section 22 of the Population Registry Law states that a man cannot be registered as the father of the child of a woman who was married to another man within 300 days before the birth of the child, except by order of an authorized court or rabbinical court. The Interior Ministry clerk told her that by religious law, her son might be considered a mamzer (the offspring of incest or adultery between Jews) or a possible mamzer.
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The terms "mamzer" and "possible mamzer" are religious ones, but impact on the civil law related to marriage and divorce.
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Only religious marriages are recognized in Israel and the Interior Ministry only registers marriages carried out by the rabbinate (and marriages conducted abroad). That is why men and women seeking to register for marriage in the rabbinate sometimes discover, perhaps for the first time in their lives, that they are halakhically considered mamzerim or at least possible mamzerim, a status involving serious prohibitions, based on Deuteronomy 23:3: "A mamzer shall not enter into the congregation of the Lord, even unto the tenth generation shall he not enter in the congregation of the Lord." They will soon realize that their opportunities to marry in Israel are limited, not only for them, but for their future offspring as well. According to halakha - and the state - mamzerim can only marry other mamzerim or converts. A "possible mamzer" must have his or her status clarified before they can marry. Unless the rabbinical court releases a person from their status of being a mamzer, "according to halakha, a mamzer is forever," explains Rabbi Shlomo Dichovski, a member of the Great Rabbinical Court. Dichovski is aware that in view of the current norms, "the country should seemingly be filled with mamzerim, but in reality this does not occur because, in certain cases, the rabbinate releases people from their status as mamzerim, and over the years, the mamzerim become assimilated into the general population and are no longer recognized as such."
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A "possible mamzer" is one whose mamzerut has not been proved and the circumstances of whose birth are not clear, for example, when the mother refuses to say who the father is and the father denies paternity. A child born to an unknown father and an unmarried mother is called a shtuki. A shtuki may not marry an ordinary Jewish woman, or a mamzeret - because she may only marry a definite mamzer - or a shtukit because she may ultimately turn out to be permissible.
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