Cauley Cars _-4AS1EIL Go That's Because They're Israeli Women Discuss Agunot Priced To Move! Stk. #T75 .400%. stft11. • \\• \‘' `' 47 . '94 LUMINA MINI VAN $29900:gth ' Lease 4 Wheel, ABS Airbag, Loaded! Stk. #T134 '94 BLAZER 4X4 4 DOOR * 24 Month ° Lease $2890 4 Wheel, ABS Airbag, Loaded! Stk. #57 '94 PRIZM SEDAN * 24 99oo Month Lease 4 Wheel, ABS Driver & Passenger Air Bag, Air, Stereo, Auto., Plus Much More! Stk. #57 '94 CAVALIER COUPE * 24 Month $1 9900 Lease 4 Wheel, ABS Air, Stereo Cassette, Auto., Plus Much More! Jack Cau tey C CHEVROLET ORCHARD LAKE RD. Between 14 Mile & 15 Mile GCV O 855.9700 HOURS: Mon. & Thurs. 8:30 a.m.-9 p.m., Tues. Wed., Wed. Fri. 8:30 a.m.-6 p.m. , GMAC SMARTLEASE APPROVED CREDIT REQUIRED, 15,000 MI. PER YEAR 30,000 MI. TOTAL ALLOWED LOWED 0010 PER MILE OVER 30,000 MI. MUST ADD 4% USE TAX, LICENSE PLATE AND $1,000.00 GAP. COST REDUCTION. TOTAL OF PAYMENTS X 24. OPTION TO PURCHASE AT END OF LEASE, LESSEE RESPONSIBLE FOR EXCESS WEAR AND TEAR. Jerusalem (JTA) — Israel's two chief rabbis have held a rare meeting with a wo- men's rights delegation pressing for solutions to the problem of agunot — women who cannot get a divorce be- cause their husbands refuse to grant one or because the husbands cannot be located. After talking with the two rabbis, members of the wo- men's delegation said they were heartened by the meeting but that it repre- sented only the beginning of the work it will take to solve the agunah problem. More than 10,000 women are in legal limbo in Israel, where there are no civil divorces and where the dissolution of a marriage must adhere to strict inter- pretations of Jewish law. According to these laws, a Jewish woman cannot ob- tain a divorce, or get, without the permission of her husband. "There are greedy, vindic- tive men who have decided that they can withhold their consent and blackmail their wives," said Sharon Shenhav, legal adviser to Na'amat, one of the women's groups represented at the meeting with the chief rabbis. The group is part of a re- cently formed International Coalition for Agunah Rights. The coalition has declared the Jewish year 5754 (1993- 94) as the International Year of the Agunah, reflec- ting an intensive effort to reform what are perceived as unjust and discriminatory divorce proceedings in rab- binical courts worldwide. According to a publication by the Israel Women's Net- work, another coalition member, "thousands of Jew- ish women are suffering as a result of heartless insistence on outmoded interpretations of halacha (Jewish law), long drawn-out court delibera- tions, the refusal of husbands to grant the get even when the court has decreed it, and the courts' failure to utilize halachical- ly permitted coercion on such 'recalcitrant' husbands." The members of the Israeli coalition won an audience with the chief rabbis follow- ing a small demonstration last week in front of Hechal Shlomo, the Jerusalem headquarters of the Chief Rabbinate. They had sought the meeting since the top rab- binic officials — Ashkenazic Chief Rabbi Yisrael Meir Lau and Sephardic Chief Rabbi Eliahu Bakshi-Doron — were elected to 10-year terms last February. Alice Shalvi, head of the Women's Network, was guardedly optimistic about the meeting with the rabbis. She told Israel Television the women's delegation was Meir Lau: Sympathetic to the problem. "very pleased" about the "collaboration between the two sides — the victims, on the one hand, and those who can provide the solution, on the other. "But obviously a great deal of work remains to be done and we can't just go home and sit quietly," she said. For his part, Rabbi Lau said he was sympathetic to the plight of the agunot and hopeful that problems could be solved following the es- tablishment of a committee to review the situation. The two chief rabbis asked the women to refrain from holding public demonstra- tions while the issue is being studied. ❑ To many, Ab Cahan, the man who built the Jewish Daily Forwardinto the largest and most influential newspaper in the Jewish world, was the symbol of the Lower East Side in New York City. He edited the Forward from 1902 to 1951, during which time the Yiddish-language paper's ciculation rose from 6,000 to over 200,000.