Categories: Emes Ve-Emunah
Do Charedi Leaders Really Oppose Extremists?

{Originally posted to author's site, Emes Ve-Emunah}
I find myself agreeing with IRAC, an organization I would otherwise eschew and disagreeing with an Orthodox Keneset member with whom I might otherwise agree.
IRAC (Israel Religious Action Center) is the public advocacy arm of the Reform movement. As an Orthodox Jew, one might expect to see me in opposition to any stand taken by the Reform Movement. It’s not that I fully agree with everything IRAC advocates. I don’t. I do not for example support their pluralistic agenda where they seek equal footing with the Orthodox rabbinate.
When it comes to fighting the kind of growing extremism one finds in various Charedi communities in Israel, I find it hard to disagree. But then who wouldn’t agree with fighting the kinds of things mentioned in a Forward editorial on this subject:
- Women harassed when they refuse to go to the back of a public bus.
- Women forced to sit in segregated areas at public health clinics and at burials in cemeteries.
- Women berated for wearing clothes deemed to be immodest.Women’s voices banned from a radio station.
- Women excluded from participating in municipal programs and state celebrations.
- A woman attacked in a Jerusalem square for wearing jeans.
- A woman soldier, in uniform, called a “whore.”


June 26, 2026 







