While the conversions will not be officially recognized, the move signals growing impatience in some sectors with the Orthodox rabbinate's tight grip on aspects of daily life and a political leadership that has not liberalized access to conversion and other religious services.
The court, established by a dozen liberal rabbis, began offering conversions on Monday, with six children starting the process.
Itim, an Israeli group that assists people dealing with the rabbinate, said it helped establish the court after efforts to address the issue failed. Spokeswoman Einat Levin said the rabbis hope that if large numbers of people go through with the conversions the state will have no choice but to recognize them.
The Orthodox controls conversions, marriage and burials. The new courts are meant to ease the path to conversion for tens of thousands of people, mainly immigrants from the former Soviet Union who have Jewish ancestry but face difficulty marrying in Israel or receiving Jewish burials.
Soviet Jews have been granted Israeli citizenship because of their ancestry, but many are not considered Jewish under Jewish law and cannot marry in Israel. Many are resistant to Orthodox conversion because the process is lengthy and requires the adoption of a strict Orthodox lifestyle.
