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Haredi Judaism

Haredi Judaism (Hebrew: יהדות חֲרֵדִית Yahadut Ḥaredit, IPA: [ħaʁeˈdi]; also spelled Charedi in English; plural Haredim or Charedim) consists of groups within Orthodox Judaism that are characterized by their strict adherence to halakha (Jewish law) and traditions, in opposition to modern values and practices.[1][2] Its members are usually referred to as ultra-Orthodox in English; however, the term "ultra-Orthodox" is considered pejorative by many of its adherents, who prefer terms like strictly Orthodox or Haredi.[3] Haredi Jews regard themselves as the most religiously authentic group of Jews,[4][5] although other movements of Judaism disagree.[6]

Haredi Jewish men during a Torah reading.

Some scholars have suggested that Haredi Judaism is a reaction to societal changes, including political emancipation, the Haskalah movement derived from the Enlightenment, acculturation, secularization, religious reform in all its forms from mild to extreme, the rise of the Jewish national movements, etc.[7] In contrast to Modern Orthodox Judaism, followers of Haredi Judaism segregate themselves from other parts of society to an extent. However, many Haredi communities encourage their young people to get a professional degree or establish a business. Furthermore, some Haredi groups, like Chabad-Lubavitch, encourage outreach to less observant and unaffiliated Jews and hilonim (secular Israeli Jews).[8] Thus, professional and social relationships often form between Haredi and non-Haredi Jews, as well as between Haredi Jews and non-Jews.[9]

Haredi communities are found primarily in Israel (13.3% of Israel's population),[10][11][12] North America, and Western Europe (most notably Antwerp and Stamford Hill in London). Their estimated global population numbers over 1.8 million, and, due to a virtual absence of interfaith marriage and a high birth rate, the Haredi population is growing rapidly.[13][14][15][16] Their numbers have been further boosted since the 1970s by secular Jews adopting a Haredi lifestyle as part of the baal teshuva movement; however, this has been offset by those leaving.[17][18][19][20]

According to data from a January 2023 report by the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics, Haredim, with their current population growth rate being 4% per year, will by the end of the decade form 16% of the entire Israeli population, including Arabs.[21] A previous report from May 2017 forecasted that Haredim will form 20% of the total population in 2040, and 32% in 2065; by then, 1 in 2 Israeli children would be Haredi.[22][23]

Terminology edit

 
Young Haredi Jews in Jerusalem, 2005

The term most commonly used by outsiders, for example most American news organizations, is ultra-Orthodox Judaism.[24] Hillel Halkin suggests the origins of the term may date to the 1950s, a period in which Haredi survivors of the Holocaust first began arriving in America.[25] However, Isaac Leeser (1806–1868) was described in 1916 as "ultra-Orthodox".[26]

Haredi is a Modern Hebrew adjective derived from the Biblical verb hared, which appears in the Book of Isaiah (66:2; its plural haredim appears in Isaiah 66:5)[27] and is translated as "[one who] trembles" at the word of God. The word connotes an awe-inspired fear to perform the will of God;[28] it is used to distinguish them from other Orthodox Jews (similar to the name used by Christian Quakers to describe their relationship to God).[27][29][30]

The word Haredi is often used in the Jewish diaspora in place of the term ultra-Orthodox, which many view as inaccurate or offensive,[31][32][33] it being seen as a derogatory term suggesting extremism; English-language alternatives that have been proposed include fervently Orthodox,[34] strictly Orthodox,[32] or traditional Orthodox.[35] Others, however, dispute the characterization of the term as pejorative.[25] Ari L. Goldman, a professor at Columbia University, notes that the term simply serves a practical purpose to distinguish a specific part of the Orthodox community, and is not meant as pejorative.[35] Others, such as Samuel Heilman, criticized terms such as ultra-Orthodox and traditional Orthodox, arguing that they misidentify Haredi Jews as more authentically Orthodox than others, as opposed to adopting customs and practises that reflect their desire to separate from the outside world.[36][25]

The community has sometimes been characterized as traditional Orthodox, in contradistinction to the Modern Orthodox, the other major branch of Orthodox Judaism, and not to be confused with the movement represented by the Union for Traditional Judaism, which originated in Conservative Judaism.[37][38]

Haredi Jews also use other terms to refer to themselves. Common Yiddish words include Yidn (Jews), erlekhe Yidn (virtuous Jews),[31] ben Torah (son of the Torah),[27] frum (pious), and heimish (home-like; i. e., our crowd).

In Israel, Haredi Jews are sometimes also called by the derogatory slang words dos (plural dosim), that mimics the traditional Ashkenazi Hebrew pronunciation of the Hebrew word datiyim (religious),[39] and more rarely, sh'chorim (blacks), a reference to the black clothes they typically wear;[40] a related informal term used in English is black hat.[41]

History edit

 
Hasidic boys in Łódź, 1910

Throughout Jewish history, Judaism has always faced internal and external challenges to its beliefs and practices which have emerged over time and produced counter-responses. According to its adherents, Haredi Judaism is a continuation of Rabbinic Judaism, and the immediate forebears of contemporary Haredi Jews were the Jewish religious traditionalists of Central and Eastern Europe who fought against secular modernization's influence which reduced Jewish religious observance. Indeed, adherents of Haredi Judaism, just like Rabbinic Jews, see their beliefs as part of an unbroken tradition which dates back to the revelation at Sinai.[42] However, most historians of Orthodoxy consider Haredi Judaism, in its most modern incarnation, to date back to the beginning of the 20th century.[42][43][44]

For centuries, before Jewish emancipation, European Jews were forced to live in ghettos where Jewish culture and religious observance were preserved. Change began in the wake of the Age of Enlightenment, when some European liberals sought to include the Jewish population in the emerging empires and nation states. The influence of the Haskalah movement[45] (Jewish Enlightenment) was also evident. Supporters of the Haskalah held that Judaism must change, in keeping with the social changes around them. Other Jews insisted on strict adherence to halakha (Jewish law and custom).

In Germany, the opponents of Reform rallied to Samson Raphael Hirsch, who led a secession from German Jewish communal organizations to form a strictly Orthodox movement, with its own network of synagogues and religious schools. His approach was to accept the tools of modern scholarship and apply them in defence of Orthodox Judaism. In the Polish–Lithuanian Commonwealth (including areas traditionally considered Lithuanian), Jews true to traditional values gathered under the banner of Agudas Shlumei Emunei Yisroel.[46]

Moses Sofer was opposed to any philosophical, social, or practical change to customary Orthodox practice. Thus, he did not allow any secular studies to be added to the curriculum of his Pressburg Yeshiva. Sofer's student Moshe Schick, together with Sofer's sons Shimon and Samuel Benjamin, took an active role in arguing against the Reform movement. Others, such as Hillel Lichtenstein, advocated an even more stringent position for Orthodoxy.

A major historic event was the meltdown after the Universal Israelite Congress of 1868–1869 in Pest. In an attempt to unify all streams of Judaism under one constitution, the Orthodox offered the Shulchan Aruch as the ruling Code of law and observance. This was dismissed by the reformists, leading many Orthodox rabbis to resign from the Congress and form their own social and political groups. Hungarian Jewry split into two major institutionally sectarian groups: Orthodox, and Neolog. However, some communities refused to join either of the groups, calling themselves "Status Quo".[citation needed]

Schick demonstrated support in 1877 for the separatist policies of Samson Raphael Hirsch in Germany. Schick's own son was enrolled in the Hildesheimer Rabbinical Seminary, headed by Azriel Hildesheimer, which taught secular studies. Hirsch, however, did not reciprocate, and expressed astonishment at Schick's halakhic contortions in condemning even those Status Quo communities that clearly adhered to halakha.[47] Lichtenstein opposed Hildesheimer, and his son Hirsh Hildesheimer, as they made use of the German language in sermons from the pulpit and seemed to lean in the direction of Zionism.[48]

Shimon Sofer was somewhat more lenient than Lichtenstein on the use of German in sermons, allowing the practice as needed for the sake of keeping cordial relations with the various governments. Likewise, he allowed extra-curricular studies of the gymnasium for students whose rabbinical positions would be recognized by the governments, stipulating the necessity to prove the strict adherence to the God-fearing standards per individual case.[49]

 
Haredi Jews from Galicia at the Karmelitermarkt [de] in Vienna's second district, Leopoldstadt, 1915

In 1912, the World Agudath Israel was founded, to differentiate itself from the Torah Nationalist Mizrachi and secular Zionist organizations. It was dominated by the Hasidic rebbes and Lithuanian rabbis and roshei yeshiva (deans). The organization nominated rabbis who subsequently were elected as representatives in the Polish legislature Sejm, such as Meir Shapiro and Yitzhak-Meir Levin. Not all Hasidic factions joined the Agudath Israel, remaining independent instead, such as Machzikei Hadat of Galicia.[50]

In 1919, Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld and Yitzchok Yerucham Diskin founded the Edah HaChareidis as part of Agudath Israel in then-Mandate Palestine.

In 1924, Agudath Israel obtained 75 percent of the votes in the Kehilla elections.[51]

The Orthodox community polled some 16,000 of a total 90,000 at the Knesseth Israel in 1929.[52] But Sonnenfeld lobbied Sir John Chancellor, the High Commissioner, for separate representation in the Palestine Communities Ordinance from that of the Knesseth Israel. He explained that the Agudas Israel community would cooperate with the Vaad Leumi and the National Jewish Council in matters pertaining to the municipality, but sought to protect its religious convictions independently. The community petitioned the Permanent Mandates Commission of the League of Nations on this issue. The one community principle was victorious, despite their opposition, but this is seen as the creation of the Haredi community in Israel, separate from the other Orthodox and Zionist movements.[53]

In 1932, Sonnenfeld was succeeded by Yosef Tzvi Dushinsky, a disciple of the Shevet Sofer, one of the grandchildren of Moses Sofer. Dushinsky promised to build up a strong Jewish Orthodoxy at peace with the other Jewish communities and the non-Jews.[54]

Post-Holocaust edit

In general, the present-day Haredi population originate from two distinct post-Holocaust waves:

  1. The vast majority of Hasidic and Litvak communities were destroyed during the Holocaust.[55][56] Although Hasidic customs have largely been preserved, the customs of Lithuanian Jewry, including its unique Hebrew pronunciation, have been almost lost. Litvish customs are still preserved primarily by the few older Jews who were born in Lithuania prior to the Holocaust. In the decade or so after 1945, there was a strong drive to revive and maintain these lifestyles by some notable Haredi leaders.
  2. The Chazon Ish was particularly prominent in the early days of the State of Israel. Aharon Kotler established many of the Haredi schools and yeshivas in the United States and Israel; and Joel Teitelbaum had a significant impact on revitalizing Hasidic Jewry, as well as many of the Jews who fled Hungary during the 1956 revolution who became followers of his Satmar dynasty, and became the largest Hasidic group in the world. These Jews typically have maintained a connection only with other religious family members. As such, those growing up in such families have little or no contact with non-Haredi Jews.[57]
  3. The second wave began in the 1970s associated with the religious revival of the so-called baal teshuva movement, although most of the newly religious become Orthodox, and not necessarily fully Haredi.[citation needed] The formation and spread of the Sephardic Haredi lifestyle movement also began in the 1980s by Ovadia Yosef, alongside the establishment of the Shas party in 1984. This led many Sephardi Jews to adopt the clothing and culture of the Lithuanian Haredi Judaism, though it had no historical basis in their own tradition.[citation needed] Many yeshivas were also established specifically for new adopters of the Haredi way of life.[citation needed]

The original Haredi population has been instrumental in the expansion of their lifestyle, though criticisms have been made of discrimination towards the later adopters of the Haredi lifestyle in shidduchim (matchmaking)[58] and the school system.[59]

Practices and beliefs edit

The Haredim represent the conservative or pietistic form of Jewish fundamentalism, distinct from the radical fundamentalism of Gush Emunim,[60] and emphasising withdrawal from, and disdain for, the secular world, and the creation of an alternative world which insulates the Torah and the life it prescribes from outside influences.[61] Haredi Judaism is not an institutionally cohesive or homogeneous group, but comprises a diversity of spiritual and cultural orientations, generally divided into a broad range of Hasidic courts and Litvishe-Yeshivish streams from Eastern Europe, and Oriental Sephardic Haredi Jews. These groups often differ significantly from one another in their specific ideologies and lifestyles, as well as the degree of stringency in religious practice, rigidity of religious philosophy, and isolation from the general culture that they maintain.[citation needed]

Some scholars, including some secular and Reform Jews, describe the Haredim as "radical fundamentalists".[62][63][64][65][66][67][68][69]

The majority of Haredi Jews worldwide live in neighborhoods occupied primarily by other Haredi Jews.[citation needed]

Efforts to keep clear of external influence is a core characteristic of Haredi Judaism. Historically, new mediums of communication such as books, newspapers and magazines, and later tapes, CDs and television, were dealt with by either transforming and controlling the content or having rabbinic leadership censor it altogether. In the modern digital era, difficulty in censoring the internet and conversely, the internet's importance, resulted in a decades long and ongoing struggle of comprehension, adaption, and regulation on the part of rabbinical leadership and community activists.[70]

These beliefs and practices, which have been interpreted as "isolationist", can bring them into conflict with authorities. In 2018, a Haredi school in the United Kingdom was rated as "inadequate" by the Office for Standards in Education, after repeated complaints were raised about the censoring of textbooks and exam papers which contained mentions of homosexuality, examples of women socializing with men, pictures showing women's shoulders and legs, or information that contradicts a creationist worldview.[71][72]

Lifestyle and family edit

 
Haredi Jewish women and girls in Mea Shearim, Jerusalem, 2013

Haredi life, like Orthodox Jewish life in general, is very family-centered and ordered. Boys and girls attend separate schools, and proceed to higher Torah study, in a yeshiva or seminary, respectively, starting anywhere between the ages of 13 and 18. A significant proportion of young men remain in yeshiva until their marriage (which is usually arranged through facilitated dating). After marriage, many Haredi men continue their Torah studies in a kollel.

Studying in secular institutions is often discouraged, although educational facilities for vocational training in a Haredi framework do exist. In the United States and Europe, the majority of Haredi males are active in the workforce. For various reasons, in Israel, most (56%) of their male members do work, though some of those are part of the unofficial workforce.[73][74][75][76] Haredi families (and Orthodox Jewish families in general) are usually much larger than non-Orthodox Jewish families, with as many as twelve or more children.[9] About 70% of female Haredi Jews in Israel work.[73]

Haredi Jews are typically opposed to the viewing of television and films,[77] and the reading of secular newspapers and books. There has been a strong campaign against the Internet, and Internet-enabled mobile phones without filters have also been banned by leading rabbis.[78][79][80] In May 2012, 40,000 Haredim gathered at Citi Field, a baseball park in New York City, to discuss the dangers of unfiltered Internet.[79][81] The event was organized by the Ichud HaKehillos LeTohar HaMachane. The Internet has been allowed for business purposes so long as filters are installed.

In some instances, forms of recreation which conform to Jewish law are treated as antithetical to Haredi Judaism. In 2013, the Rabbinical Court of the Ashkenazi Community in the Haredi settlement of Beitar Illit ruled against Zumba (a type of dance fitness) classes, although they were held with a female instructor and all-female participants.[82][83] The Court said in part: "Both in form and manner, the activity [Zumba] is entirely at odds with both the ways of the Torah and the holiness of Israel, as are the songs associated to it."[83]

Shidduchim edit

With Haredi Judaism having a heavy emphasis on marriage — especially while young — some members will employ a schadhan (a professional matchmaker) to support them in their search for a spouse. While there is no current statistical data showing how many people use the services of a schadhan, it is estimated that the vast majority of Haredi couples were paired by one.[84]

However, with the broader societal shift to online dating, matchmaking in Orthodox and Haredi Judaism has started making inroads online. Vastly different from the most popular online dating services, apps like "Shidduch" pair couples based upon shfill-out lues and life goals. To do this, users fill-out a digital resume. The app was made possible by a partnership between its developers and the Orthodox Union — the same group responsible for kosher food certification ("Circle-U").[85]

Dress edit

 
Styles of Haredi dress
 
Typical Haredi dress for men and women

The standard mode of dress for males of the Lithuanian stream is a black or navy suit and a white shirt.[86] Headgear includes black Fedora or Homburg hats, with black skull caps. Pre-war Lithuanian yeshiva students also wore light coloured suits, along with beige or grey hats,[87] and prior to the 1990s, it was common for Americans of the Lithuanian stream to wear coloured shirts throughout the week, reserving white shirts for Shabbos.[88]

Beards are common among Haredi and many other Orthodox Jewish men, and Hasidic men will almost never be clean-shaven.

Women adhere to the laws of modest dress, and wear long skirts and sleeves, high necklines, and, if married, some form of hair covering.[89] Haredi women never wear trousers, although most do wear pajama-trousers within the home at night.[90]

Over the years, it has become popular among some Haredi women to wear sheitels (wigs) that are more attractive than their own hair (drawing criticism from some more conservative Haredi rabbis). Mainstream Sephardi Haredi rabbi Ovadia Yosef forbade the wearing of wigs altogether.[91] Haredi women often dress more freely and casually within the home, as long as the body remains covered in accordance with the halakha. More modernized Haredi women are somewhat more lenient in matters of their dress, and some follow the latest trends and fashions while conforming to the halakha.[90]

Non-Lithuanian Hasidic men and women differ from the Lithuanian stream by having a much more specific dress code, the most obvious difference for men being the full-length suit jacket (rekel) on weekdays, and the fur hat (shtreimel) and silk caftan (bekishe) on the Sabbath.

Neighborhoods edit

Haredi neighborhoods tend to be safe and free from violent crime.[92] In Israel, the entrances to some of the most extreme Haredi neighborhoods are fitted with signs asking that modest clothing be worn.[93] Some areas are known to have "modesty patrols",[94] and people dressed in ways perceived as immodest may suffer harassment, and advertisements featuring scantily dressed models may be targeted for vandalism.[95][96] These concerns are also addressed through public lobbying and legal avenues.[97][98]

During the week-long Rio Carnival in Rio de Janeiro, many of the city's 7,000 Orthodox Jews feel compelled to leave the town, due to the immodest exposure of participants.[99] In 2001, Haredi campaigners in Jerusalem succeeded in persuading the Egged bus company to get all their advertisements approved by a special committee.[100] By 2011, Egged had gradually removed all bus adverts that featured women, in response to their continuous defacement. A court order that stated such action was discriminatory led to Egged's decision not to feature people at all (neither male nor female).[101] Depictions of certain other creatures, such as space aliens, were also banned, in order not to offend Haredi sensibilities.[102] Haredi Jews also campaign against other types of advertising that promote activities they deem offensive or inappropriate.[103]

To honor the Shabbat, most state-run buses in Israel do not run on Saturdays.[104] In a similar vein, Haredi Jews in Israel have demanded that the roads in their neighborhoods be closed on Saturdays, vehicular traffic being viewed as an "intolerable provocation" upon their religious lifestyle (see Driving on Shabbat in Jewish law). In most cases, the authorities granted permission after Haredi petitioning and demonstrations, some of them including fierce clashes between Haredi Jews and secular counter-demonstrators, and violence against police and motorists.[105]

Sex separation edit

 
Gender-separate beach in Israel. To accommodate Haredi and other Orthodox Jews, many coastal resorts in Israel have a designated area for sex-separate bathing.[106][107]

While Jewish modesty law requires gender separation under various circumstances, observers have contended that there is a growing trend among some groups of Hasidic Haredi Jews to extend its observance to the public arena.[108]

In the Hasidic village of Kiryas Joel, New York, an entrance sign asks visitors to "maintain sex separation in all public areas", and the bus stops have separate waiting areas for men and women.[109] In New Square, another Hasidic enclave, men and women are expected to walk on opposite sides of the road.[108] In Israel, Jerusalem residents of Mea Shearim were banned from erecting a street barrier dividing men and women during the week-long Sukkot festival's nightly parties;[110][111] and street signs requesting that women avoid certain pavements in Beit Shemesh have been repeatedly removed by the municipality.[112]

Since 1973, buses catering to Haredi Jews running from Rockland County and Brooklyn into Manhattan have had separate areas for men and women, allowing passengers to conduct on-board prayer services.[113] Although the lines are privately operated, they serve the general public, and in 2011, the set-up was challenged on grounds of discrimination, and the arrangement was deemed illegal.[114][115] During 2010–2012, there was much public debate in Israel surrounding the existence of segregated Haredi Mehadrin bus lines (whose policy calls for both men and women to stay in their respective areas: men in the front of the bus,[116] and women in the rear of the bus) following an altercation that occurred after a woman refused to move to the rear of the bus to sit among the women. A subsequent court ruling stated that while voluntary segregation should be allowed, forced separation is unlawful.[117] Israeli national airline El Al has agreed to provide gender-separated flights in consideration of Haredi requirements.[118]

 
The Bais Yaakov graduating class of 1934 in Łódź, Poland

Education in the Haredi community is strictly segregated by sex. Yeshiva education for boys is primarily focused on the study of Jewish scriptures, such as the Torah and Talmud (non-Hasidic yeshivas in America teach secular studies in the afternoon); girls obtain studies both in Jewish education as well as broader secular subjects.[119]

Newspapers and publications edit

 
Tziporah Heller, a weekly columnist for Hamodia

In 1930s Poland, the Agudath Israel movement published its own Yiddish-language paper, Dos Yiddishe Tagblatt. In 1950, the Agudah started printing Hamodia, a Hebrew-language Israeli daily.

