Brooklyn, NY – NY Times: Orthodox Rabbis Sound an Alarm Over Eating Disorders

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    Brooklyn, NY – In the large and growing Orthodox Jewish communities around New York and elsewhere, rabbinic leaders are sounding an alarm about an unexpected problem: a wave of anorexia and other eating disorders among teenage girls.

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    While no one knows whether such disorders are more prevalent among Orthodox Jews than in society at large, they may be more baffling to outsiders. Orthodox women are famously expected to dress modestly, yet matchmakers feel no qualms in asking about a prospective bride’s dress size – and her mother’s – and the preferred answer is 0 to 4, extra small.

    Rabbis say the problem is especially hard to treat because of the shame that has long surrounded mental illness among Orthodox Jews.

    “There is an amazing stigma attached to eating disorders – this is the real problem,” said Rabbi Saul Zucker, educational director for the Union of Orthodox Jewish Congregations of America, or O.U., the organization that issues the all-important kashrut stamp for food. “But hiding it is not going to make it go away. If we don’t confront it, it’s going to get worse.”

    Referring to the high risk of death from heart problems and suicide in patients with anorexia, he said: “This isn’t a luxury type of disease, where, O.K., someone is a little underweight. People die.”

    As a teenager, Naomi Feigenbaum developed bizarre eating habits that had nothing to do with Jewish dietary laws: Cocoa Puffs and milk in the morning, when she figured she had all day to burn off the calories, and nothing but Crystal Light and chewing gum the rest of the day.

    At the kosher dinner table in her home near Cleveland, she said she would start arguments with her parents so she could stomp off and avoid eating. She lost weight so rapidly in high school that she used safety pins to cinch her long skirts around her waist.

    By the time her rabbi came to visit her, she was emaciated. He told her that she must attend a treatment program that met on Saturday, the Jewish day of rest, even if she had to violate religious rules by riding in a car to get there. She could even eat food that wasn’t kosher.

    “That’s when I realized it was a matter of life and death,” Ms. Feigenbaum said in an interview. “My rabbi does not take Jewish law lightly. But he told me the Jewish laws are things God wanted us to live by, not die by, and that saving a life takes precedence over all of them.”

    Now 24, she has written a memoir, “One Life” (Jessica Kingsley Publishers, 2009), about her recovery from anorexia after treatment at the Florida branch of the Renfrew Center, the nationwide eating-disorders clinic.

    There is little research to indicate how many women are in a similar position. Israeli studies consistently find high rates of disordered eating among Jewish adolescents but not Arab ones, and Israel’s rate of dieting is among the highest in the world – more than one woman in four – though obesity rates are relatively low.

    Data about American Jews is limited, but two small studies have reported high rates of disordered eating in certain communities. One of those, a 1996 study of an Orthodox high school in Brooklyn, found 1 in 19 girls had an eating disorder – about 50 percent higher than in the general population at the time. The 1996 study was done with the agreement that it would not be published. The other study, done in 2008, looked at 868 Jewish and non-Jewish high school students in Toronto and found that 25 percent of the Jewish girls suffered from eating disorders that merited treatment, compared with 18 percent of the non-Jewish girls.

    Demand for treatment programs that accommodate Orthodox teenagers prompted the Renfrew Center to start offering kosher food at its clinics in Philadelphia, New York, Dallas and Florida, while a new residential facility catering to young women from the United States opened last year in Jerusalem. It is not affiliated with Renfrew.

    Relief Resources, a mental health referral agency that serves Orthodox communities, runs an eating disorders hot line, and last year the O.U. teamed with a social worker to make “Hungry to be Heard,” a documentary about eating disorders among the Orthodox.

    Most of the young women interviewed for this article said they did not blame the culture for their health problems and said they derived support from their religious faith. But they spoke openly about the enormous pressure they feel to marry young and immediately start families , and the challenges of balancing professional careers with the imperative to be consummate homemakers who prepare elaborate Sabbath meals.

    Experts say that eating disorders usually emerge during adolescence and other times of transition. And in large Orthodox families, the girls are often expected to help care for their younger siblings, leaving them little time to pursue their own interests. Experts suspect that anorexia may provide a way to stall adult responsibilities by literally stopping the biological clock: the drastic weight loss can halt menstruation.

    Young Orthodox women are also expected to conform to a rigorous code of conduct, with few outlets for rebellion. They are expected to be chaste until marriage and do not date until they start looking for a husband. Even gossip is considered a sin.

    Once matchmaking starts, they may be expected to choose a life partner after only a brief courtship. Known mental illness in a family can affect the chances of a successful match, not just for the individual but for siblings as well, so young women may well avoid psychiatric treatment.

    In addition to fulfilling the traditional roles of caregiver and homemaker, many Orthodox women also assume the role of primary breadwinner so their husbands can pursue religious studies full time.

    “It’s too much,” said a 23-year-old woman from the New York area who is recovering from an eating disorder and asked not to be identified by name to protect her privacy. She is married and a full-time student, but has postponed having a baby.

    “A lot of my friends are going to work and support their husbands,” she continued, “but part of my recovery is to say that I can’t do everything – I’m not superwoman.”

    Food plays a central role in Jewish family and religious life, and both the Friday night dinner and the midday Sabbath meal, as well as holiday meals, can be multicourse affairs. But fast days – when no food or water is consumed for 25 hours – are also sprinkled throughout the year, often preceded or followed by a large meal.

    Next week’s Passover Seders, which traditionally include matzo and four cups of wine, along with soup, gefilte fish, brisket and potato kugel, are a particular challenge, experts say. For women who struggle with eating disorders, they can be an invitation to purging.

