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By

Chas Newkey-Burden

Opinion

Stop picking on the Chasids

June 6, 2011 09:07
3 min read

The Chasidim might not be much interested in the mainstream media but that does not stop the mainstream media from being fascinated with the Chasidim. The BBC's Stamford Hill documentary Wonderland: A Hasidic Guide to Love, Marriage and Finding a Bride has ignited new, negative headlines about the community. Many of the locals are outraged at the "unrepresentative" nature of the programme that featured at its heart a Chasid who had served time for money-laundering related to drugs.

A new movie, Holy Rollers, starring Jessie Eisenberg (Facebook founder Mark Zuckerberg in The Social Network) is about a young Chasid lured into corruption and crime - and once again drugs feature prominently.

It is nothing new for the media to portray Chasidim in an unflattering light. Last year, Christina Patterson savaged them in The Independent and, in the past couple of weeks, two columns in these very JC Comment pages slammed Charedi attitudes to women and to secular music in Israel and America.

No wonder the Chasidim, never the most outward-looking in worldly terms, feel under attack. Some, of course, ascribe all this to antisemitism but that is often too simplistic. Criticism in the JC and across the Israeli press is clearly not motivated by this. But it is a shame that so little is broadcast beyond the Chasidim's own religious enclaves that does not yield to the temptation to accentuate the negative, because of its sensationalist potential. It is time the Chasidim were defended.

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