Houston Chronicle Sunday

Ikea omits women in catalog for Israel

- By Michele Chabin

JERUSALEM — Swedish furniture retailer Ikea has sparked an uproar in Israel with the publicatio­n of a catalog without women.

In an effort to appeal to the country’s ultra-Orthodox Jews and their increasing­ly stringent modesty norms, the niche catalog Ikea Israel released this month depicts Orthodox men with side curls and boys wearing yarmulkes in domestic settings — at a table set for a Sabbath meal, in a study with display cases lined with religious books. But not a single woman or girl.

The move was a departure for the retailer, whose catalogs normally offer an idealized glimpse of diversity.

The regular Israeli Ikea catalog distribute­d nationally looks like the one distribute­d in other countries, with both sexes and no identifiab­ly Jewish content other than being in Hebrew.

Ikea’s retail manager for Israel, Shuky Koblenz, expressed regret over the women-less publicatio­n.

“We realize that people are upset about this and that the publicatio­n does not live up to what IKEA stands for and we apologize for this,” he said in a statement sent to RNS. “We will make sure that future publicatio­ns will reflect what IKEA stands for and at the same time show respect for Haredi community.”

The ultra-Orthodox — also known as Haredim — make up about 10 percent of a population of 8.5 million.

Koblenz said the brochure had been “customized specifical­ly for the Haredi community in an attempt to reach this minority community in Israel with commercial messages.”

Writer Miriam Metzinger, who once led an ultra-Orthodox lifestyle, said Haredi consumers, who tend to have large families, are important for Israeli retailers because they need “low-cost furniture, given their birthrate and income level.”

It’s not the first time the company has waded into trouble in the Middle East. In 2012, Ikea apologized for photoshopp­ing out photos of women from catalogs distribute­d in Saudi Arabia.

In Israel, critics say efforts by ultra-Orthodox rabbis to keep images of women out of advertisem­ents and segregate men and women on public buses and other public places amount to a human rights violation.

Sam Sokol, a modern-Orthodox reporter for IBA News, said the catalog “is part of the growing trend of purging the images of women from ultra-Orthodox publicatio­ns and is presented by its proponents as being consistent with religious tradition ... but it’s actually misogynist­ic market segmentati­on.”

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