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Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant
coffee > The difference is chareidim conform their life to the Torah (Torah being the עיקר) whereas MO conform the Torah to your life (your life being the עיקר)
I just heard someone on the other side from you formulating how he sees the charedi side: checking if H’V someone somewhere enjoying eating something to osur it.
The issue of chumras is discussed on maseches Nedarim and it is clearly a double-edged sword: sometimes they are good if they help you to improve yourself; and sometimes they are bad as your motivation is off, you reject what Hashem provided you with, etc [in gemora: I ate only once from a karban of a nazir when I saw his motivation was pure].
Here are several ideas how to measure your chumra level:
– when you do a halocha, you can look up Sh’A to see what is right. If you do a chumra, there is no good measuring stick, you depend on your sechel
– for most middos, the middle is the best (Aristotle, Rambam Hilchos Deos). When you have a problem with middos, you should correct yourself. Sometimes, by going to the opposite side of the middah until you train yourself and then you go back to the middle. Ask chacham about middos same way you ask doctor about body sickness.
– when a person needs a chumra, it is his own chumra (see previous). When multitudes do the same chumra [as their leader], it is usually off [I think this is Chasam Sofer]
– if your chumros are overwhelmingly bein Adam ‘Makom, then it is probably wrong. If a person is doing chumros and then fails in basic bein adam l’havero, then he is definitely wrong.
– Bava Kama suggest 3 ways to become a chosid – nezikin/brochos/middos. If you and everyone around you use only one gate and two are standing empty, it is a problem.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantcoffee > father wants his son to eat with everyone at a sheva brachos at a treif restaurant and the son didnt feel comfortable doing, so the rabbi was finding things that the son can eat.
was it because he wanted to eat fancy food? Or maybe it was a close family where they felt they need to attend. In the second case, whether he decided to eat there or not, this decision is not because he wants to eat, but a decision how to balance several halachic obligations. The father might be more sensitive to the family issue, while the son cares more about kashrus which is easier to comprehend. Hopefully, the rabbi looked at all sides, including the chinuch and where the family stands, and gave them the right advice. And hope they followed that.
I once saw a newly-observant Yid from a choshuve reform family being sad because he wanted to skip the turkey day at his family, where fancy food is served on silver plates … He did not miss the food, just felt bad about offending the family. A wise chabad rabbi advised him to pack his kosher food and paper plates and forks, and cheerfully go there, being the first to joke about this. The guy did not become “modern” out of this.
February 16, 2026 9:56 am at 9:56 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2512728Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantSo, now that R Landau and R Hirsh told bochrim to stay and learn, can charedim organize their own force to catch those who disobey this psak and deal with them in a beis din, before they get caught by civil authorities. This would be a good step towards learning how to run a country.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantqwerty, I asked some to check with a halachic authority whether his theory of assigning Jews to different groups, but I think he did not yet tell us what the answer was.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantThere seem to be halachik reasons against chumras, quoting from secondary sources:
1) R Moshe – do not make chumros that all poor people will not be able to afford. In regards to a proposal to use only new sticks for matza baking
2) Gittin 5 – do not add extra text to Gittin – that is disrespectful to rabbis of previous generations who did not use the chumra. [This seems to be taken care of by claiming that previous rabbis performed same chumros]
3) Da’at Torah(סימן סג סעיף ב) – seems to be your case, qwerty – one should not come to a meal and then refuse to eat something and publicly refuse to eat something there when it is supervised
4) There is a story about R Moshe, I hope I remember it right – he was invited at a simcha to eat at the front table that had yashan. He refused out of fear that people will point out that R Moshe only ate at that table.
February 13, 2026 10:56 am at 10:56 am in reply to: Are we better than the Chofetz Chaim? – Saving Money #2512022Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantDaMoshe, right, this was not just Lakewood, but European attitude the same. Sheitels are at least fashioned as a hiddur mitzva, but black hat and levush is beyond that.
That people are attracted to that is a little weird, but understandable as in your quote “if it keeps you frum”. But, then it becomes the “norm” and is declared the essence of Torah. So, we gained hats, but lost Torah.
PS I believe R Wachtfogel walked casually in a hat in his later years, if my memory is not mistaken. (I was listening to him talking, not looking at his hat, but he was not turned off by my lack of a hat).
February 13, 2026 10:56 am at 10:56 am in reply to: Gashmiyus and Lavish Simchas (again) Where are our Gedolim? #2512021Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantIs this a serious problem? If you have people who work hard, earn little, and then feel pressure to spend beyond their means, it is a very serious problem.
People who do not understand it, do not understand that “gelit is tzeit and tzeit is Toirah” – they probably either live in their parents’ basement or have government support.
February 13, 2026 10:56 am at 10:56 am in reply to: Gashmiyus and Lavish Simchas (again) Where are our Gedolim? #2512020Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> There is nothing inherently wrong with a fancy wedding if the mechutanim can afford it.
