Haredi Demographics demand changes be made to save Israel

T. Belman. Recently I spoke to two Hareidi men about my suggestion that we need a new social contract that defines the relationship between secular and Hareidi. They both suggested that all my arguments in support of same were based on lies. This article suggests otherwise.

The plight of masses of children being born into a vicious cycle of self-inflicted poverty is a moral stain on Israel

Haredim. (AP/VosIzNeias.com)

A senior economist and executive Board Member at the International Monetary Fund (IMF), Anthony De Lannoy, this week diplomatically accused the Israeli government of ignoring the Haredi demographic problem which he implied threatens Israel’s long term economic prosperity.  He alluded to the fact that this rapidly growing poor population is one of the main recipients of Health, Education and Welfare resources yet they contribute very little to the tax base that sustains the Social Welfare system. The burden of financing Haredi welfare is being borne disproportionately and unfairly by other Israelis who work, pay tax and serve in the Army.

Ultra-Orthodox Jews (“Haredim”) currently make up 12% of the population in Israel (1.1 Mio 2018). With a birthrate of 7.1, the Israeli Central Bureau of Statistics forecasts the population to more than double to 2.3 Mio in 2037, and the Bank of Israel forecasts that by 2065, ultra-Orthodox Jews will make up 25% of the Israeli population.

The IMF articulated what Dan Ben David (Professor of Economics & Public Policy from Tel Aviv University, and the head of the Shoresh Institute for Socio Economic Research) has been saying for a while.  If nothing changes and their population continues to rise there is a “democratic point of no return” which, he says, some believe, we may have already crossed.  He is more optimistic and argues convincingly that it is not too late if the government starts to address the challenges of integrating Haredim more fully into Israeli society now. It must begin in the education system. Haredim must study a full core curriculum through the end of secondary school that in turn allows them to go on to university and specialized professions. They must be encouraged to work and earn higher salaries in order to pay their fare share of income tax. Strategically this is as or more important than Army service. The rights and benefits they are entitled to must be conditional on the responsibilities and duties of citizenship. They cannot arbitrage the system. Political power implies social responsibility to the greater good of society as a whole.

The Haredim are amongst the poorest groups in Israeli society.  The plight of hundreds of thousands of children being born into a vicious cycle of self-inflicted poverty is a moral stain on the Jewish and democratic values upon which the State was established. The early founders’ vision of an exemplary Jewish and democratic State caring for the weakest elements of the society has been forsaken for short term political expediency.

Ben David believes the best case scenario for the upcoming election is a unity government between Kahol Lavan and Likud that excludes the Haredim. The current coalition between the right and Haredim is unsustainable economically.  We can’t afford it. Well before the Haredim are 25% of the population in 2065 the economy and democracy will be unsustainable and our military strength and superiority will decline.  If modern Israel is to survive for a thousand years it must maintain its economic and military superiority. That requires addressing the Haredi issue now.

According to Prime Minister Netanyahu, former defense minister Avigdor Liberman is to blame for the second election. He refused to sit with the Haredim unless they agreed to serve in the Army.  The second election of 2019 has turned into a referendum not only on Netanyahu but on the Haredim and their position in Israeli society.  The Haredi issue is much more complex than the inherent unfairness of their refusal to serve in the Army or undertaken National Service.

Professor Ben David explains that partly because of the Haredim Israel has the largest percentage of people living below the poverty line, the biggest educational inequality and one of the lowest Labour Force Participation Rates of any country in the OECD (Developed World).

Haredi males in particular are poor and are encouraged by their communities to study in Yeshivot rather than work.  Primary school children study a very limited core curriculum of secular studies and high school children (14-17) virtually nothing at all. Israel is the only country in the developed world in which a core curriculum is not mandatory for all children. Only 1% of Haredi men get a National Matriculation compared to 77% in the general population. Haredi men have a significantly lower participation in the labour force (51 %) than other groups. A majority of those that do work tend to earn close to the minimum wage of NIS 4,500 and therefore pay very little Income Tax.

