Get Coercion

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  • #617056
    Bored_on_the_Job
    Participant

    Does it make any sense for an individual to be involved in get coercion?

    Break laws and potentially cause chilul hasahem vs the plight of agunos?

    #1195769
    pcoz
    Member

    How can it be a chilul hashem to ease the plight of agunos???

    #1195770
    Joseph
    Participant

    Forget breaking the non-Jewish laws these thugs engage in, they are breaking Jewish laws and producing invalid Gets. The Halacha in Shulchan Aruch is very clear in stating that a Get produced via coercion is a Get Me’usa.

    #1195771
    👑RebYidd23
    Participant

    If the get is rendered invalid, or if the methods are plain wrong.

    Example: slowly lowering the ex over a vat of boiling acid promising to let them walk free if they agree to give a get.

    #1195772

    How can it be a chilul hashem to ease the plight of agunos???

    How does the valid goal remove chillul Hashem?

    #1195773
    akuperma
    Participant

    The law is very clear that if a man gives a woman a kesubah he has agreed to give her a “get” when the marriage ends. It is no more against the “law” to coerce a man to obey the law and give the “get” than it is to coerce a robber not to take your possessions. It is a tremendous kiddush ha-Shem for people to show that they consider Ha-Shem’s law superior to the law of the goyim. A man who refueses to give a a “get” while divorcing his wife under the goyim’s law is a traitor to klal yisrael, and the coercion against him is justified. Dina Malchusa Dina, which protects such men and encourages such behavior, does not apply for laws that require a clear violation of Torah law and are directged tgowards destroying klal Yisrael.

    #1195774
    Joseph
    Participant

    akuperma: Nowhere does the kesuba obligate the issuance of a Get. Your definition of halacha is inaccurate. And it is quite rare for someone to petition for a secular divorce whilst declining to issue a Jewish one. Typically the secular divorce is obtained without his requesting it. By default Jewish law does not obligate one to divorce if the other party seeks one without halachicly recognized “cause”. There is an entire section in Shulchan Aruch dedicated to defining invalid Gets that were procured under coercion.

    #1195775
    zogt_besser
    Participant

    ideally, random individuals would never be involved. Any coercion can only be carried out by beis din or its formal agents.

    #1195776
    Joseph
    Participant

    There are very few circumstances where halacha, as recorded in the S”A, permit kefia. All of the following have to have occurred for coercion to be halachicly permissible: 1) There had to have been a beis din trial with both spouses and the dayanim all present at the same time in beis din and 2) both spouses were given the opportunity to present their case in beis din and 3) the dayanim after hearing both sides determined that based on the circumstances halachic cause exists that obligates him to issue a divorce even if he wishes not to and 4) he refuses to issue the Get and 5) the dayanim further deliberate and rule that halacha permits kefia under the circumstances.

    Even when he’s obligated under halacha to give a Get, halacha still says he cannot be physically coerced under most circumstances. (He’s a rasha if he doesn’t and beis din may be permitted to authorize lesser forms of pressure such as harchokos Rabbeinu Tam.) And halacha doesn’t even obligate a Get in the first place in most typical cases unless there is an unusual factor that Chazal specifically and explicitly say mandates a Get. Some of the few such scenarios that Chazal authorized it are a) an illegal marriage (i.e. Kohen and gerusha) b) he has a physical deformity or c) he engaged in physical violence against her, and was warned by beis din to stop but he continued after having been warned. (Shulchan Aruch says if he denies it then beis din needs witnesses testifying to it.) Shulchan Aruch lists various types of cases where a spouses request for a divorce is denied and the couple is told by beis din to go back to living together as husband and wife.

    #1195777
    feivel
    Participant

    I personally know of two cases where the recognized Posek of the city arranged for fine Yidden from elsewhere to come to his city and physically coerce a baal to give a get.

    #1195778
    Joseph
    Participant

    I’m sure great poskim in other cities have had similar cases as well. It unfortunately happens that such cases occur where such action is warranted; fortunately they’re infrequent. But when they do transpire those poskim are correct to act.

    The problem arises when vigilantes such as the unrecognized or non-poskim act outside the framework of a recognized beis din that duly has jurisdiction of the case, and act upon their own initiative and their own sense of right or wrong to engage in coercion, where the circumstances of the case do not halachicly warrant it.

    Rav Nachum Eisenstein said that over many years of dealing with contentious gittin cases he only saw two cases of real agunos, where the husband refused to give a Get out of spite. All the other cases he dealt with where someone cried they’re an aguna were cases that did not qualify as such, as often it was simply the parties not having settled the divorce in a halachic manner and the aguna card was played to either generate sympathy or obtain unwarranted concessions without agreeing to settle the case on halachic terms in beis din (i.e. one party was using non-Jewish/secular courts to obtain judgements in contradiction to halacha.)

