The Jerusalem Post

Religious schools have highest rate of sexual abuse in education system

Correlatio­n found between religiosit­y, number of men and boys treated

- • By ZVIKA KLEIN

students in religious public schools in Israel are at a higher risk of sexual harassment and assault than any other of the jewish education’s streams, a new study examining cases of sexual abuse from the religious Zionist sector by the ne’emanei torah Va’avodah movement has found.

researcher ariel Finkelstei­n analyzed the scope and profile of sexual abuse victims in Israeli local authoritie­s’ social services department­s in 2020, by sector or stream.

In Israel, there are a number of educationa­l streams: secular public school (Mamlachti), religious public school (Mamlachti dati) and ultra-orthodox schools, which are either private or semi-private.

the distributi­on of the data on sexual abuse was filtered by sector, according to the type of educationa­l stream where the victims are currently or were educated in their childhood.

according to the survey, the rate of victims in the welfare services following sexual abuse is higher among the students of the religious public school stream, who mainly represent people who identify themselves as religious-Zionist. For every 1,000 students in the stream, there are 2.39 students who were treated in welfare services as a result of sexual abuse, higher than in ultra-orthodox education (1.98), and more than double the amount in the secular public school stream (1.04).

the study found a correlatio­n between religiosit­y and a higher proportion of males treated for sexual abuse, especially among children.

among secular male and female students ages 3-18 who were treated following sexual abuse, boys make up less than a third (31%), while in the religious public school stream, boys make up almost half of the victims (48%), and those in the ultra-orthodox stream make up over half (53%).

For every 1,000 boys in the religious public school system, there are 2.3 who are treated in welfare services for sexual abuse, compared to 2.07 among those in ultra-orthodox education and only 0.61 among boys in secular schools.

“the results of the study are a cause of great concern,” said shmuel shatach, executive director of ne’emanei torah Va’avodah.

he added that these results “are a first step in the necessary, in-depth discussion­s that oblige us to recognize this phenomenon, fight it, and to wake up from the illusion that a separated society [of men from women] is a guarantee of preventing harm.”

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