There are such gezerot against excessive funerals from Mishna times, and was R Shimon b Gamliel who insisted on a modest funeral for himself.
So, it is possible to postulate a public policy based on how the kahal is affected.My chevrusa and I were once kicked out from a class, not because our (quiet) talking affected our learning, it did not, but “because others are following your example and do not understand the material”. It was a great mussar for us…
February 13, 2026 10:56 am at 10:56 am in reply to: What will it take for the frum community to stop supporting ICE? #2512019Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantIt seems that the first source of the problems is non-cooperation of some states & cities in arresting “worst ones”. Do we hear of ICE abuse in red states? not so much.
So ICE responded with escalation and arresting who they can. Is it a governmental response to report required numbers? Or is it a deliberate policy to “negotiate” with those states? I don’t know. Anyway, it seems when there are excesses, real or possible, there is public opinion reaction and government reacts to that, so the system works as it should. So far.
But those who honestly have a problem with these cases, rather than making a political point – should go and help ICE arrest criminal aliens and resolve the problem. Maybe organize patrols near police stations, make citizen arrests when someone is let go by local police and call ICE and use your whistle to call ICE.
February 12, 2026 8:07 am at 8:07 am in reply to: Math Riddles for Dr. Pepper (and other geniuses) #2511524Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipanta non-sequitur of the day – a plant that moved.
February 12, 2026 8:07 am at 8:07 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2511522Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> In simple English, the rationale boils down to one line: “If they will anyway have boyfriends/girlfriends [=כרת], better they should have Jewish boyfriends/girlfriends than Goyish ones
I am not sure I can fully summarize Rav’s arguments, I think they change between different teshuvos and speeches. But here is some of it (from 1950s):
– most modern women get various ideas and opportunities in non-Jewish culture and they need to be knowledgeable in Jewish values to understand why they are different and better than alternatives (he is not talking Brooklyn, same way as R Avigdor Miller’s advice is not for those at Harvard).
– some of modern women, those who have/are getting high secular education, are capable and require same level of Jewish learning.
– having separate classes will mean that girls education will be at lower level than boys and the goals needed above will not be achieved.I would note that Rav presumes that American Jews will be involved in American culture and education as a given. I am not sure to what degree he approves of it for “masses”, but he simply takes it as a fact. For example, he criticizes Mizrachi who come to US to only fundraise for Israeli education – mostly from first generation Americans. He says – think that Israeli Jews will get something anyway, but second-generation American Jews might disappear (and not donate to Mizrachi). He says I was able to open the high school, I am not asking you for money, but I am stunned that none of you offered to help.
On the subpar Jewish education for girls, I can see the argument at the time. I think it is only partially true today. We seemingly have lots of schools for girls. And as a parent, I don’t want my daughters to focus on what the boys are learning (and, to be truthful, same goes for sons :). And YU has separate college for girls, and so do many MO schools. At the same time, those girl schools often make girls incurious and spend time to indoctrination in skirt length and not using cellphones (that they are all using). I know it is important, but I also know that they love talking at home about actual learning.
So, to summarize, I would characterize Rav’s push for co-ed learning as haraas shaah, similar to Chazon Ish’s hiding in a desert. None of my kids went to co-ed so far, not counting online colleges, and this does not contradict my respect of the Rav.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantcoffee > I want to post a retraction
oy, I hope it is not the dental pain that gets you, and you will feel better soon and find your former reassured self again!> I think they are few and far between though and think they’re more OOT than in the city
maybe. I don’t know the City well (and I don’t think outer boroughs are considered the “City”, are they?). I had a friend who retired and moved closer to the “city” and then when we were shmoozing during his visit here, he lamented: there are hundreds of people in my shul, but nobody to talk about something interesting, they are all business … so, maybe we vehemently agreed to begin with, just using different categories.
February 12, 2026 8:07 am at 8:07 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2511520Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> Among Sephardim who went to Ashkenazi institutes of higher Jewish learning, I believe there are more in Yeshivish places than in YU style places.
I think many of them, including charedi T’Ch are more accepting of non-charedi positions on various social issues. As you probably know a joke about a lady who sat down near a rov on a bus to annoy him and caused a scene. Next day, she sat down near Sephardi rav and he paid no attention to her. When questioned why he did not upheld kavod Torah, he humbly responded: Hu rav, ani – chacham.
I once heard a sephardi ashk-yeshivish-educated moetses-following rav giving a chanuka dvar Torah, who never ever quoted anyone RZ, highlighting military aspect of Chanuka. I needled him (in private) “you sounded like a hidden Zionist”, to which he answered, to my amazement: “why so hidden”. I was not quick to answer – because you said this only in private …
February 12, 2026 8:07 am at 8:07 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2511518Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA:
on Rambam> he wasn’t “RZ” because Zionism wasn’t invented yet… He wasn’t “MO”I think he was MO at his time. As one Chabad-Charedi rav/engineer responded to my question about Rambam’s relations to various philosophies, he answered succinctly: Rambam was not afarid to be mode alhaemes regardless of the source.