Haredi publications tend to shield their readership from objectionable material,[120] and perceive themselves as a "counterculture", desisting from advertising secular entertainment and events.[121] The editorial policy of a Haredi newspaper is determined by a rabbinical board, and every edition is checked by a rabbinical censor.[122] A strict policy of modesty is characteristic of the Haredi press in recent years, and pictures of women are usually not printed.[123] In 2009, the Israeli daily Yated Ne'eman doctored an Israeli cabinet photograph replacing two female ministers with images of men,[124] and in 2013, the Bakehilah magazine pixelated the faces of women appearing in a photograph of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising.[125] The mainstream Haredi political Shas party also refrains from publishing female images.[126] Among Haredi publishers which have not adopted this policy is ArtScroll, which does publish pictures of women in their books.[127]

No coverage is given to serious crime, violence, sex, or drugs, and little coverage is given to non-Orthodox streams of Judaism.[128] Inclusion of "immoral" content is avoided, and when publication of such stories is a necessity, they are often written ambiguously.[123] The Haredi press generally takes a non-Zionist stance, and gives more coverage to issues that concern the Haredi community, such as the drafting of girls and yeshiva students into the army, autopsies, and Shabbat observance.[121] In Israel, it portrays the secular world as "spitefully anti-Semitic", and describes secular youth as "mindless, immoral, drugged, and unspeakably lewd".[129][130] Such attacks have led to Haredi editors being warned about libelous provocations.[131]

While the Haredi press is extensive and varied in Israel,[121] only around half the Haredi population reads newspapers. Around 10% read secular newspapers, while 40% do not read any newspaper at all.[132] According to a 2007 survey, 27% read the weekend Friday edition of HaModia, and 26% the Yated Ne'eman.[133] In 2006, the most-read Haredi magazine in Israel was the Mishpacha weekly, which sold 110,000 copies.[133]

Technology edit

In the modern era of the internet and mobile phones, it can be confusing as to what is or is not considered appropriate. The Haredi leaders have at times suggested a ban on the internet and any internet-capable device,[134] their reasoning being that the immense amount of information can be corrupting, and the ability to use the internet with no observation from the community can lead to individuation.[135] However, these presented reasons by the Haredi leaders could be influenced by a general fear of the loss of young Haredi members.

Banning the internet for Haredi Jews could be a detriment to possible economic uses from Jewish businesses. Some Haredi businessmen utilize the internet throughout the week, but they still observe Shabbat in every aspect by not accepting or processing orders from Friday evening to Saturday evening.[136] They utilize the internet under strict filters and guidelines. Although Haredi leaders have been unsuccessful in their attempts of banning internet use, they have influenced the world of technology. The Kosher cell phone was introduced to the Jewish public with the sole ability to call other phones. It was unable to utilize the internet, text other phones, and had no camera feature. In fact, a kosher phone plan was created, with decreased rates for kosher-to-kosher calls, to encourage community.[137][138]

News hotlines edit

News hotlines are an important source of news in the Haredi world. Since many Haredi Jews do not listen to the radio or have access to the internet, even if they read newspapers, they are left with little or no access to breaking news. News hotlines were formed to fill this gap, and many have expanded to additional fields over time.[139][140] Currently, many news lines provide rabbinic lectures, entertainment, business advice, and similar services, in addition to their primary function of reporting the news. Many Hasidic sects maintain their own hotlines, where relevant internal news is reported and the group's perspective can be advocated for. In the Israeli Haredi community, there are dozens of prominent hotlines, in both Yiddish and Hebrew. Some Haredi hotlines have played significant public roles.[141]

In Israel edit

Attitudes towards Zionism edit

While most Haredi Jews were opposed to the establishment of the State of Israel, and Haredi Jews mostly do not celebrate Yom Ha'Atzmaut (Israeli Independence Day) or any other state-instituted holidays, there were many who gave their backing to the nascent state.[142][143]

 
Members of Neturei Karta protest against Israel (Washington, 2005)

The chief political division among Haredi Jews has been in their approach to the State of Israel. After Israeli independence, different Haredi movements took varying positions on it. Only a minority of Haredi Jews consider themselves to be Zionists. Haredim who do not consider themselves Zionists fall into two-camps: non-Zionist, and anti-Zionist. Non-Zionist Haredim, who comprise the majority, do not object to the State of Israel as an independent Jewish state, and many even consider it to be positive, but they do not believe that it has any religious significance. Anti-Zionist Haredim, who are a minority, but are more publicly visible than the non-Zionist majority, believe that any Jewish independence prior to the coming of the Messiah is a sin.[144][145]

The ideologically non-Zionist United Torah Judaism alliance comprising Agudat Yisrael and Degel HaTorah (and the umbrella organizations World Agudath Israel and Agudath Israel of America) represents a moderate and pragmatic stance of cooperation with the State of Israel, and participation in the political system. UTJ has been a participant in numerous coalition governments, seeking to influence state and society in a more religious direction and maintain welfare and religious funding policies. In general, their position is supportive of Israel.[146]

Haredim who are stridently anti-Zionist are under the umbrella of Edah HaChareidis, who reject participation in politics and state funding of its affiliated institutions, in contradistinction to Agudah-affiliated institutions. Neturei Karta is a very small activist organization of anti-Zionist Haredim, whose controversial activities have been strongly condemned, including by other anti-Zionist Haredim.[147] Haredi support is often required to form coalition governments in the Knesset.

In recent years, some rebbes affiliated with Agudath Israel, such as the Sadigura rebbe Avrohom Yaakov Friedman, have taken more hard-line stances on security, settlements, and disengagement.[148]

Shas represents Sephardi and Mizrahi Haredim, and, while having many points in common with Ashkenazi Haredim, differs from them by its more enthusiastic support for the State of Israel and the IDF.

Marriage edit

The purpose of marriage in the Haredi (and Orthodox) viewpoint is for the purpose of companionship, as well as for the purpose of having children.[149]

There is a high rate of marriage in the Haredi community. 83% are married, compared to the non-Haredi community in Israel of 63%.[150] Marriage is viewed as holy, and as the natural home for a man and a woman to truly love each other.

Divorce edit

In 2016, Haaretz claimed that divorces among Haredim are increasing in Israel.[151] In 2017, some predominantly Haredi cities reported the highest growth rates in divorce in the Israel, in the context of generally falling rates of divorce.[152] In 2018, some predominantly Haredi cities reported drops in divorce. Jerusalem had a decrease of 7%, and the Haredi city of Beitar Illit had a drop of 49%, in the context of generally rising rates of divorce.[153] When the divorce is linked to one spouse leaving the community, the one who chooses to leave is often shunned from his or her communities and forced to abandon their children, as most courts prefer keeping children in an established status quo.[151][154][155]

In 2016, the divorce rate was 5% among the Haredi population, compared to the general population rate of 14%.[156]

Education edit

Haredim primarily educate their children in their own private schools, starting with chederim for pre-school to primary school ages, to yeshivos for boys from secondary school ages, and in seminaries, often called Bais Yaakovs, for girls of secondary school ages. Only Jewish religiously observant students are admitted, and parents must agree to abide by the rules of the school to keep their children enrolled. Yeshivas are headed by rosh yeshivas (deans) and principals. Many Hasidic schools in Israel, Europe, and North America teach little or no secular subjects, while some of the Litvish (Lithuanian style) schools in Israel follow educational policies to the Hasidic school. In the U.S., most teach secular subjects to boys and girls, as part of a dual curriculum of secular subjects (generally called "English") and Torah subjects. Yeshivas teach mostly Talmud and Rabbinic literature, while the girls' schools teach Jewish Law, Midrash, and Tanach (Hebrew Bible).

Between 2007 and 2017, the number of Haredim studying in higher education had risen from 1,000 to 10,800.[157]

In 2007, the Kemach Foundation was established to become an investor in the sector's social and economic development, and provide opportunities for employment. Through the philanthropy of Leo Noé of London, later joined by the Wolfson family of New York and Elie Horn from Brazil, Kemach has facilitated academic and vocational training. With a $22m budget, including government funding, Kemach provides individualized career assessment, academic or vocational scholarships, and job placement for the entire Haredi population in Israel. The Foundation is managed by specialists who, coming from the Haredi sector themselves, are familiar with the community's needs and sensitivities. By April 2014, more than 17,800 Haredim have received the services of Kemach, and more than 7,500 have received, or continue to receive, monthly scholarships to fund their academic or vocational studies. From 500 graduates, the net benefits to the government would be 80.8 million NIS if they work for one year, 572.3 million NIS if they work for 5 years, and 2.8 billion NIS (discounted) if they work for 30 years.[158]

The Council for Higher Education announced in 2012 that it was investing NIS 180 million over the following five years to establish appropriate frameworks for the education of Haredim, focusing on specific professions.[159] The largest Haredi campus in Israel is The Haredi Campus - The Academic College Ono.

Military edit

 
Haredi demonstration against the conscription of yeshiva pupils

Upon the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948, universal conscription was instituted for all able-bodied Jewish males. However, the nation's population of military-aged Haredi men were exempted from service in the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) under the Torato Umanuto arrangement, which officially granted deferred entry into the IDF for yeshiva students, but in practice allowed young Haredi men to serve for a significantly reduced period of time or bypass military service altogether. At that time, only a small group of roughly 400 individuals was affected, since, due to the historic opposition of Haredi Judaism to Zionism, the population of Haredim was very low.[160] However, the Haredim were and are a rapidly growing population, comprising an estimated 6-10% of Israel's Jewish population by 2008.[161] In 2018, the Israel Democracy Institute estimated that the Haredim comprised 12% of Israel's total population, and just over 15% of the Jewish population.[162] Compounded by the fact the Haredim are disproportionately younger than the general population, their absence from the IDF often attracts significant resentment from secular Israelis. The most common criticisms of the exemption policy are:

  • The Haredim can work in those 2–3 years of their lives in which they do not serve in the IDF, while most soldiers at the IDF are usually paid anywhere between $80–250 a month, in addition to clothing and lodging.[163] All the while, Haredi yeshiva students receive significant monthly funds and payments for their religious studies.[164]
  • The Haredim, if they so choose, can study at that time.[165][166]

While a certain amount of Haredim have enlisted in the IDF every year in recent decades, the Haredim usually reject the practice of IDF service. Contentions include:

  • A yeshiva student has an important role in protecting the Jewish people because Haredim believe that Torah study brings spiritual protection similar to how a soldier in the IDF brings physical protection. Haredim maintain that each role is important in protecting the Jewish people, and one who is a yeshiva student should not abandon his personal duty in spiritually protecting the Jewish people.[167][168][169][170]
  • The Israeli army is not conducive to a Haredi lifestyle. It is regarded as a "state-sponsored quagmire of promiscuity" due to Israel conscripting both men and women, and often grouping them together in military activities.[171] Additionally, the keeping of military procedures makes it difficult to observe the Sabbath and many other Jewish practices.[citation needed]

The Torato Umanuto arrangement was enshrined in the Tal Law that came into force in 2002. The High Court of Justice later ruled that it could not be extended in its current form beyond August 2012. A replacement was expected. The IDF was, however, experiencing a shortage of personnel, and there were pressures to reduce the scope of the Torato Omanuto exemption.[172]

The Shahar program, also known as Shiluv Haredim (Ultra-Orthodox integration), allows Haredi men aged 22 to 26 to serve in the army for about a year and a half. At the beginning of their service, they study mathematics and English, which are often not well covered in Haredi boy schools. The program is partly aimed at encouraging Haredi participation in the workforce after military service. However, not all beneficiaries seem to be Haredim.[173]

Over the years, as many as 1000 Haredi Jews have volunteered to serve in a Haredi Jewish unit of the IDF known as the Netzah Yehuda Battalion, or Nahal Haredi. The vast majority of Haredi men, however, continue to receive deferments from military service.[174]

In March 2014, Israel's parliament approved legislation to end exemptions from military service for Haredi seminary students. The bill was passed by 65 votes to one, and an amendment allowing civilian national service by 67 to one.[175]

There has been much uproar in Haredi society following actions towards Haredi conscription. While some Haredim see this as a great social and economic opportunity,[176] others (including leading rabbis among them) strongly oppose this move.[177] Among the extreme Haredim, there have been some more severe reactions. Several Haredi leaders have threatened that Haredi populations would leave the country if forced to enlist.[178][179] Others have fueled public incitement against secular and National-Religious Jews, and specifically against politicians Yair Lapid and Naftali Bennett, who support and promote Haredi enlistment.[180][181] Some Haredim have taken to threatening their fellows who agree to enlist,[182][183] to the point of physically attacking some of them.[184][185]

Employment edit

As of 2013, figures from the Central Bureau of Statistics on employment rates place Haredi women at 73%, close to the 80% for the non-Haredi Jewish women's national figure; while the number of working Haredi men has increased to 56%, it is still far below the 90% of non-Haredi Jewish men nationwide.[73] As of 2021, most Haredi boys instead go to yeshivas and then continue to study at yeshiva after getting married.[186]

The Trajtenberg Committee, charged in 2011 with drafting proposals for economic and social change, called, among other things, for increasing employment among the Haredi population. Its proposals included encouraging military or national service and offering college prep courses for volunteers, creating more employment centers targeting Haredim and experimental matriculation prep courses after yeshiva hours. The committee also called for increasing the number of Haredi students receiving technical training through the Industry, Trade, and Labor Ministry and forcing Haredi schools to carry out standardized testing, as is done at other public schools.[187] It is estimated that half as many of the Haredi community are in employment as the rest of population. This has led to increasing financial deprivation, and 50% of children within the community live below the poverty line. This puts strain on each family, the community, and often the Israeli economy.

The demographic trend indicates the community will constitute an increasing percentage of the population, and consequently, Israel faces an economic challenge in the years ahead due to fewer people in the labor force. A report commissioned by the Treasury found that the Israeli economy may lose more than six billion shekels annually as a result of low Haredi participation in the workforce.[188] The OECD in a 2010 report stated that, "Haredi families are frequently jobless, or are one-earner families in low-paid employment. Poverty rates are around 60% for Haredim."[189]

As of 2017, according to an Israeli finance ministry study, the Haredi participation rate in the labour force is 51%, compared to 89% for the rest of Israeli Jews.[190]

A 2018 study by Oren Heller, a National Insurance Institute of Israel senior economic researcher, has found that while upper mobility among Haredim is significantly greater than the national average, unlike it, this tends not to translate into significantly higher pay.[191]

Haredi families living in Israel benefited from government-subsidized child care when the father studied Torah and the mother worked at least 24 hours per week. However, after Israeli Finance Minister Avigdor Liberman introduced a new policy in 2021, families in which the father is a full-time yeshiva student are no longer eligible for a daycare subsidy. Under this policy, fathers must also work at least part-time in order for the family to qualify for the subsidy. The move was denounced by Haredi leaders.[192]

Other issues edit

 
Hasidim walk to the synagogue, Rehovot, Israel.

The Haredim in general are materially poorer than most other Israelis, but still represent an important market sector due to their bloc purchasing habits.[193] For this reason, some companies and organizations in Israel refrain from including women or other images deemed immodest in their advertisements to avoid Haredi consumer boycotts.[194][195] More than 50 percent of Haredim live below the poverty line, compared with 15 percent of the rest of the population.[196] Their families are also larger, with Haredi women having an average of 6.7 children, while the average Jewish Israeli woman has 3 children.[197] Families with many children often receive economic support through governmental child allowances, government assistance in housing, as well as specific funds by their own community institutions.[198]

In recent years, there has been a process of reconciliation and an attempt to merge Haredi Jews with Israeli society,[199] although employment discrimination is widespread.[200] Haredi Jews such as satirist Kobi Arieli, publicist Sehara Blau, and politician Israel Eichler write regularly for leading Israeli newspapers.

Another important factor in the reconciliation process has been the activities of ZAKA, a Haredi organization known for providing emergency medical attention at the scene of suicide bombings, and Yad Sarah, the largest national volunteer organization in Israel established in 1977 by former Haredi mayor of Jerusalem, Uri Lupolianski. It is estimated that Yad Sarah saves the country's economy an estimated $320 million in hospital fees and long-term care costs each year.[201][202]

Population edit

Due to its imprecise definition, lack of data collection, and rapid change over time, estimates of the global Haredi population are difficult to measure, and may significantly underestimate the true number of Haredim, due to their reluctance to participate in surveys and censuses.[203][204] One estimate given in 2011 stated that there were approximately 1.3 million Haredi Jews globally.[205] Studies have shown a very high growth rate, with a large young population.[206]

Israel edit

Haredi population in Israel in the recent years:
YearPop.±% p.a.
2009 750,000—    
2014 910,500+3.95%
2015 950,000+4.34%
2017 1,033,000+4.28%
2018 1,079,000+4.45%
2019 1,125,892+4.35%
2020 1,175,088+4.37%
2021 1,226,261+4.35%
2022 1,279,528+4.34%
Sources:[207][208][10]
 
Haredi Rabbis and students writing a Torah scroll (Haredi settlement of Beitar Illit, Gush Etzion)

Israel has the largest Haredi population.[1] In 1948, there were about 35,000 to 45,000 Haredi Jews in Israel. By 1980, Haredim made up 4% of the Israeli population.[209] Haredim made up 9.9% of the Israeli population in 2009, with 750,000 out of 7,552,100; by 2014, that figure had risen to 11.1%, with 910,500 Haredim out of a total Israeli population of 8,183,400. According to a December 2017 study conducted by the Israeli Democracy Institute, the number of Haredi Jews in Israel exceeded 1 million in 2017, making up 12% of the population in Israel. In 2019, Haredim reached a population of almost 1,126,000;[207] the next year, it reached 1,175,000 (12.6% of total population),[208] and by the end of 2022, it reached 1,280,000, or 13.3% of total population.[10][210] By 2030, the Haredi Jewish community is projected to make up 16% of the total population, and by 2065, a third of the Israeli population.[157]

The number of Haredi Jews in Israel is rising rapidly. The number of children per woman is 7.2, and the share of Haredim among those under the age of 20 was 16.3% in 2009 (29% of Jews).[211] In 1992, out of a total of 1,500,000 Orthodox Jews worldwide, about 550,000 were Haredi (half of them in Israel).[212] The vast majority of Haredi Jews are Ashkenazi. However, some 20% of the Haredi population are thought to belong to the Sephardic Haredi stream. In recent decades, Haredi society has grown due to the addition of a religious population that identifies with the Shas movement. The percentage of people leaving the Haredi population has been estimated between 6% and 18%.[213] The Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics forecasts that the Haredi population of Israel will number 1.1 million in 2019. It is also projected that the number of Haredim in 2059 may be between 2.73 and 5.84 million, of an estimated total number of Israeli Jews between 6.09 and 9.95 million.[211][214] The largest Israeli Haredi concentrations are in Jerusalem, Bnei Brak, Modi'in Illit, Beitar Illit, Beit Shemesh, Kiryat Ye'arim, Ashdod, Rekhasim, Safed, and El'ad. Two Haredi cities, Kasif and Harish, are planned.

United States edit

The United States has the second largest Haredi population, which has a growth rate on pace to double every 20 years. In 2000, there were 360,000 Haredi Jews in the US (7.2 per cent of the approximately 5 million Jews in the U.S.); by 2006, demographers estimate the number had grown to 468,000 (30% increase), or 9.4 per cent of all U.S. Jews.[14] In 2013, it has been estimated that there were 530,000 total Orthodox Jews in the United States, or 10% of all American Jews.[215]

As of 2020, it has been estimated that there were approximately 700,000 total Orthodox Jews in the United States, or 12% of all American Jews.[216] This number is expected to grow significantly in the coming years, due to high Haredi birth and growth rates in America.

New York state edit

Most American Haredi Jews live in the greater New York metropolitan area.[217][218]

New York City edit
Brooklyn edit
 
Hasidic family on the street in Borough Park, Brooklyn

The largest centers of Haredi and Hasidic life in New York are found in Brooklyn.[219][220]

Queens edit

The New York City borough of Queens is home to a growing Haredi population, mainly affiliated with the Yeshiva Chofetz Chaim and Yeshivas Ohr HaChaim in Kew Gardens Hills and Yeshiva Shaar Hatorah in Kew Gardens. Many of the students attend Queens College.[228] There are major yeshivas and communities of Haredi Jews in Far Rockaway,[226] such as Yeshiva of Far Rockaway and a number of others. Hasidic shtibelach exist in these communities as well, mostly catering to Haredi Jews who follow Hasidic customs, while living a Litvish or Modern Orthodox cultural lifestyle, although small Hasidic enclaves do exist, such as in the Bayswater section of Far Rockaway.

Manhattan edit

One of the oldest Haredi communities in New York is on the Lower East Side,[229] home to the Mesivtha Tifereth Jerusalem.

