By COLlive staff
N., born and raised in a large settlement in the Yehudah and Shomron region of Israel, lost her father when she was just a child. As the first-born, she was expected to help her mother shoulder the burden of raising the family.
An Arab who worked in the settlement’s maintenance department picked up on her distress and befriended her. He promised her the world and showered her with expensive gifts, and she responded by converting to Islam and marrying him in the Sharia religious court.
After the wedding, N. was brought to her husband’s home and got the shock of her life. In the home, located in a village near Shechem, she discovered his Muslim wife and six children. N. would be the Arab man’s second wife.
If that weren’t enough, the house had no running water or electricity. “It was like going back 200 years,” she later told a social worker from the Yad L’Achim organization.
For their part, the Muslim wife and children decided to show N. exactly how they felt about her. They called her “stinking Jew,” vowed to kill her and her Jewish family, and did everything they could to remind her that she was not wanted.
N. was in an impossible situation. She wanted to run away but feared for her life if she were caught by her Arab husband.
However, when she gave birth to her first child, a daughter, she decided to make a run for it, come what may. “I can’t raise my daughter in this place,” she told herself.
She mustered the courage and called her mother for the first time since her marriage. The mother, who had been in touch with Yad L’Achim, matched N. up with the rescue organization’s social worker, who was already familiar with the story.
The rescue was arranged two days later. N. asked her Arab husband to drive her to the mother-child health center in the settlement where he worked in order to open a file for the baby.
Right after she was dropped off, a Yad L’Achim rescue pulled up and drove her and her daughter to a secret safe house. A few days later, N. went to a nearby police station and filed a complaint against her husband, resulting in his entry permit to Israel being canceled.
Last week, N. came before the Rabbinical Court in Jerusalem and took part in a moving “Return to Judaism” ceremony.
“The war spurred me to return to Judaism,” she told the dayanim. “I felt that every second I didn’t take this step, I was acting against the interests of our people. It was clear to me that I had to take this step for the wellbeing of Am Yisrael.”
After hearing from the social worker about the mitzvos she had accepted upon herself and the Torah classes she was attending, the dayanim were impressed by her sincere desire to return to her people and signed her Return to Judaism document.
A Yad L’Achim official said: “As a result of the security situation, more and more souls are returning to the G-d of Israel. It is clear to us that N.’s return to Judaism is making big waves in Shamayim and helping to protect Am Yisrael and our security people.”
Hashem have rachmanus on her and your people. Amen
May she have much nachas.
Dayonim have to sign a return to judaism document? Isn’t it once a yid always a yid? Like no matter how far you go, you always have a neshama and can come back…? Why do the dayonim have to be impressed and then choose to sign a document? Never heard of this…
But either way yad la’achim is the best
Given that she converted, r”l, the state of Israel wouldn’t necessarily consider her Jewish (halachah notwithstanding), so she’d need an official paper from a recognized beis din. That’s probably all this is.
I assume it’s for some sort of legal thing with the state.