> To become a doctor 800 years ago, there was no need to go to college or medical school … Let alone gratuitous courses in kefirah … Rambam sat and learned full time and was supported fully by his brother [contrary to how people misinterpret his shittah…]
I agree, stam being a doctor was a good parnosah for a medium-educated person at the time. Still, Rambam was working for senior leaders in Egypt, so presumably he was better than someone getting a degree from a diploma-mill. But, his other work in astronomy and philosophy shows great familiarity with “modern” (for his time) works. Note that between Spain and Egypt, he was in Fes. Modern muslim apologists call Fes medrasa “first university”, preceding and possibly providing an example to Sorbonne and Oxford, as it integrated religious and scientific studies. You had to be muslim to attend. And later on in Egypt Rambam was accused (and acquitted) of being a “former Muslim” (a death-penalty crime) by someone who knew him in Fes. Whatever the circumstances. clearly Rambam was hanging out around people who learned in the medrasa, in addition to his previous studies in Fes.
On his brother’s support: I personally have no problems with people learning supported by their family or other willing donors. Kol hakavod. Especially if they are at Rambam’s level. “Rambam and I”, if I may use this phrase, have problem with those who impose support of them on others. Rambam does not approve relying on general tzedokah (and kal vehomer on non-Jewish one). I presume he would not favor using government funds that are designated for poor by staying or pretending to be poor. Not sure what he would think about people who strive to learn without clear results. He was clearly sympathetic – his Mishna Torah is for not-top-learners, but presumably for those who work & have less time to learn. But I think it is a fascinating way to analyze situations from Rambam’s POV. Not because he is “better”, but because his rationalism makes it possible to consider what he would do in our days.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantqwerty> something that a frum Jew did that totally turned her off from the religion.
There is a story about R Eliezer Silber visiting Yidden just freed from Nazi camps. One of them said that he lost his emunah after observing someone “frum” who smuggled a siddur in the camp – and then every day lent it to others and taking their meager food rations as payment. Rav challenged him – this is one person, but what about hundreds of people who borrowed his siddur in order to daven for a day who gave away their last food?
February 12, 2026 8:07 am at 8:07 am in reply to: Are we better than the Chofetz Chaim? – Saving Money #2511516Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantRadin students saw a reference to a sefer in Mishna Berurah but could not find a sefer in the yeshiva, so they thought Chofetz Chaim kept it at home and went to him to ask to read it. He answered hat he did not own the book, but knows someone in another town, an hour away on a train, where they can find the sefer. When students were surprised that Chofetz Chaim had to borrow the sefer he obviously learned, he explained: sefer costs gelt, and gelt is tzait (of working for it), and tzait is Toirah …
So, presumably people who spend on unnecessary things either do not value their Toirah or learned how to live at someone else’s gelt, so they think they are better of than Chofetz Chaim who did not figure it out.
February 11, 2026 9:56 am at 9:56 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2510950Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> Even if I don’t know what exactly ‘Chareidi’ is,
You keep harping on the “charedi” self-identification. I don’t really care. Was Rambam charedi? I asked here before – and would he be now?
When I started wondering whether Rambam in our times will go to Lakewood or to MIT first (nobody answered here), someone said – to Lakewood, because after MIT, he will not be admitted to Lakewood.I gave an example of two T’Ch who mutually respected each other, disagreed on a number of issues, and also were both connected with multiple other respected rabbis, with whom both sometimes agreed, sometimes disagreed. Let’s say, you are a pashute kosher Jews totally disconnected from this internal football, say, a Persian or a Teimani, landing in NYC. You know what Torah is, you can read it by heart, you know Rambam and S’A … So, you listen to these two T’Ch. Do you have a way to select which one of them is the “real Torah”, or maybe you decide that both have value, and you show both a good Sephardishe respect.
For example, on co-ed high schools – R Soloveitchik writes certain rationales for this. He was certainly aware of all possible objections. In fact, his first response from a shaila from NY board in 1950s was that he is not going to respond to such a provocative topic without an assurance that someone needs it. Only when they wrote back that they bind themselves to follow his psak, he writes a full answer. In truth, some of his rationales are somewhat outdated and may not apply in our times – and a lot of serious MO schools are indeed not co-ed any more.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantOk, I’ll drop silly abbreviations as you seem to be in pain as it is … Obviously, people meet diffferent people. In my environment, MOs with whom I learn, and have kiddush too, are engineers. professors, doctors, who are mostly respected in their fields and who are pretty much cut out for learning and they engage in that learning despite living busy life. A rav is sometimes passing our group in beis midrash gets to quickly answer (yes, no, dont know) accumulated questions from the maggid shiur (engineer) with full respect. Our class does not have to rely on Rashi for old-french rendering of greek turn, the professor explains greek terms directly, and the subtle details of sanhedrin rulings are highlighted by comparison with 19th century US supreme court cases, when appropriate. I sometimes learned already the same sugya in a more traditional environment, and the discussion is always interesting.
