Chief Rabbi Signs Landmark Reform: Rabbinical Courts Adopt Tough New Measures Against Parental Alienation
In a dramatic and unprecedented move aimed at protecting children caught in divorce disputes, the Rabbinical Courts Administration has unveiled sweeping new regulations designed to combat parental alienation and safeguard children’s welfare. The new binding directives were signed by the President of the Supreme Rabbinical Court, Chief Rabbi Rav Dovid Yosef, and establish uniform procedures for handling urgent cases involving concerns over child safety and parent-child relationships.
The new policy is rooted in the halachic and judicial principle that every child has a fundamental right to maintain a healthy and ongoing relationship with both parents. At the same time, the guidelines recognize that children must be fully protected in situations involving violence or danger. The regulations emphasize that delays in addressing parental alienation can cause severe and lasting emotional harm to children, and therefore require rabbinical judges throughout the regional court system to act quickly and decisively.
Among the most significant changes is a strict timetable for handling urgent cases. Whenever a request is filed seeking immediate or temporary relief to preserve a child’s relationship with a parent or to ensure the child’s safety, the court must either hold a hearing within seven days of the filing or issue a detailed written ruling within 72 hours if the matter can be decided based on the submitted materials.
The regulations also prohibit unnecessary delays once proceedings have begun. Follow-up stages, including responses from the parties, affidavits, and expert reports, must be completed within the shortest possible timeframes. Any deviation from the prescribed schedule will require special justification and a written explanation by the court.
To ensure compliance, the heads of the regional rabbinical courts will personally oversee implementation of the new procedures. Every six months they will be required to submit reports to the President of the Supreme Rabbinical Court and the Director of the Rabbinical Courts detailing any cases that exceeded the mandated timetable and explaining the reasons for the delay.
A major section of the new directive addresses parental alienation directly, defining it as emotional harm and abuse inflicted upon a child. The regulations state that rabbinical courts have a judicial obligation to intervene aggressively when one parent attempts to turn a child against the other.
The new framework authorizes a broad range of enforcement measures against an alienating parent. These include the use of collection proceedings, contempt sanctions, and other administrative restrictions intended to compel compliance with court orders.
The policy also introduces significant financial consequences. Courts will be empowered to impose fines payable either to the state or to the injured parent, following advance warnings issued early in the proceedings. In cases involving deliberate refusal to facilitate contact between a child and a parent, judges will have explicit authority to reduce or even eliminate child-support obligations. The courts may also require the alienating parent to reimburse legal-aid expenses incurred by the state.
Perhaps the most far-reaching provision concerns custody. The regulations state that parental alienation occurs under the supervision and responsibility of the parent with whom the child resides, and that failure to prevent such alienation may reflect a serious deficiency in that parent’s fitness as a custodial guardian. As a result, courts will be authorized to consider immediately transferring the child to the alienated parent or temporarily placing the child with a third party or treatment center to facilitate restoration of the relationship.
The new procedures further clarify that repairing severe parental alienation often requires specialized treatment from private professionals rather than relying solely on public services. In such situations, the alienating parent may be ordered to bear the full cost of the therapeutic intervention.
In addition, the Supreme Rabbinical Court is instructed to exercise caution before granting stays of execution that would delay regional court orders intended to restore or stabilize a child’s relationship with a parent.
Explaining the purpose of the initiative, Rav Dovid Yosef said, “These proposals are intended to eliminate or at least reduce the harm inflicted on the tender souls of children who, unfortunately, experience parental alienation, as well as the severe long-term consequences that result. These children have no one to save them, and their eyes are turned toward us.”
The new regulations will be published in the official registry and on the Rabbinical Courts’ official website and will take effect immediately.
{Matzav.com}
