The Jewish Chronicle

Think first before you condemn the Charedim

Strictly-Orthodox communitie­s have large households which makes them more vulnerable

- By Jonathan Boyd Jonathan Boyd is is Executive Director of the Institute for Jewish Policy Research ( JPR)

THE NARRATIVE has been all over the press, the outrage palpable. The Charedi community — or at least parts of it — has been observed flouting the social-distancing regulation­s we are all meant to follow. That’s according to the narrative anyway. But narratives are comprised of stories, anecdotes, snapshots. They contain versions of the truth — sometimes deep truths — but not necessaril­y complete truths. For a more empirical assessment, we need data.

So, what do the data tell us? Research is building, but one of the best insights we have comes from a recent serologica­l study conducted by the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine (LSHTM). Analysing one specific Charedi community in Britain in late 2020, the researcher­s found that 65 per cent had contracted Covid-19 at some point. The equivalent proportion­s for the population­s of London and the UK are 11 per cent andseven per cent.

It’s a troubling finding. But however tempting it may be to draw links between these data and the newspaper reports, the LSHTM researcher­s are much more cautious. They argue instead that the results are due to a “complex interplay of socioecono­mic and behavioura­l factors”.

There are various reasons for this. Part of their caution comes from concern that their findings might prompt social tensions. But the main reason is because key socioecono­mic factors may indeed explain a significan­t part of their results.

Charedi Jews commonly live in large households — on average, they have five people in them compared to 2.3 in non-Charedi Jewish ones. Many are larger still; on average, Charedi women have six or seven children; non-Charedi women have about two. This impacts age structures — the median age among Charedim is 15; among other UK Jews, it is 44. These factors, combined with very different attitudes towards education and vocational training, mean that overcrowdi­ng and deprivatio­n are considerab­ly more common in Charedi households than in other Jewish ones.

So, when a highly infectious, airborne virus enters a Charedi community, infection rates will almost inevitably skyrocket, even if compliance with social-distancing regulation­s is impeccable. Any population with large, overcrowde­d, low-income households will experience aboveavera­ge infection rates. The implicatio­ns of a single infected person in a large household are considerab­ly graver than for one in a small household. Thus, before rushing to condemn the Charedi community en masse, we really ought to bear these factors in mind alongside the behavioura­l issues so commonly highlighte­d.

Moreover, the LSHTM study demonstrat­es that, in fact, Charedi Jews did broadly comply, during the first lockdown at least. Their data show that infection rates among Charedim dropped dramatical­ly at that time, something that simply could not have happened without widespread compliance.

Of course, it’s possible to read these data unsympathe­tically. Some argue that Charedi Jews don’t need to have large families or forgo a university education. They could make other choices less likely to result in overcrowdi­ng and deprivatio­n. They could be less insular. They could comply better with government guidelines.

But the ‘they’ language bothers me. It generalise­s and stereotype­s ‘them,’ when the truth, demonstrat­ed by the data, is actually far more complex. And, in fact, the truth in the rest of the Jewish community is also complex — JPR data indicate that infection rates there are way above average too.

I am not an apologist for any Charedi Jews or anyone else who has failed to comply. Non-compliance is wrong. And Charedi communitie­s have many challenges, particular­ly how to manage their ardent communitar­ianism in a fervently individual­istic age. But I would encourage Jews outside the Charedi community to demonstrat­e a little more understand­ing and empathy, and indeed, would hope that would be reciprocat­ed. The absence of that should warn us that far greater intracommu­nal tensions may well lie ahead.

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A high percentage of Charedi contracted coronaviru­s
PHOTO: GETTY IMAGES Hit hard: A high percentage of Charedi contracted coronaviru­s

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