News U.S. U.S. Jewish groups welcome Netanyahus Kotel initiative Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By J. Correspondent | January 4, 2013 Three U.S. Jewish groups welcomed Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu’s initiative to review restrictions on women’s prayer at the Western Wall. Netanyahu this week asked the Jewish Agency and its chairman, Natan Sharansky, to come up with solutions to ensure that women are welcome at the Western Wall, a move the Union for Reform Judaism, Hadassah and the Conservative movement’s Rabbinical Assembly greeted with optimism. “It’s a really important development,” said Mark Pelavin, a senior adviser to URJ’s president, Rabbi Rick Jacobs. “It’s the first time the prime minister has recognized that the status quo is problematic. It’s the beginning of a much more serious conversation about women in Israel.” In 2003, Israel’s Supreme Court upheld a government ban on women donning religious garments or reading from a Torah scroll while at the Wall, saying that such meetings represented a threat to public safety and order. The court required the government to provide an alternate place for women to pray, and the nearby Robinson’s Arch site was opened for egalitarian prayer that year. Women who have attempted to pray at the Western Wall while wearing their tallit or tefillin have been arrested. Rabbi Julie Schonfeld, executive vice president of the Rabbinical Assembly, said her group would support “Israel in its efforts to work toward ensuring women’s equality and religious pluralism both in the most sacred moment of prayer at the Western Wall and throughout life in Israel.” The Hadassah president, Marcie Natan, said her organization “hopes that a resolution can be reached which will allow all women to pray, individually and collectively, at the Kotel freely, without harassment and in accordance with their own religious practices.” — jta J. Correspondent Also On J. Food What makes Trader Joe’s new matzah different from all other matzah? Bay Area Chabad brings new life to S.F. cinema with a Jewish backstory Israel Both sides agree: Israel is headed for a constitutional crisis Art Before your flight, catch SFO's exhibit of California women artists Subscribe to our Newsletter Enter Email Sign Up