
Agunah - Wikipedia
An aguna or agunah (Hebrew: עֲגוּנָה, romanized: ʿaḡunā, lit. 'anchored or chained [woman]', plural: עֲגוּנוֹת , ʿaḡunoṯ) is a Jewish woman who is stuck in her marriage as determined by traditional halakha (Jewish law). The classic case is a man who has left on a journey and has not returned or has gone into battle and is missing in action.
The Agunah - Chabad.org
The agunah is a "chained woman," who cannot marry because she is still technically married to a man she no longer lives with. In the overwhelming majority of cases, the get (Jewish divorce) process proceeds without hitches, offering men and women the ability to be freed of unwanted matrimonial bonds.
Agunah - Jewish Virtual Library
AGUNAH (Heb. עֲגוּנָה; lit. "tied," cf. Ruth 1:13), married woman who for whatsoever reason is separated from her husband and cannot remarry, either because she cannot obtain a divorce from him (see Divorce), or because it is unknown whether he is still alive.
Agunot - Jewish Women's Archive
2021年6月23日 · Agunot (agunah, s.) are women who are unable to obtain a rabbinic divorce (Writ of (religious) divorce get; gittin, pl.) because their husbands or their husband’s male next of kin are unable or unwilling to give one, leaving them chained in marital captivity (iggun). The term comes from the Hebrew word for “anchor.”
The Agunah - Wikipedia
The Agunah is a 1974 English translation by Curt Leviant of the 1961 Yiddish novel Di Agune (די עגונה) by Chaim Grade. It was also published in a 1962 Hebrew translation, Ha-Agunah (העגונה).
Agunot: A Different Kind of Hostage | My Jewish Learning
No one who has read Chaim Grade’s powerful novel The Agunah will soon forget its tragic heroine, whose husband has left her and refuses to give her a get (Jewish divorce), so that she can never remarry. Actually, the novel describes only one of several categories of agunah.
Agunah - Jewish Knowledge Base - Chabad.org
Agunah: (lit. anchored woman”); A woman whose husband has disappeared and it is not known with certainty whether he is dead or alive; she is thus forbidden to marry unless a) the husband is located and grants her a legal divorce, or b) careful investigation by rabbinical authorities uncovers admissible evidence of his death. It can also refer ...
Agunah | Divorce, Halakhah, Get | Britannica
Agunah, in Orthodox and Conservative Judaism, a woman who is presumed to be widowed but who cannot remarry because evidence of her husband’s death does not satisfy legal requirements. The plight of the agunah has generated voluminous and complex treatment in Halakhic literature.
Ruth: Who is an Agunah? – The International Beit Din
Perhaps the most well-known definition of an agunah is a woman whose husband has disappeared and is presumed dead. As a result, his wife finds herself in a limbo-like status. Without clear proof of his death, she cannot remarry or move on with her life.
What Is an Agunah - Agunah and Her Get
An Agunah, according to Jewish law, is a woman who wishes to obtain a divorce from her husband, but whose husband is either unable or unwilling to grant her a halachic bill of divorce, or Get. Circumstances leading to a woman being declared an agunah are: The husband refusing maliciously to grant his wife a Get.