Washington Heights, in northern Manhattan, is the historical home to German Jews, with Khal Adath Jeshurun and Yeshiva Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch.[230] The presence of Yeshiva University attracts young people, many of whom remain in the area after graduation.[231]

Long Island edit

The Yeshiva Sh'or Yoshuv, together with many synagogues in the Lawrence neighborhood and other Five Towns neighborhoods, such as Woodmere and Cedarhurst, have attracted many Haredi Jews.[232]

Hudson Valley edit

The Hudson Valley, north of New York City, has the most rapidly growing Haredi communities, such as the Hasidic communities in Kiryas Joel[233][234][235] of Satmar Hasidim, and New Square of the Skver.[236] A vast community of Haredi Jews lives in the Monsey, New York, area.[237]

New Jersey edit

There are significant Haredi communities in Lakewood (New Jersey), home to the largest non-Hasidic Lithuanian yeshiva in America, Beth Medrash Govoha.[238] There are also sizable communities in Teaneck,[239] Englewood, Mahwah,[240] Passaic[241] and Edison, where a branch of the Rabbi Jacob Joseph Yeshiva opened in 1982. There is also a community of Syrian Jews favorable to the Haredim in their midst in Deal, New Jersey.[242]

Maryland edit

Baltimore, Maryland, has a large Haredi population. The major yeshiva is Yeshivas Ner Yisroel, founded in 1933, with thousands of alumni and their families. Ner Yisroel is also a Maryland state-accredited college, and has agreements with Johns Hopkins University, Towson University, Loyola College in Maryland, University of Baltimore, and University of Maryland, Baltimore County, allowing undergraduate students to take night courses at these colleges and universities in a variety of academic fields.[228] The agreement also allows the students to receive academic credits for their religious studies.

Silver Spring, Maryland, and its environs has a growing Haredi community, mostly of highly educated and skilled professionals working for the United States government in various capacities, most living in Kemp Mill, White Oak, and Woodside,[243] and many of its children attend the Yeshiva of Greater Washington and Yeshivas Ner Yisroel in Baltimore.

Florida edit

Aventura,[244] Sunny Isles Beach, Golden Beach, Surfside[245] and Bal Harbour[246] are home to a large and growing Haredi population. The community is long-established in the area, with several synagogues including the Shul of Bal Harbour,[247] Young Israel of Bal Harbour, Aventura Chabad, Beit Rambam, Safra Synagogue of Aventura, and Chabad of Sunny Isles; mikvehs, Jewish schools and kosher restaurants. The community has recently grown much further, due to many Orthodox Jews from New York moving to Florida during the COVID-19 pandemic.[248][249]

North of Miami, the communities of Boca Raton, centered around the Boca Raton Synagogue, Boynton Beach, and Hollywood have significant Haredi populations.[250][251]

California edit

Los Angeles has many Hasidim and Haredi Jews who are not Hasidic. Most live in the Pico-Robertson and the Fairfax (Fairfax Avenue-La Brea Avenue) areas.[252][253]

Illinois edit

Chicago is home to the Haredi Telshe Yeshiva of Chicago, with many other Haredim living in the city.[254]

Philadelphia edit

Haredim in Philadelphia primarily live in Bala Cynwyd, and the community is centered around Aish HaTorah and the Philadelphia Community Kollel.[255][256]

Colorado edit

Denver has a large Haredi population of Ashkenazi origin, dating back to the early 1920s. The Haredi Denver West Side Jewish Community adheres to Litvak Jewish traditions (Lithuanian), and has several congregations located within their communities.[257]

Massachusetts edit

Boston and Brookline, Massachusetts, have the largest Haredi populations in New England.

 
Students of Telshe yeshiva, 1936

Ohio edit

One of the oldest Haredi Lithuanian yeshivas, Telshe Yeshiva, transplanted itself to Cleveland in 1941.[258][259] Beachwood, Ohio has a large and growing Haredi community, and is a heavily Jewish suburb of Cleveland. The haredi community is centered around the Beachwood Kehilla and Green Road Synagogue, has a mikvah and a Jewish day school.[260]

United Kingdom edit

In 1998, the Haredi population in the Jewish community of the United Kingdom was estimated at 27,000 (13% of affiliated Jews).[212] The largest communities are located in London, particularly Stamford Hill, Golders Green, Hendon, Edgware; in Salford and Prestwich in Greater Manchester; and in Gateshead. A 2007 study asserted that three out of four British Jewish births were Haredi, who then accounted for 17% of British Jews (45,500 out of around 275,000).[14] Another study in 2010 established that there were 9,049 Haredi households in the UK, which would account for a population of nearly 53,400, or 20% of the community.[261][262] The Board of Deputies of British Jews has predicted that the Haredi community will become the largest group in Anglo-Jewry within the next three decades: In comparison with the national average of 2.4 children per family, Haredi families have an average of 5.9 children, and consequently, the population distribution is heavily biased to the under-20-year-olds. By 2006, membership of Haredi synagogues had doubled since 1990.[263][264]

An investigation by The Independent in 2014 reported that more than 1,000 children in Haredi communities were attending illegal schools where secular knowledge is banned, and they learn only religious texts, meaning they leave school with no qualifications and often unable to speak any English.[265]

The 2018 Survey by the Jewish Policy Research (JPR) and the Board of Deputies of British Jews showed that the high birth rate in the Haredi and Orthodox community reversed the decline in the Jewish population in Britain.[266]

As of 2020, it has been estimated that there were approximately 76,000 total Orthodox Jews in the United Kingdom, or 25% of all British Jews, significantly increasing in size from 1998 and 2010.[216]

Elsewhere edit

About 25,000 Haredim live in the Jewish community of France, mostly people of Sephardic, Maghrebi Jewish descent.[212] Important communities are located in Paris, Strasbourg, and Lyon.

Other important communities, mostly of Ashkenazi Jews, are the Antwerp community in Belgium, as well as in the Swiss communities of Zürich and Basel, and in the Dutch community in Amsterdam. There is also a Haredi community in Vienna, in the Jewish community of Austria. Other countries with significant Haredi populations include: Canada, with a total number of 30,000 Haredim,[267] with large Haredi centres in Montreal and Toronto; South Africa, primarily in Johannesburg; and an estimated 7,500 Haredim in Australia,[268] centred in Melbourne. Haredi communities also exist in Argentina, especially in Buenos Aires, and in Brazil, primarily in São Paulo. A Haredi city is under construction (2021) in Mexico near Ixtapan de la Sal.[269] Decades after The Holocaust, Haredim are growing again in Budapest, opening several new synagogues and two mikvehs in the city over the past couple of years. [270] [271]

Country Year Core Jewish Population Haredi Population[272] % Haredi Annual growth rate
Israel 2022 6,900,000 1,280,000[10] 17% 4%[10]
United States 2020 6,000,000 700,000[215][273][274] 12% 5.4%[14]
United Kingdom 2020 292,000 76,000[275] 26% 4%[276]
Canada 2020 393,500 30,000[277] 8%
Argentina 2020 175,000 13,500[278] 8%
France 2020 446,000 12,000 3%
Belgium 2020 28,900 10,000 35%
South Africa 2020 52,000 10,000 19%
Mexico 2020 40,000 7,500 19%
Australia 2020 118,000 7,500[279] 6%
Switzerland 2020 18,400 3,300 18%
Germany 2020 118,000 3,000 3%
Austria 2020 10,300 2,000 19%
Spain 2020 12,900 104 0.8%
Hungary 2020 46,800 885[280] 1.9%
Netherlands 2020 29,700 455 1.5%
Poland 2020 4,500 59 1.3%
Sweden 2020 14,900 34 0.2%

Present leadership and organizations edit

Rabbis and rabbinic authority edit

Notwithstanding the authority of Chief Rabbis of Israel (Ashkenazi: David Lau, Sephardi: Yitzhak Yosef) or the wide acknowledgement of specific rabbis in Israel (for example, Rabbi Gershon Edelstein of the non-Hasidic Lithuanian Jews, and Yaakov Aryeh Alter who heads the Ger Hasidic dynasty, the largest Hasidic group in Israel), Haredi and Hasidic factions generally align with the independent authority of their respective group leaders.

Major representative groups and political parties edit

Other representative associations may be linked to specific Haredi and Hasidic groups. For example:

Haredi political parties in Israel include:

Controversies edit

Shunning edit

People who decide to leave Haredi communities are sometimes shunned and pressured or forced to abandon their children.[151][154][155]

Pedophilia and sexual abuse cases edit

Cases of pedophilia, sexual violence, assaults, and abuses against women and children occur in roughly the same rates in Haredi communities as in the general population; however, they are rarely discussed or reported to the authorities, and frequently downplayed by members of the communities.[281][282][283][284][285][286][287][288]

Divorce coercion edit

To receive a religious divorce, a Jewish woman needs her husband's consent in the form of a get (Jewish divorce document). Without this consent, any future offspring of the wife would be considered mamzerim (bastards/impure). If the circumstances truly warrant a divorce, and the husband is unwilling, a dayan (rabbinic judge) has the prerogative of instituting community shunning measures to "coerce him until he agrees", with physical force reserved only for the rarest of cases.[289][35][290]

The New York divorce coercion gang was a Haredi Jewish group that kidnapped, and in some cases tortured, Jewish men in the New York metropolitan area to force them to grant their wives gittin (religious divorces). The Federal Bureau of Investigation (FBI) broke up the group after conducting a sting operation against the gang in October 2013. The sting resulted in the prosecution of four men, three of whom were convicted in late 2015.[291]

Political controversies involving Haredi communities and parties in Israel edit

In January 2023, the Times of Israel reported that Haredi Jewish citizens in Israel pays just 2% of the country's total income tax revenues, despite making up 12% of the nation's population. Furthermore, the article's author described their communities as an epicenter of poverty, with over 60% of Haredi households classified as poor on the government's socioeconomic index, with that figure remaining nearly constant in every Haredi community.[292]

While this disparity has been present in Israel for decades, it has garnered more attention since December 2022 for numerous reasons. First, Haredi families have the highest fertility rate in Israel at 6.6 births per woman. In comparison, the average fertility rate in Israel is much lower at 2.9 per woman. Current projections estimate that the Haredi population will double by 2036, and they will comprise 16% of the total population by 2030.[293]

The second aspect of the controversy surrounds their political connections to Israel's Religious Zionist alliance. Historically, they have remained politically uninvolved, but since the 1990s, they have continuously engaged more. Today, members of Israel's ultra-Orthodox community have long enjoyed benefits unavailable to many other Israeli citizens: exemption from army service for Torah students, government stipends for those choosing full-time religious study over work and separate schools that receive state funds even though their curriculums barely teach government-mandated subjects. Today, many Israeli Haredi men do not work, preferring to study the Torah full-time, since they receive government funding for it, thus resulting in their high poverty rate.[294]

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Raysh Weiss. "Haredim (Charedim), or Ultra-Orthodox Jews". My Jewish Learning. What unites haredim is their absolute reverence for Torah, including both the Written and Oral Law, as the central and determining factor in all aspects of life. ... In order to prevent outside influence and contamination of values and practices, haredim strive to limit their contact with the outside world.
  2. ^ . Berkley Center for Religion, Peace & World Affairs. Archived from the original on May 16, 2012. Retrieved May 15, 2019. Haredi Judaism, on the other hand, prefers not to interact with secular society, seeking to preserve halakha without amending it to modern circumstances and to safeguard believers from involvement in a society that challenges their ability to abide by halakha.
  3. ^ Shafran, Avi (February 4, 2014). "Don't Call Us 'Ultra-Orthodox". Forward. from the original on August 8, 2022. Retrieved May 13, 2020.
  4. ^ Tatyana Dumova; Richard Fiordo (September 30, 2011). Blogging in the Global Society: Cultural, Political and Geographical Aspects. Idea Group Inc (IGI). p. 126. ISBN 978-1-60960-744-9. Haredim regard themselves as the most authentic custodians of Jewish religious law and tradition which, in their opinion, is binding and unchangeable. They consider all other expressions of Judaism, including Modern Orthodoxy, as deviations from God's laws.
  5. ^ . Berkley Center for Religion, Peace & World Affairs. Archived from the original on May 16, 2012. Retrieved May 15, 2019. Orthodox Judaism claims to preserve Jewish law and tradition from the time of Moses.
  6. ^ Nora L. Rubel (2010). Doubting the Devout: The Ultra-Orthodox in the Jewish American Imagination. Columbia University Press. p. 148. ISBN 978-0-231-14187-1. Retrieved July 24, 2013. Mainstream Jews have—until recently—maintained the impression that the ultraorthodox are the 'real' Jews.
  7. ^ For example: Arnold Eisen, Rethinking Modern Judaism, University of Chicago Press, 1998. p. 3.
  8. ^ Waxman, Chaim. . Archived from the original on March 7, 2006.
  9. ^ a b Wertheimer, Jack. "What You Don't Know About the Ultra-Orthodox." July 24, 2015, at the Wayback Machine Commentary Magazine. 1 July 2015. 4 September 2015.
  10. ^ a b c d e "Statistical Report on Ultra-Orthodox Society in Israel". en.idi.org.il.
  11. ^ שנתון החברה החרדית בישראל 2019 (PDF). Idi.org.il. Retrieved March 2, 2022.
  12. ^ "How many ultra-Orthodox live in Israel today, and how many in 40 years? These are CBS data". Hidabroot.org. November 11, 2020. Retrieved March 2, 2022.[permanent dead link]
  13. ^ Norman S. Cohen (January 1, 2012). The Americanization of the Jews. NYU Press. p. 389. ISBN 978-0-8147-3957-0. Given the high fertility and statistical insignificance of intermarriage among ultra-Orthodox haredim in contrast to most of the rest of the Jews...
  14. ^ a b c d Wise 2007
  15. ^ Buck, Tobias (November 6, 2011). "Israel's secular activists start to fight back". Financial Times. Archived from the original on December 10, 2022. Retrieved March 26, 2013.
  16. ^ Berman, Eli (2000). "Sect, Subsidy, and Sacrifice: An Economist's View of Ultra-Orthodox Jews" (PDF). Quarterly Journal of Economics. 115 (3): 905–953. doi:10.1162/003355300554944.
  17. ^ Šelomo A. Dešen; Charles Seymour Liebman; Moshe Shokeid (January 1, 1995). Israeli Judaism: The Sociology of Religion in Israel. Transaction Publishers. p. 28. ISBN 978-1-4128-2674-7. The number of baalei teshuvah, "penitents" from secular backgrounds who become Ultraorthodox Jews, amounts to a few thousand, mainly between the years 1975-1987, and is modest, compared with the natural growth of the haredim; but the phenomenon has generated great interest in Israel.
  18. ^ Harris 1992, p. 490: "This movement began in the US, but is now centred in Israel, where, since 1967, many thousands of Jews have consciously adopted an ultra-Orthodox lifestyle."
  19. ^ Weintraub 2002, p. 211: "Many of the ultra-Orthodox Jews living in Brooklyn are baaley tshuva, Jews who have gone through a repentance experience and have become Orthodox, though they may have been raised in entirely secular Jewish homes."
  20. ^ Returning to Tradition: The Contemporary Revival of Orthodox Judaism, By M. Herbert Danzger: "A survey of Jews in the New York metropolitan area found that 24% of those who were highly observant (defined as those who would not handle money on the Sabbath) had been reared by parents who did not share such scruples. [...] The ba'al t'shuva represents a new phenomenon for Judaism; for the first time there are not only Jews who leave the fold ... but also a substantial number who "return". p. 2; and: "These estimates may be high... Nevertheless, as these are the only available data we will use them... Defined in terms of observance, then, the number of newly Orthodox is about 100,000... despite the number choosing to be orthodox the data do not suggest that Orthodox Judaism is growing. The survey indicates that although one in four parents were Orthodox, in practice, only one in ten respondents are Orthodox" p. 193.
  21. ^ Gross, Judah Ari (January 2, 2023). "Haredim are fastest-growing population, will be 16% of Israelis by decade's end". The Times of Israel. Retrieved January 24, 2023.
  22. ^ "Oops, Something is wrong" הודעה לתקשורת – תחזית אוכלוסיית ישראל עד שנת 2065. Israel Central Bureau of Statistics. May 21, 2017. Retrieved January 24, 2023.
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  31. ^ a b Ayalon, Ami (1999). "Language as a barrier to political reform in the Middle East", International Journal of the Sociology of Language, Volume 137, pp. 67–80: "Haredi" has none of the misleading religious implications of "ultra-Orthodox": in the words of Shilhav (1989: 53), "They are not necessarily [objectively] more religious, but religious in a different way."; and "'Haredi' ... is preferable, being a term commonly used by such Jews themselves... Moreover, it carries none of the venom often injected into the term 'ultra-Orthodox' by other Jews and, sadly, by the Western media..."
  32. ^ a b Sources describing the term as pejorative or derogatory include:
    • Kobre, Eytan. One People, Two Worlds. A Reform Rabbi and an Orthodox Rabbi Explore the Issues That Divide Them, reviewed by Eytan Kobre, Jewish Media Resources, February 2003. Retrieved August 25, 2009. "'Indeed, the social scientist Marvin Schick calls attention to the fact that "through the simple device of identifying [some Jews] ... as "ultra-Orthodox", ... [a] pejorative term has become the standard reference term for describing a great many Orthodox Jews... No other ethnic or religious group in this country is identified in language that conveys so negative a message.'"
    • Goldschmidt, Henry. Race and Religion among the Chosen Peoples of Crown Heights, Rutgers University Press, 2006, p. 244, note 26. "I am reluctant to use the term 'ultra-Orthodox', as the prefix 'ultra' carries pejorative connotations of irrational extremism."
    • Longman, Chia. "Engendering Identities as Political Processes: Discources of Gender Among Strictly Orthodox Jewish Women", in Rik Pinxten, Ghislain Verstraete, Chia Longmanp (eds.) Culture and Politics: Identity and Conflict in a Multicultural World, Berghahn Books, 2004, p. 55. "Webber (1994: 27) uses the label 'strictly Orthodox' when referring to Haredi, seemingly more adequate as a purely descriptive name, yet carrying less pejorative connotations than ultra-Orthodox."
    • Shafran, Avi. "Don't Call Us 'Ultra-Orthodox'", The Jewish Daily Forward, February 2014. Retrieved July 9, 2014. "Considering that other Orthodox groups have self-identified with prefixes like "modern" or "open", why can't we Haredim just be, simply, "Orthodox"? Our beliefs and practices, after all, are those that most resemble those of our grandparents. But, whatever alternative is adopted, "ultra" deserves to be jettisoned from media and discourse. We Haredim aren't looking for special treatment, or to be called by some name we just happen to prefer. We're only seeking the mothballing of a pejorative."
  33. ^ Stolow, Jeremy (January 1, 2010). Orthodox by Design: Judaism, Print Politics, and the ArtScroll Revolution. University of California Press. ISBN 9780520264250.
  34. ^ Lipowsky, Josh. "Paper loses 'divisive' term" August 26, 2011, at the Wayback Machine. Jewish Standard. January 30, 2009. "... JTA [Jewish Telegraphic Agency] faced the same conundrum and decided to do away with the term, replacing it with 'fervently Orthodox'. ... 'Ultra-Orthodox' was seen as a derogatory term that suggested extremism."
  35. ^ a b c Goldstein, Joseph; Schwirtz, Michael (October 10, 2013). "U.S. Accuses 2 Rabbis of Kidnapping Husbands for a Fee". The New York Times. ISSN 0362-4331. Retrieved April 14, 2020.
  36. ^ Heilman, Samuel. "Ultra-Orthodox Jews Shouldn't Have a Monopoly on Tradition". The Forward. Retrieved January 13, 2017.
  37. ^ Heilman, Samuel C. (1976). Synagogue Life: A Study in Symbolic Interaction. Transaction Publishers. pp. 15–16. ISBN 978-1412835497.
  38. ^ Ritzer, George (2011). Ryan, J. Michael (ed.). The concise encyclopedia of sociology. Chichester, West Sussex, UK: Wiley-Blackwell. p. 335. ISBN 978-1444392647.
  39. ^ Donna Rosenthal. The Israelis: Ordinary People in an Extraordinary Land. Simon and Schuster, 2005. p. 183. "Dossim, a derogatory word for Haredim, is Yiddish-accented Hebrew for 'religious'."
  40. ^ Nadia Abu El-Haj. Facts on the ground: Archaeological practice and territorial self-fashioning in Israeli society. University of Chicago Press, 2001. p. 262.
  41. ^ Benor, Sarah Bunin (2012). Becoming frum how newcomers learn the language and culture of Orthodox Judaism. New Brunswick, N.J.: Rutgers University Press. p. 9. ISBN 978-0813553917.
  42. ^ a b Rubel, Nora L. (November 1, 2009). Doubting the Devout: The Ultra-Orthodox in the Jewish American Imagination. Columbia University Press. ISBN 9780231512589.
  43. ^ Caplan, Kimmy (October 27, 2016). Post-World War II Orthodoxy. pp. 9780199840731–0139. doi:10.1093/OBO/9780199840731-0139. First and foremost, as Katz 1986 and Samet 1988 prove, notwithstanding the overall Orthodox perception that it is the only authentic expression of traditional Judaism and although it is related to traditional Judaism, Orthodoxy is a modern European phenomenon which gradually emerged in response to the gradual demise of traditional Jewish societies, the rise of the Jewish Enlightenment (Haskalah), Jewish Reforms, secularization, and various additional processes which developed throughout the 19th century.
  44. ^ Slifkin, Natan. "The Novelty of Orthodoxy" (PDF). The Orthodox simply viewed themselves as authentically continuing the ways of old. Originally, historians viewed them in the same way, considering them less interesting than more visibly new forms of Judaism such as the haskalah and Reform Judaism. But beginning with the works of Joseph Ben-David2 and Jacob Katz,3 it was realized in academic circles that all of this was nothing more than a fiction, a romantic fantasy. The very act of being loyal to tradition in the face of the massive changes of the eighteenth century forced the creation of a new type of Judaism. It was traditionalist rather than traditional.
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  75. ^ Stadler 2009, p. 44: "The support of the yeshiva culture is related also to the developments of Israel's welfare policy... This is why in Israel today, Haredim live in relatively poorer conditions (Berman 2000, Dahan 1998, Shilhav 1991), and large Haredi families are totally dependent on state-funded social support systems. This situation is unique to Israel."
  76. ^ Stadler 2009, pp. 77–78: "According to various surveys of the Haredi community, between 46 and 60 percent of its members do not participate in the labor market and 25 percent have part-time jobs (see Berman 1998; Dahan 1998). Members who work usually take specific jobs within a very narrow range of occupations, mainly those of teachers and clerical or administrative staff (Lupo 2003). In addition, because Haredim encourage large families, half of them live in poverty and economic distress (Berman 1998)."
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  95. ^ Ben-Yehuda 2010, p. 115: "Women dressed in what is judged as immodest may experience violence and harassment, and demands to leave the area. Immodest advertising may cause Haredi boycotts, and public spaces that present immodest advertisement may be vandalized."
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  97. ^ Heilman 2002, p. 322: "While similar sentiments about the moral significance of "immodest" posters in public are surely shared by American haredim, they would not attack images of scantily clad models on city bus stops on their neighborhoods with the same alacrity as their Israeli counterparts.
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External links edit