    #1195779
    charliehall
    Participant

    “There had to have been a beis din trial with both spouses and the dayanim all present at the same time in beis din “

    Not if one of the parties refuses to acknowledge the beit din or if one of the parties flagrantly engages in non halachic behavior such as marrying someone else in a secular ceremony or converts to another religion.

    #1195780
    Joseph
    Participant

    If one of the parties refuses to accept any beis din, then beis din can issue a Siruv and put him/her in Cherem. But even in such a case beis din cannot halachicly issue a ruling that a Get is mandatory without first having an actual trial with the parties to determine whether or not the halacha is that a Get is obligated to be given/accepted.

    #1195781
    Health
    Participant

    feivel -“I personally know of two cases where the recognized Posek of the city arranged for fine Yidden from elsewhere to come to his city and physically coerce a baal to give a get.”

    What do you mean by “physically”? If they beat him up, then Joe is right, it isn’t a Good Get!

    #1195782
    yehudayona
    Participant

    Joseph, which Rabbi Nachum Eisenstein? The one in Israel or the one in Lakewood (formerly of Detroit and Boston)?

    #1195783
    Joseph
    Participant

    The Talmud Muvhik of Rav Elyashiv zt’l, who is a Rov in Yerushalayim currently, and was previously a Rov in the U.S. He might have a brother in Lakewood.

    #1195784
    rabbiofberlin
    Participant

    Joseph: the case of a “get me-usah” is complicated so I will not enter into this halachic thicket. However, someone is misleading the world- I don’t want to accuse a Rov of that- when you say that there were only “two cases of genuine agunos”. This is preposterous. “Puk mo amo diber”. There are multiple such cases and they run into the hundreds,maybe thousands.

    #1195785
    oomis
    Participant

    How does the valid goal remove chillul Hashem”

    Pikuach nefesh? (and I do not recommend forcing a GET or causing a Ch”H).

    #1195786

    Pikuach nefesh is not docheh chillul Hashem, at least some forms (I’m thinking changing shoelaces), so you’d have to know how this fits in.

    #1195787
    Its Okay
    Member

    its interesting which things in judaism GET people all fired up and emotional.

    living one’s life for materialism, nah.

    gittin (roar!!!)

    #1195788
    golfer
    Participant

    It’s simple, itsokay.

    Materialism is lots of fun.

    Gittin, sadly, are not.

    #1195790
    Joseph
    Participant

    rob: He was speaking about the (many) cases he was involved with, not the worldwide total. And it was a tiny percentage. As far as Get Me’usa, it is complicated indeed, but it is also playing with fire as Get Me’usa brings mamzeirim into the world.

    #1195791
    flatbusher
    Participant

    Apukerma: The law is very clear that if a man gives a woman a kesubah he has agreed to give her a “get” when the marriage ends. It is no more against the “law” to coerce a man to obey the law and give the “get” than it is to coerce a robber not to take your possessions. It is a tremendous kiddush ha-Shem for people to show that they consider Ha-Shem’s law superior to the law of the goyim. A man who refueses to give a a “get” while divorcing his wife under the goyim’s law is a traitor to klal yisrael, and the coercion against him is justified. Dina Malchusa Dina, which protects such men and encourages such behavior, does not apply for laws that require a clear violation of Torah law and are directged tgowards destroying klal Yisrael.

    This is a bizarre comment. If a person doesn’t follow halacha, no one coerces another to do so. Please cite the source where halacha encourages physical violence to comply with a halacha. I also think you don’t understand what chillul Hashem means, otherwise you would not have made your comment that physical violence by frum people to force a get that gets widely publicized is somehow a Kiddush Hashem.

    #1195792
    rabbiofberlin
    Participant

    Joseph: I did not hear or read the comments you quote but it is pretty clear that there are hundreds, maybe thousands, of agunot today. In Eretz Yisroel, the “botei din” have tried to deal with this-all the way putting people in jail- but out of israel, few rabbonim have dealt with this in a constructive manner.

    #1195793
    yehudayona
    Participant

    Joseph, I very much doubt if the two Nachum Eisensteins are brothers. George Foreman might have given all his sons the same name, but we don’t do that.

    #1195794
    lesschumras
    Participant

    I’ve read that in pre-war Europe, chassidish justified beating husbands with the following rational: the person’s natural instinct is to give a get, but it’s his yetzer harah that was stopping him. So, they were simply beating out his yetzer harah so that he could, uncoerced, grant the get

    #1195795

    Lesschumras, it’s a Mishnah.

    ???? ?????, ??? ?, ???? ?

    #1195797
    Lightbrite
    Participant

    Bump

    #1195798
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    “How can it be a chilul hashem to ease the plight of agunos???”

    “How does the valid goal remove chillul Hashem?”

