100%

Scanned image of the page. Keyboard directions: use + to zoom in, - to zoom out, arrow keys to pan inside the viewer.

Page Options

Share

Something wrong?

Something wrong with this page? Report problem.

Rights / Permissions

The University of Michigan Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes. These materials may be under copyright. If you decide to use any of these materials, you are responsible for making your own legal assessment and securing any necessary permission. If you have questions about the collection, please contact the Bentley Historical Library at bentley.ref@umich.edu

May 26, 2000 - Image 34

Resource type:
Text
Publication:
The Detroit Jewish News, 2000-05-26

Disclaimer: Computer generated plain text may have errors. Read more about this.

Welcome

This Week

H

ob.hicoest

DON'T WORRY
ABOUT
YOUR MOM
BEING ALONE

r;r:4:1 r-

There is alway s staff to help the residents at Regent
Street of West Bloomfield. In fact, not onl y do we have

caring and well trained Resident Assistants but we are the
only Assisted Living to have Licensed Nurses on the

premises 24 hours a day, 7 day s a week.

What do you do if y our in-home help doesn't show up?
Wouldn't y ou like not to have to worr y about that? Call

Renee Mahler toda y for more information or a personal
tour of this ver y special place for ver y special people — your
mom or dad.

TOURS AVAILABLE DAILY

call 248.683.1010

• Are you battling with your
child over food?

• Is your child sneaking food?

• Is your child gaining too
much weight?

• Do weight problems
run in your family?

Women's Prayer Gains

Religious pluralism advocates hail
"victories" for prayer at Kotel.

JULIE WIENER
Jewish Telegraphic Agency

New York
dvocates of religious pluralism in
Israel are hailing what they are
calling two major breakthroughs
in efforts to enable all Jews to pray as
they see fit at Judaism's holiest site.
In a landmark ruling Monday that
caps an 11-year legal battle, Israel's
High Court of Justice recognized the
right of the Women of the Wall orga-
nization to hold women's prayer ser-
vices — using the Torah and with
women wearing prayer shawls — at
Jerusalem's Western Wall.
The court gave the government six
months to make the necessary arrange-
ments for the services and awarded the
women — who are Orthodox,
Conservative and Reform, but use
Orthodox liturgy — $4,800 in damages.
In a separate development, the
Conservative movement reached an
understanding with the Israeli govern-
ment allowing it to hold mixed-gender
prayer services at Robinson's Arch, at
the southern end of the wall.
While officially part of the Kotel, as
the Western Wall of the Temple is
known, the arch has not traditionally
been a site of prayer and is separated
from the main part of the wall by a
ramp leading to the Dome of the
Rock mosque.

A

Piling On

New Iranian charges revive fears of execution for Jews.

MICHAEL J. JORDAN
Jewish Telegraphic Agency

New York
he ongoing trial of 13 Iranian
Jews charged with espionage for
Israel took an ominous turn this week
when four of the defendants were also
accused of spying for Iraq.
The four — all prominent religious
figures in the Jewish community —
allegedly spied for Iraq during its
bloody war with Iran from 1980 to
1988, according to two French human
rights lawyers quoted by the French
news agency, AFP.

T

Center
for Childhood
Weight Management

5/26

2000

For over a decade, Reform and
Conservative Jews and women from a
variety of Jewish streams have fought for
the right to hold services at the wall.
The Kotel has separate sections for
men and women, and efforts to hold
non-Orthodox services or ones led by
women have often led to ejection by
Israeli police and harassment — some-
times violent — by Orthodox worshipers.
"This is a great day for the advance-
ment of the struggle for religious plural-
ism in Israel," the president of Israel's
Conservative movement, Rabbi Ehud
Bandel, said in a statement Monday.
It's a day, he said, when both the Israeli
government and the High Court "accept
the principle that all Jews have the right to
pray at the holiest place of the Jewish
people, according to their traditions."
Activists for the Women of the Wall
in Israel and the United States welcomed
the ruling. The court noted that nothing
in the group's prayer services — in which
women pray separately from men, use
Orthodox liturgy and do not say any
prayers that would require the presence
of a minyan of 10 men — violates
Orthodox interpretation of Jewish law.
Some Orthodox Jews object to the
fact that the women raise their voices in
prayer, contravening the prohibition
against men hearing a woman's voice,
lest he be distracted from his worship.
"We've come out of the Middle
Ages, and we will soon hold the first bat

The two lawyers have been the only
foreigners permitted access — albeit
much restricted — to the court.
The charge came as the last three o f
the 13 Iranian Jews accused of spying
for Israel proclaimed their innocence
in court on Monday. An Iraqi official
called the accusation "stupid."
The charge of spying for Iraq
renews fears that some of the Jews may
face execution, a fear Iranian judiciary
officials tried to dispel last week.
Since the Islamic revolution in Iran
in 1979, 17 Jews have been executed,
many of them for spying.
"It's disturbing because it shows the

Back to Top

© 2025 Regents of the University of Michigan