  • Benjamin Brown, "Orthodox Judaism", in: The Blackwell Companion to Judaism, 2001.
  • Haredi and technology

haredi, judaism, hebrew, יהדות, ית, yahadut, Ḥaredit, ħaʁeˈdi, also, spelled, charedi, english, plural, haredim, charedim, consists, groups, within, orthodox, judaism, that, characterized, their, strict, adherence, halakha, jewish, traditions, opposition, mode. Haredi Judaism Hebrew יהדות ח ר ד ית Yahadut Ḥaredit IPA ħaʁeˈdi also spelled Charedi in English plural Haredim or Charedim consists of groups within Orthodox Judaism that are characterized by their strict adherence to halakha Jewish law and traditions in opposition to modern values and practices 1 2 Its members are usually referred to as ultra Orthodox in English however the term ultra Orthodox is considered pejorative by many of its adherents who prefer terms like strictly Orthodox or Haredi 3 Haredi Jews regard themselves as the most religiously authentic group of Jews 4 5 although other movements of Judaism disagree 6 Haredi Jewish men during a Torah reading Some scholars have suggested that Haredi Judaism is a reaction to societal changes including political emancipation the Haskalah movement derived from the Enlightenment acculturation secularization religious reform in all its forms from mild to extreme the rise of the Jewish national movements etc 7 In contrast to Modern Orthodox Judaism followers of Haredi Judaism segregate themselves from other parts of society to an extent However many Haredi communities encourage their young people to get a professional degree or establish a business Furthermore some Haredi groups like Chabad Lubavitch encourage outreach to less observant and unaffiliated Jews and hilonim secular Israeli Jews 8 Thus professional and social relationships often form between Haredi and non Haredi Jews as well as between Haredi Jews and non Jews 9 Haredi communities are found primarily in Israel 13 3 of Israel s population 10 11 12 North America and Western Europe most notably Antwerp and Stamford Hill in London Their estimated global population numbers over 1 8 million and due to a virtual absence of interfaith marriage and a high birth rate the Haredi population is growing rapidly 13 14 15 16 Their numbers have been further boosted since the 1970s by secular Jews adopting a Haredi lifestyle as part of the baal teshuva movement however this has been offset by those leaving 17 18 19 20 According to data from a January 2023 report by the Israel Central Bureau of Statistics Haredim with their current population growth rate being 4 per year will by the end of the decade form 16 of the entire Israeli population including Arabs 21 A previous report from May 2017 forecasted that Haredim will form 20 of the total population in 2040 and 32 in 2065 by then 1 in 2 Israeli children would be Haredi 22 23 Contents 1 Terminology 2 History 2 1 Post Holocaust 3 Practices and beliefs 3 1 Lifestyle and family 3 2 Shidduchim 3 3 Dress 3 4 Neighborhoods 3 5 Sex separation 3 6 Newspapers and publications 3 7 Technology 3 8 News hotlines 4 In Israel 4 1 Attitudes towards Zionism 4 2 Marriage 4 3 Divorce 4 4 Education 4 5 Military 4 6 Employment 4 7 Other issues 5 Population 5 1 Israel 5 2 United States 5 2 1 New York state 5 2 1 1 New York City 5 2 1 1 1 Brooklyn 5 2 1 1 2 Queens 5 2 1 1 3 Manhattan 5 2 1 1 4 Long Island 5 2 1 2 Hudson Valley 5 2 2 New Jersey 5 2 3 Maryland 5 2 4 Florida 5 2 5 California 5 2 6 Illinois 5 2 7 Philadelphia 5 2 8 Colorado 5 2 9 Massachusetts 5 2 10 Ohio 5 3 United Kingdom 5 4 Elsewhere 6 Present leadership and organizations 6 1 Rabbis and rabbinic authority 6 2 Major representative groups and political parties 7 Controversies 7 1 Shunning 7 2 Pedophilia and sexual abuse cases 7 3 Divorce coercion 7 4 Political controversies involving Haredi communities and parties in Israel 8 See also 9 References 10 Bibliography 11 External linksTerminology edit nbsp Young Haredi Jews in Jerusalem 2005The term most commonly used by outsiders for example most American news organizations is ultra Orthodox Judaism 24 Hillel Halkin suggests the origins of the term may date to the 1950s a period in which Haredi survivors of the Holocaust first began arriving in America 25 However Isaac Leeser 1806 1868 was described in 1916 as ultra Orthodox 26 Haredi is a Modern Hebrew adjective derived from the Biblical verb hared which appears in the Book of Isaiah 66 2 its plural haredim appears in Isaiah 66 5 27 and is translated as one who trembles at the word of God The word connotes an awe inspired fear to perform the will of God 28 it is used to distinguish them from other Orthodox Jews similar to the name used by Christian Quakers to describe their relationship to God 27 29 30 The word Haredi is often used in the Jewish diaspora in place of the term ultra Orthodox which many view as inaccurate or offensive 31 32 33 it being seen as a derogatory term suggesting extremism English language alternatives that have been proposed include fervently Orthodox 34 strictly Orthodox 32 or traditional Orthodox 35 Others however dispute the characterization of the term as pejorative 25 Ari L Goldman a professor at Columbia University notes that the term simply serves a practical purpose to distinguish a specific part of the Orthodox community and is not meant as pejorative 35 Others such as Samuel Heilman criticized terms such as ultra Orthodox and traditional Orthodox arguing that they misidentify Haredi Jews as more authentically Orthodox than others as opposed to adopting customs and practises that reflect their desire to separate from the outside world 36 25 The community has sometimes been characterized as traditional Orthodox in contradistinction to the Modern Orthodox the other major branch of Orthodox Judaism and not to be confused with the movement represented by the Union for Traditional Judaism which originated in Conservative Judaism 37 38 Haredi Jews also use other terms to refer to themselves Common Yiddish words include Yidn Jews erlekhe Yidn virtuous Jews 31 ben Torah son of the Torah 27 frum pious and heimish home like i e our crowd In Israel Haredi Jews are sometimes also called by the derogatory slang words dos plural dosim that mimics the traditional Ashkenazi Hebrew pronunciation of the Hebrew word datiyim religious 39 and more rarely sh chorim blacks a reference to the black clothes they typically wear 40 a related informal term used in English is black hat 41 History edit nbsp Hasidic boys in Lodz 1910Throughout Jewish history Judaism has always faced internal and external challenges to its beliefs and practices which have emerged over time and produced counter responses According to its adherents Haredi Judaism is a continuation of Rabbinic Judaism and the immediate forebears of contemporary Haredi Jews were the Jewish religious traditionalists of Central and Eastern Europe who fought against secular modernization s influence which reduced Jewish religious observance Indeed adherents of Haredi Judaism just like Rabbinic Jews see their beliefs as part of an unbroken tradition which dates back to the revelation at Sinai 42 However most historians of Orthodoxy consider Haredi Judaism in its most modern incarnation to date back to the beginning of the 20th century 42 43 44 For centuries before Jewish emancipation European Jews were forced to live in ghettos where Jewish culture and religious observance were preserved Change began in the wake of the Age of Enlightenment when some European liberals sought to include the Jewish population in the emerging empires and nation states The influence of the Haskalah movement 45 Jewish Enlightenment was also evident Supporters of the Haskalah held that Judaism must change in keeping with the social changes around them Other Jews insisted on strict adherence to halakha Jewish law and custom In Germany the opponents of Reform rallied to Samson Raphael Hirsch who led a secession from German Jewish communal organizations to form a strictly Orthodox movement with its own network of synagogues and religious schools His approach was to accept the tools of modern scholarship and apply them in defence of Orthodox Judaism In the Polish Lithuanian Commonwealth including areas traditionally considered Lithuanian Jews true to traditional values gathered under the banner of Agudas Shlumei Emunei Yisroel 46 Moses Sofer was opposed to any philosophical social or practical change to customary Orthodox practice Thus he did not allow any secular studies to be added to the curriculum of his Pressburg Yeshiva Sofer s student Moshe Schick together with Sofer s sons Shimon and Samuel Benjamin took an active role in arguing against the Reform movement Others such as Hillel Lichtenstein advocated an even more stringent position for Orthodoxy A major historic event was the meltdown after the Universal Israelite Congress of 1868 1869 in Pest In an attempt to unify all streams of Judaism under one constitution the Orthodox offered the Shulchan Aruch as the ruling Code of law and observance This was dismissed by the reformists leading many Orthodox rabbis to resign from the Congress and form their own social and political groups Hungarian Jewry split into two major institutionally sectarian groups Orthodox and Neolog However some communities refused to join either of the groups calling themselves Status Quo citation needed Schick demonstrated support in 1877 for the separatist policies of Samson Raphael Hirsch in Germany Schick s own son was enrolled in the Hildesheimer Rabbinical Seminary headed by Azriel Hildesheimer which taught secular studies Hirsch however did not reciprocate and expressed astonishment at Schick s halakhic contortions in condemning even those Status Quo communities that clearly adhered to halakha 47 Lichtenstein opposed Hildesheimer and his son Hirsh Hildesheimer as they made use of the German language in sermons from the pulpit and seemed to lean in the direction of Zionism 48 Shimon Sofer was somewhat more lenient than Lichtenstein on the use of German in sermons allowing the practice as needed for the sake of keeping cordial relations with the various governments Likewise he allowed extra curricular studies of the gymnasium for students whose rabbinical positions would be recognized by the governments stipulating the necessity to prove the strict adherence to the God fearing standards per individual case 49 nbsp Haredi Jews from Galicia at the Karmelitermarkt de in Vienna s second district Leopoldstadt 1915In 1912 the World Agudath Israel was founded to differentiate itself from the Torah Nationalist Mizrachi and secular Zionist organizations It was dominated by the Hasidic rebbes and Lithuanian rabbis and roshei yeshiva deans The organization nominated rabbis who subsequently were elected as representatives in the Polish legislature Sejm such as Meir Shapiro and Yitzhak Meir Levin Not all Hasidic factions joined the Agudath Israel remaining independent instead such as Machzikei Hadat of Galicia 50 In 1919 Yosef Chaim Sonnenfeld and Yitzchok Yerucham Diskin founded the Edah HaChareidis as part of Agudath Israel in then Mandate Palestine In 1924 Agudath Israel obtained 75 percent of the votes in the Kehilla elections 51 The Orthodox community polled some 16 000 of a total 90 000 at the Knesseth Israel in 1929 52 But Sonnenfeld lobbied Sir John Chancellor the High Commissioner for separate representation in the Palestine Communities Ordinance from that of the Knesseth Israel He explained that the Agudas Israel community would cooperate with the Vaad Leumi and the National Jewish Council in matters pertaining to the municipality but sought to protect its religious convictions independently The community petitioned the Permanent Mandates Commission of the League of Nations on this issue The one community principle was victorious despite their opposition but this is seen as the creation of the Haredi community in Israel separate from the other Orthodox and Zionist movements 53 In 1932 Sonnenfeld was succeeded by Yosef Tzvi Dushinsky a disciple of the Shevet Sofer one of the grandchildren of Moses Sofer Dushinsky promised to build up a strong Jewish Orthodoxy at peace with the other Jewish communities and the non Jews 54 Post Holocaust edit In general the present day Haredi population originate from two distinct post Holocaust waves The vast majority of Hasidic and Litvak communities were destroyed during the Holocaust 55 56 Although Hasidic customs have largely been preserved the customs of Lithuanian Jewry including its unique Hebrew pronunciation have been almost lost Litvish customs are still preserved primarily by the few older Jews who were born in Lithuania prior to the Holocaust In the decade or so after 1945 there was a strong drive to revive and maintain these lifestyles by some notable Haredi leaders The Chazon Ish was particularly prominent in the early days of the State of Israel Aharon Kotler established many of the Haredi schools and yeshivas in the United States and Israel and Joel Teitelbaum had a significant impact on revitalizing Hasidic Jewry as well as many of the Jews who fled Hungary during the 1956 revolution who became followers of his Satmar dynasty and became the largest Hasidic group in the world These Jews typically have maintained a connection only with other religious family members As such those growing up in such families have little or no contact with non Haredi Jews 57 The second wave began in the 1970s associated with the religious revival of the so called baal teshuva movement although most of the newly religious become Orthodox and not necessarily fully Haredi citation needed The formation and spread of the Sephardic Haredi lifestyle movement also began in the 1980s by Ovadia Yosef alongside the establishment of the Shas party in 1984 This led many Sephardi Jews to adopt the clothing and culture of the Lithuanian Haredi Judaism though it had no historical basis in their own tradition citation needed Many yeshivas were also established specifically for new adopters of the Haredi way of life citation needed The original Haredi population has been instrumental in the expansion of their lifestyle though criticisms have been made of discrimination towards the later adopters of the Haredi lifestyle in shidduchim matchmaking 58 and the school system 59 Practices and beliefs editThe Haredim represent the conservative or pietistic form of Jewish fundamentalism distinct from the radical fundamentalism of Gush Emunim 60 and emphasising withdrawal from and disdain for the secular world and the creation of an alternative world which insulates the Torah and the life it prescribes from outside influences 61 Haredi Judaism is not an institutionally cohesive or homogeneous group but comprises a diversity of spiritual and cultural orientations generally divided into a broad range of Hasidic courts and Litvishe Yeshivish streams from Eastern Europe and Oriental Sephardic Haredi Jews These groups often differ significantly from one another in their specific ideologies and lifestyles as well as the degree of stringency in religious practice rigidity of religious philosophy and isolation from the general culture that they maintain citation needed Some scholars including some secular and Reform Jews describe the Haredim as radical fundamentalists 62 63 64 65 66 67 68 69 The majority of Haredi Jews worldwide live in neighborhoods occupied primarily by other Haredi Jews citation needed Efforts to keep clear of external influence is a core characteristic of Haredi Judaism Historically new mediums of communication such as books newspapers and magazines and later tapes CDs and television were dealt with by either transforming and controlling the content or having rabbinic leadership censor it altogether In the modern digital era difficulty in censoring the internet and conversely the internet s importance resulted in a decades long and ongoing struggle of comprehension adaption and regulation on the part of rabbinical leadership and community activists 70 These beliefs and practices which have been interpreted as isolationist can bring them into conflict with authorities In 2018 a Haredi school in the United Kingdom was rated as inadequate by the Office for Standards in Education after repeated complaints were raised about the censoring of textbooks and exam papers which contained mentions of homosexuality examples of women socializing with men pictures showing women s shoulders and legs or information that contradicts a creationist worldview 71 72 Lifestyle and family edit nbsp Haredi Jewish women and girls in Mea Shearim Jerusalem 2013Haredi life like Orthodox Jewish life in general is very family centered and ordered Boys and girls attend separate schools and proceed to higher Torah study in a yeshiva or seminary respectively starting anywhere between the ages of 13 and 18 A significant proportion of young men remain in yeshiva until their marriage which is usually arranged through facilitated dating After marriage many Haredi men continue their Torah studies in a kollel Studying in secular institutions is often discouraged although educational facilities for vocational training in a Haredi framework do exist In the United States and Europe the majority of Haredi males are active in the workforce For various reasons in Israel most 56 of their male members do work though some of those are part of the unofficial workforce 73 74 75 76 Haredi families and Orthodox Jewish families in general are usually much larger than non Orthodox Jewish families with as many as twelve or more children 9 About 70 of female Haredi Jews in Israel work 73 Haredi Jews are typically opposed to the viewing of television and films 77 and the reading of secular newspapers and books There has been a strong campaign against the Internet and Internet enabled mobile phones without filters have also been banned by leading rabbis 78 79 80 In May 2012 40 000 Haredim gathered at Citi Field a baseball park in New York City to discuss the dangers of unfiltered Internet 79 81 The event was organized by the Ichud HaKehillos LeTohar HaMachane The Internet has been allowed for business purposes so long as filters are installed In some instances forms of recreation which conform to Jewish law are treated as antithetical to Haredi Judaism In 2013 the Rabbinical Court of the Ashkenazi Community in the Haredi settlement of Beitar Illit ruled against Zumba a type of dance fitness classes although they were held with a female instructor and all female participants 82 83 The Court said in part Both in form and manner the activity Zumba is entirely at odds with both the ways of the Torah and the holiness of Israel as are the songs associated to it 83 Shidduchim edit With Haredi Judaism having a heavy emphasis on marriage especially while young some members will employ a schadhan a professional matchmaker to support them in their search for a spouse While there is no current statistical data showing how many people use the services of a schadhan it is estimated that the vast majority of Haredi couples were paired by one 84 However with the broader societal shift to online dating matchmaking in Orthodox and Haredi Judaism has started making inroads online Vastly different from the most popular online dating services apps like Shidduch pair couples based upon shfill out lues and life goals To do this users fill out a digital resume The app was made possible by a partnership between its developers and the Orthodox Union the same group responsible for kosher food certification Circle U 85 Dress edit nbsp Styles of Haredi dress nbsp Typical Haredi dress for men and womenThe standard mode of dress for males of the Lithuanian stream is a black or navy suit and a white shirt 86 Headgear includes black Fedora or Homburg hats with black skull caps Pre war Lithuanian yeshiva students also wore light coloured suits along with beige or grey hats 87 and prior to the 1990s it was common for Americans of the Lithuanian stream to wear coloured shirts throughout the week reserving white shirts for Shabbos 88 Beards are common among Haredi and many other Orthodox Jewish men and Hasidic men will almost never be clean shaven Women adhere to the laws of modest dress and wear long skirts and sleeves high necklines and if married some form of hair covering 89 Haredi women never wear trousers although most do wear pajama trousers within the home at night 90 Over the years it has become popular among some Haredi women to wear sheitels wigs that are more attractive than their own hair drawing criticism from some more conservative Haredi rabbis Mainstream Sephardi Haredi rabbi Ovadia Yosef forbade the wearing of wigs altogether 91 Haredi women often dress more freely and casually within the home as long as the body remains covered in accordance with the halakha More modernized Haredi women are somewhat more lenient in matters of their dress and some follow the latest trends and fashions while conforming to the halakha 90 Non Lithuanian Hasidic men and women differ from the Lithuanian stream by having a much more specific dress code the most obvious difference for men being the full length suit jacket rekel on weekdays and the fur hat shtreimel and silk caftan bekishe on the Sabbath Neighborhoods edit Haredi neighborhoods tend to be safe and free from violent crime 92 In Israel the entrances to some of the most extreme Haredi neighborhoods are fitted with signs asking that modest clothing be worn 93 Some areas are known to have modesty patrols 94 and people dressed in ways perceived as immodest may suffer harassment and advertisements featuring scantily dressed models may be targeted for vandalism 95 96 These concerns are also addressed through public lobbying and legal avenues 97 98 During the week long Rio Carnival in Rio de Janeiro many of the city s 7 000 Orthodox Jews feel compelled to leave the town due to the immodest exposure of participants 99 In 2001 Haredi campaigners in Jerusalem succeeded in persuading the Egged bus company to get all their advertisements approved by a special committee 100 By 2011 Egged had gradually removed all bus adverts that featured women in response to their continuous defacement A court order that stated such action was discriminatory led to Egged s decision not to feature people at all neither male nor female 101 Depictions of certain other creatures such as space aliens were also banned in order not to offend Haredi sensibilities 102 Haredi Jews also campaign against other types of advertising that promote activities they deem offensive or inappropriate 103 To honor the Shabbat most state run buses in Israel do not run on Saturdays 104 In a