Bnei Brak – In Israel’s Religious Press, Hillary Clinton Is Invisible

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    File - In this  Monday, Aug. 15, 2016 file photo, Secret Service agents stand near Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton during a campaign event at the Riverfront Sports Complex in Scranton, Pa.  n Israel’s ultra-Orthodox press, Democratic U.S. presidential candidate Hillary Clinton is nowhere to be seen. For decades, the media catering to Israel’s fervently religious Jews have avoided publishing pictures of women in a show of modesty. They are vowing to maintain their policy even if Clinton is elected president of Israel’s closest ally.(Butch Comegys/The Times & Tribune via AP, File)Bnei Brak, Israel – Hillary Clinton may become the president of Israel’s most important ally, but her image is banished from a significant swath of the country’s media: the ultra-Orthodox press whose deeply conservative readership chafes at images of women.

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    Clinton’s nomination as Democratic candidate for the U.S. presidency is casting light on a longstanding policy that has already applied to other female figures from Germany’s Angela Merkel to Israel’s own prime minister Golda Meir. But whereas the election is causing some discussion among U.S. ultra-Orthodox media, their Israeli equivalents are digging in their heels.

    “For us there is no question. We will not publish pictures of women, period,” said Meni Shwartz, editor of the ultra-Orthodox news site Behadrei Haredim.

    About 11 percent of Israel’s 8.5 million citizens are Haredi, or ultra-Orthodox. Recognizable by their black hats and long black clothes, they often lead insular lives, separated from the more secular Jewish majority and closely adhering to Jewish laws. Ultra-Orthodox women traditionally dress in long skirts and long-sleeved shirts, covering their hair if they are married. Men and women sit separately at synagogues and weddings and unrelated women and men refrain from physical contact.

    Ultra-Orthodox media, which include four daily newspapers, two main weeklies and two main web sites, cater to conservative ideals that include preserving women’s modesty and skipping topics involving drugs, murder and sex. Many consider showing pictures of women a violation of those values, however newsworthy the figure.

    So Haredi media use pictures of the White House, Democratic running mate Tim Kaine or even Bill Clinton instead of showing Hillary’s face.

    The issue sparked discussion in Israel this year when Yated Neeman, the largest ultra-Orthodox daily, published a story about Clinton’s choice of Kaine as her running mate, accompanied by a photograph of Clinton’s husband.

    “Hey Yated Neeman, what will happen if Hillary really wins? Four years of photos of Bill?” tweeted journalist Yair Ettinger, who covers religion for the secular daily Haaretz.

    Beni Rabinovich, a journalist with Yated Neeman, tweeted back that the Haredi press has “a clear and rigid line on this issue. Without Bill or with Bill, we’ll manage.”

    Yaakov Lustigman, foreign affairs reporter for the popular Haredi newspaper Hamevaser, said his readers are fascinated by the U.S. elections and “we have no problem with there being a female president” – but they don’t want to see Clinton’s picture or even read her first name.

    Hamevaser achieved notoriety when it edited German Chancellor Angela Merkel out of a picture of world leaders marching through Paris after extremists attacked the offices of the satirical Charlie Hebdo magazine in 2015.

    Hamodia, a veteran ultra-Orthodox paper, is the only current Haredi daily that existed during the administration of Meir, Israel’s only female prime minister. A reporter there said that at the time, in the early 1970s, the newspaper did not publish her picture.

    News site Kikar Hashabbat publishes demure photographs of Clinton and other female leaders, according to foreign affairs reporter Israel Cohen.

    “Hillary Clinton is in her 60s. She’s solid, she dresses modestly and she’s likely to be the next president,” Cohen said. “You cannot ignore it.”

    But it is the lone exception, and journalists at rival publications said they don’t consider the site to be truly Haredi because of its policy.

    Rivka Neria-Ben Shahar, an expert on Haredi media at Sapir College in Sderot, said ultra-Orthodox newspapers have become more conservative in the past decades – but her studies show Haredi women today overwhelmingly support the policy.

    Ultra-Orthodox rabbis, some with tens of thousands of followers, set the guidelines for what is acceptable in their communities. Several ultra-Orthodox papers have rabbinical committees overseeing their content, and journalists say the issue of whether to publish Hillary Clinton’s picture hasn’t been discussed.

    Behadrei Haredim, headquartered in the ultra-Orthodox enclave of Bnei Brak near Tel Aviv, walks a tight line between conservative ideals and the modern essence of being online.

    Shwartz, the editor, said he gets about 1 million unique visits to the site a month, with users coming from Israel and around the world. The only photographs of women are in a section called “women’s lobby,” which focuses on cooking, motherhood and lifestyle. Users entering this area are warned that only women should proceed.

    Atara Sternbuch, an observant woman who runs the site’s English section, said the lack of women’s pictures on the main site is “just not an issue.” She said people who want to see pictures of Hillary Clinton can search elsewhere. “We want to make it comfortable to our readers who don’t want to be exposed to that,” she said.

    American ultra-Orthodox media have traditionally shied away from publishing women’s pictures as well. But the prospect of a Clinton presidency is stirring some debate. One newspaper recently broke a taboo by publishing a picture of Hillary Clinton’s hand.

    Rabbi Yitzchok Frankfurter, editor of the weekly Ami Magazine in New York, said he would consider printing Clinton’s photograph if rabbinical authorities allow it.

    “We don’t want to isolate the executive branch of the U.S. government,” Frankfurter said. “It’s too important for us as Jews who are citizens of the U.S. and as Jews who are friends of Israel.”

    Sheldon Schorer, former chairman of Democrats Abroad Israel, derided the policy of excluding women’s pictures and said it put Clinton at a disadvantage.

    “I don’t think the Jewish religion really requires that.”


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    12 Comments
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    Meloah
    Meloah
    7 years ago

    I think that it is important to respect each other’s opinion, even if you don’t agree with them, as long as they are not doing anything that violates our laws.

    7 years ago

    So, for the sake of Hamodia, Trump had better win. (Although I hope & pray she loses anyway).

    7 years ago

    Now ,if we could only make her invisible here in the USA……..

    jakyw
    jakyw
    7 years ago

    I think there is nothing prust about a women’s face and many people will answer for degrading frum women by blotting out our faces in the news. Can we get one frum magazine for women that shows women and not butterflies please!

    takeittothem
    takeittothem
    7 years ago

    if we can make Hillary wear a burka, where all you see are the eyes, would that press than publish her picture? Hillary – convert!

    jg0909
    jg0909
    7 years ago

    Izdusneias?

    yonasonw
    Member
    yonasonw
    7 years ago

    Taliban

    7 years ago

    Its better that Chareidim read ANY newspaper (even one that doesn’t shown women) than simply having them remain in the dark with no awareness of what is happening in the world. We’re not going to force them to change what most of us consider a chumrah that is not required by daas torah (especially for someone like HRC who dresses very modestly). Better they get some information than none.

    straightasitgets
    straightasitgets
    7 years ago

    there is nothing about her to cause hirhurim so it all should be fine

    savtat
    savtat
    7 years ago

    They can publish articles without any pictures. That’s okay by me. But to edit someone important out of photo, that is just a lie. We don’t need the men’s pictures either. It’s not a comic book.

    RebelSheep
    RebelSheep
    7 years ago

    If anyone has inappropriate thoughts when looking at pictures of Hillary Clinton, they have issues. In fact, the more one looks at her, the more disgusted one becomes.