    According to the halachic definition of chillul Hashem, if something is a Mitzvah, it can’t be a chillul Hashem. Actually, it is a Kiddush Hashem, even if (maybe especially if) others look down on you for it.

    #1195799
    Avi K
    Participant

    1. Actually Rambam (Hilchot Gerushin 2:20) says that beating him gets rid of his yetzer hara. However, Rambam lived in a time when the Jewish communities had internal autonomy and the bet din was the officially recognized. Outside of Israel, where the Chief Rabbinate courts handle marriage and divorce for Jews(and have various means of persuasion at their disposal, including imprisonment, but not corporal punishment), there is no longer an official bet din (bet din kavua). Certainly, three rabbis who hang out a shingle, do not constitute a bet din kavua.

    2. In the US no one has a halachic obligation to recognize this or that bet din. In fact, I heard that there are several people in Monsey who were put in cherem by one community but receive all honors in their own shuls.

    3. There is no mitzva to have a person beaten in order to extract a get from him. It is an option that a bet din kavua has. Thus doing it is a chillul Hashem. This is similar to returning a lost object to a gentile where it is expected that people will return lost objects.

    4. Applying social pressure probably does not constitute force as he can choose to ignore it. The same goes for informing his employer. However, the bet din or other organization should be careful to run afoul of the libel and slander laws.

    5. Once someone in Posen became a Reformer so Rabbi Akiva Eiger, upon the wife’s request, ordered him to give a get. He refused so RAE read him the first mishna in Kiddushin regarding how a married woman becomes single. The guy laughed, walked out of the office and fell down the stairs.

    #1195800
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    Avi K.: “5. Once someone in Posen became a Reformer so Rabbi Akiva Eiger, upon the wife’s request, ordered him to give a get. He refused so RAE read him the first mishna in Kiddushin regarding how a married woman becomes single. The guy laughed, walked out of the office and fell down the stairs.”

    The last two words should be “and died” (thereby making his wife single).

    (I’m not sure if that would be clear to s.o. who doesn’t already know the story).

    #1195801
    Abba_S
    Participant

    I don’t know of one case where social pressure caused a husband to give a Get. The only thing that is accomplished is that the husband has been embarrassed. It should be noted that the second Bais HaMekdash was destroyed because Bar Kamtza was embarrassed even though he was an evil man. It should also be noted that one who embarrasses his fellow Jew loses his portion in the next world.

    Informing an employer may get you sued for defamation of character. I know of a Bais Din that has been sued for issuing a Siruv. You do realize that the husband can go back to civil court and ask that his alimony and child support be reduced as the wife’s agents are trying to get him fired.

    #1195802
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    “I don’t know of one case where social pressure caused a husband to give a Get. The only thing that is accomplished is that the husband has been embarrassed. It should be noted that the second Bais HaMekdash was destroyed because Bar Kamtza was embarrassed even though he was an evil man. It should also be noted that one who embarrasses his fellow Jew loses his portion in the next world.”

    That would only apply if he embarrasses someone when he is not allowed to (which is most of the time). If it’s a situation in which he is halachically required to, it would not apply. I believe there are situations in which a Beis Din may be required to embarrass someone publicly.It’s not a topic I’m so up on, but I think that I have heard stories from the past.

    If someone is chayiv misa, they are obviously being embarrassed publicly, so clearly there are cases in which Beis Din can publicly embarrass someone. Nowadays, it’s probably much more complicated, but it’s possible that there are situations today where they are allowed to.

    #1195803
    Abba_S
    Participant

    “That would only apply if he embarrasses someone when he is not allowed to (which is most of the time). If it’s a situation in which he is halachically required to, it would not apply. I believe there are situations in which a Beis Din may be required to embarrass someone publicly.”

    I believe you should never embarrass someone without a constructive purpose. My proof is Bar Kamtza, an evil man, who was embarrassed at a party attended by the leading Rabbis of that time (who had greater minds then anyone in the coffee room) and resulted in the destruction of the second Temple. According to you the destruction should have been caused by something else.( Note there were other factors but Bar Kamtza was one of the main factors)

    There is a big difference between Bais Din punishing someone and the person being embarrassed. There the intention was to punish the person not embarrass him. In this case they are trying to embarrass him as pressure to give a Get. Also is this social pressure sanctioned by Bais Din? Also at least here in the USA there is no obligation to follow one Bais Din so the husband can claim he is following a different Bais Din resulting in embarrassing an innocent man.

    I am not saying it’s 100% prohibited to use social pressure in this case. What I am saying is that it’s a minefield, as you can lose your portion in the next world and should be avoided.

    #1195804
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    This sentence, “I believe you should never embarrass someone without a constructive purpose.” is not a contradiction to this sentence: “I believe there are situations in which a Beis Din may be required to embarrass someone publicly.”