The rapidly growing Haredi population puts an even greater tax burden on increasingly fewer tax payers. Israel already has one of the smallest number of tax payers paying 90% of all Income Tax. Anyone earning more than around NIS 18,000 ($5,000) per month is part of the top 20% of income earners paying  92% of all income taxes collected by the Government.  This is highly unfair and the demographics suggest it will get worse. The current system is economically unsustainable.

The real victims here are what Eitan Regev, a Research Fellow from the Israel Democracy Institute, calls the “lost generations of Haredi children” who are being deprived of their right to an education that will enable them to work or earn higher wages, and extract themselves from a vicious cycle of poverty.  Over the last 20 years approximately 120,000 Haredi boys have been deprived of a secular education and over the next two decades if nothing changes approximately 274,000 young men and their offspring will be condemned to poverty. There are currently 308,000 children in Haredi schools between 1-12 grades and a further 124,450 student in Yeshivot. Haredi children are currently 19% of all 1st graders and this is expected to increase to 50% in two generations. Approximately 8,000 Haredi male students graduate 12th grade each year. Liberman’s plan for integrating them into the Army ramps up to 6,500 a year over 8 years.

There is no other country in the developed world with a poverty problem of this nature and magnitude. Ben David says that it is the responsibility of the State to educate all children equally and provide them with the means to become economically self-sufficient. Professor Ben David argues compellingly that you cannot maintain a 1st World Army with a 3rd World Education System.  Fixing this problem now before the numbers become too large is doable. In the future it may be impossible. The survival of the State economically and militarily is at stake. The real victims however are the children who are being deprived of their right to an education that will enable them to work and extract themselves from poverty. If we were talking about a Health issue related to children everyone would understand that the State has the duty and right to protect all children but here it’s as if the children don’t exist. Israel desperately needs to start listening to the IMF, the Bank of Israel and Dan Ben David if it wants to survive.

In New York, Haredi parents and their children who have been similarly deprived of secular educations have bought a Class Action lawsuit against the Government accusing it of failing to provide an equal level of secular studies for all children.  It may not be long before similar claims are being made in Israel.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR
Simon Fink lives in Israel and is originally from Melbourne, Australia. He studied Law Politics and Economics and is interested in public policy. He has worked for governments in Israel and Australia and currently works for a Bank in Israel.
December 23, 2019 | 23 Comments »

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23 Comments / 23 Comments

  1. The quick answer to this is that nobody under thirty gets any welfare unless they have done their IDF or national service, and damn the consequences.
    For that we need a government that is not dependent on the Haredi parties and a police force willing to arrest those black coats vandalising posters etc with female images. Even the three years of the Lapid government woke up a lot of bochurim that there is a world of better income in the IDF and in the workforce..

  2. @ Ted Belman: Actually, Ted, I live in an area of New York State (the Mid-Hudson and Mid-Delaware Valleys) where there is a both a sizable hasidic population, and a lot of people, many of them local officials, who hate them. They make exactly the same complaints about these American hasidim that the TAU professor whose article you have published makes.
    They are welfare bums living off the public till. They don’t work, but they expect the government to “subsidize their religious customs.” They attend a local community college only in order to take certain courses, in order to learn certain specialized skills, but with no intention of graduating (why people think this is such an awful crime is beyond me). They want the government to subsidize their schools, even though religious customs, such as separate seating for boys and girls, are observed there. They have too much political power (actually they have almost none). They vote as a bloc (actually, they don’t). They are crooked.

    As in Israel, many of the these attacks on upstate New York hasidic (and hence “haredi”) Jews originate with secular or non-Orthodox Jews. I personally know both several haredim and several non-Orthodox Jews(including even a local rabbi) who hate them passionately and slander them. Both groups of Jews live in towns near mine.

