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What does a Jew look like?

When the mainstream press publishes a Jewish story, how do they illustrate it? With Charedi Jews photographed from behind

November 8, 2017 16:33
Photo: Getty Images

ByHilary Freeman, Hilary Freeman

4 min read

What does a Jew look like? If you were an alien and images from the British media were beamed up to you from Earth, you’d get the impression that all Jews are a) men, b) have beards and c) wear black hats. In other words, that all Jews are Charedi. Take pretty much any article from the past few years — whether in print or online — that focuses on Jews or Judaism, and the chances are that it will be illustrated with a photo of strictly Orthodox Jews. It doesn’t matter how inappropriate the images are, or whether the story is about antisemitism in the Labour party, protests at British universities, or the rise in the number of applications for German passports following Brexit: ‘Charedi’ has become visual shorthand for ‘Jew’. You certainly wouldn’t think that the community remains a small minority (albeit a rapidly growing one) of the Jewish population.

I’ve experienced this myself: an article I wrote for the Daily Mail in 2014 about the rise in antisemitism in the UK, was illustrated with a stream of photos which included shots of strictly Orthodox Israeli Jews at Yad Vashem and a protest by the anti-Zionist Neturei Karta. Rather confusingly, given that my thesis was about not conflating ‘Jew’ with ‘Israel’.

Sociologist Dr Keith Kahn-Harris, a lecturer at Leo Baeck College, and the author of several books on the Jews in Britain, including Turbulent Times: The British Jewish Community Today, has been studying this phenomenon. He says the problem for the media is that most non-Charedi Jews don’t look visibly different from non-Jews: “That creates an issue for photo editors and editors in how they illustrate stories that pertain to Jews. It is not to do with antisemitism. It’s about pressure of time and lack of resources, and ignorance — particularly ignorance of how different the Charedi community is from the rest of the British Jewish community.”

In the past, only a minority of newspaper articles was ever illustrated. But there has been an explosion in the number of news outlets, which are now publishing more and more articles, often online, requiring ever more illustrations. At the same time, newspapers have been making cuts, sacking sub-editors, and relying on a skeleton staff to file stories fast. Without the time or money to commission bespoke photographs, newspapers head to photo libraries or other online resources. “Because they may not know anything about British Jews, they will pick the most immediately obvious pictures that come up when they search ‘British Jews’ or ‘Jews in London’, or whatever it is. That’s often a picture of Charedi Jews,” says Kahn-Harris.