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Reporters Change An Insular Jewish World

Orthodox Jews

MATTI FRIEDMAN   07/ 6/11 11:41 AM ET   AP

JERUSALEM — In the insular world of ultra-Orthodox Jews in Israel, the fact that the news is being reported is itself important news.

A decade ago, brawling between two ultra-Orthodox factions over real estate in Jerusalem would almost certainly not have been reported in the community's media. Neither would a bitter debate over ethnic segregation in a girls' school, or an incident in which a member of a Hasidic sect in New York attacked and badly burned a community dissident.

All of these stories have appeared in the past year, part of a flowering of journalism that is both driving and being driven by a gradual opening in this stringently conservative world.

The ultra-Orthodox are experiencing an unprecedented proliferation of Internet sites, radio stations, call-in news lines and newspapers increasingly independent of rabbinic control and willing to touch topics that might seem entirely mundane to an outsider but which, in the confines of this religious community, have long been taboo.

"It used to be that people were happy to live in their little caves, but now we all need to know what's going on everywhere. It's like air," said Nachman Tubul, a lanky, bearded 27-year-old who runs a wire service called News 24 out of a tiny storefront in Jerusalem.

Tubul was interrupted by the repeated ringing of the three cell phones concealed under his knee-length black coat.

No ultra-Orthodox reporter would say they want to upend their community's beliefs. But there is little doubt about the subversive nature of what they are doing, intentionally or not, when they give their audience a window on the outside world and a mirror in which to view their own.

The term "ultra-Orthodox" – the Hebrew equivalent is "Haredim," or "those who fear" God – is shorthand for sects that share loyalty to an eastern European ideal of religious study, large families, modesty, charity and a rejection of secular society.

The community of 700,000 – around 9 percent of Israel's population – is extraordinarily closed on itself and tightly governed by its rabbinical leadership. Many men choose lives of Torah study and welfare assistance instead of work. The very idea of news is still viewed as a somewhat disreputable distraction from more important pursuits like religious reflection. Television, the Internet and secular radio stations and newspapers are banned outright by rabbis – though, at least in the case of the Internet, increasingly without success.

The Haredi media revolution is linked to small but significant signs of change. More ultra-Orthodox men and women are joining the workforce and pursuing professional training. More are online. And their birthrate, still high, has inched downward in the past 10 years by 15 percent.

Until little more than a decade ago, Haredi media consisted mainly of a handful of dull newspapers that served as mouthpieces for ultra-Orthodox political parties.

But today, for example, a news junkie can dial the popular paid phone-in news service known as the "Haredi Voice," run from Jerusalem by the journalist Meni Shwartz-Gera.

This month, a caller might have heard an update on the deadlocked Israeli-Palestinian conflict, on the condition of a venerated rabbi on his deathbed in Jerusalem, or on the case involving the New York Hasidic sect – a combination of news from the outside world and from within the community.

A half-dozen or so call-in services of this kind – known as "nayis" lines, that being the Yiddish word for "news" – allow people to check the news without being seen to do anything more controversial than talk on the phone.

Shwartz-Gera prides himself on being the first ultra-Orthodox outlet to report the 2008 arrest of three young seminary students in Japan on drug smuggling charges. Among the ultra-Orthodox, he said, the word "drugs" had nearly never been uttered publicly before. When he reported the story, he said, others followed suit.

"I'm not doing anything revolutionary," Shwartz-Gera said. "We're all living in the age of the Internet."

On Tubul's news service, much of the content comes from a network of citizen reporters. He has sources he calls "sleeper cells" in rabbinic courts equipped with MP3 players they use to record audio. When one powerful rabbi, Ovadia Yosef, recently excommunicated a disobedient member of his political party, one of Tubul's sleepers surreptitiously taped him and the recording was out the same day. Methods like this would have been unheard of not long ago.

Tubul's agency, he said, "doesn't take sides" and will talk to anyone. He noted that he has interviewed an openly gay lawmaker "despite his problematic sexual tendencies."

Not everything is permitted. Direct attacks on important rabbis are off-limits, and sex remains taboo. During the rape trial of Israel's disgraced former president, Moshe Katsav, ultra-Orthodox media reported that Katsav was in court but never reported why.

Reporters also must take into account unique restrictions like the rabbinic prohibition on the "evil tongue," meaning speaking badly of others. The stricture is sometimes circumvented by criticizing organizations, rather than the people who head them.

Also barred are photographs of women, which are considered immodest. The current leader in the Haredi newspaper market, for example, the independent weekly Mishpacha, publishes a women's magazine without a single picture of a woman.

That makes a glimpse behind the scenes all the more surprising. At Mishpacha – which means "family" – more than half of the 250 employees are women, including reporters, graphic designers and the managing editor of the paper's English edition. This, too, would have been unthinkable until recently.

