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Geoffrey Alderman

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Geoffrey Alderman,

Geoffrey Alderman

Opinion

Unequal definitions of equality

January 21, 2016 15:14
2 min read

The practice of Orthodox Judaism in this country is under attack. From time to time, I have drawn attention to signs and portents that this was the case; I have warned that laws made for other purposes were bound to be exploited by the enemies of the religion I profess. I have been accused of scaremongering, of making volcanic mountains out of inconsequential molehills, of spreading despair and despondency without a shred of hard evidence. But within the past two weeks a number of seemingly unconnected news stories have provided this verification.

The first concerns the Belz Chasidic community, whose Talmud Torah Machzike Hadass boys' school in Hackney was the subject of an uncomplimentary Ofsted report last week. I'm a critical friend of the Belz Chasidim. They nurture a warm, family ethos but have their moments of madness. Last summer, they hit the headlines after the publication of an encyclical that sought to bar Belz children from attending Belz schools if they were driven there by females of the Belz persuasion.

Condemned by Education Secretary Nicky Morgan, the encyclical was hastily withdrawn. In my column of June 12, 2015, I gave vent to my disgust that the encyclical had been issued. But I now have to defend the Belzers.

In drawing attention to shortcomings in the education provided at the Talmud Torah Machzike Hadass, the Ofsted inspectors write: "The school's ethos identifies its founding principle as 'unconditional adherence to the Shulchan Aruch (code of Jewish law)'. Leaders are aware that this disregards the protected characteristic of sexual orientation within the 2010 Equality Act." Nobody (not even Ofsted) has been able to explain what these sentences mean. But I've been given to understand that, while Ofsted accepts the school can teach its disapproval of same-sex marriages, it must also teach that partners to a same-sex marriage must not be disparaged on that account.

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