  3. As an American Haredi with a master’s degree I take exception to the way that your article dismisses Haredim as if we were all Neanderthals whose vocabulary consists of a few words and several grunts. Yes, there are some Haredi Yeshiva systems where secular subjects are not taught. They are few and far between. American Haredim include PhD’s, JD’s, MD’s accountants, computer programmers, professionals, and businessmen. We tend to be overperformers. We are strong supporters of Israel and Israeli charities. We visit Israel. We send our children to study in Israel. Most of us have siblings or children who now live in Israel.

  4. @ EDDYDEE: Eddy, Israel can’t survive if 12 per cent of its Jewishpopulation “has to go.” (Go where? to concentration camps?).

    If Israel survives Arab, Iranian and other Arab aggression by 2065, this uthor’s target date, the haredim will be fully integrated into Israeli society, and won’t need or desire a “feed box.” If, on the other hand, the Arab, Iranian and other Muslim enemies of Israel succeed in destroying it, for example with nuclear weapons, there won’t be any Jews at all in Israel in 2065, and perhaps very few anywhere. The TAU crowd sees Orthodox Jews as the enemy. I see the Islamic jihadists and their Western collaborators as the enemy.

  5. While the TAU crowd just kvetches about the haredim because its furthers their anti-Judaic, anti-religious agenda there are many non-profit institutions in that work actively to integrate haredim into the mainstream of Israeli life, find productive jobs for them, etc. Few if any TAU people are active in these positive-orinted nonprofits.

  6. “Haredi” Campus Strauss
    Background

    In March 2012, MALAG -the Israel Council for Higher Education (CHE) issued a call to all colleges and universities to propose special undergraduate degree tracks for “Haredi” men and women. The purpose of the initiative is to encourage the ultra-Orthodox to pursue a career-focused academic education while respecting their way of life, leading to full and productive integration into the workforce.

    This CHE program (entitled “MACHAR”) is viewed as instrumental to ensure a better future for the students’ families and the Haredi community while strengthening Israel’s economic and social base.

    Hadassah Academic College was among a small group of institutions selected to pioneer this CHE initiative. The College’s program opened in January 2013 with the first pre-academic preparatory programs (“mechinot”). After only two years, no less than 40% of all Haredi students enrolled in the national MACHAR program today study at Hadassah Academic College.

    To Campus Strauss website

    2015 Graduation Ceremony
    2015 Graduation Ceremony

    The Program

    The College is offering six different undergraduate tracks. Each track is on the same academic level and with the same requirements as in the College’s general program.

    1) Biotechnology (3 year program)
    2) Optometry (4 year program)
    3) Computer Sciences (3 year program)
    4) Management of Service Organizations (3 year program)
    5) Politics and Communication (3 year program)
    6) Communication Disorders – Hearing and Speech Therapy
    (7 semester program)

    Plans are to offer an additional track in Economics and Accounting (3 year program) in the next academic year.

    Graduates will be awarded a fully accredited bachelor’s degree from Hadassah Academic College.

    Students begin studies with a one-year preparatory program (“Mechina”) tailored specifically for the “Haredi” student. There are separate studies for men and women.
    Frontal lectures take place on a separate mini-campus located at the edge of the Haredi “Meah Shearim” neighborhood of Jerusalem, just minutes walking from the College’s main campus. Laboratory and clinical studies are conducted on the College’s main campus.

    Each student is provided with individual assistance to ensure his/her success. Toward graduation, each student receives career counseling to prepare for successful entry and integration to the workforce. The College is also cementing relations with relevant institutions in both the private and public sectors that can offer promising career paths and a welcoming work environment for our Haredi graduates.

    Enrollment to date

    This past academic year (2013-14), 500 ”Haredi” students were enrolled in this special program (285 in the preparatory program and 215 students in first year undergraduate studies).

    Registration is projected to rise to 700 students in the current 2014-15 academic year including 300 students in the preparatory year and 400 students in first and second year undergraduate studies. Plans call for 1,000 students per academic year once the program reaches “steady state” consisting of an equal number of male and female students.