The newspaper has set a new standard for its competitors, printing glossy supplements and human interest stories. Reporters have gently tackled previously untouched topics like child abuse and divorce. The paper's agenda, which has included offering legitimacy for choosing to enter the workforce, has drawn the ire of some of the traditional Haredi papers it has eclipsed.

The issues published in the weekly paper "are the things people will be talking about around their Sabbath tables," said managing editor Shoshana Friedman.

"It's not a threat to us that our readers see what's happening in the world," she said. "I don't think people gain anything from being kept in a little black box."

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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlackYowe
I am a classical- liberal woman and a Jeweler.
10:46 PM on 07/10/2011
Their world is much like the Amish world. Amish keep their people in the dark so they are afraid to leave but many still leave because its way too restrictive.
08:05 AM on 07/10/2011
This is a site that caters to them http://www.thejerusalemlife.com
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ChiBloger
And the truth shall set us ALL free
12:31 PM on 07/08/2011
An open window from a cult it would seem. Not to condemn the whole deal, but many of the exclusions seem rather cultish.
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HUFFPOST COMMUNITY MODERATOR
General Public
liberal, progressive, atheist, Democrat, SubGenius
02:44 PM on 07/08/2011
Cult, religion, same thing, religions just have more people.
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ChiBloger
And the truth shall set us ALL free
02:49 PM on 07/08/2011
An oversimplification. One which is clearly anti Religion my friend.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
BlackYowe
I am a classical- liberal woman and a Jeweler.
10:47 PM on 07/10/2011
You sir are a bigot.
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BurtonDesque
Fear a Blank Planet
09:29 PM on 07/07/2011
As usual this article makes clear that "religion poisons everything".
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daveh88
SLTFATF
09:01 PM on 07/07/2011
The reporter misstates many things about Haredi jews. First over 80% of those over 30 work in Israel (unless they were layed off) Only the younger ones learn. This is because Israel has a draft but divinity students are exempt. Once someone turns 28 they cannot be drafted. They only use Torah study and welfare until they cannot be drafted anymore. This is because they are against compulsory military service (some choose to go in, but not all). This is typical secular israeli propaganda against Hareidim, who work hard and are discriminated against by many Israeli employers. Second He grossly distorts many aspects like the Internet, which he gets wrong. All Haredi rabbis have no problem with the Internet for business, the only issue is for pleasure, which the rabbis are divided. Also Mishpacha has been a majority female staffed publication since its inception, not anything recently.

This article is shoddily research and relies more on stereotypes than actual facts and the reporter who wrote it has such a track record regarding Haredim before. Bad work Huffpo putting up such a shoddy article
TomMartin
Freedom and equality.
10:13 PM on 07/07/2011
But is the reporter right that secular radio and newspapers are forbidden by those rabbis? That reminds me of cults like the Fundamentalist Church of Jesus Christ of Latter-day Saints.
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HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Rachelvis
There is a difference between "your" and "you're".
10:36 AM on 07/08/2011
Yes, it is forbidden. This is not propaganda, the rabbis want to maintain very tight control over their sheep, and the "intrusion" of the internet, TV and radio into mainstream Orthodox life threatens that control greatly.
I know this firsthand, I lived in Jerusalem for 2 years. Also, many men STRICTLY study Torah and do not work. It's even worse when young, able bodied men shun working and SERVING IN THE MILITARY, which is how the country protects itself. These young men have a child every year, there are 23 year olds with three children and no way of supporting them other than very very modest stipends from the place they "study"--relying on the government for their needs to be taken care of. It's sick.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daveh88
SLTFATF
06:38 PM on 07/08/2011
First they do have radios, there are several Haredi Radio stations. Second many of the Haredi papers are no different that Secular papers except they don't have movie reviews and celeb gossip
Here is todays edition of an American Haredi paper (they have a sister paper in Israel)
http://hamodia.com/digitaledition.cfm?docid=d6bb8a7832564a298950d21214787447

Read it and tell me if its not a legit paper.

Also the Rabbis can't force anything they only recommend things which some follow and some don't There is no Hierarchy in Orthodox Judaism or formal rabbinic structure to control anything
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
ZENNEPHI
06:57 PM on 07/07/2011
In the Panoramic array of an Eccumenical "group-think"...
The Discipline of "White and Black Magik" are Akin to the
Wiccan-Vatican traditions of Rome, that can cohabit in latter
Day Worship. None the less, the new comer to the vaste,
Calideiscope of Our Vocation.aka=The Kingdom Within...
The investigator, should, search ponder and Pray, {Contemplate}
In the Medium of the Spirit of the Holy Ghost,
[Rome] Cannonized Saint Joan of Ark', Orchistraited the Steps/Degrees of"
Shamman, Wiccan roles, in fellowship. Usually in there home sanctuary..

