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Women of Valor: The Israeli ‘Suffragettes’ of the Twenty-first Century

Some Charedi women believe that they are completing the work of the original suffragettes

March 8, 2022 12:58
GettyImages-584174971 Suffragettes
Members of British suffragist organization, the Women's Freedom League, with a touring publicity caravan, 1908. W.F.L. co-founder, Charlotte Despard (1844 - 1939) is second from left. (Photo by Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
6 min read

The women toil away in relentlessly dismal work conditions, scrubbing laundry on washing boards with raw, red fingers, faces damp and flushed from the rising steam. From a window overhead, men supervise their labour, watching the women as they exchange paperwork. One leisurely lights his pipe. Against this scene, a voiceover warns: ‘If we allow women to vote, it would mean the loss of social structure.… Once was the vote was given, it would be impossible to stop at this.

Women would then demand the right to becoming MPs, cabinet ministers, judges.’ The 2015 film Suffragette, written by Abi Morgan and directed by Sarah Gavron, which began this way, told a story that concluded with a victory already known to viewers: in 1918, British women, after much struggle, achieved the right to vote. Despite the obviousness of the outcome, the film still had much to offer; turning from the towering historical figures of first-wave feminism and the women’s suffrage movement, such as Emmeline Pankhurst, who makes only brief appearance here, the film delves into the implications of enfranchisement for working-class women.

Anna Somershaf’s 2021 documentary Women of Valor, which was screened online globally by the Women’s International Zionist Organization (WIZO) this past month, with a panel discussion following, presents viewers with a far less familiar story. Like Suffragette, it is a story that ends in victory—albeit one Somershaf couldn’t have counted on when she began collecting footage. Like Suffragette, it is invested in the lives of women who might normally fly below the radar. These are Israeli Haredi women who have spent the better part of the last decade fighting for their right to run for and hold office in Israeli Haredi political parties like Shas and Agudath Yisrael (now part of United Torah Judaism). These are women who have founded a non-profit organisation, Nivcharot, dedicated to women’s leadership, education, and advocacy. And these are also women who, interestingly, have become enamoured with the film Suffragette (even though Haredi women do not typically watch mainstream cinema!), believing that they are completing the work of the British women who lived a century before them.

At the heart of Women of Valor are two Esties: Esty Shushan and Estee Rieder-Indursky. The film was created after Somershaf—a secular Russian-born woman who immigrated to Israel—met Rieder-Indursky in an MA programme at Tel Aviv University and had her ‘mind blown’ by the power and courage of these women. ‘It was like I was in the time of the suffragettes,’ Somershaf said in the panel discussion, ‘but with a camera.’ After building trust with the women involved—given the amount of sensationalising Haredi women are subject to by outsiders, it is unsurprising that Somershaf would have to win them over—Somershaf shot footage for her documentary for four and a half years. Somershaf’s film specifically addresses the issue of lack of political representation for Haredi women, but it is not only Haredi women who bear the consequences of their absence in these parties. There is a far bigger feminist problem in Israel if, of 120 seats in the Knesset, Haredi groups hold 16 (Shas holds 9, UTJ 7), and women can’t run for them; this means almost a tenth of all Knesset seats are completely closed to women. 

The two Esties work together like Suffragette’s Carey Mulligan (a launderer) and Helena Bonham-Carter (a chemist), drawing on different experiences and beliefs, but coming together for a united cause. Both women wrote for Haredi journals and newspapers for many years, under male or gender-neutral pseudonyms. But the time came for them to speak up for women, as women. These women began to embrace feminism as an ideology that was neither corrosive (as many Haredi community leaders have argued and continue to do so) nor inaccessible to them as religious women. For Rieder-Indursky, feminism is a purely secular notion. It is one that she as a Haredi woman wants to apply to the workplace, to the political context—in other words, to places that she believes Jewish law doesn’t touch. For Shushan, feminism is more comprehensive and includes her right to study religious texts as Haredi men do.