    For further information e-mail shimonar@hac.ac.il

  7. Strauss Campus

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    Computer Science is an interesting and challenging profession, which provides much intellectual satisfaction and exposes the student to a wide range of areas in the field. Students have at their disposal state-of-the-art-laboratories with the most advanced technology and software. Parallel to the theoretical courses, a large number of hours are dedicated to practical experience and application workshops in the laboratory, enabling students to become highly skilled in the development of program systems and writing large projects. Studies in this department are prestigious and highly regarded by potential employers in the workforce. Graduates integrate well into hi-tech companies in Jerusalem and the rest of the country.

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    Strauss Campus, a Haredi academic campus, is the product of collaboration between the Lomda Institute and the Hadassah Academic College. The campus is located within the Haredi neighborhoods of Jerusalem, in a central location easily accessible by public transport and close to the light rail.
    Our Advantages

    – Over 20 years of experience in training Haredim.
    – 80% job placement rate among our graduates.
    – Centrally located and easily accessible by public transportation.

    Come Visit
    24 Strauss St. Jerusalem
    Tel: +972-26-222202

  8. We should remember that Tel Aviv University (TAU) is a hotbed not only of anti-haredi sentiment, but anti-Judaism sentiment in general, anti-Bible sentiment, anti-Zionist sentiment, Jewish history in the Land of Israel denial, Jewish peoplehood denial. For example, a prominent TAU archeologist has claimed that David and Soloman were mere “tribal leaders” if they ever existed at all, and that the Israelites were primitive, illiterate tribesman during their lifetime, and for generations thereafter.(There is overwhelming archeological evidence, discovered by other archeologists, that dispoves these claims). Several TAU professors have expressed the view that the medieval blood libel charge against Jews, that Jews used the blood of Christian children in their Passover matzot, is true! One TAU professor actually wrote and published a book arguing the case for the blood libel. Another TAU professor argued that since there were no camels in the land of Israel during Biblical times (of course there were), the Bible must have been written much more recently, since it contains many mentions of camels in the land. The overwhelming majority of TAU professors have spoken out about the Israel-Palestine conflict denounced the Israeli “occupation,” demanded the expulsion of the Jewish “settlers,” called the settlers Nazis, etc. Anyhting that a TAU professor writes targeting the groups that the TAU faculty view as “the enemy” must therefore be taken with a grain of salt.

  9. The author’s complaints about the haredim sound suspiciously like the complaints about “those people on welfare” and “welfare queens” in the United States, made by conservatives in the United States. In the Us, the left has always denounced these complaints as racist, and directed against blacks, Hispanics, immigrants, etc. But in Israel, so-called “progressives” use these same arguments and complaintsagainst the haredim–although not against Arabs and Ethiopians, whom they regard as “oppressed” and therefire deserving of government largesse.

  10. Notice that the author doesn’t say a word about the Arab citizens of Israel, who receive even more handouts from the Israeli government (welfare, unemployment insurance, child allowances, etc.). The “Arab sector” also contributes disproportionately to Israel’s crime rate, which in turn costs working Israelis a vast amount of money–the direct losses from thefts, including car thefts, the cost of maintaining the police forces needed to arrest at least some of these offenders, the cost of maintaining them in prison, etc. As many as 60 per cent of crimes in Israel are committed by members of the “Arab sector.” By way of contrast, the crime rate and the rate of incarceration of haredim are both low.

  11. The author of this article asserts that the right to vote should be restricted to those who contribute proportionally to the tax base. This sounds suspiciously like the system that prevailed in Britain from the fourteenth through the nineenth centuries, in which only those who earned a certain amound of land or property, or who could meet income requirements, could vote. The last such income requirements for voting in Britain itself were not abolished until 1920. In Northern Ireland, they persisted until sometime within the past twenty years (I don’t have the exact date), which excluded most Catholics from voting in municipal elections, and deprived them of representation in municipal governments. It took the IRA’s forty-year terrorist campaign before the British government grudgingly abolished the income and property requirements for voting in Northern Ireland.

  12. This in today’s Timesof Israel:

    The Israel Democracy Institute’s yearbook on haredi society finds educated women powering broad and rapid change.

