Become a Member
Opinion

Time to fully embrace the Strictly Orthodox

It’s wrong to think of Charedim as a separate category from the mainstream community

May 27, 2022 13:54
pg-34-Jews-Getty.jpeg
3 min read

The recent piece of research by Jewish Policy Research (JPR) on the global growth of the Charedi population makes for fascinating reading. I have long been a fan of JPR. The work they do helps community leaders become better leaders, through providing reliable statistical information upon which to base policy decisions. The authors note that to date there has been no real effort to collate statistics for the Charedi population. Although this is partially due to the challenges involved in analysing a particular sub-group of the Jewish community, an additional reason for the lack of data has simply been due to the issue of prioritisation. “Religiosity in the West”, write the authors, “has declined over the past 120 years among Jews and non-Jews alike, and strong and committed religiosity has become very marginal in many Western societies”. Thus, “monitoring the population dynamics of the haredim did not feel like a high priority”.

The import of this statement is remarkable in light of the report’s headline findings. Today, one in seven Jews are Charedi. In 2040, close to one in four Jews will be Charedi. Perhaps there is no better rejoinder than this statistic to the perceived increasingly irrelevant role of religious communities in society. It provides further proof, if such was needed, for a particularly honest reflection by one of the most pre-eminent sociologists of the 20th century, the late Peter Berger. Writing in 1988, he confessed to having made “one big mistake” in his career. That error was to, “believe that modernity necessarily leads to a decline in religion… Most of the world today is as religious as it ever was and, in a good many locales, more religious than ever”.

From a Jewish perspective, however, the JPR report is of far greater significance. For 200 years, the collective Jewish people have agonised over their future in the face of seemingly endless assimilation. With the opportunities of modernity came the ever-present risks that future generations would cast off the traditions of their ancestors, traditions which had held strong against all the odds during millennia of exile. Looking at these statistics, however, things appear to have dramatically changed. 

Viewing the Jewish people as a single collective leads to one inescapable conclusion. The assimilationist tidal wave has failed to drag us under. The Jewish people, thank God, will continue long into the future.