similar vein Haredi Jews in Israel have demanded that the roads in their neighborhoods be closed on Saturdays vehicular traffic being viewed as an intolerable provocation upon their religious lifestyle see Driving on Shabbat in Jewish law In most cases the authorities granted permission after Haredi petitioning and demonstrations some of them including fierce clashes between Haredi Jews and secular counter demonstrators and violence against police and motorists 105 Sex separation edit nbsp Gender separate beach in Israel To accommodate Haredi and other Orthodox Jews many coastal resorts in Israel have a designated area for sex separate bathing 106 107 While Jewish modesty law requires gender separation under various circumstances observers have contended that there is a growing trend among some groups of Hasidic Haredi Jews to extend its observance to the public arena 108 In the Hasidic village of Kiryas Joel New York an entrance sign asks visitors to maintain sex separation in all public areas and the bus stops have separate waiting areas for men and women 109 In New Square another Hasidic enclave men and women are expected to walk on opposite sides of the road 108 In Israel Jerusalem residents of Mea Shearim were banned from erecting a street barrier dividing men and women during the week long Sukkot festival s nightly parties 110 111 and street signs requesting that women avoid certain pavements in Beit Shemesh have been repeatedly removed by the municipality 112 Since 1973 buses catering to Haredi Jews running from Rockland County and Brooklyn into Manhattan have had separate areas for men and women allowing passengers to conduct on board prayer services 113 Although the lines are privately operated they serve the general public and in 2011 the set up was challenged on grounds of discrimination and the arrangement was deemed illegal 114 115 During 2010 2012 there was much public debate in Israel surrounding the existence of segregated Haredi Mehadrin bus lines whose policy calls for both men and women to stay in their respective areas men in the front of the bus 116 and women in the rear of the bus following an altercation that occurred after a woman refused to move to the rear of the bus to sit among the women A subsequent court ruling stated that while voluntary segregation should be allowed forced separation is unlawful 117 Israeli national airline El Al has agreed to provide gender separated flights in consideration of Haredi requirements 118 nbsp The Bais Yaakov graduating class of 1934 in Lodz PolandEducation in the Haredi community is strictly segregated by sex Yeshiva education for boys is primarily focused on the study of Jewish scriptures such as the Torah and Talmud non Hasidic yeshivas in America teach secular studies in the afternoon girls obtain studies both in Jewish education as well as broader secular subjects 119 Newspapers and publications edit nbsp Tziporah Heller a weekly columnist for HamodiaIn 1930s Poland the Agudath Israel movement published its own Yiddish language paper Dos Yiddishe Tagblatt In 1950 the Agudah started printing Hamodia a Hebrew language Israeli daily Haredi publications tend to shield their readership from objectionable material 120 and perceive themselves as a counterculture desisting from advertising secular entertainment and events 121 The editorial policy of a Haredi newspaper is determined by a rabbinical board and every edition is checked by a rabbinical censor 122 A strict policy of modesty is characteristic of the Haredi press in recent years and pictures of women are usually not printed 123 In 2009 the Israeli daily Yated Ne eman doctored an Israeli cabinet photograph replacing two female ministers with images of men 124 and in 2013 the Bakehilah magazine pixelated the faces of women appearing in a photograph of the Warsaw Ghetto Uprising 125 The mainstream Haredi political Shas party also refrains from publishing female images 126 Among Haredi publishers which have not adopted this policy is ArtScroll which does publish pictures of women in their books 127 No coverage is given to serious crime violence sex or drugs and little coverage is given to non Orthodox streams of Judaism 128 Inclusion of immoral content is avoided and when publication of such stories is a necessity they are often written ambiguously 123 The Haredi press generally takes a non Zionist stance and gives more coverage to issues that concern the Haredi community such as the drafting of girls and yeshiva students into the army autopsies and Shabbat observance 121 In Israel it portrays the secular world as spitefully anti Semitic and describes secular youth as mindless immoral drugged and unspeakably lewd 129 130 Such attacks have led to Haredi editors being warned about libelous provocations 131 While the Haredi press is extensive and varied in Israel 121 only around half the Haredi population reads newspapers Around 10 read secular newspapers while 40 do not read any newspaper at all 132 According to a 2007 survey 27 read the weekend Friday edition of HaModia and 26 the Yated Ne eman 133 In 2006 the most read Haredi magazine in Israel was the Mishpacha weekly which sold 110 000 copies 133 Technology edit In the modern era of the internet and mobile phones it can be confusing as to what is or is not considered appropriate The Haredi leaders have at times suggested a ban on the internet and any internet capable device 134 their reasoning being that the immense amount of information can be corrupting and the ability to use the internet with no observation from the community can lead to individuation 135 However these presented reasons by the Haredi leaders could be influenced by a general fear of the loss of young Haredi members Banning the internet for Haredi Jews could be a detriment to possible economic uses from Jewish businesses Some Haredi businessmen utilize the internet throughout the week but they still observe Shabbat in every aspect by not accepting or processing orders from Friday evening to Saturday evening 136 They utilize the internet under strict filters and guidelines Although Haredi leaders have been unsuccessful in their attempts of banning internet use they have influenced the world of technology The Kosher cell phone was introduced to the Jewish public with the sole ability to call other phones It was unable to utilize the internet text other phones and had no camera feature In fact a kosher phone plan was created with decreased rates for kosher to kosher calls to encourage community 137 138 News hotlines edit Main article Haredi news hotline News hotlines are an important source of news in the Haredi world Since many Haredi Jews do not listen to the radio or have access to the internet even if they read newspapers they are left with little or no access to breaking news News hotlines were formed to fill this gap and many have expanded to additional fields over time 139 140 Currently many news lines provide rabbinic lectures entertainment business advice and similar services in addition to their primary function of reporting the news Many Hasidic sects maintain their own hotlines where relevant internal news is reported and the group s perspective can be advocated for In the Israeli Haredi community there are dozens of prominent hotlines in both Yiddish and Hebrew Some Haredi hotlines have played significant public roles 141 In Israel editAttitudes towards Zionism edit See also Haredim and Zionism While most Haredi Jews were opposed to the establishment of the State of Israel and Haredi Jews mostly do not celebrate Yom Ha Atzmaut Israeli Independence Day or any other state instituted holidays there were many who gave their backing to the nascent state 142 143 nbsp Members of Neturei Karta protest against Israel Washington 2005 The chief political division among Haredi Jews has been in their approach to the State of Israel After Israeli independence different Haredi movements took varying positions on it Only a minority of Haredi Jews consider themselves to be Zionists Haredim who do not consider themselves Zionists fall into two camps non Zionist and anti Zionist Non Zionist Haredim who comprise the majority do not object to the State of Israel as an independent Jewish state and many even consider it to be positive but they do not believe that it has any religious significance Anti Zionist Haredim who are a minority but are more publicly visible than the non Zionist majority believe that any Jewish independence prior to the coming of the Messiah is a sin 144 145 The ideologically non Zionist United Torah Judaism alliance comprising Agudat Yisrael and Degel HaTorah and the umbrella organizations World Agudath Israel and Agudath Israel of America represents a moderate and pragmatic stance of cooperation with the State of Israel and participation in the political system UTJ has been a participant in numerous coalition governments seeking to influence state and society in a more religious direction and maintain welfare and religious funding policies In general their position is supportive of Israel 146 Haredim who are stridently anti Zionist are under the umbrella of Edah HaChareidis who reject participation in politics and state funding of its affiliated institutions in contradistinction to Agudah affiliated institutions Neturei Karta is a very small activist organization of anti Zionist Haredim whose controversial activities have been strongly condemned including by other anti Zionist Haredim 147 Haredi support is often required to form coalition governments in the Knesset In recent years some rebbes affiliated with Agudath Israel such as the Sadigura rebbe Avrohom Yaakov Friedman have taken more hard line stances on security settlements and disengagement 148 Shas represents Sephardi and Mizrahi Haredim and while having many points in common with Ashkenazi Haredim differs from them by its more enthusiastic support for the State of Israel and the IDF Marriage edit The purpose of marriage in the Haredi and Orthodox viewpoint is for the purpose of companionship as well as for the purpose of having children 149 There is a high rate of marriage in the Haredi community 83 are married compared to the non Haredi community in Israel of 63 150 Marriage is viewed as holy and as the natural home for a man and a woman to truly love each other Divorce edit In 2016 Haaretz claimed that divorces among Haredim are increasing in Israel 151 In 2017 some predominantly Haredi cities reported the highest growth rates in divorce in the Israel in the context of generally falling rates of divorce 152 In 2018 some predominantly Haredi cities reported drops in divorce Jerusalem had a decrease of 7 and the Haredi city of Beitar Illit had a drop of 49 in the context of generally rising rates of divorce 153 When the divorce is linked to one spouse leaving the community the one who chooses to leave is often shunned from his or her communities and forced to abandon their children as most courts prefer keeping children in an established status quo 151 154 155 In 2016 the divorce rate was 5 among the Haredi population compared to the general population rate of 14 156 Education edit Main articles Cheder Yeshiva and Bais YaakovHaredim primarily educate their children in their own private schools starting with chederim for pre school to primary school ages to yeshivos for boys from secondary school ages and in seminaries often called Bais Yaakovs for girls of secondary school ages Only Jewish religiously observant students are admitted and parents must agree to abide by the rules of the school to keep their children enrolled Yeshivas are headed by rosh yeshivas deans and principals Many Hasidic schools in Israel Europe and North America teach little or no secular subjects while some of the Litvish Lithuanian style schools in Israel follow educational policies to the Hasidic school In the U S most teach secular subjects to boys and girls as part of a dual curriculum of secular subjects generally called English and Torah subjects Yeshivas teach mostly Talmud and Rabbinic literature while the girls schools teach Jewish Law Midrash and Tanach Hebrew Bible Between 2007 and 2017 the number of Haredim studying in higher education had risen from 1 000 to 10 800 157 In 2007 the Kemach Foundation was established to become an investor in the sector s social and economic development and provide opportunities for employment Through the philanthropy of Leo Noe of London later joined by the Wolfson family of New York and Elie Horn from Brazil Kemach has facilitated academic and vocational training With a 22m budget including government funding Kemach provides individualized career assessment academic or vocational scholarships and job placement for the entire Haredi population in Israel The Foundation is managed by specialists who coming from the Haredi sector themselves are familiar with the community s needs and sensitivities By April 2014 more than 17 800 Haredim have received the services of Kemach and more than 7 500 have received or continue to receive monthly scholarships to fund their academic or vocational studies From 500 graduates the net benefits to the government would be 80 8 million NIS if they work for one year 572 3 million NIS if they work for 5 years and 2 8 billion NIS discounted if they work for 30 years 158 The Council for Higher Education announced in 2012 that it was investing NIS 180 million over the following five years to establish appropriate frameworks for the education of Haredim focusing on specific professions 159 The largest Haredi campus in Israel is The Haredi Campus The Academic College Ono Military edit nbsp Haredi demonstration against the conscription of yeshiva pupilsUpon the establishment of the State of Israel in 1948 universal conscription was instituted for all able bodied Jewish males However the nation s population of military aged Haredi men were exempted from service in the Israel Defense Forces IDF under the Torato Umanuto arrangement which officially granted deferred entry into the IDF for yeshiva students but in practice allowed young Haredi men to serve for a significantly reduced period of time or bypass military service altogether At that time only a small group of roughly 400 individuals was affected since due to the historic opposition of Haredi Judaism to Zionism the population of Haredim was very low 160 However the Haredim were and are a rapidly growing population comprising an estimated 6 10 of Israel s Jewish population by 2008 161 In 2018 the Israel Democracy Institute estimated that the Haredim comprised 12 of Israel s total population and just over 15 of the Jewish population 162 Compounded by the fact the Haredim are disproportionately younger than the general population their absence from the IDF often attracts significant resentment from secular Israelis The most common criticisms of the exemption policy are The Haredim can work in those 2 3 years of their lives in which they do not serve in the IDF while most soldiers at the IDF are usually paid anywhere between 80 250 a month in addition to clothing and lodging 163 All the while Haredi yeshiva students receive significant monthly funds and payments for their religious studies 164 The Haredim if they so choose can study at that time 165 166 While a certain amount of Haredim have enlisted in the IDF every year in recent decades the Haredim usually reject the practice of IDF service Contentions include A yeshiva student has an important role in protecting the Jewish people because Haredim believe that Torah study brings spiritual protection similar to how a soldier in the IDF brings physical protection Haredim maintain that each role is important in protecting the Jewish people and one who is a yeshiva student should not abandon his personal duty in spiritually protecting the Jewish people 167 168 169 170 The Israeli army is not conducive to a Haredi lifestyle It is regarded as a state sponsored quagmire of promiscuity due to Israel conscripting both men and women and often grouping them together in military activities 171 Additionally the keeping of military procedures makes it difficult to observe the Sabbath and many other Jewish practices citation needed The Torato Umanuto arrangement was enshrined in the Tal Law that came into force in 2002 The High Court of Justice later ruled that it could not be extended in its current form beyond August 2012 A replacement was expected The IDF was however experiencing a shortage of personnel and there were pressures to reduce the scope of the Torato Omanuto exemption 172 The Shahar program also known as Shiluv Haredim Ultra Orthodox integration allows Haredi men aged 22 to 26 to serve in the army for about a year and a half At the beginning of their service they study mathematics and English which are often not well covered in Haredi boy schools The program is partly aimed at encouraging Haredi participation in the workforce after military service However not all beneficiaries seem to be Haredim 173 Over the years as many as 1000 Haredi Jews have volunteered to serve in a Haredi Jewish unit of the IDF known as the Netzah Yehuda Battalion or Nahal Haredi The vast majority of Haredi men however continue to receive deferments from military service 174 In March 2014 Israel s parliament approved legislation to end exemptions from military service for Haredi seminary students The bill was passed by 65 votes to one and an amendment allowing civilian national service by 67 to one 175 There has been much uproar in Haredi society following actions towards Haredi conscription While some Haredim see this as a great social and economic opportunity 176 others including leading rabbis among them strongly oppose this move 177 Among the extreme Haredim there have been some more severe reactions Several Haredi leaders have threatened that Haredi populations would leave the country if forced to enlist 178 179 Others have fueled public incitement against secular and National Religious Jews and specifically against politicians Yair Lapid and Naftali Bennett who support and promote Haredi enlistment 180 181 Some Haredim have taken to threatening their fellows who agree to enlist 182 183 to the point of physically attacking some of them 184 185 Employment edit As of 2013 update figures from the Central Bureau of Statistics on employment rates place Haredi women at 73 close to the 80 for the non Haredi Jewish women s national figure while the number of working Haredi men has increased to 56 it is still far below the 90 of non Haredi Jewish men nationwide 73 As of 2021 update most Haredi boys instead go to yeshivas and then continue to study at yeshiva after getting married 186 The Trajtenberg Committee charged in 2011 with drafting proposals for economic and social change called among other things for increasing employment among the Haredi population Its proposals included encouraging military or national service and offering college prep courses for volunteers creating more employment centers targeting Haredim and experimental matriculation prep courses after yeshiva hours The committee also called for increasing the number of Haredi students receiving technical training through the Industry Trade and Labor Ministry and forcing Haredi schools to carry out standardized testing as is done at other public schools 187 It is estimated that half as many of the Haredi community are in employment as the rest of population This has led to increasing financial deprivation and 50 of children within the community live below the poverty line This puts strain on each family the community and often the Israeli economy The demographic trend indicates the community will constitute an increasing percentage of the population and consequently Israel faces an economic challenge in the years ahead due to fewer people in the labor force A report commissioned by the Treasury found that the Israeli economy may lose more than six billion shekels annually as a result of low Haredi participation in the workforce 188 The OECD in a 2010 report stated that Haredi families are frequently jobless or are one earner families in low paid employment Poverty rates are around 60 for Haredim 189 As of 2017 according to an Israeli finance ministry study the Haredi participation rate in the labour force is 51 compared to 89 for the rest of Israeli Jews 190 A 2018 study by Oren Heller a National Insurance Institute of Israel senior economic researcher has found that while upper mobility among Haredim is significantly greater than the national average unlike it this tends not to translate into significantly higher pay 191 Haredi families living in Israel benefited from government subsidized child care when the father studied Torah and the mother worked at least 24 hours per week However after Israeli Finance Minister Avigdor Liberman introduced a new policy in 2021 families in which the father is a full time yeshiva student are no longer eligible for a daycare subsidy Under this policy fathers must also work at least part time in order for the family to qualify for the subsidy The move was denounced by Haredi leaders 192 Other issues edit nbsp Hasidim walk to the synagogue Rehovot Israel The Haredim in general are materially poorer than most other Israelis but still represent an important market sector due to their bloc purchasing habits 193 For this reason some companies and organizations in Israel refrain from including women or other images deemed immodest in their advertisements to avoid Haredi consumer boycotts 194 195 More than 50 percent of Haredim live below the poverty line compared with 15 percent of the rest of the population 196 Their families are also larger with Haredi women having an average of 6 7 children while the average Jewish Israeli woman has 3 children 197 Families with many children often receive economic support through governmental child allowances government assistance in housing as well as specific funds by their own community institutions 198 In recent years there has been a process of reconciliation and an attempt to merge Haredi Jews with Israeli society 199 although employment discrimination is widespread 200 Haredi Jews such as satirist Kobi Arieli publicist Sehara Blau and politician Israel Eichler write regularly for leading Israeli newspapers Another important factor in the reconciliation process has been the activities of ZAKA a Haredi organization known for providing emergency medical attention at the scene of suicide bombings and Yad Sarah the largest national volunteer organization in Israel established in 1977 by former Haredi mayor of Jerusalem Uri Lupolianski It is estimated that Yad Sarah saves the