Times of Israel It was only when her sons came at her with
knives that she realized keeping quiet was not going to work.
For nine years, her rabbis had told her not to
speak up about her husband’s verbal, physical and sexual attacks. They
assured her that the abuse would pass, that if she obeyed his every wish
— folding his napkin just so or letting him do as he liked in bed — the
attacks would end and he would stop telling their grown sons she was a
bad mother.
But when her sons began to threaten her, she knew it was time to leave.
Taking her youngest children, she turned to
Yad Sarah, a highly regarded Israeli charity founded by former Jerusalem
Mayor Uri Lupolianski. The organization mainly focuses on medical
services, but it also runs a domestic abuse division geared toward
Orthodox Jews. A professional there directed her to Bat Melech, a
shelter for battered religious women. [..]
The wall of silence surrounding sensitive
domestic issues in the haredi Orthodox community has long been seen as
an impediment to successfully addressing them. Yad Sarah and Bat Melech
have sought to change the situation — and their efforts appear to be
bearing fruit.
A decade ago, haredi community leaders rarely
spoke openly about violence against women. Now leading rabbis are
working with experts to fight abuse in the community. [...]
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