Davidson helped create an organisation called
Giyur KeHalacha, which has grown into a network of Orthodox
conversion courts that are working independently of the Chief Rabbinate. The organisation gained traction after a number of high-profile rabbis came on board such as
Shlomo Riskin. However, Davidson soon left that organisation, partly over their attempts to gain favour with the Chief Rabbinate. He then co-founded a new organisation called
Ahavat HaGer, which is an umbrella group of Orthodox rabbis around the world who wish to convert independently of centralized rabbinic organizations, and have agreed to accept any conversion that meets the minimum standard under the
Halacha. The organisation connects communities around the world and has rabbis from
Israel, the
United States,
Brazil,
Colombia,
Italy,
Finland and
Sweden as well as Israeli rabbis with communal connections in
Germany,
Russia,
Lithuania, and the
Netherlands. Davidson is an expert on the laws of conversion having studied them for over a decade. He is also a protégé of Rabbi
Haim Amsalem, and has sat on a number of conversion courts around the world with him. He is also active in training rabbis to perform conversions, and setting out principles to assist other courts. While his adversarial style has alienated him from some authorities, Davidson believes that a forceful approach is needed to break the monopoly of the Chief Rabbis. He has called the current Chief Rabbinate an "illegitimately coercive institution" == See also ==