[Witchcraft]. [The Hasid Jewry] has lieages that trace back in pedigree
Charts, to Southern Transalvania. From Convens to Coventry.

Withcraft in all it's manifestation is simply placed:
Unordained,Christian Mechezedik Priesthood..
However the "Fellow Crafts" in Higher Sanction Priesthood,
Have been refined into Patriarchal Strongholds.

Solitary, from Source of Gallows of Rome.
They are invited to thrive,
"Let them Worship, How, When or What they May" {Prophet Joseph Smith]"

After All Rome, "Face the Music">>>JueruSalem
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bigmacha
Truth through research.
10:00 AM on 07/06/2011
No matter what, still living in a world of isolation where women are objects and second class citizens and (imho) men's lives are wasted all while on the public dole.
HUFFPOST SUPER USER
Daveh88
SLTFATF
09:14 PM on 07/07/2011
Most men work in the Haredi community as do most women. In the Haredi community more women have college degrees and earn more than the men. There has never been proof to the claim by secular Israelis that the Haredi live off of welfare. Hebrew U did a study and found that they use Welfare slightly lower than regular Israeli society. Also how are the women in Isolation when they go out and work, go to college and run most of the news publications in the community? You have reiterated an ignorant and bigoted stereotype that is totally false that has been propagated by anti religious elements in Israeli society.

Here are some Haredi Rabbis/ secular Scholars,
http://www.econ.nyu.edu/user/kirzner/
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Yehuda_%28Leo%29_Levi

Here is a Haredi Woman whos husband is a Haredi Rabbi
http://www.columbia.edu/cu/history/fac-bios/Carlebach/faculty.html

And there are so many more. I have Haredi cousins in Israel. One of them her husband is a union factory worker and she is a PT.
You pushed an ugly and false stereotype

But for your reading pleasure here the online edition of the American edition of the only haredi daily paper. I would show the Israeli edition but its in Hebrew this is in English so you can enjoy (they also have a weekly paper and magazine). This is the kind of publications from the community you malign
http://hamodia.com/digitaledition.cfm?docid=217287ed83fd4b0c93d2bf2de7467206
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bigmacha
Truth through research.
04:57 PM on 07/08/2011
Thanks for your reply to my post - however, I take issue with your inflammatory (self-inflicted persecution complex) about "...an ignorant and bigoted stereotype that is totally false". Bigotry and a narrow world view can - and is - amply demonstrated by the Haredi "community", as it is in any other "community". The difference is when bases that bigotry on some kind of divine direction - and that is irrespective of whether it is Jewish, Christian or Muslim.

Herewith are some articles from other publications that deal with this subject. Read and enjoy.
(1)'Sinful' city buses stoned by ultra-Orthodox Jews
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/sinful-city-buses-stoned-by-ultraorthodox-jews-1631370.html

(2)Jewish 'ultras' defend morals with menace
The Haredi sect has launched an aggressive campaign against the secular lifestyles of women in Jerusalem.

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/sep/21/israelandthepalestinians.middleeast1

(3)Jewish women risk arrest, insults to pray at holy site

‪‪Religious women say facing discrimination at Western Wall simply because of their gender‬‬

http://www.ynetnews.com/articles/0,7340,L-3824512,00.html

(4)Haredi Jewish Newspaper Erased Hillary Clinton From History

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/rabbi-jason-miller/haredi-newspaper-hillary-clinton-photo_b_859601.html
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bigmacha
Truth through research.
05:03 PM on 07/08/2011
Now as to the issue of men living off the dole - seems this ultra-orthodx rabbi agrees and member of parliament agrees with that sentiment.

Many Israelis Question Haredi Welfare, Yeshiva Stipends

JERUSALEM — Chaim Amsellem was certainly not the first Israeli Parliament member to suggest that most ultra-Orthodox men should work rather than receive welfare subsidies for full-time Torah study. But when he did so last month, the nation took notice: He is a rabbi, ultra-Orthodox himself, whose outspokenness ignited a fresh, and fierce, debate about the rapid growth of the ultra-religious in Israel.
“Torah is the most important thing in the world,” Rabbi Amsellem said in an interview. But now more than 60 percent of ultra-Orthodox men in Israel do not work, and he argued that full-time, state-financed study should be reserved for great scholars destined to become rabbis or religious judges.

Read the rest of the article at:

http://failedmessiah.typepad.com/failed_messiahcom/2010/12/many-israelis-question-haredi-welfare-yeshiva-stipends-345.html