The Jerusalem Post

Women of the Wall activists attacked

‘Yes, Jews did this to other Jews. When will we learn that we are stronger together?’

- BY SAMUEL THROPE

Activists from the Women of the Wall feminist organizati­on were violently attacked during the group’s monthly prayer service at the Western Wall Friday morning, members of the group told The Jerusalem Post.

A mob of haredi (ultra-Orthodox) men threw rocks at activists, a Jewish prayerbook bearing the Women of the Wall insignia was burned, and a young American intern for the organizati­on had to seek medical treatment for wounds to the head and neck, activists said.

The group of some 200 activists, dressed in the ritual prayer shawls and yarmulkes that traditiona­l Judaism proscribes only for men, had gathered at the Western Wall to mark the beginning of the Hebrew month of Av.

During the service, ultra-Orthodox women in the same gender-segregated section of the Western Wall plaza harassed the Women of the Wall activists, the organizati­on said on Friday.

“Police and guards from the Western Wall Heritage Foundation surrounded the plaza, looking on without taking action against the attackers,” the group said.

When they left the Western Wall plaza, they encountere­d an angry mob of haredi men.

“Some of the haredim grabbed one of the womens’ kippahs and tried to burn it,” said Hallel Silverman, a volunteer with the organizati­on and the niece of wellknown Jewish comedian Sarah Silverman. “They were yelling, ‘You should burn with it.’”

“Shira Boyar, an intern with the organizati­on from Sharon, Massachuse­tts and an incoming senior at Connecticu­t College, was physically assaulted.

“Some really large haredi [man] pulled me by my hair, pulled me back so I fell on the ground. And then he elbowed me really hard in the neck,” Boyar said.

She recounted that the paramedic who later treated her for her wounds told Boyar that if she had been hit one centimeter to the left, her neck could have easily snapped.

Boyar and four friends fled the scene, but they were pursued by the mob. “My boyfriend tried to call the police,” she said. “They asked, ‘Who’s chasing you?’ When he said, ‘haredim,’ they replied, ‘Oh, it’s not Arabs? Okay, okay, we’ll send someone when we can.”

The police, she said, never arrived.

Founded in 1988, Women of the Wall seeks to secure women the right to pray equally, including wearing prayer shawls, yarmulkes and phylacteri­es, and reading from the Torah scroll, at the Western Wall, Judaism’s holiest site.

Women of the Wall members are routinely harassed by women protesting their presence, and have been physically and verbally assaulted during their prayer services.

In recent months, the Women of the Wall group has been required to pray inside a police cordon within the women’s section, which the Western Wall Heritage Foundation says was required by a recent decision of the High Court of Justice.

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