Women of the Wall help others lay tfillin in Tel Aviv

An Israeli soldier wears a prayer shawl while carrying her weapon as she dances together with Women of the Wall at the Western Wall on March 3. [Flash90 photo]

TEL AVIV — They were standing in a public square in a major Israeli city, helping women lay tfillin amid shouts of protest and quizzical looks from nearby men in black hats.

It’s become an occasional morning routine for Women of the Wall. Except this time, they weren’t at the Western Wall in Jerusalem. They were at the entrance to Shuk Hacarmel, the boisterous central market in Tel Aviv.

The women’s prayer group achieved something of a coup this year when a district court legalized their monthly services at the Western Wall, effectively ending years of periodic arrests and detentions of its members.

Women of the Wall isn’t allowed to bring a Torah into the Kotel’s women’s section, and it’s still negotiating with the government over the expansion of a pluralistic prayer site at the Robinson’s Arch section of the wall. But the court ruling and ensuing police protection have allowed the group to pray in relative peace in recent months, without fear of prison or counter-protest.

So, in advance of International Women’s Day on March 8, the group came to Tel Aviv the morning of March 7 and set up a small stand at Star of David Square, so named because crowded, noisy streets shoot out of it in six directions.

Then they started asking women if they wanted to put on tallit and tfillin. Most ignored the offer or politely refused, but a handful said yes to one or the other, repeating the blessing word for word along with a Women of the Wall member.

Men who walk through the square get the same offer every day from Chabad Chassidim. But when the women started wrapping willing passersby in a tallit, though, it elicited an outcry. U.S. Orthodox day schools such as SAR Academy and Ramaz in New York may allow women to don prayer shawls and leather straps, but at least some Israelis apparently think the same behaviour should not take place to the streets of Tel Aviv.

A crowd formed as one young man in a white shirt and large, black, knit kippah began to scream.

“Really? What else do you want to do? Have a circumcision?” he yelled before two friends pulled him away. “Maybe you’ll do that one day.”

By time the women were ready to close up, the Chabad tables had opened, flanking Women of the Wall’s booth on either side. Each side, for the most part, left the other alone, but perhaps the Chabadniks were a bit jealous. Never in recent memory had a tfillin table in central Tel Aviv gotten so much attention.