The Israeli government approved on Sunday the creation of a mixed-sex
plaza at Jerusalem's Western Wall to accommodate Jews who contest
Orthodox curbs on worship by women there.
The wall is revered as a
vestige of Judaism's two ancient temples and access to it is segregated
by gender. Most religious rites take place in the men's section in
accordance with centuries-old Orthodox standards that hold sway in
Israel.
The new area will be located at a separate expanse of the
wall that, when seen from the plaza looking toward the wall, stands to
the right of the current Orthodox-administered compound where men and
women will still worship separately.
More liberal streams of
Judaism, which outside of Israel have larger followings than Orthodoxy,
chafe at the restriction.
It is regularly challenged by the activist
group "Women of the Wall", sometimes setting off scuffles and police
intervention.
Under the plan approved by Prime Minister Benjamin
Netanyahu's cabinet over objections from Orthodox members, an old
archaeological site will be turned into a plaza where men and women can
mix and pray freely.
In remarks broadcast before the 15-to-5 vote,
Netanyahu said the plan sought a "solution to the question of the Women
of the Wall" and "a compromise on this sensitive issue of a place that
is meant to unite the Jewish people".
Welcoming the blueprint, Women of the Wall activist Rabbi Susan Silverman said: "This is an extremely joyful day."
Natan Sharansky, the head of the quasi-governmental Jewish Agency
chosen by Netanyahu in 2013 to resolve the dispute, has said the new
plaza would not entail structural damage to the nearby al Aqsa mosque,
Islam's third-holiest site.
Israel has seen a four-month-old surge
of Palestinian street violence fueled in part by Muslim agitation at
perceived Jewish encroachment on al Aqsa compound. Israel denies
Palestinian allegations it plans to open the compound to non-Muslim
prayer.
The mosque compound, wall and several Christian shrines
are in Jerusalem's Old City, which Israel captured in the 1967 war and
annexed as its capital in a move not recognized abroad.
An Israeli
official said the new plaza will take at least a year to complete.
Unlike the Western Wall, it will not have a state-employed rabbi, but
will be run by a committee under Sharansky.
Plaza regulations will
permit bar-mitzvah and bat-mitzvahs - Jewish coming-of-age ceremonies
for boys and girls, respectively - to be held there.
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