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So what's left? A Jewish man may marry a Jewish woman, and they had better do it in the Rabbinate. And what will the rest of the people do, including homosexuals, lesbians, atheists or those without any religious affiliation – who are all, by the way, law-abiding and tax-paying citizens? They can take care of themselves.
These laws are shamefully still determined by religious law, which imposes different restrictions on a person's right to get married. And whoever doesn't want to or can't, is forced to go out of the country to do so.
I know, because after going through the entire Israeli route – from kindergarten through military service to university – I discovered that in my own country I am not allowed to marry according to my faith. And in order to wed in a civil marriage, I was forced to travel abroad.
That was when I found out that Israel was the only democracy in the Western world still imposing serious restrictions on the freedom of marriage – as is customary only in the most backward Islamic countries.
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