The Jerusalem Post

Temech’s Jerusalem conference helps haredi women open small businesses

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Hundreds of haredi women gathered at the Jerusalem Internatio­nal Convention Center on Wednesday for a conference on business developmen­t and management held by the Temech nonprofit organizati­on.

Temech was founded in 2005 by Rabbi Shmuel Bloom to help the haredi community overcome the poverty it had found itself in. It has helped place 6,000 haredi women in employment and assisted more than 2,000 haredi women to open their own businesses.

The conference was geared toward women who are running businesses or seeking to establish one, providing ample networking opportunit­ies as well as putting on talks by leading business owners and other experts on business developmen­t and management.

Temech director Shaindy Babad said one of the biggest problems faced by haredi women seeking to establish a business was that in most cases they are the first person in their family to have ever attempted such a venture.

There is therefore a large knowledge deficit, a lack of people to turn to for advice, and few if any business connection­s.

“Temech puts on workshops and courses in business management and developmen­t, marketing, branding, budgeting, raising capital and everything you can think of to help haredi women deal with these challenges,” Babad said.

The organizati­on also provides women with office space in Temech’s Jerusalem Hub, where for a fee they can make use of computers, meeting rooms, and other office necessitie­s.

Babad also explained the organizati­on’s strategy for its other major function, job placement.

Temech’s placement strategy is based on a model of employment-based training, where the organizati­on approaches businesses to understand their needs and then provides them with relevant candidates to be trained in the profession­al skills needed for the work required.

According to Babad, the organizati­on has had success in placing haredi women in a wide variety of fields, from sewing IDF uniforms in Arad to working for a digital animation company that provides services to Disney.

Bloom, who was still living in the US when he founded Temech, said that his motivation for starting the initiative was to create a way for American Jews to help the haredi sector in Israel.

The project began by encouragin­g American businesses to open branches in Israel and employ haredi women, but this restricted employment opportunit­ies to English-speaking women, who represent a minority of the haredi community in Israel.

Temech soon began working with Israeli businesses and demonstrat­ed to them that haredi women would be effective and loyal employees.

Bloom said the turnover for haredi women employees is significan­tly lower than that of the general workforce, which is an attractive propositio­n for employers.

The frequent emphasis of haredi women on their home and children as their central concern and goal means that they are less likely to seek promotion or change jobs, he explained.

Addressing the conference, Chief Rabbi David Lau warmly praised working haredi women, although he insisted that their “greatest merit” was to raise children to serve God.

He also noted that haredi women who work and bring in an income give their husbands the opportunit­y to study Torah full time in yeshiva.

“You allow your husbands to sit and learn; you have the merit of sustaining the Torah world,” said the chief rabbi, ending with a blessing that the women merit to raise children “who serve God, are great Torah scholars and sustain the Jewish people.”

 ?? (Temech) ?? ULTRA-ORTHODOX WOMEN network at the Jerusalem Internatio­nal Convention Center yesterday.
(Temech) ULTRA-ORTHODOX WOMEN network at the Jerusalem Internatio­nal Convention Center yesterday.

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