The 'chained women' whose husbands refuse them a divorce

By John Safran
Updated June 2 2015 - 10:23am, first published May 21 2015 - 12:31pm
Lana Krain remarried after her first husband refused her a gett, but chose not to have children because they would be considered illegitimate. Photo: Simon Schluter
Lana Krain remarried after her first husband refused her a gett, but chose not to have children because they would be considered illegitimate. Photo: Simon Schluter
Lana Krain remarried after her first husband refused her a gett, but chose not to have children because they would be considered illegitimate. Photo: Simon Schluter
Lana Krain remarried after her first husband refused her a gett, but chose not to have children because they would be considered illegitimate. Photo: Simon Schluter

Hundreds of Jewish women stare down at a rabbi in a school hall. The Victorian chapter of the National Council of Jewish Women of Australia has called a meeting tonight to discuss agunot, "chained women". These are the women whose husbands refuse to hand over a religious divorce certificate, a gett. Without a gett, the woman are forbidden to remarry under Jewish law.