Re: Avigdor Miller. He is indeed probably concerned primarily about separating his students from less observant drinkers. But, his opposition to MO is more principled. I presume he knew well what he was talking about based on his early learning in Boston. And his writings about modern life and science address those issues. And while he has good insights into these issues, he is not always at the level of educated professionals in these discussions.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantrescue> Try walking into a store in one of our communities not dressed in the latest outfits. People won’t treat you like a human being.
I walked into the Bobove shul on shabbos some decades ago, dressed in a decidedly modern suit. When the Rebbe Z’L walked in briskly, he made a beeline from the row of shtreimels waiting to greet him to shake my hand.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantChofetz Chaim was against people reading or selling newspapers – that were distributing things that were, or were becoming, publicly known at that point. I don’t think he gave reshus to distribute those.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> ‘cursing’ a king, not ‘criticizing’.
the difference is not that big given how people “criticize”.years ago, I actually got a psak to behave with respect towards pretty wicked (literally, not metaphorically is it is often used) political Jews. So wicked that I am, like Baba b Buta, scared to say their names even anonymously. When I responded – how can I show respect to such a vile person, the (charedi) Rav said “just show respect to his position”
I understand your attitudes towards your PM. Most other people in Israel have their own reasons to not like him – except when they need him… My attitude towards Bibi is biased by an early observation. In the mid 90s when he was dealing with difficult Clinton-time political situation, I happened to read his father’s book on Abarbanel. The main thesis of the book seems to be that despite all his involvement with the government, Abarbanel somehow missed that moment when expulsion edict was promulgated. He tried everything he could to fight back, but failed. Seems like a life of achievements ended with a failure at the most important moment. But that was not the end of the story – Abarbanel switched to supporting the exiles in places where they settled, giving them nechama and an attitude on how to look to rebuild in the future. It struck me at that moment how this was prescient to what the author’s son was dealing with in Israeli politics. I shared this observation with several people and they found it reasonable. That was before Bibi had to do with several other crises over these years …
> Wishful thinking?
yes, but better than an alternative. One of the motivations for LH is said to be an indirect way to boost own self-esteem. It is silly to always claim how smart you, or your group, are – but you can achieve the same relative boost by tearing others down.February 10, 2026 8:50 am at 8:50 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2510467Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantso on Scotsman, let’s take American example from 1950s (because I am more familiar with it). Here are R Kotler and R Soloveitchik having different attitudes towards a number of social issues. Both from impeccable pedigree, both T’Ch, both members of moetzes. both somewhat differ from established rabbonim of the time. There were rabbis who did not like RYBS approach, but there were also those who did not like R Kotler’s approach.
In our times, many would select the opinion of one over the other based on the group they belong to. How would you select one over the other at that time before each of them built their community?
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantcoffee, refuah shleimah. I hope you appreciate your Jewish doctor who is more likely to be MO than a BMG grad.
Part of the argument is that “MO” is not well defined. It could mean students of R Soloveitchik (TMP true MO) or it could mean your local members of kiddush club (KMO kiddush MO). …
coffee> Those things are only because of the modern part of modern orthodoxy in other words if those weren’t American values I don’t think modern orthodox would be machmir in those things
Could be. But then NMOs (non-modern O) might be machmir on something just because Americans are for it …Presumably, TMOs who were to live in, say, Stalin’s Russia would not be copying Stalin’s values. Anyway, values are values. As I mentioned, being an erliche and qualified doctor produces a lot of chesed, and I hope you have a good one and appreciate him.
> Also “Torah lishmah”? Who are you kidding? The only way to get MO to a shiur is by offering food
These are KMOs. TMOs learn either at their shul or at a local kollel after a long professional day. They choose which classes to attend without a need to show kavod to a high-position rav. When they teach, they don’t worry whether someone will pay them or that someone will find their teaching deficient … H’V I am saying that NMOs are generally learning lo lishmah, but there are challenges to overcome. Some of my kids are volunteering in kiruv, and they have several NMOs and MOs participating. NMOs are regularly absent when there is a paying babysitting opportunity, or even when they fulfilled their school “chessed” quote.
February 10, 2026 8:49 am at 8:49 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2510440Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> What precisely defines one as a “true Chareidi” is an interesting discussion in itself, but SOMETHING must be a red line.
We were discussing potential variety of halachik opinions, and I don’t think I used “true charedi”. Too lazy to scroll up, but I don’t recognize that there is “charedi halakha” separate from stam halakha.
> Something some Sephardim are machmir on, but it isn’t really a chiyuv even for them.
right. But this particular rav paskened like that for his congregation, but I never saw him carrying anything himself. I was considering jokingly offer him a something in the street until he mentioned that he used the eruv when he needed to move his mother in a wheelchair.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant> is deliberately trying to maintain an endless state of [at least low simmer] war and fear in order to strengthen his political position.
this is an example of LK we are discussing. In US, politicians are almost exempt from libel laws in favor of free expression. Do we have a similar exemption for Jewish public figures, whether they are tzadikkim or not? Bava, in Bava Basra, is very careful not to criticize a king, presumably mostly out of fear, but maybe not also. Maybe if we ascribe good intentions to politicians, they’ll have to behave accordingly?