    Dan Zaken
    Haredi women in technology jobs
    Let’s start with The Israel Democracy Institute’s conclusion: the “Israelization” process in haredi (ultra-Orthodox Jewish) society in Israel proceeds apace, and it’s haredi women who are responsible for that.

    The Institute’s annual report on haredim in Israel does show a complicated picture: on the one hand, the integration of haredi men into the workforce and academic institutions remains at a standstill, but on the other hand, per capita income in haredi families has increased substantially, and their standard of living has therefore risen, manifested in far more vacations in Israel and abroad, a considerable rise in car ownership, and so on.

    Researchers Dr. Lee Cahaner and Dr. Gilad Malach state: “The processes of integration of Haredi households continue, evidenced both by employment and income levels of women and by partial adoption of middle-class lifestyle characteristics. The integration of haredi men, however, particularly as far as employment and academic studies are concerned, has come to a halt, apparently because of an absence of economic incentives.”

    The researchers refer to the renewed rise in state payouts to young kolel (institute of higher rabbinic learning) and yeshiva students. These allowances were cut during the period of the Netanyahu-Lapid government, but they have been raised again under the Netanyahu-haredi party government, which is still in office.

    The researchers say that the consequence is a stagnant 51% rate of participation in the workforce among haredi men (which compares with 87% among non-haredi Jewish men) for three successive years up to 2018, after a substantial rise in the period 2013-2015. At the same time, the number of yeshiva and kolel students in Israel rose by 6% annually, 1.5 times the rate of growth of the haredi population.

    Steep rise in income

    All this has not, however, hindered the continued improvement in haredi society’s standard of living. In 2017, average gross monthly income of haredi households grew by 10% to over NIS 15,000. This compares with a rise of just 5% for non-haredi households. A similar rate of increase was recorded for most of the preceding years. The result is, first of all, a substantial fall in the rate of poverty as measured by per capita income, from 52% in 2013 to 43% in 2017. This is still severe, but the trend of improvement is dramatic.

    In this context it should be pointed out that according to a study by The Haredi Institute for Public Affairs, the poverty rate among haredim is much lower, among other things because of consumer behavior that is very different from that of the general population and a broad community support network.

    One measure of the rise in the standard of living is car ownership. In the previous decade, only a third of haredi families owned a car. The study finds that by 2018, the number had risen to 44%. The proportion of haredim holding driving licenses has risen dramatically.

    Another clear indicator of a rise in standard of living is vacations. The proportion of people in haredi society vacationing overseas rose from 12% in 2013-2014 to 17% in 2017-2018, representing an increase of nearly 50% in just four years. The explanation for the increase lies in the rise in income (alongside the Open Skies reform in Israeli aviation, which brought down the cost of vacations), but also in lifestyle changes. Today’s haredi feels more comfortable with the idea of taking a vacation, part of a spreading culture of leisure in this population that is becoming more and more like that of Israelis at large, and what could be more Israeli than to want to travel on vacation abroad?

    A woman of worth

    And who is responsible for all these changes? There are several answers to that question, but the main one is the haredi woman. She manages, amazingly, to raise the highest number of children per family in the West (averaging more than six), to improve her own standard of education, to go out to work, and to earn steadily increasing income, thereby raising the standard of living of haredi society in general.

    How does she do it? It all starts with education, a battered but true slogan. Most haredi girls receive their high-school education in religious seminaries. The proportion of female haredi pupils sitting bagrut (school matriculation) examinations rose from 31% in the 2008/9 school year to 51% in 2016/7. The proportion has steadily risen because of the demand to be able to go out to work and for study of core curriculum subjects and other vital lessons. According to Dr. Malach, preparation of girls for bagrut in haredi seminaries in order to meet this demand is a growing trend, and the seminaries that provide such preparation are the most popular.