country s economy an estimated 320 million in hospital fees and long term care costs each year 201 202 Population editDue to its imprecise definition lack of data collection and rapid change over time estimates of the global Haredi population are difficult to measure and may significantly underestimate the true number of Haredim due to their reluctance to participate in surveys and censuses 203 204 One estimate given in 2011 stated that there were approximately 1 3 million Haredi Jews globally 205 Studies have shown a very high growth rate with a large young population 206 Israel edit Haredi population in Israel in the recent years YearPop p a 2009750 000 2014910 500 3 95 2015950 000 4 34 20171 033 000 4 28 20181 079 000 4 45 20191 125 892 4 35 20201 175 088 4 37 20211 226 261 4 35 20221 279 528 4 34 Sources 207 208 10 nbsp Haredi Rabbis and students writing a Torah scroll Haredi settlement of Beitar Illit Gush Etzion Israel has the largest Haredi population 1 In 1948 there were about 35 000 to 45 000 Haredi Jews in Israel By 1980 Haredim made up 4 of the Israeli population 209 Haredim made up 9 9 of the Israeli population in 2009 with 750 000 out of 7 552 100 by 2014 that figure had risen to 11 1 with 910 500 Haredim out of a total Israeli population of 8 183 400 According to a December 2017 study conducted by the Israeli Democracy Institute the number of Haredi Jews in Israel exceeded 1 million in 2017 making up 12 of the population in Israel In 2019 Haredim reached a population of almost 1 126 000 207 the next year it reached 1 175 000 12 6 of total population 208 and by the end of 2022 it reached 1 280 000 or 13 3 of total population 10 210 By 2030 the Haredi Jewish community is projected to make up 16 of the total population and by 2065 a third of the Israeli population 157 The number of Haredi Jews in Israel is rising rapidly The number of children per woman is 7 2 and the share of Haredim among those under the age of 20 was 16 3 in 2009 29 of Jews 211 In 1992 out of a total of 1 500 000 Orthodox Jews worldwide about 550 000 were Haredi half of them in Israel 212 The vast majority of Haredi Jews are Ashkenazi However some 20 of the Haredi population are thought to belong to the Sephardic Haredi stream In recent decades Haredi society has grown due to the addition of a religious population that identifies with the Shas movement The percentage of people leaving the Haredi population has been estimated between 6 and 18 213 The Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics forecasts that the Haredi population of Israel will number 1 1 million in 2019 It is also projected that the number of Haredim in 2059 may be between 2 73 and 5 84 million of an estimated total number of Israeli Jews between 6 09 and 9 95 million 211 214 The largest Israeli Haredi concentrations are in Jerusalem Bnei Brak Modi in Illit Beitar Illit Beit Shemesh Kiryat Ye arim Ashdod Rekhasim Safed and El ad Two Haredi cities Kasif and Harish are planned United States edit The United States has the second largest Haredi population which has a growth rate on pace to double every 20 years In 2000 there were 360 000 Haredi Jews in the US 7 2 per cent of the approximately 5 million Jews in the U S by 2006 demographers estimate the number had grown to 468 000 30 increase or 9 4 per cent of all U S Jews 14 In 2013 it has been estimated that there were 530 000 total Orthodox Jews in the United States or 10 of all American Jews 215 As of 2020 it has been estimated that there were approximately 700 000 total Orthodox Jews in the United States or 12 of all American Jews 216 This number is expected to grow significantly in the coming years due to high Haredi birth and growth rates in America New York state edit Most American Haredi Jews live in the greater New York metropolitan area 217 218 New York City edit Brooklyn edit nbsp Hasidic family on the street in Borough Park BrooklynThe largest centers of Haredi and Hasidic life in New York are found in Brooklyn 219 220 In 1988 it was estimated that there are between 40 000 and 57 000 Haredim in the Williamsburg neighborhood of Brooklyn New York Hasidim most belonging to Satmar 221 The Jewish population in the Borough Park neighborhood of Brooklyn estimated at 70 000 in 1983 is also mostly Haredi and also mostly Hasidic 212 The Bobov Hasidim are the largest single bloc that mainly live in Borough Park 222 Crown Heights is the home base of the worldwide Chabad Lubavitch movement with its network of shluchim emissaries heading Chabad houses throughout the Jewish world 223 224 The Flatbush Midwood 225 Kensington 226 Marine Park 227 neighborhoods have tens of thousands of Haredi Jews They are also the centers for the major non Hasidic Haredi yeshivas such as Yeshiva Torah Vodaas Yeshiva Rabbi Chaim Berlin Mir Yeshiva as well as a string of similar smaller yeshivas The Torah Vodaas and Chaim Berlin yeshivas 228 allow some students to attend college and university presently at Touro College and previously at Brooklyn College 228 Queens edit The New York City borough of Queens is home to a growing Haredi population mainly affiliated with the Yeshiva Chofetz Chaim and Yeshivas Ohr HaChaim in Kew Gardens Hills and Yeshiva Shaar Hatorah in Kew Gardens Many of the students attend Queens College 228 There are major yeshivas and communities of Haredi Jews in Far Rockaway 226 such as Yeshiva of Far Rockaway and a number of others Hasidic shtibelach exist in these communities as well mostly catering to Haredi Jews who follow Hasidic customs while living a Litvish or Modern Orthodox cultural lifestyle although small Hasidic enclaves do exist such as in the Bayswater section of Far Rockaway Manhattan edit One of the oldest Haredi communities in New York is on the Lower East Side 229 home to the Mesivtha Tifereth Jerusalem Washington Heights in northern Manhattan is the historical home to German Jews with Khal Adath Jeshurun and Yeshiva Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch 230 The presence of Yeshiva University attracts young people many of whom remain in the area after graduation 231 Long Island edit The Yeshiva Sh or Yoshuv together with many synagogues in the Lawrence neighborhood and other Five Towns neighborhoods such as Woodmere and Cedarhurst have attracted many Haredi Jews 232 Hudson Valley edit The Hudson Valley north of New York City has the most rapidly growing Haredi communities such as the Hasidic communities in Kiryas Joel 233 234 235 of Satmar Hasidim and New Square of the Skver 236 A vast community of Haredi Jews lives in the Monsey New York area 237 New Jersey edit There are significant Haredi communities in Lakewood New Jersey home to the largest non Hasidic Lithuanian yeshiva in America Beth Medrash Govoha 238 There are also sizable communities in Teaneck 239 Englewood Mahwah 240 Passaic 241 and Edison where a branch of the Rabbi Jacob Joseph Yeshiva opened in 1982 There is also a community of Syrian Jews favorable to the Haredim in their midst in Deal New Jersey 242 Maryland edit Baltimore Maryland has a large Haredi population The major yeshiva is Yeshivas Ner Yisroel founded in 1933 with thousands of alumni and their families Ner Yisroel is also a Maryland state accredited college and has agreements with Johns Hopkins University Towson University Loyola College in Maryland University of Baltimore and University of Maryland Baltimore County allowing undergraduate students to take night courses at these colleges and universities in a variety of academic fields 228 The agreement also allows the students to receive academic credits for their religious studies Silver Spring Maryland and its environs has a growing Haredi community mostly of highly educated and skilled professionals working for the United States government in various capacities most living in Kemp Mill White Oak and Woodside 243 and many of its children attend the Yeshiva of Greater Washington and Yeshivas Ner Yisroel in Baltimore Florida edit Aventura 244 Sunny Isles Beach Golden Beach Surfside 245 and Bal Harbour 246 are home to a large and growing Haredi population The community is long established in the area with several synagogues including the Shul of Bal Harbour 247 Young Israel of Bal Harbour Aventura Chabad Beit Rambam Safra Synagogue of Aventura and Chabad of Sunny Isles mikvehs Jewish schools and kosher restaurants The community has recently grown much further due to many Orthodox Jews from New York moving to Florida during the COVID 19 pandemic 248 249 North of Miami the communities of Boca Raton centered around the Boca Raton Synagogue Boynton Beach and Hollywood have significant Haredi populations 250 251 California edit Los Angeles has many Hasidim and Haredi Jews who are not Hasidic Most live in the Pico Robertson and the Fairfax Fairfax Avenue La Brea Avenue areas 252 253 Illinois edit Chicago is home to the Haredi Telshe Yeshiva of Chicago with many other Haredim living in the city 254 Philadelphia edit Haredim in Philadelphia primarily live in Bala Cynwyd and the community is centered around Aish HaTorah and the Philadelphia Community Kollel 255 256 Colorado edit Denver has a large Haredi population of Ashkenazi origin dating back to the early 1920s The Haredi Denver West Side Jewish Community adheres to Litvak Jewish traditions Lithuanian and has several congregations located within their communities 257 Massachusetts edit Boston and Brookline Massachusetts have the largest Haredi populations in New England nbsp Students of Telshe yeshiva 1936Ohio edit One of the oldest Haredi Lithuanian yeshivas Telshe Yeshiva transplanted itself to Cleveland in 1941 258 259 Beachwood Ohio has a large and growing Haredi community and is a heavily Jewish suburb of Cleveland The haredi community is centered around the Beachwood Kehilla and Green Road Synagogue has a mikvah and a Jewish day school 260 United Kingdom edit In 1998 the Haredi population in the Jewish community of the United Kingdom was estimated at 27 000 13 of affiliated Jews 212 The largest communities are located in London particularly Stamford Hill Golders Green Hendon Edgware in Salford and Prestwich in Greater Manchester and in Gateshead A 2007 study asserted that three out of four British Jewish births were Haredi who then accounted for 17 of British Jews 45 500 out of around 275 000 14 Another study in 2010 established that there were 9 049 Haredi households in the UK which would account for a population of nearly 53 400 or 20 of the community 261 262 The Board of Deputies of British Jews has predicted that the Haredi community will become the largest group in Anglo Jewry within the next three decades In comparison with the national average of 2 4 children per family Haredi families have an average of 5 9 children and consequently the population distribution is heavily biased to the under 20 year olds By 2006 membership of Haredi synagogues had doubled since 1990 263 264 An investigation by The Independent in 2014 reported that more than 1 000 children in Haredi communities were attending illegal schools where secular knowledge is banned and they learn only religious texts meaning they leave school with no qualifications and often unable to speak any English 265 The 2018 Survey by the Jewish Policy Research JPR and the Board of Deputies of British Jews showed that the high birth rate in the Haredi and Orthodox community reversed the decline in the Jewish population in Britain 266 As of 2020 it has been estimated that there were approximately 76 000 total Orthodox Jews in the United Kingdom or 25 of all British Jews significantly increasing in size from 1998 and 2010 216 Elsewhere edit About 25 000 Haredim live in the Jewish community of France mostly people of Sephardic Maghrebi Jewish descent 212 Important communities are located in Paris Strasbourg and Lyon Other important communities mostly of Ashkenazi Jews are the Antwerp community in Belgium as well as in the Swiss communities of Zurich and Basel and in the Dutch community in Amsterdam There is also a Haredi community in Vienna in the Jewish community of Austria Other countries with significant Haredi populations include Canada with a total number of 30 000 Haredim 267 with large Haredi centres in Montreal and Toronto South Africa primarily in Johannesburg and an estimated 7 500 Haredim in Australia 268 centred in Melbourne Haredi communities also exist in Argentina especially in Buenos Aires and in Brazil primarily in Sao Paulo A Haredi city is under construction 2021 in Mexico near Ixtapan de la Sal 269 Decades after The Holocaust Haredim are growing again in Budapest opening several new synagogues and two mikvehs in the city over the past couple of years 270 271 Country Year Core Jewish Population Haredi Population 272 Haredi Annual growth rateIsrael 2022 6 900 000 1 280 000 10 17 4 10 United States 2020 6 000 000 700 000 215 273 274 12 5 4 14 United Kingdom 2020 292 000 76 000 275 26 4 276 Canada 2020 393 500 30 000 277 8 Argentina 2020 175 000 13 500 278 8 France 2020 446 000 12 000 3 Belgium 2020 28 900 10 000 35 South Africa 2020 52 000 10 000 19 Mexico 2020 40 000 7 500 19 Australia 2020 118 000 7 500 279 6 Switzerland 2020 18 400 3 300 18 Germany 2020 118 000 3 000 3 Austria 2020 10 300 2 000 19 Spain 2020 12 900 104 0 8 Hungary 2020 46 800 885 280 1 9 Netherlands 2020 29 700 455 1 5 Poland 2020 4 500 59 1 3 Sweden 2020 14 900 34 0 2 Present leadership and organizations editRabbis and rabbinic authority edit Main article Rabbinic authority Orthodox Judaism and da as Torah Notwithstanding the authority of Chief Rabbis of Israel Ashkenazi David Lau Sephardi Yitzhak Yosef or the wide acknowledgement of specific rabbis in Israel for example Rabbi Gershon Edelstein of the non Hasidic Lithuanian Jews and Yaakov Aryeh Alter who heads the Ger Hasidic dynasty the largest Hasidic group in Israel Haredi and Hasidic factions generally align with the independent authority of their respective group leaders Major representative groups and political parties edit World Agudath Israel including Agudath Israel of America Edah HaChareidis representing anti Zionist Haredi groups in and around Jerusalem including Satmar Dushinsky Toldos Aharon Toldos Avrohom Yitzchok Mishkenos HoRoim Spinka Brisk and a section of other Litvish Haredim Other representative associations may be linked to specific Haredi and Hasidic groups For example Breslov Hasidism maintains an umbrella group known as Vaad Olami D Chasedai Breslov Chabad Lubavitch 224 maintains an international network of organizations and is formally represented under the umbrella group Agudas Chasidei Chabad The Hasidic umbrella group Central Rabbinical Congress is associated with SatmarHaredi political parties in Israel include Shas representing Mizrahi and Sephardic Haredim United Torah Judaism alliance representing Ashkenazi Haredim Agudat Yisrael representing many Hasidic Jews Degel HaTorah representing Lithuanian Jews U Bizchutan representing Haredi women and the Orthodox Jewish feminist movement Noam YachadControversies editShunning edit See also Off the derech Orthodox views of OTD peoplePeople who decide to leave Haredi communities are sometimes shunned and pressured or forced to abandon their children 151 154 155 Pedophilia and sexual abuse cases edit See also Adass Israel School sex abuse scandal FailedMessiah com Royal Commission into Institutional Responses to Child Sexual Abuse Yeshiva Melbourne and Yeshiva Bondi and Sexual abuse cases in Brooklyn s Haredi community Cases of pedophilia sexual violence assaults and abuses against women and children occur in roughly the same rates in Haredi communities as in the general population however they are rarely discussed or reported to the authorities and frequently downplayed by members of the communities 281 282 283 284 285 286 287 288 Divorce coercion edit Main article New York divorce coercion gang To receive a religious divorce a Jewish woman needs her husband s consent in the form of a get Jewish divorce document Without this consent any future offspring of the wife would be considered mamzerim bastards impure If the circumstances truly warrant a divorce and the husband is unwilling a dayan rabbinic judge has the prerogative of instituting community shunning measures to coerce him until he agrees with physical force reserved only for the rarest of cases 289 35 290 The New York divorce coercion gang was a Haredi Jewish group that kidnapped and in some cases tortured Jewish men in the New York metropolitan area to force them to grant their wives gittin religious divorces The Federal Bureau of Investigation FBI broke up the group after conducting a sting operation against the gang in October 2013 The sting resulted in the prosecution of four men three of whom were convicted in late 2015 291 Political controversies involving Haredi communities and parties in Israel edit In January 2023 the Times of Israel reported that Haredi Jewish citizens in Israel pays just 2 of the country s total income tax revenues despite making up 12 of the nation s population Furthermore the article s author described their communities as an epicenter of poverty with over 60 of Haredi households classified as poor on the government s socioeconomic index with that figure remaining nearly constant in every Haredi community 292 While this disparity has been present in Israel for decades it has garnered more attention since December 2022 for numerous reasons First Haredi families have the highest fertility rate in Israel at 6 6 births per woman In comparison the average fertility rate in Israel is much lower at 2 9 per woman Current projections estimate that the Haredi population will double by 2036 and they will comprise 16 of the total population by 2030 293 The second aspect of the controversy surrounds their political connections to Israel s Religious Zionist alliance Historically they have remained politically uninvolved but since the 1990s they have continuously engaged more Today members of Israel s ultra Orthodox community have long enjoyed benefits unavailable to many other Israeli citizens exemption from army service for Torah students government stipends for those choosing full time religious study over work and separate schools that receive state funds even though their curriculums barely teach government mandated subjects Today many Israeli Haredi men do not work preferring to study the Torah full time since they receive government funding for it thus resulting in their high poverty rate 294 See also edit nbsp Judaism portalJewish religious movements Relationships between Jewish religious movements Schisms among the Jews Hasidim and Mitnagdim Who is a Jew References edit a b Raysh Weiss Haredim Charedim or Ultra Orthodox Jews My Jewish Learning What unites haredim is their absolute reverence for Torah including both the Written and Oral Law as the central and determining factor in all aspects of life In order to prevent outside influence and contamination of values and practices haredim strive to limit their contact with the outside world Orthodox Judaism Berkley Center for Religion Peace amp World Affairs Archived from the original on May 16 2012 Retrieved May 15 2019 Haredi Judaism on the other hand prefers not to interact with secular society seeking to preserve halakha without amending it to modern circumstances and to safeguard believers from involvement in a society that challenges their ability to abide by halakha Shafran Avi February 4 2014 Don t Call Us Ultra Orthodox Forward Archived from the original on August 8 2022 Retrieved May 13 2020 Tatyana Dumova Richard Fiordo September 30 2011 Blogging in the Global Society Cultural Political and Geographical Aspects Idea Group Inc IGI p 126 ISBN 978 1 60960 744 9 Haredim regard themselves as the most authentic custodians of Jewish religious law and tradition which in their opinion is binding and unchangeable They consider all other expressions of Judaism including Modern Orthodoxy as deviations from God s laws Orthodox Judaism Berkley Center for Religion Peace amp World Affairs Archived from the original on May 16 2012 Retrieved May 15 2019 Orthodox Judaism claims to preserve Jewish law and tradition from the time of Moses Nora L Rubel 2010 Doubting the Devout The Ultra Orthodox in the Jewish American Imagination Columbia University Press p 148 ISBN 978 0 231 14187 1 Retrieved July 24 2013 Mainstream Jews have until recently maintained the impression that the ultraorthodox are the real Jews For example Arnold Eisen Rethinking Modern Judaism University of Chicago Press 1998 p 3 Waxman Chaim Winners and Losers in Denominational Memberships in the United States Archived from the original on March 7 2006 a b Wertheimer Jack What You Don t Know About the Ultra Orthodox Archived July 24 2015 at the Wayback Machine Commentary Magazine 1 July 2015 4 September 2015 a b c d e Statistical Report on Ultra Orthodox Society in Israel en idi org il שנתון החברה החרדית בישראל 2019 PDF Idi org il Retrieved March 2 2022 How many ultra Orthodox live in Israel today and how many in 40 years These are CBS data Hidabroot org November 11 2020 Retrieved March 2 2022 permanent dead link Norman S Cohen January 1 2012 The Americanization of the Jews NYU Press p 389 ISBN 978 0 8147 3957 0 Given the high fertility and statistical insignificance of intermarriage among ultra Orthodox haredim in contrast to most of the rest of the Jews a b c d Wise 2007 Buck Tobias November 6 2011 Israel s secular activists start to fight back Financial Times Archived from the original on December 10 2022 Retrieved March 26 2013 Berman Eli 2000 Sect Subsidy and Sacrifice An Economist s View of Ultra Orthodox Jews PDF Quarterly Journal of Economics 115 3 905 953 doi 10 1162 003355300554944 Selomo A Desen Charles Seymour Liebman Moshe Shokeid January 1 1995 Israeli Judaism The Sociology of Religion in Israel Transaction Publishers p 28 ISBN 978 1 4128 2674 7 The number of baalei teshuvah penitents from secular backgrounds who become Ultraorthodox Jews amounts to a few thousand mainly between the years 1975 1987 and is modest compared with the natural growth of the haredim but the phenomenon has generated great interest in Israel Harris 1992 p 490 This movement began in the US but is now centred in Israel where since 1967 many thousands of Jews have consciously adopted an ultra Orthodox lifestyle Weintraub 2002 p 211 Many of the ultra Orthodox Jews living in Brooklyn are baaley tshuva Jews who have gone through a repentance experience and have become Orthodox though they may have been raised in entirely secular Jewish homes Returning to Tradition The Contemporary Revival of Orthodox Judaism By M Herbert Danzger A survey