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> business owner from releasing disparaging information
are you saying that newspapers nogea bdavar? Well, their “business” is to provide information. But if you are quoting Chofetz Chaim, he was considering working for church preferably to selling newspapers anyway!
> do or don’t apply in the context of social media such as the “Coffee Room”,
this is not new. There were anonymous writings throughout history, including Jewish… You probably want to analyze it through separate damages to (1) target (2) speaker (3) audience.
1: target. First idea that there is no damage as nobody knows you … I am thinking if someone calls AAQ an idiot or an ignoramus, I am not really affected as I trusting more opinions I hear in person. Except they might not say it to my face. Some posters might be affected though. It is often clear from writing when a person is sensitive, and you probably want to take that into account. Most importantly, and that is what I was talking about, often here people really write about groups. So, when I write about “charedim”, halochos related to groups of people apply.
2. the speaker is definitely affected by the shmutz he is saying. Anonymity makes it worse, as people talk the way they would not in person.
3. audience is also affected. Again, may be worse due to wide dissemination. And also time. someone can read this ten years later.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantBaruch> You want to argue with Trumas Hadeshen? With the Gemara?
I don’t think your opponent said that the sefer is fake. But it is possible to bring some of the opinions, rather than a variety of different opinions. Especially, when the issue is so sensitive. So, the question for you is – are there are other opinions and how we see all of them in different context. For example, about 100 years ago, sheitels were not considered tzanua, just the opposite.
February 9, 2026 8:16 pm at 8:16 pm in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2510322Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> A broad consensus of experts i.e. Gedolei Yisroel, say one thing, and ‘AAQ’ says other things. If you have your own ‘experts’, so follow them. We will follow ours.
I think we got to some point here: if we have an important communal issue – can every “religious group” follow their own derech or is there a need for finding a common solution. Let’s for simplicity exclude non-religious Jews, just two groups of religious Jews – and this issue is either joining current IDF or IDF consisting of both groups of Jews.
February 9, 2026 6:06 pm at 6:06 pm in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2510288Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA, a good question about definitions. We had some exotic discussions with some posters here, but I don’t think you are in the camp of denying validity to observant Jews who disagree with you. What you seem to be claiming, though, is that charedim are “a religious group”. This troubles me. And this may indeed be the source of differences.
I have no problem with, say, Teimanim or Yakkis to have their own minhagim, even Chassidim :). Even then, everyone can eat or not eat rice on Pesach, but if we were to form a joint army or social services, it would not be right if rules were different for different groups. Presumably, a beis din would be formed to develop a uniform policy. I know, for example, sephardi rabbis who allow their congregants to use Ashkenazi eruvin that are not al pi Sephardim.
February 9, 2026 6:06 pm at 6:06 pm in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2510287Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> They don’t care because they don’t care. If Chareidim wouldn’t have large families ח״ו, do you seriously think the Chilonim would in any way change their lifestyle
Population issue was (is?) part of Zionist discourse. Government would use more resources to subsidize larger families. Maybe even more than now, as now “subsidies for Nth child” is a code word for paying charedim and, thus, controversial. Would this work? I am not sure – it seems that world experience with encouraging more children by money is not working well. But I am explicitly comparing this with Charedim/IDF. If ISrael were to rely on a charedi army right now – that also would not be easy.
February 9, 2026 6:06 pm at 6:06 pm in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2510286Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> You said “charedim don’t care about serving because chilonim protect them.” The way you worded that statement is כפירה .. “Chareidim don’t go to the army because Chilonim do go.”
So, (again, this is a Socratic logical discussion, not a social policy) let’s say chilonim go to the army, but they are bad at that. The country is, H’V, open to attack, any neighboring country can send missiles or invade. You will then say, there is no halachik reason to organize defense or do something else – flee, negotiate, bribe, etc? Can your charedi town ask Iron Dome to exclude your town from the system? I think this would be a real kefirah.
YYA> Correct. If the Chilonim WOULDN’T go to the army, there would be no problem for us to go…
excellent attitude. And very forward-looking to the times of presumed charedi majority. There are certain areas where charedim already excel – hatzolah, hevra kadisha. Is there any other military-oriented services you can start now? police your towns against terrorists and non-halachik demonstrators? uncover and prevent your chevra from clicking on Iranian messages? simply, having your own military training, organizing units that can later join army on your own conditions. Many countries in the region have tribal militias.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> I was questioning the toeles, and even the Halachic permissibility, of posting the name here on YWN or similar forums.
