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Rosa Doherty

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Rosa Doherty,

Rosa Doherty

Opinion

Don’t think Charedi women are meek or mild, they’re the ultimate multitaskers

Rosa Doherty says it is wrong to assume the life of a Charedi woman is oppressive, passive and restricted to the home

February 7, 2019 11:37
Charedi women watch as men dance down the street during Purim 2017 in London.
3 min read

It is easy as a secular Jew to look in on the Charedi community with a sort of superior scorn. Our way of life is better, more civilised. They are a community that is primitive, prohibited from going outside their protective bubble — you might think.

This is not helped by the fact that, by and large, as a community they are extremely cautious of outside interaction.

I’m often asked by non-Jews to provide an insight into the strictly Orthodox community’s “strange” way of life. The truth is, before working for the JC, I knew as little about Charedim as the inquisitors themselves.

“Why do the men look through me when I’m walking in the street?” one friend asked. She’s lived in the heart of Stamford Hill for more than three years, and regularly feels stunned that her neighbours consistently ignore her existence.