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Miriam Shaviv

ByMiriam Shaviv, Miriam Shaviv

Opinion

Strict believers are 'beyond belief'

June 16, 2016 14:53
2 min read

It sounded, at first, like a feel-good story.

Last week, 34 Strictly Orthodox teenagers from Stamford Hill, on a half-term trip to Kent, got lost on a hike along the coast. Trapped by a rising tide, they realised their lives were in danger and alerted the police. A team of 40 rescuers eventually brought them to safety , guided by the lights on the kids' phones. In gratitude, the group donated £5,000 to the Royal National Lifeboat Institution, which co-ordinated their rescue.

A genuine mistake, from which everyone has learned? All's well that ends well?

Not so fast. Unfortunately, this is only the latest of a long list of similar incidents. They reveal a serious underlying problem with the Charedi community's attitude to the safety and welfare of their own children, and with the professional standards of some of their schools and youth organisations.