I agree here. Probably, whatever need there is to publicize is achieved by the court publishing the name, so anyone can find the information already just googling for the name. Some write that one of the concerns behind lashon hara prohibition is a need for society to presume and encourage the idea that normative behavior is to be yashar. If we constantly talk about negatives, then you get the attitude of “everyone does it”. In this aspect, it is interesting that you and several others showed concern for this misguided individual, but at the same time many post negatively-framed opinions about people from other groups of Jews, without slight concern for LH. I am sure people will bring up explanations why those groups are “really bad”, but the social consequences are the same – if everyone does it, I can do something too … You see sometimes posts like – they let Arabs do that ….
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> … They also don’t have the slightest inkling how to hide their tracks,
You read this in spy novels. The game is a little different now. Internet allows cheap access to multitudes of not very smart people. You can talk them, or threaten, into lots of silly things. Posting inflammatory posters (maybe pro and against draft, or anything else); making pictures of government offices or officials; putting something on fire. This is happening all over the world. If you live your life erliche, you should not have problems. When someone contacts you and ask for some silly information, simply do not reply.
February 9, 2026 7:47 am at 7:47 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2509337Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> It isn’t at all our problem to make a “kosher Israel”. Our job is to keep the Torah as taught by our Rebbeim
sounds like an answer Moshe gave at the sne … well, that also happened only once in history … this is a self-protective instinct to go away from others not just to Torah but even only to the Torah taught “by your Rebbeim” …
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantsounds like someguy also got swindled by persians, so he now needs to shift the blame.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantIt looks like there is a machlokes here between a rational explanation – hair enhances beauty v. kabbalistic where some other values become important
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantinteresting question on Lashon Hara. It seems to be the practice of most countries to publicize court outcomes with rate exceptions – minors, state secrets.
These might be different from beis din rules, but these rules have some reasoning behind them – openness helps prevent abuses of the court in general.Similarly, courts that use juries who are amei haaretz are not following Sh’A, but the system again enables society check with their common sense against government abuses of power.
It is a valid question – should you try to move Israeli system closer to halachik here. What would happen if all court proceedings were publicized only when there is clear danger, like child abuse. Would you prohibit employers from doing background checks, or would these checks be done using a closed system? Similarly, with shidduchim. Local (charedi) Rosh Yeshiva advised me that “his only requirement for children shidduchim was that parents be honest in business”. I guess he trusted the shadchanim or maybe googled court cases himself … As it is, you call references, esp from Jewish school and it is “he is a great boy/girl” and you are listening for the tone of the voice if they are waiting for a hard question. Sometimes you ask to clarify the issue you found out, and the menahel becomes so relieved “oh, you know about it, so let me explain the details …..”. So, my intuition is that we err on the side of privacy more often than other way around.
I guess one if the questions is whether there is an issue of deterrence – if a person get a lenient punishment, would it change behavior of future criminals or idiots? And to what degree halakha takes deterrence into account.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantExplanation for the recruiting scheme is that it is an escalating game: first a person is asked to paint a message on a wall; then carry a bag to another place; then make a picture of a public person near his house … at some point, the agent understands that the “innocent” things he did might already take him to prison or at least damage his reputation, so he agrees to the next step … out of 10 such agent, one might move further.
You can see a possible societal impact, as you are saying, as it happens between Russia and Ukraine: both sides recruit or threaten people to go put government offices on fire and such – the damage is not big, but it affects the society.
Another article is saying that Shin Bet is worrying that charedim might be easier targets here because they might not know about such things, so go spread the word.
February 6, 2026 4:30 pm at 4:30 pm in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2509204Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> Which is actually why I started this thread on a different topic.
Back to your original question, maybe there is a mutual reliance here. To simpifY:
charedim don’t care about serving because chilonim protect them.
chilonim don’t care about population growth, because charedim have big families.What would happen, if all chilonim suddenly decamped to Uganda. I presume charedim would run to man the guns, F-35s, and iron dome. Or to the airport. It might be very confusing at the beginning as a lot of training is required. Presumably, chilonim will be responsible in their retreat and they’ll train charedim first.
Now, reverse to your question. What would happen if all Charedim decamp for Stamford Hill? Chilonim will start worrying about population. They’ll have some apartments in Yerushalaim to move in. Government will start paying for having more children, but it is not easy to change basic family structure.. Maybe harder than to train for flying F-35s. Some might want to convert bunch of non-Jews …
Maybe in both scenarios, RZs will save the day – by being able to relate to both camps and teach them to either fly F-35s or to keep zone defense when there are more kids than parents in the house.
So, now that we realize that everyone is important, maybe time to start respecting each other now. The hint to that is gemorah in Megilah, making megillah reading on market days to accommodate farmers who bring you food.
February 6, 2026 4:30 pm at 4:30 pm in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2509203Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA, thanks for the answers, I think this is the core issue:
> Now let’s talk about “taking advantage of a service that others are providing for you and refuse to participate”.
