| Street scene in Bnei Brak (TOI) |
After the Holocaust, my parents immigrated to the United
States and lived in a largely mixed environment consisting of secularized Jews
and non-Jews. My father believed that the world in which he had been raised had
been destroyed forever, never to be rebuilt. Upon his first visit to Israel, he
was surprised and amazed to discover that this world still existed in a city
called Bnei Brak. Shortly after that visit, he bought a condominium, and a few
years later, in 1974, he made aliyah.
My frequent visits to my parents gave me the feeling that
their home was my home. I loved the neighborhood and the feeling of being part
of a world that was not only entirely Jewish, but entirely religious.
The entire city shut down for Shabbos. The main
thoroughfare, Rabbi Akiva Street, became one giant sidewalk. No vehicles of any
kind—other than emergency vehicles—were seen there. On Friday nights after the
Shabbos meal, it was common for families to take a leisurely walk down Rabbi
Akiva.
I had never seen anything like it. There was a sea of people
walking on both sides of the street and right down the middle. It was an
amazing and exhilarating sight for someone like me, who was accustomed to
seeing cars driving on Shabbos down Devon Avenue, one of Chicago’s main
thoroughfares running through my West Rogers Park neighborhood, home to an
enormous Orthodox Jewish population.
But that was then.
Today, I’m not sure such a scene still exists. And if it
does, it may eventually be legislated out of existence by the city’s leaders.
As reported by the Times
of Israel:
The Bnei Brak municipality is working to establish gender-segregated sidewalks inside the largely ultra-Orthodox city.
In accordance with a decision by the city’s rabbis, Bnei Brak plans to segregate the bustling Shlomo Hamelech and Ezra streets with barriers and signage to prevent men and women from crossing each other’s paths, Channel 13 reported.
The plan has been in development for several years and is likely to be expanded to other busy streets in the city, municipal officials told the channel.
An official message by the city instructed residents of all ages to abide by the new guidelines, the report said.
The municipality told Channel 13 that the rabbis’ instructions are “very clear and speak for themselves. The city’s public, which is committed to obeying the great Torah leaders and heeding their words, will comply with their request.”
I wish I could say I was surprised by this development. But
as noted in the article, there are already other cities where similar policies
have been implemented. It was only a matter of time before a city like Bnei
Brak followed suit.
I understand the concern about violations of tznius.
But legislating policies of extreme segregation of the sexes out of fear of
incidental contact undermines normal civility between men and women in public.
By further isolating the sexes from one another, the city’s leaders are
continuing the “Frumkeit chase” that has become increasingly common in recent
decades.
This sends the wrong message to young people…
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