The Jerusalem Post

Holy ‘ walls of separation’ can’t keep COVID- 19 in

- ANALYSIS • By JEREMY SHARON

In its Sukkot edition, the Hamahane Haharedi newspaper of the Belz Hassidic community had a fascinatin­g interview with one of its most senior leaders in Israel, Rabbi Pinchas Friedman, in which he explained the approach of the Grand Rabbi of Belz Yissachar Rokeach toward the COVID- 19 pandemic.

The rabbi and his Belz Hassidim have largely ignored social distancing and other regulation­s, including wearing masks for the past six months, and have become

notorious for holding mass celebratio­ns and prayer services during the health crisis.

In his interview, Friedman emphasized that the injunction in Jewish law to preserve

life at all costs could be interprete­d in two different ways: protecting the physical body or the spiritual soul.

that there have been significan­t spikes in Borough Park, which has had a COVID19 infection rate of 231 per 100,000 population over the last four weeks, and which has a large ultra- Orthodox and hassidic community.

Another spike has been observed in Far Rockaway in Queens, which also has a large ultra- Orthodox community.

Both Borough Park and Far Rockaway are included in the new red zones.

The infection rate in Kiryas Joel in Orange County has

Post.

New York •

He then went on to say that after the initial lockdown when educationa­l institutio­ns were allowed to reopen “we saw massive numbers of boys and girls, from the best of the community, who did not return to their studies.”

Continued the rabbi: “When there is a definite danger to the soul set against a possible danger to the body, you need a lot of responsibi­lity to rule in favor of the possible risk to the body instead of the [ definite risk] to the soul and to Yiddishkei­t.”

In the last few days and weeks, images of large numbers of ultra- Orthodox men crowding together in prayer and celebratio­ns have flooded the press and social media in Israel, the US and beyond, despite the ongoing ravages of the COVID19 pandemic. At the same time, rates of infection among sectors of the ultra- Orthodox community itself have spiked dramatical­ly in Israel, the UK and the US.

Friedman explained the priorities of the Belz Hassidim, which explain how some ultra- Orthodox communitie­s, especially the ultraconse­rvative hassidic groups, have adopted an attitude that has had, and could continue to have, grave consequenc­es for other parts of society wherever such communitie­s dwell.

Friedman’s opinions are also not an outlier. A former editor of a major ultra- Orthodox new website told The Jerusalem Post this week that he believes Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky, leader of the non- hassidic ultra- Orthodox world, had “played his hand very well” regarding COVID- 19.

Kanievsky has refused to order closing synagogues, schools and yeshivot, arguing that Torah study “protects and saves.”

The former editor argued that Kanievsky’s position is based on the fact that the ultra- Orthodox community is very young, and that yeshiva students in particular had little to fear from the coronaviru­s, due to their youth.

Similarly, another prominent ultra- Orthodox journalist told the Post that there was no reason to shut yeshivot, since students are of an age where they do not suffer from serious symptoms, and because “they don’t really leave their cities, so who are they going to infect?”

Both said that the possible ramificati­ons of mass delinquenc­y from the ultra- Orthodox community by youth who have no educationa­l framework was a far greater risk than the coronaviru­s.

These profoundly mistaken ideas about the nature of a contagious virus like COVID- 19, the manner in which it spreads, and the dangers to the health of the entire country posed by overflowin­g hospitals without enough capacity to treat those with severe symptoms, sadly underlie what has become the attitude of large parts of the ultra- Orthodox community to the global pandemic.

In Jerusalem, Bnei Brak, New York and beyond, the attitude appears to be that as long as

the ultra- Orthodox community gets to preserve its traditions and way of life, with perhaps a few casualties along the way, what happens beyond the walls of that community is less important.

One of the primary characteri­stics of ultra- Orthodox society and its traditions and culture since the late 19th century has been its isolation from the rest of society, wherever that may be, and the erection of “holy walls of separation.”

These walls have been highly effective in preserving that unique way of life, but also in insulating the ultra- Orthodox community from much of what occurs outside of those boundaries, and even divorcing it from the ramificati­ons of its own lifestyle on broader society.

Although those walls have for a long time been able to keep a good many things out, they are certainly not strong enough to keep the COVID- 19 virus in. •

presence of the oldest Jewish community in Lebanon among the 17 other religious communitie­s,” Zeidan said.

There has not been a rabbi at the synagogue since 1985, and the city’s last surviving Jews pray at home. During the 1950s and 1960s, there were 18 synagogues around the country. Lebanon was the only Arab nation after the creation of the State of Israel to see its Jewish population grow. It was only after the Yom Kippur War that Jews began to leave – and rapidly.

 ??  ?? FOLLOWERS OF Pittsburgh Rebbe Mordechai Leifer attend his funeral in Ashdod earlier this week. ( Flash90)
FOLLOWERS OF Pittsburgh Rebbe Mordechai Leifer attend his funeral in Ashdod earlier this week. ( Flash90)

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