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    The real problem is with the lawyers. They many times act contrary
    to the better interest of their client, and this causes many snags
    and much agony.
    
    My brother-in-law ia a Dayan and has sat on the Beth Din in Haifa,
    Tel-Aviv, and presently in Ashkelon. He has told me on many occasions
    that the moment lawyers are involved the case drags and drags. This
    is due to the "ADVICE" that lawyers give their clients. In his oppinion
    most cases could be handled swiftly and efficiently and to the liking
    of both sides if lawyers were left out.
    
    The law in Israel does permit the courts to jail a man if he refuses
    to give a "GET" after the Beth Din decreed that he must. This usually
    works, though there is a case of a man who has been in jail for
    over twenty years and still refuses. Likewise the Beth Din can invoke
    what is called "Heter Mea Rabanim" for a man whose wife refuses
    to accept a "GET" eventhough the Beth Din has decreed. This porcedure
    allows the man to remarry eventhough he is legally married now to
    two women.
    
    The tools do exist to help out BOTH sides. The lawyers are the ones
    who screw up the proceedings.
    
    Cb. 
    
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|  |     Occasionally the Jewish papers (Jewish Press, etc.) carry an ad
    that so-and-so has refused to deliver a /get/ and is now under /cherem/
    (ban).  He is then to be shunned, privately and publicly, until
    he delivers.  This is virtually the only recourse when Batei Din
    have no legal enforcement power.
    
    Not that I'm knocking peer pressure.  I was told of a community
    where a man refused to give his wife a get.  The women of the community
    decided that they would not go to the /mikveh/ until a /get/ was
    delivered, i.e., normal marital relations would become forbidden
    -indefinitely-.
    
    The /get/ was delivered rapidly.
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