    “There are a lot of mixed messages,” said a 27-year-old woman from a strict Orthodox community in Brooklyn, who once carried less than 100 pounds on her 5-foot-6 frame. “My grandmother would see me and say, ‘You look so good, you’re so skinny – come eat, eat.’ ”

    Many rabbis find themselves being asked to resolve conflicts between religious obligations – like the requirement to fast on Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement – and doctors’ orders that patients not restrict food intake under any circumstances.

    “A patient will call and tell me their weight is down to 82 pounds, and they have weaknesses in their body, and I’ll tell them there is no question they must eat during a fast – not that they can eat, but that they must eat,” said Rabbi Dovid Goldwasser of the Bais Yitzchak Synagogue in Flatbush, Brooklyn, who has become known in the Orthodox world as an expert on eating disorders and counsels women from all over the world.

    “They have great difficulty with that,” Rabbi Goldwasser went on, “and they say to me, ‘But isn’t it true that by fasting you get atonement for your sins?’

    “I try to answer the spiritual conflict and say that no, God wants you to eat. Your eating on that day is considered as if you fasted.”


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    24 Comments
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    missyid
    missyid
    13 years ago

    I find it deplorable that we are a community that insists on the utmost tzniut from our young girls, but then we feel permitted to ask and answer questions related to their sizes and weight when involving shiduchim, That is a mockery of what tzniut is. Young girls are under tremendous pressure only partly because they are concerned about an eventual shiduch., They also hear their own mothers harping over and over again about how they (the mothers themselves) need to keep thin and go on diet after diet after diet and typically very restrictive diets. The mothers many times have no idea how their constant talk of it is affecting their impressionable daughters. And sometimes even fathers make terrible remarks to their wives that daughter’s hear regarding weight or to the daughters themselves. This is one illness that can be prevented easily.

    Michel
    Michel
    13 years ago

    Then there are the heavily overweight who use food to alleviate pain from personal issues. Both are bad. But for Jews and the Holidays, I would think overeating is the bigger problem with heart disease, cancer and diabetes and high BP being in the forefront of health issues. Thur night Cholent, Fri afternoon Toamaya and Pesach Gribenes and potatoes, to say nothing of the weekly pot kugel with all those eggs and oil. Yuck.

    13 years ago

    I’m gratetful this problem has been discussed so openly and honestly. However, my concern and fear is that there really is a no solid solution to this problem. Just being thin before marriage is not enough. Women in the frum world ARE expected to be thin, make fabulous meals, have a spotless house, raise a large family with wonderful children, work full time, and have time to do chesed in the community. How can we ever end this vicious cycle?

    smile2me
    smile2me
    13 years ago

    Its about time that the jewish community recognizes that they are not immune

    NJ_Jewish_Mother
    NJ_Jewish_Mother
    13 years ago

    Women in every type of community have eating disorders and it is good they are making people aware of it. BUT come on, I don’t think the orthodox way of life is causing it.
    Quoting #5 “Women in the frum world ARE expected to be thin, make fabulous meals, have a spotless house, raise a large family with wonderful children, work full time, and have time to do chesed in the community”. IT IS NOT TRUE. Some women do, do all that but we are not expected to. My house is not perfect and neither are all my friends. If you expect that, then you have problems. My husband appreciates when he has supper or if the house is clean. But I work and my house is not perfect and it is ok. I do Chessed every so often because I like to help people – not because it is expected of me!!
    This article does not reflect the normal, balanced and beautiful homes that orthodox jewish people have.

    BinderDundat
    BinderDundat
    13 years ago

    Sadly its a two way disease. the girls kill themselves to be thin and by the same token, there are countless young men in Lakewood who have ZERO interest in learning, but feel they have to be there in order to make a good shidduch. There is something very very wrong with this whole system. If a boy wants to learn for a couple of years, fine, but if you’re old enough to get married, then you’re old enough to work and support your family. You can learn in the morning and/or evening like thousands of others.

    charliehall
    charliehall
    13 years ago

    Thank you, Rabbi Goldwasser, for this important work!

    fiftyseven
    fiftyseven
    13 years ago

    Fact: 50% of Anorexic’s stem from abuse. Either physical or emotional. so to blame the jewish comunity’s for their religios eating habits or for their dating standards, would be highly unprofessional and misleading. i am saying this from experience. we might not be able to fix this problem so fast but if we want to help then the least we can do is train school teachers to identify the red flags and if a problem is detected they should send them for professional assistance. in adition to that if parents see a child that is showing signs of an eating disorder, dont try to fix your kids problem on your own, send them for outside help!

    13 years ago

    #13 - I agree with you 100%. I always say that these bochurim should be given tests to see if they are really learning or just taking up space for the shidduch. This whole shidduch system has gotten totally out of hand. The girl has to have a resume, with references??? What happened to the days when the boy and girl got to meet and know eachother?

    13 years ago

    I think we have a problem of everything expected from the women i make my husband help he helps cook clean and does the dishes and when we have kids our boys will we learning how to cook because they cannot except that we as womean work a whole day it’s our responsbility to do everything and i agree that shaddchamin shouldnt ask size i do not think my husband had any idea what size i wore till way after we got married.

    SharpSooter
    SharpSooter
    13 years ago

    Just touching the topic, a man is suppose to go and work and bring in the money(at least he signed that when he married her) not that she should be home to raise the kids and not the non jewish house keeper with a cross rocking them to sleep humming “my baby jesus…”but now that we need both parties to make ends meet we ALL have to chip in. If your saying your learning and making no sacrifice but your wife (turning her into a mess!!!) by making her look her best ,pay the bills, take care of the kids, clean the house with out help(on kollel budget) and have food ready ,your learning is worth NOTHING! But no they want it all a super model (and they have the audacity to ask a skirt size! very soon they will be asking a BUST size too!!!) and super women all in one!!! THE “LEARNING” COMMUNITY HAS TO CHANGE!!!