The Jewish Chronicle

Virus has exposed flaws in the Charedi way

- BLOGGER: IF YOU TICKLE US turning into a morbid

LIVING IN a community that’s been making headlines around the world for its recklessne­ss in the face of a raging pandemic which is exacting a huge cost in death and suffering, I too have been wondering: what is going on?

Is it lack of education? Insularity? Ignorance of — if not outright hostility to — science? A fanatical commitment to religion and culture? Blind faith in religious leaders? Victimhood? An ingrained quest for martyrdom? I keep on asking myself: which switch in our system has tripped to produce this crazy result?

I’m afraid that the unpalatabl­e answer is that our system is broke.

We have had plentiful moments of madness before but never at this sustained level and never with this horrific cost to life, suffering and our indifferen­ce and complicity in it. We are staring death in the face the world over.

Charedi websites and social media call daily for Tehilim for the sick and constantly report on the passing of yet another white beard, and not a few black ones too.

We could, were we so minded, adopt with relative ease a whole string of measures that would minimise the risk of contagion — even without closing

Vshops, schools and shuls. But we take no action whatsoever. To the contrary, we defiantly continue holding packed events and celebratio­ns as people around us fall like flies, with the wedding mitzvah tantz danse macabre.

The pundits say it’s ignorance of science, notwithsta­nding that our same system and communitie­s constantly embrace the latest medical advances in fertility treatment, heart surgery and cancer. So any depiction of us as primitive communitie­s out of touch with the modern world is simply false.

It’s not that we accept or reject anything, but that we do not think in terms of cause and effect, assuming we think at all.

By the yardstick of the Talmud — “Who is wise? He who anticipate­s the consequenc­es” — our communitie­s must consist of blistering idiots who understand only results. We can see a scalpel, we have heard enough of chemothera­py and its awful side effects and we trust in anything that assists in the magic process of producing a kicking, crying baby.

Raising funds, as we do, and arranging treatment, also occupies hordes of fixers, lends prestige to philanthro­pists and bestows a halo upon the rebbes whose blessing and “advice” is sought. The “noise” and drama of illness, prayer and sirens, the sentimenta­lity of tears whether of joy or tragedy, excite the onlookers and keeps our constantly whirring machine running.

But where’s the fun and excitement in prevention? There’s no glamour in sitting at home, no noise in quarantini­ng, no sirens in maskwearin­g, no whizz in following simple instructio­ns and no kudos in not being infected.

For as much as our system was ever designed for anything, buzz and turmoil were always an integral part of it.

In the entire Charedi counter narrative to the government and media response to the pandemic, no rational explanatio­n has been proffered for failing to adhere to even minimal rules. The best they can come up with are contrived exclusions to pikuach nefesh (the mandatory obligation to preserve life), turning the very principle on its head; distortion or outright denial of verifiable facts; and ridiculing of science — and that’s when they’re not skirting with quackery and crackpot conspiracy theories or engaging in populist whataboute­ry.

If they’re being honest, they will tell you that too many of our youths may abandon our way of life as a result of calling a halt to our daily and life-cycle rituals. We need not ask why children brought up in our supposedly sound education system and in what we are told is a superior way of life, should head for the exit at the first opportunit­y. Rather, the question is, how does this justify packed weddings, parties of all kinds, school plays to which grandmas are invited and all the other breaches we carry out definatly in full view and for which we daily pay the price? Could it be that the risk lies simply in teaching our youth to think rather than to react, to adhere to an additional set of rules, and one set by government­s and not by rabbis? Thinking, cause and effect and reasoning are just not part of our bargain. It’s not as if rabbis and scholars have met to discuss the situation, engaged their own scientists, set up their own committees, formed their own rules or formulated their own response. It’s each Chasidic rebbe, or ‘court’ as they like to label their lavish trappings, making up its own rules and damn everyone else.

If the Charedi response were translated to a state it would resemble Baghdad in the aftermath of the Iraq war, with each warlord and several thousand clan members controllin­g their own few streets, as if coronaviru­s can be stopped by a roadblock or an eiruv string. For if we are, as many have suggested, a state within a state then we are a failed state.

This has come at a pivotal moment in world and especially US politics and it feels as if we’ve met at a junction. While America has been imploding under Trump for its own reasons, our society is imploding from decades of weak leadership and an education system barely worthy of its name. Led on by amoral leaders with stagnant minds who do little but parrot the reigning dogma, we are finally reaping the generation we have sown. Americans might get a chance to fix their system. We alas are stuck with ours unless and until we take matters into our own hands.

If we are a state within a stae, we are a failed state

IfYouTickl­eUs.blogspot.com

 ?? PHOTOS: TWITTER, GETTY IMAGES ?? No masks: a Stamford Hill shivah that took place in late September
PHOTOS: TWITTER, GETTY IMAGES No masks: a Stamford Hill shivah that took place in late September
 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom