex position on
religious issues. Mr. Baram,
a non-Orthodox Laborite
who serves as Minister of
Tourism, is temporarily
holding the religious port-
folio in the hope he can turn
it over to one of the Orthodox
parties that has yet to join
the governing coalition.
Meanwhile, Mr. Baram is
attempting to ameliorate
problems with the religious
councils and the religious
courts, whose authority over
marriage and divorce brings
them in contact, and fre-
quent conflict, with secular
Israelis.
"The struggle on these
issues is shared by Jews of
all trends," Mr. Baram told
the convention of the Move-
ment for Progressive
Judaism, as the Reform
movement is known in
Israel.
The movement's chair-
man, Yonatan Livni, ex-
pressed hope that Mr.
Baram's appearance before
the convention signaled offi-
cial recognition.
But in response to ques-
tions from reporters, Mr.
Baram later said that he
would not take steps to grant
the Reform movement offi-
cial recognition.
To avoid desecrating the
Sabbath, Mr. Baram took a
one-hour walk from his
residence in Jerusalem's
Beit Hakerem neighborhood
to Hebrew Union College.
The haredi, or fervently
Orthodox, parties, such as
Shas inside the coalition and
United Torah Judaism in
the opposition, reacted an-
grily to Mr. Baram's ap-
pearance before the Reform
convention.
According to one report,
Premier Yitzhak Rabin also
expressed dissatisfaction
with the appearance of Mr.
Baram.