New York – TIME Magazine Reports On The Role Of Charedim In “The Battle For Jerusalem”

    28

    New York – There is a new battle being waged over the future of Jerusalem, but not between the usual Israeli and Palestinian players. According to TIME Magazine, (http://ti.me/TcEpA2) in their cover story out this week entitled “The Battle for Jerusalem,” this time, the warring factions are the ultra-orthodox or “charedi” Jews and the secular Israelis.

    Join our WhatsApp group

    Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


    TIME author Karl Vick writes, “Since 1967, Jerusalem has become a resolutely Jewish city, so much so that the central question preoccupying residents today is not how it might be divided with Palestinians – for they are widely ignored of late – but rather just how religiously conservative the city can become while remaining a place most Israeli Jews could imagine living.” The article states that the ultra-orthodox have only recently made a “Lazarus-like comeback,” one which “threatens the fabric of Israel, or as they see it, points the way to the nation’s salvation.”

    Two Israeli men, one ultra-orthodox and the other secular were followed and interviewed by TIME for their story. Both men live and own apartments in a neighborhood called Kiryat Yovel which is home to about 800,000 people. But it has become less of a home for secular Israelis like Noam Pinchasi and more of a home to charedim like Elhanan Gibli. TIME estimates that approximately 20,000 secular Israelis have moved away from Kiryat Yovel in the past seven years, bringing the total percent of secular Israelis in the area to just 31. Meanwhile, the number of ultra-Orthodox Jews, also at 31 percent, is increasing.

    “It’s a flight much of Israel is watching with concern bordering on alarm,” TIME writes. “The ultra-orthodox are the fastest growing population in a Jewish state long governed by seculars but lately grappling with just how Jewish it wants to be.”

    When Gibli moved in to Kiryat Yovel, he was the first charedi in his building. Now charedim reside in four out of eight apartments. Across Israel, charedim now comprise 10% of the population and 21% of the enrollment in elementary schools. The birthrate of charedim is three to four times more than that of secular Israelis, and demographers estimate that in 20 years, one in five Israelis will be charedi.

    TIME references the collapse of Netanyahu’s government coalition and attributes the breakdown to the issue of how to address the “question of what to do about the ultra-Orthodox.” It says the Kadima party left Netanyahu’s coalition when he refused to force religious youth into service in the Israeli military.

    In an unabashedly critical paragraph, Vick writes, “Draft avoidance is just one privilege. The ultra-Orthodox, whose hermetic lifestyle may be based on the preoccupation with the next world but whose political clout defines savvy in this one, also enjoys subsidies for child care, education and housing. The community’s power only grows with its numbers. Uncontained, it stands to fundamentally alter Israel’s identity.”

    Noam Pinchasi says he is at war with the “blacks” – a reference to ultra-Orthodox Jews – over land in Israel. He and a crew of similar-minded citizens have been arrested for stirring up trouble in charedi neighborhoods by placing posters of nude paintings on the doors of synagogues. Pinchasi said he is sending a message to the charedim, “This is not like Ramot Eshkol, Neve Yaakov, Maalot Dafna,” referring to neighborhoods in Jerusalem which were once identified as secular, but have since become “black.” Pinchasi began his movement after mixed swimming was banned during the day at neighborhood pools, and when charedim set up makeshift synagogues in homes and stores. Pinchasi is also aggrieved that residents of Kiryat Yovel want their own eruv even though there is an eruv that runs around all of Jerusalem.

    Charedim are now “conquering neighborhoods designated for others,” according to TIME. When a religious man offered to buy the home of Pinchasi’s neighbor, saying, “We’ll give you a good price because we want you out of here,” Pinchasi told the man, “I have barbeques during Shabbat. Pork. We’re going to play music. We smoke. And we bring prostitutes here.” The religious man bought the house anyway because of the tight housing market. Pinchasi is quick to point out that he is not an atheist, that his family lights shabbos candles and makes kiddush on Friday nights. Yet, he identifies principally as an Israeli and not as a Jew.

    “The bookish ultra-Orthodox have their militants, too. . .” writes TIME. “Downtown billboards in Israel no longer feature women; advertisers fear defacement, or worse, boycotts. On public buses, ultra-Orthodx women sit in the back. . .ultra-Orthodox men spit on an 8-year-old girl on her way to school, calling her a “whore” for her long-sleeved clothes, which were not conservative enough for their standards.”

    In response to reports that secular Israelis are coordinating efforts to buy property in Kiryat Yovel and re-claim the area, Yitzchak Pindrus, the charedi vice mayor of Jerusalem said, “Be serious. . .This is the reality in Jerusalem. Demography is geography.”


    Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

    iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

    Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


    Connect with VINnews

    Join our WhatsApp group


    28 Comments
    Most Voted
    Newest Oldest
    Inline Feedbacks
    View all comments
    11 years ago

    Pinchasi will cut off his nose to spite his face. Many Jews who want to live secular go outside Israel to make money. This “man” is just a nut case

    my4amos
    my4amos
    11 years ago

    While we are blessed with large families, the secular Israelis lead the world in the rate of abortions. Obviously, there will be more and more of us and fewer and fewer of them. How then they can complain that “Uncontained, it stands to fundamentally alter Israel’s identity?” Boggles my mind.

    Incidentally, how does this despicable character want to “contain” demographics? Force us to submit to abortions, communist style, so that we are more like seculars? I know for sure this poor excuse for a man, who places posters of nude paintings on the doors of shuls, is not planning to have a large family of his own. Which is the only good thing about him: he is not likely to procreate.

    11 years ago

    looks like a great article. is there anywhere i can read the full article without a subscription for time.com?

    5TResident
    Noble Member
    5TResident
    11 years ago

    I wouldn’t trust TIME to write objectively about anything remotely involving Jews.

    LebidikYankel
    LebidikYankel
    11 years ago

    I was in a park today in a “reclaimed” area. There were many frum families and a young secular couple or two. There was absolutely no friction, the secular people were treated with complete respect.

    Facts1
    Facts1
    11 years ago

    The continued war against religious Jews in the Media.

    HolyMoe
    HolyMoe
    11 years ago

    My advice to Noam Pinchasi and those who think like him is to fight fire with fire.

    Let their men marry only women.
    Let them do this while they are young.
    Let them be fruitful and multiply making sure to give their large broods an education that is ” secular LaMehadrin”.
    Let them buy homes and move into Bne Brak, Meah Shearim, and Kiryat Sefer.

    That’ll teach those Charedi fanatics not to start up with these enlightened elites.

    Unasked_Question
    Unasked_Question
    11 years ago

    Can any of you answer me please…

    Let’s assume that we -Chareidim!- “win” and we are the majority in Israel:
    Are we going to have Doctors, engineers, taxi drivers, lawyers ?
    and let’s not even think “who will serve in the military” ?

    It’s time to admit that we are in deep trouble.
    We adopted a lifestyle that excludes any form of education.
    We face the world with no means of earning a living, yet we all must live on a very expensive lifestyle.

    Does anyone really thing that a country where Charedim are a majority is sustainable ?

    The “everyone hates us” mentality will not solve any problem.

    Anominous
    Anominous
    11 years ago

    Chazal bring in a story of a king who build a beautiful palance with a very nice orchard. It lasted for many years and one day a tsadik passed by and rested under the tree. Chazal say that the whole purpose of the big palace and orchard was just for the purpose of that tsadik to rest under the tree once in a lifetime.

    All the blessings of the secular Israelis and the rest of the world come for the purpose of Bnei Torah to be able to somehow be able to benefit form it. All the achievements of the secular Israelis, or those less religious, is for the purpose of perpetuating God’s will and the Torah. Why did the secular Israelis deserve to win the war against the arabs in a miraculous way? Do they deserve that God do miracles for them more than for the religious arabs??? No, but it was for the sake of the benefit that Torah observant Jews will have later in the future. The secular Jews don’t deserve more Divine providence than the rest of the world. All of their super achievements in technology is for the sake of God’s glory, which is ultimately the fulfillment of Torah to its fullest.

    Anominous
    Anominous
    11 years ago

    People like you who put the chareidim down are not thinking allright. You say “the fact that goyim also combine learning with labor”…point to me 3 gentiles you personally know that you think are keeping all the 7 mitsvos properly and spend every day learning about Hashem. I agree that there are some, but it is a very, very minority. I am not in the chassidishe chareidi circles but most of them are keeping very far from the internet and its shmutz and spend tons of time learning Torah and are very focused on doing Hashem’s will. They keep themselves closed from society to try to in their best ways serve Hashem.

    In Malachi chapter 3 we have “Then shall ye again discern between the righteous and the wicked, between him that serveth God and him that serveth Him not.” When that day comes, hopefully soon, we are going to find where the Chareidi community stands and where the others stand. Maybe some of them should be working to prevent hillul Hashem, but I am sure that everyone will see on that day that the world stands on the merit of Torah, and that fault will no longer be viewed as a fault, but as a merit.