> There are about half a dozen main arguments why Chareidim, myself included, do not feel any guilt about this whatsoever,
.> The whole point of life is to do רצון השם יתברך ולדבקה בו.
and long poetic elaboration, confirmed by the rabbeim.i don’t understand. My argument is simple and has nothing to do with chilonim or goyim: you are openly taking advantage of others, making them protect you. This sounds like gezelah, aggravated that this is about taking life risks, not just money. There is no davening or learning that can override such aveiros. Sheretz byado. Rambam is pretty clear on that aspect of teshuva.
Maybe the only of a “half a dozen” arguments that seems to make sense to me is that if government makes arrangements to allow you not to serve, then you got a contract with other Israelis through legit democracy. So even if many are unhappy, it is legit. But we are now talking about possible change in the legal situation. So, if you have a choice between being a gazlan, doing something that you don’t think is allowed and leaving, leaving is the ehrliche Torah answer. I am wondering whether you can present this argument to your Rav and let me know his reply.
Thanks for referring to Rambam. My question is whether anyone comments on this, suggesting that EY is different here.
> Since there is basically wall to wall consensus on this in the entire Chareidi world, so for all of us the issue is closed.
a true scotsman here? Or as one Manhattan lady exclaimed – how did Nixon won the election if I don’t know anyone who voted for him?
Who made “charedi” a synonym to “Torah”? If after we went through various logical aspects of this, the final answer is based on “I am right because I am right”, then it is an indication of a weakness in the position.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantredleg > From the times of the Gemorah, hair covering was a siman of marriage and was the general custom.
you may be right, because this was also minhag of men. A student came up to an amorah and the latter asked him why he is not wearing a sudar. The yungerman explained that this is ok because he not yet married. Then, the amorah chewed him out for not being married yet.
February 5, 2026 7:18 pm at 7:18 pm in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2509106Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA: By that definition there may already be a majority. But Chareidim are growing far faster than any of those groups, except for the far right of the RZ who are becoming more Chareidi…
AAQ: “will your eineklah join IDG with kashrus mehadrin, women instructors in beis yaakov skirts and sheitels – but with, say hallel on yom haatzmaut? bli brocha?”
YYA: Women instructors for men, or women in the army altogether, is אביזרייהו דגילוי עריות. With or without sheitels. Kashrus is literally the least of the problems in the IDF. Hallel on Yom Ha’atzamot? For what exactly?
Let’s put Devorah aside … So this seems to be the core question – so we are having or soon will have a kosher majority in Israel. By forging a joint position, this makes it possible to resolve all the issues you are concerned about in a democratic way (supreme court will eventually give up too in the face of a sustained majority). Are charedim capable of joining other kosher Yidden in forming a Torah-true country? According to my theory – yes, as most of the strict boundaries in the charedi community are for protection. So, now protection will not be needed.
The rest is a tactical question of chicken and egg – can charedim start cooperating and help bring kosher Israel faster or will you be waiting for someone else to deal with the problems and will join only when it is safe. Whole Chumash is about being leaders in solving issues, not waiting until someone else will create a perfect environment for you.
February 5, 2026 7:18 pm at 7:18 pm in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2509105Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantAAQ said: “Everyone was “frum” in Lita contrary to Germany – until suddenly everyone stopped.”
YYA: Ever heard of the “Haskalah” movement?this was not out of nowhere, haskala was already in western Europe. Were Litvaks ready? no. Alter rebbe tried to slow down its arrival by helping the Czar fight Napoleon, at least he understood what was going to happen … But it is very shortsighted to blame maskilim – their appearance was natural consequence of the progress in science & technology – to which, at the time, neither Jews nor goyim had a good answer. Now, we do. But, at the time, our answer was inadequate. These are not only my thoughts. Similarly, R Soloveitchik asks – what if Jews at the Roman times came up with something like Spanish-time philosophical works – this, more timely, response, would have let the world understand Jewish ideas better at the time they were absorbing some of them into a new religion.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantcoffee,
when the kid R Soloveitchik was sick, his father hesitated to add logs into fire for doctor to see better, so the grandfather, Chaim Brisker, added it himself – machmir on p/n, not meikel on shabbos. Now, R Moshe was modernishe, while R Chaim was not, but, metaphorically, a MO Talmid Chochom survived due to that fire!your question is good, except that it provokes LH, so maybe we can just discuss general social trends. And it is also loaded as MO may be R Soloveitchik and maybe your local opera lover… Still: MO are more machmir on fulfilling metubah obligations of supporting the wives according to their level; educating their children in umanut; supporting Jews in trouble, whether in Israel or in USSR; everyday middos – safe and ehrliche driving, not driving against “one way” signs; learning Torah lishma; understanding Torah in the context of other info which sometimes leads to better understanding of a sugya; kiddush Hashem in their activities in public sphere; avoiding theft and tax problems in business; mesiras nefesh in paying for day schools and shul membership;
Pick which ones you want me to justify
February 5, 2026 9:39 am at 9:39 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2508575Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> Dati Leumi Rabbanim: “IDF Is Violating Orders;
this is the right way to deal with the issue – they participate, and then deal with problem that arise.> Ehrlich” is defined by Hashem and His Torah. Not by your personal sensibilities
Ehrlich is about obligations to the others. I understand you are taking offense of my suggestion to leave the country. This is purely a socratic argument here. You plan to take advantage of a service that others are providing for you and refuse to participate. You propose a payment that they find insufficient. Then, don’t use the service. You can live in EY outside of medina.> No one is looking to “get some acceptance” from the poritz.