of Jews in the New York metropolitan area found that 24 of those who were highly observant defined as those who would not handle money on the Sabbath had been reared by parents who did not share such scruples The ba al t shuva represents a new phenomenon for Judaism for the first time there are not only Jews who leave the fold but also a substantial number who return p 2 and These estimates may be high Nevertheless as these are the only available data we will use them Defined in terms of observance then the number of newly Orthodox is about 100 000 despite the number choosing to be orthodox the data do not suggest that Orthodox Judaism is growing The survey indicates that although one in four parents were Orthodox in practice only one in ten respondents are Orthodox p 193 Gross Judah Ari January 2 2023 Haredim are fastest growing population will be 16 of Israelis by decade s end The Times of Israel Retrieved January 24 2023 Oops Something is wrong הודעה לתקשורת תחזית אוכלוסיית ישראל עד שנת 2065 Israel Central Bureau of Statistics May 21 2017 Retrieved January 24 2023 Druckman Yaron May 21 2017 ישראל 2065 20 מיליון תושבים כל אזרח שלישי חרדי Ynet Retrieved January 24 2023 Markoe Lauren February 6 2014 Should ultra Orthodox Jews be able to decide what they re called Washington Post Retrieved January 13 2017 a b c Philologos Hillel Halkin February 17 2013 Just How Orthodox Are They The Forward Archived from the original on August 10 2022 Retrieved January 13 2017 May Max B 1916 Isaac Mayer Wise Founder of American Judaism A Biography PDF New York G P Putnam s p 71 a b c Stadler 2009 p 4 Ben Yehuda 2010 p 17 White John Kenneth Davies Philip John 1998 Political Parties and the Collapse of the Old Orders State University of New York Press p 157 ISBN 978 0 7914 4068 1 Kosmin Barry Alexander Keysar Ariela 2009 Secularism Women amp the State The Mediterranean World in the 21st Century Institute for the Study of Secularism in Society and Culture p 86 ISBN 978 0 692 00328 2 a b Ayalon Ami 1999 Language as a barrier to political reform in the Middle East International Journal of the Sociology of Language Volume 137 pp 67 80 Haredi has none of the misleading religious implications of ultra Orthodox in the words of Shilhav 1989 53 They are not necessarily objectively more religious but religious in a different way and Haredi is preferable being a term commonly used by such Jews themselves Moreover it carries none of the venom often injected into the term ultra Orthodox by other Jews and sadly by the Western media a b Sources describing the term as pejorative or derogatory include Kobre Eytan One People Two Worlds A Reform Rabbi and an Orthodox Rabbi Explore the Issues That Divide Them reviewed by Eytan Kobre Jewish Media Resources February 2003 Retrieved August 25 2009 Indeed the social scientist Marvin Schick calls attention to the fact that through the simple device of identifying some Jews as ultra Orthodox a pejorative term has become the standard reference term for describing a great many Orthodox Jews No other ethnic or religious group in this country is identified in language that conveys so negative a message Goldschmidt Henry Race and Religion among the Chosen Peoples of Crown Heights Rutgers University Press 2006 p 244 note 26 I am reluctant to use the term ultra Orthodox as the prefix ultra carries pejorative connotations of irrational extremism Longman Chia Engendering Identities as Political Processes Discources of Gender Among Strictly Orthodox Jewish Women in Rik Pinxten Ghislain Verstraete Chia Longmanp eds Culture and Politics Identity and Conflict in a Multicultural World Berghahn Books 2004 p 55 Webber 1994 27 uses the label strictly Orthodox when referring to Haredi seemingly more adequate as a purely descriptive name yet carrying less pejorative connotations than ultra Orthodox Shafran Avi Don t Call Us Ultra Orthodox The Jewish Daily Forward February 2014 Retrieved July 9 2014 Considering that other Orthodox groups have self identified with prefixes like modern or open why can t we Haredim just be simply Orthodox Our beliefs and practices after all are those that most resemble those of our grandparents But whatever alternative is adopted ultra deserves to be jettisoned from media and discourse We Haredim aren t looking for special treatment or to be called by some name we just happen to prefer We re only seeking the mothballing of a pejorative Stolow Jeremy January 1 2010 Orthodox by Design Judaism Print Politics and the ArtScroll Revolution University of California Press ISBN 9780520264250 Lipowsky Josh Paper loses divisive term Archived August 26 2011 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Standard January 30 2009 JTA Jewish Telegraphic Agency faced the same conundrum and decided to do away with the term replacing it with fervently Orthodox Ultra Orthodox was seen as a derogatory term that suggested extremism a b c Goldstein Joseph Schwirtz Michael October 10 2013 U S Accuses 2 Rabbis of Kidnapping Husbands for a Fee The New York Times ISSN 0362 4331 Retrieved April 14 2020 Heilman Samuel Ultra Orthodox Jews Shouldn t Have a Monopoly on Tradition The Forward Retrieved January 13 2017 Heilman Samuel C 1976 Synagogue Life A Study in Symbolic Interaction Transaction Publishers pp 15 16 ISBN 978 1412835497 Ritzer George 2011 Ryan J Michael ed The concise encyclopedia of sociology Chichester West Sussex UK Wiley Blackwell p 335 ISBN 978 1444392647 Donna Rosenthal The Israelis Ordinary People in an Extraordinary Land Simon and Schuster 2005 p 183 Dossim a derogatory word for Haredim is Yiddish accented Hebrew for religious Nadia Abu El Haj Facts on the ground Archaeological practice and territorial self fashioning in Israeli society University of Chicago Press 2001 p 262 Benor Sarah Bunin 2012 Becoming frum how newcomers learn the language and culture of Orthodox Judaism New Brunswick N J Rutgers University Press p 9 ISBN 978 0813553917 a b Rubel Nora L November 1 2009 Doubting the Devout The Ultra Orthodox in the Jewish American Imagination Columbia University Press ISBN 9780231512589 Caplan Kimmy October 27 2016 Post World War II Orthodoxy pp 9780199840731 0139 doi 10 1093 OBO 9780199840731 0139 First and foremost as Katz 1986 and Samet 1988 prove notwithstanding the overall Orthodox perception that it is the only authentic expression of traditional Judaism and although it is related to traditional Judaism Orthodoxy is a modern European phenomenon which gradually emerged in response to the gradual demise of traditional Jewish societies the rise of the Jewish Enlightenment Haskalah Jewish Reforms secularization and various additional processes which developed throughout the 19th century Slifkin Natan The Novelty of Orthodoxy PDF The Orthodox simply viewed themselves as authentically continuing the ways of old Originally historians viewed them in the same way considering them less interesting than more visibly new forms of Judaism such as the haskalah and Reform Judaism But beginning with the works of Joseph Ben David2 and Jacob Katz 3 it was realized in academic circles that all of this was nothing more than a fiction a romantic fantasy The very act of being loyal to tradition in the face of the massive changes of the eighteenth century forced the creation of a new type of Judaism It was traditionalist rather than traditional Kogman Tal January 7 2017 Science and the Rabbis Haskamot Haskalah and the Boundaries of Jewish Knowledge in Scientific Hebrew Literature and Textbooks The Leo Baeck Institute Year Book 62 135 149 doi 10 1093 leobaeck ybw021 Ner Tamid Emblem Workbook PDF January 20 2008 Archived from the original PDF on February 19 2012 YIVO Schick Mosheh Yivoencyclopedia org Retrieved March 26 2013 Kolmyya Ukraine Pages 41 55 85 88 Jewishgen org February 12 2011 Retrieved March 26 2013 Rabbi Shimon Sofer The Author of Michtav Sofer Hevratpinto org Retrieved March 26 2013 New Religious Party Archive jta org September 13 1934 Retrieved March 26 2013 Berlin Conference Adopts Constitution for World Union Progressive Judaism Archive jta org August 21 1928 Retrieved March 26 2013 Agudah Claims 16 205 Palestine Jews Favor Separate Communities Archive jta org February 28 1929 Retrieved March 26 2013 Palestine Communities Ordinance Promulgated Archive jta org July 20 1927 Retrieved March 26 2013 Rabbi Dushinsky Installed As Jerusalem Chief Rabbi of Orthodox Agudath Israel Archive jta org September 3 1933 Retrieved March 26 2013 Assaf David 2010 Hasidism Historical Overview The YIVO Encyclopedia of Jews in Eastern Europe p 2 MacQueen Michael 2014 The Context of Mass Destruction Agents and Prerequisites of the Holocaust in Lithuania Holocaust and Genocide Studies 12 1 27 48 doi 10 1093 hgs 12 1 27 ISSN 1476 7937 Weiss Raysh August 12 2023 Haredim Chareidim myjewishlearning com Lehmann David Siebzehner Batia August 2009 Power Boundaries and Institutions Marriage in Ultra Orthodox Judaism European Journal of Sociology 50 2 273 308 doi 10 1017 s0003975609990142 S2CID 143455323 Bob Yonah Jeremy April 19 2013 Sephardi haredim complain to court about ghettos The Jerusalem Post Retrieved June 22 2014 Silberstein 1993 p 17 Tehranian 1997 p 324 Ilan Shahar July 12 2012 The myth of Haredi moral authority Haaretz com Retrieved August 11 2021 Munson Henry L Jr November 26 2019 Fundamentalism The Haredim Encyclopedia Britannica Retrieved August 11 2021 Frey Rebecca Joyce 2007 Fundamentalism Infobase Publishing p 9 ISBN 978 1 4381 0899 5 Heilman Samuel C Friedman Menachem July 1994 Religious Fundamentalism and Religious Jews The Case of the Haredim In Marty Martin E Appleby R Scott American Academy of Arts and Sciences eds Fundamentalisms Observed University of Chicago Press p 257 ISBN 978 0 226 50878 8 Huff Peter A October 19 2001 Haredim In Brasher Brenda ed Encyclopedia of Fundamentalism Volume 3 of Religion amp Society Berkshire Publishing Group p 207 ISBN 978 1 61472 834 4 Herriot Peter September 25 2008 Religious Fundamentalism Global Local and Personal Routledge p 246 ISBN 978 1 134 10161 0 Silberstein 1993 p 18 Janner Klausner Laura October 5 2015 Jewish Fundamentalism In Dunn James D G ed Fundamentalisms Threats and Ideologies in the Modern World Bloomsbury Publishing p 79 ISBN 978 0 85772 545 5 organised Haredi Judaism is in fact a relatively new phenomenon in Jewish history Fader Ayala May 26 2020 Hidden Heretics Princeton University Press pp 17 20 ISBN 978 0 691 16990 3 State faith school that redacted textbooks failed by Ofsted Humanists UK June 26 2018 Retrieved June 28 2018 School Report Yesodey Hatorah Senior Girls School Ofsted 2018 a b c להב אביטל January 14 2015 הלמ ס 56 מהגברים החרדים מועסקים Ynet Stadler 2009 p 79 The economic situation of Haredi in Israel is unique When comparing the Haredi community in Israel with that in the United States Gonen 2000 found that Haredi members in the United States both Lithuanians and Hasidic work and participate in the labor market Stadler 2009 p 44 The support of the yeshiva culture is related also to the developments of Israel s welfare policy This is why in Israel today Haredim live in relatively poorer conditions Berman 2000 Dahan 1998 Shilhav 1991 and large Haredi families are totally dependent on state funded social support systems This situation is unique to Israel Stadler 2009 pp 77 78 According to various surveys of the Haredi community between 46 and 60 percent of its members do not participate in the labor market and 25 percent have part time jobs see Berman 1998 Dahan 1998 Members who work usually take specific jobs within a very narrow range of occupations mainly those of teachers and clerical or administrative staff Lupo 2003 In addition because Haredim encourage large families half of them live in poverty and economic distress Berman 1998 נחשוני קובי July 29 2013 הרב הראשי לתלמידי הישיבות אל תצפו בטלוויזיה בפיצוציות Chief Rabbi of Israel To Yeshiva Students Don t Watch TV in Kiosks Ynetnews in Hebrew Retrieved September 21 2013 Rosenblum Jonathan December 15 2004 Proud to be Chareidi Jewish Media Resources Archived from the original on March 2 2009 Retrieved September 21 2013 a b Miller Jason June 8 2012 Ultra Orthodox Jews are Correct About the Dangers of the Internet The Huffington Post Retrieved June 22 2014 Is that cellphone kosher BBC News October 6 2008 Retrieved September 21 2013 Ultra Orthodox Jews Rally to Discuss Risks of Internet The New York Times May 20 2012 Retrieved September 20 2012 Sommer Allison Kaplan September 9 2013 Haredi Rabbis Ban All female Zumba Classes Haaretz Retrieved March 8 2018 a b Haredi Rabbis Outlaw Women Only Zumba Classes September 9 2013 Retrieved March 8 2018 Jacobs Leah Shaindy Marks 2006 Dating secrets the ultimate guide to finding your spouse New York Shaar Press ISBN 1 4226 0220 6 OCLC 123944171 Shidduch app now available in English The Jerusalem Post Retrieved April 27 2023 Barry Rubin 2012 Israel An Introduction Yale University Press p 162 Question 11 1 6 Dress Why do some Orthodox Jews especially Chassidim wear a distinctive style of clothing i e fur hats black coats gartel Soc Culture Jewish Newsgroups Archived from the original on May 10 2016 The style of hat varies by groups and the black hat is relatively modern In the pre war Lithuanian Yeshivot grey suits and grey fedoras were the style and many in the Litvish tradition still wear grey and blue suits What Kind of Frum Am I Rebbetzin Esther Reisman Binah Magazine December 23 2019 vol 13 no 664 p 34 In the 1970s and 80s most bachurim yeshiva students did not wear white shirts My husband Rabbi Yisroel Reisman and most of his friends wore colored shirts during the week and white shirts on Shabbos In looking at group photographs of talmidim students and Rebbeim rabbinic teachers of this tekufah era one is struck by the colorful attire of the talmidim Hoffman 2011 p 90 a b A long article explaining the characteristics of female Haredi dress inside and outside the house Peopleil org Archived from the original on November 1 2013 Retrieved March 11 2014 Galahar Ari September 6 2010 Rabbi Yosef comes out against wig wearing Ynetnews Ynetnews com Retrieved January 31 2014 Aryeh Spero January 11 2013 Orthodoxy Confronts Reform The Two Hundred Years War In Dana Evan Kaplan ed Contemporary Debates in American Reform Judaism Conflicting Visions Routledge p 119 ISBN 978 1 136 05574 4 Haredi citizenship is beneficial however since it creates safe neighborhoods where robbery mugging or rape will not be visited on strangers walking through it and where rules of modesty and civilized behavior are the expected norm Starr Sered 2001 p 196 Sharkansky 1996 p 145 Modesty patrols exist in Bnei Brak and ultra Orthodox neighborhoods of Jerusalem their purpose is to keep those areas free of immoral influences Ben Yehuda 2010 p 115 Women dressed in what is judged as immodest may experience violence and harassment and demands to leave the area Immodest advertising may cause Haredi boycotts and public spaces that present immodest advertisement may be vandalized Melman 1992 p 128 In one part of the city Orthodox platoons smash billboards showing half naked fashion models Heilman 2002 p 322 While similar sentiments about the moral significance of immodest posters in public are surely shared by American haredim they would not attack images of scantily clad models on city bus stops on their neighborhoods with the same alacrity as their Israeli counterparts Calvin Klein bra advert ruled OK despite Charedi complaint Jennifer Lipman January 18 2012 Jews flee Rio during carnival Kobi Nahshoni 15 02 13 Cohen 2012 p 159 Lidman Melanie August 29 2012 Egged We will not use people on J lem bus ads Jpost com Retrieved September 21 2013 Egged bars J lem ads featuring aliens Times of Israel June 28 2013 Ban this offensive advert Jewish leaders demand By Chris Hastings and Elizabeth Day 27 07 03Daily Telegraph N J Demerath III Nicholas Jay Demerath January 1 2003 Crossing the Gods World Religions and Worldly Politics Rutgers University Press p 103 ISBN 978 0 8135 3207 3 To honor the Sabbath many government services are closed and no state buses operate from sundown Friday to sundown Saturday Recent religious demands in Jerusalem have ranged from Sabbath road closings in Jewish areas and relocating a sports stadium so that it would not disturb a particular neighborhood s Sabbath to halting the sale of non kosher food in Jewish sectors Issa Rose 2004 Taking Space Seriously Law Space and Society in Contemporary Israel Ashgate Publishing Ltd pp 101 105 ISBN 978 0 7546 2351 9 The residents of the neighbourhood considered traffic on the Sabbath an intolerable provocation directly interfering with their way of life and began to demonstrate against it Segev 1986 Landau 1993 p 276 Ettinger 2011b a b Zeveloff 2011 Chavkin amp Nathan Kazis 2011 Rosenberg 2011 Sharon 2012 Heller 2012 The Jewish Spectator School of the Jewish Woman 1977 p 6 THE NEW YORK State Assembly has passed a law permitting segregated seating for women on the buses chartered by ultra Orthodox Jews for the routes from their Brooklyn and Rockland County Spring Valley Monsey New Square neighborhoods to their places of business and work in Manhattan The buses are equipped with mehitzot which separate the men s section from the women s The operator of the partitioned buses and the sponsors of the law that permits their unequal seating argued their case by invoking freedom of religion Dashefsky amp Sheskin 2012 p 129 Haughney 2011 Kobre Eytan December 28 2011 In The Hot Seat Mishpacha Archived from the original on November 3 2013 Retrieved December 18 2013 Katya Alder April 24 2007 Israel s modesty buses draw fire BBC News El Al to launch kosher flights for haredim Israel Jewish Scene Ynetnews Ynet co il Retrieved September 21 2013 Israel Selected Issues Paper IMF Country Report 12 71 March 9 2012 PDF Retrieved February 23 2014 Bryant 2012 Haredi press rarely reports on deviance and unconventionality among Haredim Thus most reports are based on the secular Press This is consistent with Haredi press policy of the right of the people not to know which aims to shield Haredi readers from exposure to information about such issues as rape robbery suicide prostitution and so on a b c Rita James Simon July 28 1978 Continuity and Change A Study of Two Ethnic Communities in Israel CUP Archive pp 73 74 ISBN 978 0 521 29318 1 Cohen 2012 p 79 a b Cohen 2012 p 80 Papers alter Israel cabinet photo BBC April 3 2009 Retrieved August 7 2013 Tessler 2013 נחשוני קובי June 7 2012 ynet ביטאון ש ס צנזר את תמונת רחל אטיאס יהדות Ynet Ynet co il Retrieved March 11 2014 Rabbi Avrohom Biderman in minute 53 54 of May 7 2020 Twitter Live podcast with SeforimChatter Archived from original on July 24 2020 Cohen 2012 p 93 Cohen amp Susser 2000 p 103 The Haredi press for its part is every bit as belligerent and dismissive Apart from the recurrent images of drug crazed sybaritic terminally empty headed young people the secular world is also portrayed as spitefully anti Semitic Cohen amp Susser 2000 p 102 Yet when the Haredi newspapers present the world of secular Israeli youth as mindless immoral drugged and unspeakably lewd Cohen amp Susser 2000 p 103 Cohen 2012 p 110 a b Cohen 2012 p 111 Deutsch 2009 pp 4 5 Deutsch 2009 p 8 Deutsch 2009 p 4 Deutsch 2009 p 9 Deutsch 2009 p 18 קווי נייעס ספקי החדשות והרכילות של המגזר החרדי נלחמים על חייהם Haredi news hotlines fighting to stay alive Haaretz in Hebrew Blau Shloimy August 23 2012 12 000 Calls a Day One Number Behind the Scenes at FNW The Voice of Lakewood Archived from the original on March 7 2018 Retrieved March 9 2018 Haredi protestors shut down Jerusalem roads for the second week in a row The Jerusalem Post Retrieved March 7 2018 Instructions were eventually sent out at 6 30 p m over the Jerusalem Faction s telephone hotlines for the protesters to disperse and only then were the roads and junctions they had blocked open to traffic again David Sherman 1993 Judaism Confronts Modernity Sermons and Essays by Rabbi David Sherman on the Meaning of Jewish Life and Ideals Today D Sherman p 289 ISBN 978 0 620 18195 2 The establishment of the State of Israel was bitterly opposed by the ultra Orthodox who still have great difficulty in accepting it In Mea Shearim Yom Ha Atzmaut Israel Independence Day is treated as a day of mourning They act as if they would rather be under Arafat or Hussein Ruth Ebenstein 2003 Remembered Through Rejection Yom HaShoah in the Ashkenazi Haredi Daily Press 1950 2000 Israel Studies Indiana University Press 8 3 149 via Project MUSE database A few years later in the late 1990s we find a striking twist to the Haredi rejection of the day Both Ha mod ia and Yated Ne eman usher in Yom HaShoah with trepidation No longer was the day simply one they found offensive but in their experience it now marked the start of a week long assault on Haredim for not observing the trilogy of secular Israel s national holy days Yom HaShoah Yom Hazikaron Lehaleley Zahal the Memorial Day for Israel s war dead and Yom Ha atzmaut Independence Day Sparked perhaps by media coverage of Haredim ignoring memorial sirens Haredim now felt attacked even hunted down for their rejection of the day during a period described by both Haredi newspapers with the Talmudic term byimey edeyhem referring to idolatrous holidays Judaism On Haredi opposition to Zionism The Jerusalem Post Retrieved March 2 2022 Opinion Think All Orthodox Jews Are Zionists Think Again The Forward October 11 2018 Retrieved March 2 2022 Agudath Israel may be non Zionist but it supports Israel and its people Jewishchronicle org Retrieved March 2 2022 Sela Neta December 15 2006 Satmar court slams Neturei Karta ynetnews Ettinger Yair January 1 2013 Hasidic Leader Yaakov Friedman the Admor of Sadigura Dies at 84 Haaretz Retrieved August 21 2017 The Purposes of Marriage in Judaism Chabad org Retrieved March 2 2022 STATISTICAL REPORT ON ULTRA ORTHODOX SOCIETY IN ISRAEL 2016 PDF En idi org il Retrieved March 2 2022 a b c Rabinowitz Aaron December 31 2017 Divorce Is Becoming a New Norm Among ultra Orthodox in Israel Haaretz Tel Aviv Retrieved August 3 2018 Lev Tzvi May 3 2018 Israeli divorce rate drops Israel National News Beit El Retrieved August 3 2018 Jewish divorces in Israel up 5 in 2018 with 86 increase in one town The Times of Israel a b Ruz Eva Pritchard Charlotte December 6 2016 The strictly Orthodox Jewish mothers pressured to give up their children BBC News London Retrieved August 3 2018 a b Otterman Sharon May 25 2018 When Living Your Truth Can Mean Losing Your Children The New York Times New York City Retrieved August 3 2018 Statistical report of ultra orthodox society in