    In fact they are the same thing. If the Beis Din is supposed to embarrass someone in a specific situation, it is because there is a constructive purpose. (which does not mean that it is allowed any time there is a constructive purpose, but in order to be allowed, there must be a constructive purpose.

    #1195805
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    “According to you the destruction should have been caused by something else”

    Where do you see that in anything I wrote?

    #1195806
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    “In this case they are trying to embarrass him as pressure to give a Get. Also is this social pressure sanctioned by Bais Din?” “I am not saying it’s 100% prohibited to use social pressure in this case. What I am saying is that it’s a minefield, as you can lose your portion in the next world and should be avoided.”

    If the Beis Din says to do so, then it is a Mitzvah to do so, and you are not allowed to worry about losing your portion in the next world. If you refuse to listen to the Beis Din, you will be greatly punished in the next world.

    The concept of losing your portion in the next World for embarrassing someone should not come into the equation. The only question one should be asking is: “What does the Beis Din/Rabbanim say to do?” If you do the right thing, you will be rewarded. If you don’t, you will be punished.

    #1195807
    Abba_S
    Participant

    The Bais Din may rule that the husband has to give a get but I don’t believe the Bais Din authorizes embarrassing him. The story of Bar Kamtza shows that Hashem punishes the Jewish People even for the embarrassment of an Evil Man such as Bar Kamtza.

    What is happening is that zealots take the ruling as a license to embarrass the husband and in some cases resulting in the husband fleeing the jurisdiction making it more difficult to collect alimony and child support besides making it harder to get him to give a get. Even if he doesn’t flee he can sue in Civil Court the ex-wife, Bais Din and the people defaming him at least here in the US. This why Bais Din would be stupid to authorize it as they gain nothing by authorizing it but can lose fined so severely that they loose everything they own.

    #1195809
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    “This why Bais Din would be stupid to authorize it as they gain nothing by authorizing it but can lose fined so severely that they loose everything they own.”

    If they rule that way, then it is not stupid. If it’s stupid, then they don’t rule that way.

    #1195810
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    “The story of Bar Kamtza shows that Hashem punishes the Jewish People even for the embarrassment of an Evil Man such as Bar Kamtza.”

    True. And I never said anything that is a contradiction to that statement.

    #1195811
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    “What is happening is that zealots take the ruling as a license to embarrass the husband and in some cases resulting in the husband fleeing the jurisdiction making it more difficult to collect alimony and child support besides making it harder to get him to give a get. Even if he doesn’t flee he can sue in Civil Court the ex-wife, Bais Din and the people defaming him at least here in the US. This why Bais Din would be stupid to authorize it as they gain nothing by authorizing it but can lose fined so severely that they loose everything they own.”

    I have been thinking about what you said that there is nothing to gain. Obviously, if the guy would give in and give his wife a get, there is a lot to gain, which is why people would do this.

    So I was assuming that you are assuming that most men in this situation won’t give in anyhow. Which made sense to me.

    But, when I thought about it some more, I realized that there is a point. The point is that if people know that this can happen to them if they refuse to give their wife a get, then they will make sure not to put themselves in this situation.

    That is why Lenny keeps asking if he will be ostracized if he refuses to give his wife a get. No one wants to be ostracized. So the men who are already refusing to give their wives a get may not give in, but ostracizing them will prevent others from doing so.

    It’s like jail. Going to jail doesn’t help the criminals who end up there, but fear of jail prevents crime.

    Obviously, one should only do these thing if the Rabbanim say to. I know nothing about the matter, so I have no idea if the Rabbanim ever say to or not, and maybe they never do. But if they do, then obviously it’s a Mitzvah to do so, and you will get Olam Haba if you listen, and you will go to gehinnom if you don’t listen. And you may be saving lives by listening. So you definitely have a lot to gain (if the Rabbanim say to do so).

    #1195812
    Abba_S
    Participant

    “This why Bais Din would be stupid to authorize it as they gain nothing by authorizing it but can lose fined so severely that they loose everything they own.”

    If they rule that way, then it is not stupid. If it’s stupid, then they don’t rule that way.”

    While it’s important to rebuke someone for his transgressions it is equally important not to do it in an embarrassing way. So for the Bais Din to sanction embarrassing the husband not only wouldn’t help the situation but may cause additional problems such as them being fined by civil court besides any punishment in the world to come.

    #1195813
    Lilmod Ulelamaid
    Participant

    Again, if you do what Hashem wants, you don’t get punished, but if you don’t, then you do. Hashem makes the rules, and He decides who gets punished.

    If you listen to Beis Din, you won’t get punished, but if you don’t, you will.

    You don’t lose your World-to-Come for embarrassing someone when Hashem says to, and in fact you may lose it if you don’t.

    As you already know, the Torah tells us in certain situations that we are required to embarrass others.

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