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Homophobia is not a feature of Charedi culture

Tiferes Shlomo Boys' School headteacher Eli Spitzer says his community is anti-LGBT education because it does not teach children about sex

August 12, 2019 10:53
Eli Spitzer
4 min read

The Charedi Jewish community is close knit and differentiates itself from wider society in its dress, its mores and even its language. Many people, Jews and non-Jews, are understandably curious about what life is like on the inside. Unfortunately, this has resulted in a cottage industry of people who make claims and assertions about Charedi Jews that are, frankly, outlandish and, in some cases outright defamatory.

Last week’s column by Daniel Sugarman on the ongoing saga of LGBT education in Charedi schools falls firmly in the latter category. I’m more than willing to listen to thoughtful criticism of Charedim, but when I read an account of my community that bears no relation to anything I know, I feel compelled to respond.

First, the claim that anyone who admitted an alternative sexuality “would be immediately ostracised and rejected” is absolutely false. In reality, the Charedi community contains dozens of people who have rejected the Charedi lifestyle in its entirety and nevertheless choose to remain within its midst. Indeed, there are a number of Charedi organisations whose raison d'etre is to provide these members of the community with emotional and material support.

This is well known to those with a passing familiarity with the Charedi community. What even they may be surprised to learn, however, is that homophobia is not a feature of Charedi culture. In the Modern Orthodox world, homosexuality is the subject of the same fierce disputes that raged in the western world for 40 years and there are strong opinions on both sides, but it simply does not occupy that kind of place in the Charedi mind. Mainstream Charedim in Stamford Hill do not bully gay people, make homophobic jokes, or use ‘gay’ as an all-purpose term of abuse. This is not because the subject is taboo, but simply because no one on either side of the issue has yet convinced them that the topic is terribly important.