Women of the Wall draws 100 following Western Wall deal

Ben Sales

Women of the Wall praying at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, Jan. 2, 2014.(Miriam Alster/Flash90)

Women of the Wall praying at the Western Wall in Jerusalem, Jan. 2, 2014.(Miriam Alster/Flash90)

TEL AVIV (JTA) — Women of the Wall drew 100 women to its monthly service a week and a half after the adoption of a compromise over the future of prayer at the Western Wall.

Haredi Orthodox protesters shouted insults at the worshippers Wednesday, according to a press release from the group, which conducts monthly services in the wall’s women’s section. The group was unable to pray with a Torah, as the site’s regulations prohibit torahs in the women’s section.

The deal reached last month will expand a non-Orthodox prayer section south of the traditional, Orthodox prayer area at the site, which will be run by a non-Orthodox committee. A shared entrance will lead to both sections. The wall’s Orthodox prayer area will remain under haredi control.

Women of the Wall agreed to the deal, and will move to the expanded non-Orthodox section only once it is completed, a process that could take years. Once there, the group will pray behind a partition. A breakoff from the group has rejected the deal and vowed to continue praying in the Orthodox women’s section.

“We sang with the feeling that now we truly begin a new path to ‘being a free people in our land,’” Women of the Wall Chairwoman Anat Hoffman said in the press release, quoting Israel’s national anthem.

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