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By
Norman Lebrecht, norman lebrecht

Opinion

On the radar: more Charedi flight chaos

At the height of the Covid pandemic when more prudent Jews observed lockdown, Charedim kept totting up their air-miles

September 10, 2020 09:51
Buckle up: Charedim on board
3 min read

As a yeshiva bochur in Jerusalem long ago, I met old men who, born in the Holy City, never left it in their lives. Never saw the sea at Tel Aviv or the desert at Beersheva, never bought a ticket for an intercity Egged bus. Staying put was considered a mark of piety, an acceptance of a man’s place in God’s world, the more so if that place was God’s own.

Such men were not uncommon. Travel played no part in the religious way of life. It might be undertaken for family and work events, but leaving home was seen as an unnecessary distraction from the study of Torah, carrying with it a risk of exposure to worldly temptation. So, no go.

Flash forward half a century and the airports are crowded with ultra-frum Jews even – especially – at the height of the Covid pandemic when more prudent Jews observed lockdown and Charedim kept totting up air-miles, gathering in illegal numbers at weddings and shouting antisemitism when the cops came to disperse them.

Most of all, they flew back and forth between yeshiva terms (“bayn hazmanim”), a migration so central to the calendar that the Israeli government bent quarantine and immigration rules to admit thousands of foreign students for the month of Ellul.