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Analysis

What's behind the legal challenge to the Department for Education over Charedi schools

Charedi schools cannot talk about homosexuality in a 'positive manner', say lawyers

January 10, 2019 09:27
Shraga Stern
2 min read

It was hardly surprising that Charedim have turned to lawyers in their struggle with Ofsted over talking about LGBT issues in schools. The letter sent by solicitors last week to the Department for Education may have been the initiative of an individual activist, Shraga Stern, a Chasid from Stamford Hill, but its views reflects those of a far wider constituency.

Barristers won’t be reaching for their gowns just yet. The letter itself is not a threat to go to court. Rather, it is an attempt to persuade Education Secretary Damian Hinds that, under the law as it stands, government policy should protect Charedi schools.

It could make the DfE think twice. The government’s efforts to crack down on unregistered yeshivot, where boys receive minimal or zero secular education, were stopped in their tracks after one yeshivah obtained a legal opinion that it did not meet the legal definition of a school and so was exempt from registration. The DfE has shown no inclination to test the argument in court.

Mr Stern’s solicitors, Stone King, who have particular expertise in education law, argue that Ofsted inspectors who criticise strictly Orthodox schools for refusing to talk about same-sex relations are actually going beyond the law.