Israel PDF The Israel Democracy Institute Retrieved August 2 2021 a b Lev Tzvi December 31 2017 Education rising poverty dropping among haredim Israel National News Lisa Cave Hamutal Aboody December 2010 The Benefits and Costs of Employment Programs for the Haredim Implemented by the Kemach Foundation Myers JDC Brookdale Institute Lior Dattel February 10 2012 New project to integrate Haredim in higher education Haaretz Retrieved March 2 2012 Israel ends ultra Orthodox military service exemptions BBC News March 12 2014 Stadler Nurit Lomsky Feder Edna Ben Ari Eyal 2008 Fundamentalism s encounters with citizenship the Haredim in Israel Citizenship Studies 12 3 215 231 doi 10 1080 13621020802015388 S2CID 144319224 Latest Population Statistics for Israel www jewishvirtuallibrary org משכורות בצה ל כמה הצבא מוציא עליכם Mako co il February 6 2012 Retrieved March 11 2014 אילן שחר November 13 2012 סל ההטבות לאברך 17 אלף שקל ברוטו כללי הארץ הארץ Haaretz co il Retrieved March 11 2014 An example for an academic program for Haredi yeshiva students at the Israeli Open University Openu ac il Archived from the original on September 21 2013 Retrieved March 11 2014 Only one academic institution allows this Also most soldiers work over 9 hours a day and cannot afford such studies time wise or with their low monthly salary see prior references to soldier s monthly income Israel s ultra Orthodox fight to be exempt from military service BBC News September 11 2012 תורה מגינה ומצילה Shabes net Retrieved March 11 2014 הרב עמאר ישיבת ההסדר באשקלון מגנה על העיר Srugim co il September 13 2011 Retrieved March 11 2014 שר הפנים אלי ישי צה ל נכשל במלחמת לבנון השנייה כי החיילים לא התפללו חינוך וחברה הארץ הארץ Haaretz co il January 18 2012 Retrieved March 11 2014 Mordecai Richler This Year in Jerusalem Chatto amp Windus 1994 ISBN 0701162724 p 73 Amos Harel February 24 2012 IDF facing shortage of new soldiers Haaretz Retrieved March 19 2012 Amos Harel March 1 2012 Haaretz probe Many in IDF s Haredi track aren t really Haredi Haaretz Retrieved March 19 2012 Sheleg Yair 2000 The new religious Jews recent developments among observant Jews in Israel HaDati im haHadashim Mabat achshavi al haHevra haDatit b Yisrael Jerusalem Keter in Hebrew BBC News Israel ends ultra Orthodox military service exemptions Bbc com March 12 2014 Retrieved August 17 2014 נשפיע סקר 68 מהחרדים בעד גיוס תלמידי ישיבות לצבא Nashpia co il April 18 2013 Archived from the original on November 4 2013 Retrieved March 11 2014 הרב חיים דרוקמן בעד גיוס חרדים מצווה מהתורה Kikarhashabat co il Retrieved March 11 2014 הרב עובדיה יוסף על סכנת הגיוס נעזוב את הארץ Kikarhashabat co il Retrieved March 11 2014 צפו בוידאו שעורר סערה הרב אייכלר אם תפגעו בנו נעזוב את הארץ לצמיתות Kooker co il October 17 2013 Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved March 11 2014 גלובס שירות September 29 2013 News report of mainstream Haredi Rabbis cursing and inciting against Lapid Globes Globes co il Archived from the original on November 2 2013 Retrieved March 11 2014 נחשוני קובי October 29 2013 A news report regarding an incitement campaign against people supporting Haredi enlistment included a long comic book depicting Haredim as sheep and the Secular Nationally Religious and their politicians as predatory animals who conspire to eat them Ynet Ynet co il Retrieved March 11 2014 אברהם שמוליק May 26 2013 די להסתה גם אני חרד ק גאה יהדות Ynet Ynet co il Retrieved March 11 2014 פרקש טלי May 22 2013 אזהרה בקרוב עלול להירצח חייל חרדי יהדות Ynet Ynet co il Retrieved March 11 2014 נחשוני קובי July 10 2013 ביום שאחרי אף חייל לא הותקף ספין של צה ל יהדות Ynet Ynet co il Retrieved August 17 2014 פרקש טלי July 10 2013 החיים שלנו סיוט עדויות של חיילים חרדים יהדות Ynet Ynet co il Retrieved March 11 2014 In Israel religious schools begin opening an old world to the new Christian Science Monitor September 29 2021 Retrieved October 30 2021 Hila Weisberg January 27 2012 Measures on Haredim vanish from labor reform The Marker Haaretz Retrieved July 15 2014 Golan Jonathan June 20 1995 Haredi unemployment costs billions annually Ynetnews Ynetnews com Retrieved August 17 2014 Israel OECD Reviews of Labour Market and Social Policies Organisation for Economic Co operation and Development January 22 2010 p 286 The difficulty of drafting ultra Orthodox Jews into Israel s army The Economist September 30 2017 Where did you come from and where are you going Hebrew TheMarker print edition pp 90 97 June 2018 Liberman cancels daycare subsidies for kids of full time yeshiva students Times of Israel Retrieved October 30 2021 Bartram David Cultural Dimensions of Workfare and Welfare Journal of Comparative Policy Analysis 7 3 233 247 2005 קריסטל מירב July 25 2013 A news report on the very large Israeli company Tnuva censoring women in order to please Haredi clients Ynet Ynet co il Retrieved September 21 2013 וייס חיים ורוחמה July 26 2013 A news report August 2013 Ynet Ynet co il Retrieved September 21 2013 Erlanger Steven November 2 2007 A Modern Marketplace for Israel s Ultra Orthodox The New York Times Retrieved May 22 2008 Paul Morland April 7 2014 Israeli women do it by the numbers The Jewish Chronicle Retrieved May 20 2014 Dov Friedlander 2002 Fertility in Israel Is the Transition to Replacement Level in Sight Part of Completing the Fertility Transition PDF United Nations Department of Economic and Social Affairs Population Division Ibenboim Racheli Ultra Orthodox feminism Not a contradiction in terms Jewish Journal 29 June 2016 1 July 2016 Newman Marissa March 30 2014 Gov t Employers discriminate against Arabs Haredim The Times of Israel Retrieved June 22 2014 Yad Sarah 30 Years Old Israel Today Magazine July 9 2006 Archived from the original on May 8 2012 Retrieved December 8 2011 Marks Abbey June 22 2007 Israel s Yad Sarah Makes Volunteering With Elderly A National Pastime Jweekly com Retrieved December 8 2011 Ettinger 2011a Analysis of Nonresponse in a Social Survey with the Sharp Bounds Method PDF Amstat org Archived from the original PDF on September 21 2013 Retrieved September 21 2013 Brown 2011 Britain Sees Spike in Ultra Orthodox Population Forward com May 24 2010 Retrieved September 21 2013 a b 2019 Statistical Report on Haredi Society in Israel Hiddush December 25 2019 Retrieved September 25 2020 a b Haredi population growing twice as fast as overall Israeli population report Time of Israel December 31 2020 Retrieved March 22 2021 Lintl Peter 2020 The Haredim as a challenge for the Jewish State the culture war over Israel s identity Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik German Institute for International and Security Affairs 5 6 10 doi 10 18449 2020RP14 Statistical Report on Ultra Orthodox Society in Israel en idi org il in Hebrew 2022 Retrieved July 14 2023 a b Ari Paltiel Michel Sepulchre Irene Kornilenko Martin Maldonado Long Range Population Projections for Israel 2009 2059 Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics Retrieved 2014 04 21 a b c d Baumel Simon D 2005 Sacred speakers language and culture among the Haredim in Israel New York Berghahn Books ISBN 978 1 84545 062 5 LCCN 2005053085 OCLC 226230948 Arlosoroff Meirav November 13 2019 Haredim Are Leaving the Fold but the Community Is Growing Haaretz Retrieved July 11 2021 CBS predicts Arab haredi majority in 2059 Israel News Ynetnews Ynetnews Ynetnews com June 20 1995 Retrieved August 6 2013 a b Haredi Demography The United States and the United Kingdom PDF The Jewish People Policy Institute JPPI Retrieved September 25 2020 a b Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 14 2023 Berger Joseph June 11 2012 Aided by Orthodox City s Jewish Population Is Growing Again The New York Times Retrieved June 16 2014 Goldberg J J June 15 2012 Time To Rethink the New York Jew Study Leaves Out Suburbs and Ignores Splits Among Orthodox The Jewish Daily Forward Retrieved June 16 2014 Debra Nussbaum Cohen February 19 2013 As New York Haredim multiply Jewish Federation faces a quandary Haaretz Retrieved June 16 2014 Shwayder Maya September 20 2013 NY Jewish community wields growing political power High birthrate of ultra Orthodox and Hasidic communities expected to have great impact on future votes The Jerusalem Post Retrieved June 16 2014 Berger Joseph July 5 2012 Divisions in Satmar Sect Complicate Politics of Brooklyn Hasidim The New York Times Retrieved June 16 2014 Fox Margalit March 25 2005 Naftali Halberstam Dies at 74 Bobov Hasidim s Grand Rabbi The New York Times Retrieved June 16 2014 Brenner Elsa April 3 1994 Two Groups Contest Role in Promoting Lubavitch Judaism s Cause in the County The New York Times Retrieved June 16 2014 a b According to some sociologists studying contemporary Jewry the Chabad movement neither fits into the category of Haredi or modern Orthodox the standard categories for Orthodox Jews This is due in part to the existence of the non Orthodox Hasidim of which include former Israeli President Zalman Shazar the lack of official recognition of political and religious distinctions within Judaism and the open relationship with non Orthodox Jews represented by the activism of Chabad emissaries See Liebman Charles S Orthodoxy in American Jewish Life The American Jewish Year Book 1965 21 97 Ferziger Adam S Church sect theory and American orthodoxy reconsidered Ambivalent Jew Charles S Liebman in memoriam ed Stuart Cohen and Bernard Susser 2007 107 124 Weichselbaum Simone June 26 2012 Nearly one in four Brooklyn residents are Jews new study finds Growing Orthodox families across the borough account for most of the increase The New York Daily News Retrieved June 16 2014 a b Heilman Samuel C 2006 Sliding to the Right The Contest for the Future of American Jewish Orthodoxy Berkeley California University of California Press pp 73 74 ISBN 9780520247635 Retrieved June 16 2014 Machberes Matzav com November 17 2010 Shea Rubenstein Claims Marine Park is Fastest Growing Jewish Community in the World The Jewish Press Matzav com Retrieved June 16 2014 a b c d Helmreich William B 1982 The World of the Yeshiva An Intimate Portrait of Orthodox Jewry New York New York The Free Press Macmillan Publishing Company Republished by Ktav Publishing 2000 pp 200 226 228 236 238 ISBN 978 0881256420 Diner Hasia R Diner 2000 Lower East Side Memories A Jewish Place in America Princeton New Jersey Princeton University Press pp 98 99 ISBN 978 0691095455 Retrieved June 16 2014 Geberer Raanan March 28 2013 Ultra Orthodox Jews who are they Brooklyn Daily Eagle Retrieved June 16 2014 Oppenheim Rivka August 11 2010 Washington Heights Jews Caught In A Growth Bind The New York Jewish Week Retrieved December 14 2019 Eisenberg Carol June 10 2006 A clash of cultures in the Five Towns US Newsday Retrieved June 16 2014 Neighbors riled as insular Hasidic village seeks to expand The Korea Times February 27 2017 Retrieved March 4 2017 McKenna Chris March 25 2011 CENSUS 2010 Orange population growth rate 2nd highest in state but lower than expected Sullivan and Ulster also recorded increases Times Herald Record Archived from the original on August 16 2017 Retrieved June 16 2014 Santos Fernanda August 27 2006 Reverberations of a Baby 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South Florida into a promised land for Orthodox New Yorkers Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved July 19 2023 Deutch Gabby June 1 2022 New yeshiva aims to put South Florida on the map for Torah learning Jewish Insider Retrieved July 19 2023 Jacob Allan August 6 2021 Opinion Why Orthodox Jews Are Leaving Brooklyn for Florida Wall Street Journal ISSN 0099 9660 Retrieved July 19 2023 Klein Amy November 9 2006 Two neighborhoods reveal Orthodox community s fault lines Pico Robertson vs Hancock Park Jewish Journal Retrieved June 16 2014 Tavory Iddo The Hollywood shtetl From ethnic enclave to religious destination 2010 Ethnography sagepublications com 11 89 108 doi 10 1177 1466138109347007 S2CID 145340420 Retrieved June 16 2014 Wax Burton June 10 2012 Orthodoxy Traditional Judaism in Chicago PDF Chicago Jewish History Vol 36 no 1 Chicago Jewish Historical Society published 2012 pp 15 16 Retrieved June 16 2014 Saffren Jarrad March 3 2022 Aish Chaim Attracts Young Families Jewish Exponent Retrieved July 19 2023 Marker David Steiger Darby 2019 Jewish Population Study of Greater Philadelphia Area www jewishdatabank org Retrieved July 19 2023 Denver West Side Jewish Community Wittenberg Ed August 23 2013 Telshe Yeshiva hidden gem in Lake County Cleveland Jewish News Retrieved June 16 2014 Encyclopedia of Cleveland History Case Western Reserve University Telshe Yeshiva The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History 13 Mar 2011 ech case edu The Encyclopedia of Cleveland History Retrieved June 16 2014 Sales Ben October 27 2016 Among Cleveland s Orthodox voters reluctance reigns Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved July 18 2023 Graham amp Vulkan 2010 Pinter 2010 Wynne Jones 2006 Shtetls of the mind The Economist June 13 2015 Retrieved December 17 2015 Siobhan Fenton Dina Rickman August 14 2016 Ultra orthodox Jews crowdfunding to stop parents who leave community seeing their children The Independent Archived from the original on May 9 2022 Haredi Orthodox responsible for reversing Jewish population decline in Britain study says Jta org June 20 2018 Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 14 2023 Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 14 2023 In first for Latin America ultra Orthodox city planned for Mexico The Times of Israel Retrieved June 29 2021 Smilk Carin M May 2 2023 Chabad inaugurates Budapest s second mikvah JNS org Retrieved July 18 2023 Schwartz Yaakov Confident that Jews will fill pews Hungary s Chabad opens 2 synagogues in a day www timesofisrael com Retrieved July 18 2023 Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 18 2023 Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 14 2023 Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 18 2023 Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 14 2023 Graham amp Vulkan 2008 Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 18 2023 Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 18 2023 Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 18 2023 Haredi Jews around the world Population trends and estimates JPR www jpr org uk Retrieved July 18 2023 Otterman Sharon Rivera Ray May 9 2012 Ultra Orthodox Jews Shun Their Own For Reporting Child Sexual Abuses The New York Times New York City Retrieved August 3 2018 Ketcham Christopher November 12 2013 The Child Rape Assembly Line VICE Montreal Retrieved August 3 2018 Marr David February 19 2015 Rabbis absolute power how sex abuse tore apart Australia s Orthodox Jewish community The Guardian London Retrieved August 4 2018 Fenton Siobhan April 7 2016 Calls for urgent inquiry into sexual abuse of Jewish children in illegal schools The Independent London Archived from the original on May 9 2022 Retrieved August 3 2018 Tucker Nati May 11 2017 The Crusaders Fighting Sex Abuse in the Underbelly of Israel s ultra Orthodox Community Haaretz Tel Aviv Retrieved August 3 2018 Eglash Ruth September 9 2017 In Israel s ultra Orthodox community abused women are finding a way out The Washington Post Washington Retrieved August 3 2018 JTA February 28 2018 Jerusalem Ultra Orthodox Elementary School Accused Of Physical Sexual Abuse The Forward New York City Retrieved August 3 2018 Rabinowitz Aaron December 22 2019 Sexual Assault Allegations Rock an Israeli Hasidic Community Haaretz Tel Aviv Malinowitz Chaim The New York State Get Bill and its Halachic Ramifications Jewish Law Articles Bandler Jonathan Lieberman Steve October 10 2013 FBI Arrests N Y Rabbis in Jewish Divorce gang Probe USA Today Mullen Shannon April 21 2015 Rabbi Guilty of Kidnapping Conspiracy Jury Finds Asbury Park Press Gur Haviv Rettig Are Haredi parties standing in the way of their community s prosperity www timesofisrael com Retrieved April 25 2023 Haredim set to make up 16 of Israel s population by 2030 IDI report The Jerusalem Post Retrieved April 25 2023 Leon Nissim January 2023 Soft Ultra Orthodoxy Revival Movement Activists Synagogue Communities and the Mizrahi Haredi Teshuva Movement in Israel Religions 14 1 89 doi 10 3390 rel14010089 ISSN 2077 1444 Bibliography editBatnitzky Leora 2011 How Judaism Became a Religion An Introduction to Modern Jewish Thought Princeton University Press ISBN 9781400839711 Ben Yehuda Nachman 2010 Theocratic Democracy The Social Construction of Religious and Secular Extremism Oxford University Press ISBN 9780199813230 Brown Mick February 25 2011 Inside the private world of London s ultra Orthodox Jews The Daily Telegraph Retrieved August 2 2013 Bryant Clifton D D 2012 The Handbook of Deviant Behavior Routledge International Handbooks CRC Press ISBN 978 1134015573 Chavkin Sasha Nathan Kazis Josh November 4 2011 Outside New York City Sexes Separated on State Funded Bus New York World and the Jewish Daily Forward Retrieved August 2 2013 Cohen Asher Susser Bernard 2000 Israel and the Politics of Jewish Identity The Secular Religious Impasse JHU Press ISBN 978 0801863455 Cohen Yoel 2012 Mikva News God Jews and the Media Religion and Israel s Media Routledge Jewish Studies Series Routledge pp 77 95 ISBN 978 1136338588 Dashefsky Arnold Sheskin Ira M 2012 American Jewish Year Book 2012 Springer ISBN 9789400752047 Ettinger Yair April 21 2011a Four surveys yield different totals for Haredi population Haaretz Retrieved August 2 2013 Ettinger Yair September 23 2011b Israel s Dead Sea to get its first gender divided beach Haaretz Retrieved August 7 2013 Graham David Vulkan Daniel June 2008 Population Trends among Britain s Strictly Orthodox Jews PDF Board of Deputies Archived from the original PDF on October 23 2013 Retrieved August 9 2013 Graham David Vulkan Daniel May 2010 Synagogue Membership in the United Kingdom in 2010 PDF Institute for Jewish Policy Research amp Board of Deputies Archived from the original PDF on July 18 2011 Retrieved August 9 2013 Deutsch Nathaniel 2009 The Forbidden Fork the Cell Phone Holocaust and Other Haredi Encounters with Technology Contemporary Jewry 29 1 3 19 doi 10 1007 s12397 008 9002 7 S2CID 143875551 Harris Ian Charles 1992 Contemporary Religions A World Guide Longman Current Affairs ISBN 978 0 582 08695 1 Haughney Christine October 19 2011 At Front of Brooklyn Bus a Clash of Religious and Women s Rights New York Times Retrieved August 2 2013 Heller Moshe August 6 2012 Beit Shemesh Signs excluding women still up Yedioth Ahronoth Retrieved August 6 2013 Heilman Samuel Defenders of the Faith Inside Ultra Orthodox Jewry Heilman Samuel C 1994 Quiescent and Active Fundamentalisms The Jewish Cases In Marty Martin E Appleby R Scott eds Accounting for Fundamentalisms The Dynamic Character of Movements The Fundamentalism Project 4 Chicago Il London University of Chicago Press pp 173 196 ISBN 0 226 50885 4 Heilman Samuel C 2002 Haredim and the Public Square In Mittleman Alan L Licht Robert A Sarna Jonathan D eds Jewish Polity and American Civil Society Communal Agencies and Religious Movements in the American Public Sphere Rowman amp Littlefield ISBN 978 0742521223 Hirshman Yechezkel 2007 One Above and Seven Below A Consumer s Guide to Orthodox Judaism from the Perspective of the Chareidim MAZO PUBLISHERS ISBN 9789657344385 Hoffman Seymour 2011 Two Are Better Than One Case Studies of Brief Effective Therapy Mondial ISBN 9781595691965 Landau David 1993 Piety and Power The World of Jewish Fundamentalism Secker amp Warburg ISBN 9780436241567 Melman Yossi 1992 The new Israelis an intimate view of a changing people Carol Pub Co ISBN 9781559721295 Pinter Abraham June 24 2010 Alderman should face facts The Jewish Chronicle Retrieved August 9 2013 Rosenberg Oz October 16 2011 Israel High Court upholds ban on Sukkot gender segregation in Jerusalem Haaretz Retrieved August 7 2013 Sharkansky Ira 1996 Religion and Public Policy Rituals of Conflict Religion Politics and Public Policy in Israel Lynne Rienner ISBN 9781555876784 Sharon Jeremy April 10 2012 Mea She arim not enforcing gender separation Jerusalem Post Retrieved August 7 2013 Silberstein Laurence J 1993 Religion Ideology and Modernity In Silberstein Laurence J ed Jewish Fundamentalism in Comparative Perspective NYU Press ISBN 978 0 8147 7967 5 Soloveitchik Haym 1994 Migration Acculturation and the New Role of Texts in the Haredi Worid In Marty Martin E Appleby R Scott eds Accounting for Fundamentalisms The Dynamic Character of Movements The Fundamentalism Project 4 Chicago Il London University of Chicago Press pp 197 235 ISBN 0 226 50885 4 Sorotzkin David February 17 2022 The Formation of Haredism Perspectives on Religion Social Disciplining and Secularization in Modern Judaism Religions 13 2 175 doi 10 3390 rel13020175 Stadler Nurit 2009 Yeshiva Fundamentalism Piety Gender and Resistance in the Ultra Orthodox World NYU Press p 4 ISBN 9780814740491 Starr Sered Susan 2001 Replaying the Rape of Dinah Women s Bodies in Israeli Cultural Discourse In Frankel Jonathan ed Jews and Gender The Challenge to Hierarchy Oxford University Press ISBN 978 0195349771 Tehranian Majid 1997 1993 Fundamentalist impact on Education and the Media In Marty R Martin E Appleby Scott eds Fundamentalisms and Society Reclaiming the Sciences the Family and Education The Fundamentalism Project 2 University of Chicago Press ISBN 9780226508818 Tessler Yitzhak March 28 2013 Haredi weekly censors female Holocaust victims Yedioth Ahronoth Retrieved August 7 2013 Weintraub Aviva 2002 Poultry in Motion The Jewish Atonement Ritual of Kapores In Abramovitch Ilana Galvin Sean eds Jews of Brooklyn Brandeis series in American Jewish history culture and life UPNE ISBN 9781584650034 Wise Yaakov July 23 2007 Majority of Jews will be Ultra Orthodox by 2050 University of Manchester Archived from the original on October 17 2013 Retrieved August 9 2013 Wynne Jones Jonathan November 26 2006 Is this the last generation of British Jews Daily Telegraph Retrieved August 9 2013 Zeveloff Naomi October 28 2011 Sex Segregation Spreads Among Orthodox Buses Public Sidewalks and Streets Split Between Men and Women The Jewish Daily Forward Retrieved August 2 2013 External links edit nbsp Wikimedia Commons has media related to Haredi Judaism Benjamin Brown Orthodox Judaism in The Blackwell Companion to Judaism 2001 Haredi and technology Hasidic and Haredi Jewish population growth Map of the main Haredi Communities in Jerusalem Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Haredi Judaism amp oldid 1186908486, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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