When you live under Poritz and have a chance to live in a normal country, you need to move. See Rambam/desert. Any commentaries there that discuss whether and how is EY different in this aspect?> Because before there was a medinah and an IDF the Maskilim, Zionists and Secularists just loved us.
this is over the top. this is not current Israel.
> Don’t hold your breath waiting to see Belzer soldiers…
you know israeli politics better than I do, so maybe this is a ploy. But presumably rabbonim sign something they can agree with, they just hope that the plan will not work out. why then others do not sign to this? Could it be that you are projecting your uncompromising position onto them?
> the children belong to the Chareidim.
It is suggestive, but history is not always predictable. We had generations where things shifted a lot. Conservative movement in US was very strong 40% of population – and now it is not, they just stopped having children and enthusiasm towards the ideology. Everyone was “frum” in Lita contrary to Germany – until suddenly everyone stopped. If you continue ignoring social and ideological problems with charedism, you are making your community weaker, not stronger.it is more predictable that Israel will have observant majority – if you add RZ, stam observant and traditional Yidden together. Then, it will not be kashrus out of Ben Gurion’s sentimentalism, but because knesset will consistently vote for it. Is this exciting enough? Something unimaginable 100 years ago. Will we all be able to run the country together in an erliche way, or we will continue squabble? will your eineklah join IDG with kashrus mehadrin, women instructors in beis yaakov skirts and sheitels – but with, say hallel on yom haatzmaut? bli brocha?
February 5, 2026 9:39 am at 9:39 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2508541Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantrebM > EVEN those that agree under some circumstances to seme sore of chareidi devision/s in the army, that is only for those anyway not learning.
Any bachur or yungerman that is learning must be excemp from all and any other kind of service.This is a pretty reasonable position, with some details open to negotation – who counts as “learning”, and what quality of “learning”.
Mir mashgiach used to plead with the bachurim: I am signing your exemption as toraso umanoso, I never lied in my life, don’t make me into aliar, learn at full strength. What are the current mashgichim telling to you or your children – can someone quote?
February 5, 2026 9:39 am at 9:39 am in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2508540Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantreb M> The topic here is that the chareidim are doing their part by raising large families, and why is this issue not part of the equation of “sharing the burden”?
it is in the gemorah whether one can take someone’s life instead of his own – who says your blood is redder. And, as with all contracts, they require agreement of both sides. If you can convince the rest of Israelis of your mailos, I’ll have no problems with that at all! So, the question becomes: why don’t non-charedi Israelis value great charedi contribution in growing families, learning Torah, providing religious services to others, having great middos, inviting foreign investment, providing kiddush Hashem and kiddush medina story in international papers about great Torah lifestyle, etc?
You can’t blame this on anti-religious sentiment – B’H majority of Israelis are either observant or traditional, with many others indifferent rather than anti-religious.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> no one is asking Satmar, and Satmar probably wouldn’t answer
maybe this is important. When someone is not involved in an issue – it becomes possible to express extremist opinions. Others, both RZ and charedi, who are involved in politics, have to be responsible.
YYA> anyone will be forced to vote on pain of death?
maybe not death, but in some countries, citizens are obligated to vote and probably need to pay fines if they don’t. We have now people complaining that evil medinah is not paying them enough subsidies as destroying Torah. Anti-voters will say the same when having to pay for not voting.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantHappy> Ruchniyus is for goyim.
YYA> “Ruchniyus” without Halacha is for Goyim (and is also fake.) Ruchniyus within Halacha is very much for Jews.Happy, nothing personal, but this is a great example of the effect of other cultuers on us. This one goes back to middle ages, according to some. Christians focused on ruchniyus and “beliefs”, so the natural response was to de-emphasize that and focus on value of actions only. Was this response useful to prevent assimilation? yes. Is it a true expression of Torah? not exactly,
February 4, 2026 2:22 pm at 2:22 pm in reply to: Sharing the burden – Why Israel needs Chareidim to survive. #2508404Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel> rabenu nissim states that every jew has a right to live in EY and
> no secularist and no medina and no AAQ and no somejew can take that right away from him
> no one can tell him to go away and live in judenrein and dangerous placessome ridiculous claims aside that you do not subscribe to, I presume, religious Jews currently live in EY thanks to the zionist efforts (secular, and religious, and supporters from other countries). My only suggestion to go away is only if you consider it impossible to comply with the laws of the land. What was R Nissim’s suggestion – go and refuse pay taxes to Muslim authorities? I presume he suggested to find a way to live there according to their regulations. But if you actually believe that it is not possible – do like Avraham did during the hunger – go to Mitzrayim.
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