The Chief Rabbi of Zichron Yaakov stated that a man and wife whose marriage contract was burnt in the fires could not live under the same roof until a new contract had been drawn up.

 Having suffered through the trauma of towering infernos that consumed their homes and possessions, families who lost everything in the recent fires around around the country faced more bad news from rabbinic quarters. 

In the wake of the conflagrations, the municipal chief rabbi of Zichron Yaakov, who is also in charge of marriage licenses in Haifa, issued a statement saying that a man and wife whose marriage contract was burnt in the fires could not live under the same roof until a new contract had been drawn up.

The national chief rabbis quickly intervened however and ruled that any couple who had lost their ketubah in the fire could continue to live together, but should have a replacement marriage contract drawn up.

Jewish law states that a couple can only live together if they are in possession of a marriage contract, ketubah in Hebrew, and that living together without the document is forbidden and is even compared to concubinage. 

The ketubah in Jewish law was designed to…read more at Jpost