    From there, it’s a short step to higher education. In the past decade, the number of haredim, men and women, studying for academic degrees has grown 2.5 times, and the annual growth rate averages 12.5%. In the 2018/19 academic year, there were some 12,000 haredi students in academic institutions in Israel, 70% of them (8,400) women. The rate of growth among men, however, has slowed. In the past two years, it has been 9%, while the growth rate among haredi women has been 12%.

    Growing Internet use

    What of those important tools for the modern labor market, computers and the Internet? The bans and restrictions imposed by haredi rabbis on using the Internet have not stopped the trend. If a decade ago, 28% of adult haredim reported that they used the Internet, by 2018 that proportion had grown to half the haredi population, almost doubling. It’s impossible to exaggerate the significance of this figure and its consequences for haredi society, which through the Internet is becoming more exposed and more connected to Israeli society in general.

    The modernization of haredi society continues, and what is interesting is that haredi society itself is aware of the process, Dr. Malach told “Globes”. He attributes the rise in the standard of living chiefly to the rise in earned income among haredi women,

    but also to greater state support, and to negative income tax for people on low incomes. The haredi integration process continues, but haredi men still lag behind, not least because of the obstacles placed in their way by haredi politicians, in the form of greater state support and the incentives for those who do not work.

    Published by Globes, Israel business news – en.globes.co.il – on December 24, 2019

  13. Email received.

    1) “main recipients of Health, Education and Welfare resources” – on a per capita basis chareidim receive much less for education. There are no special benefits regarding Health or Welfare for Chareidim. In addition Chareidim contribute tremendously to theses areas through a huge number of chessed organizations like Yad Sarah and Hatzalah.

    2) “contribute very little to the tax base” – by what measure? They pay a lot of income tax, maybe less than average based as they tend to earn less. They pay VAT on all purchases. Taxes when purchasing apartments and cars and many other taxes. The article has no actual statistics on what percentage of all types of taxes are paid by Chareidim – it just states their percentage of the population. In all countries most income tax is paid by a few high earners this is a result of inequities in pay and has little to do with Chareidim. In the US the top 10% pay 70% of income tax https://taxfoundation.org/summary-latest-federal-income-tax-data-2018-update/). Chareidim being only 7% of the population have little effect on these statistics.

    3) “other Israelis who work, pay tax and serve in the Army” – The army has too many people and too much tax money goes to pay bloated army salaries and pensions which start when the soldiers are in their 40’s. The army has always refused to have the Ministry of Finance involved in these aspects. The army today needs less people as the population in Israel gets larger and larger. In Israeli society the army is “sacred” so there is little discussion of how much it costs and whether the money is spent well.

    4) “Haredim must study a full core curriculum” – The world is changing. Information is available to all at the touch of a few buttons. Education today needs to be about making people think, problem solving and thinking “out of the box”. All areas that Chareidi education excels at. Chareidim are literate and educated so comparisons to other societies based on the “core curriculum” are skewed because in other countries they learn the “core curriculum” or do not learn.

    Also, the basic premise that uses money and earnings as a measure of value is immoral.

  14. From Wikipedia:

    The Jerusalem College of Technology – Lev Academic Center (JCT) (Hebrew: ????? ?????? ???), is an Israeli university, recognized by the Council for Higher Education, which specializes in providing high-level science and technology education to the religious Jewish community. More than 2,000 of JCT’s 4,500 students are Haredi, and the remainder of the students are mostly national religious or international students from religious backgrounds.
    JCT’s main campus (“Lev”) is situated in the Givat Mordechai neighborhood of Jerusalem. Other branches are located in the Givat Shaul neighborhood (“Tal Campus”) of Jerusalem and Ramat Gan (“Lustig Campus”). JCT offers bachelor’s degrees and master’s degrees in several fields of study combined with intensive Jewish studies.

    Contents
    1 History
    2 Branches
    3 Degrees awarded
    3.1 Bachelor of Science
    3.2 Bachelor of Arts
    3.3 Masters Degree
    4 Special Programs
    4.1 The Reuven Surkis Program for Students from The Ethiopian Community
    4.2 Haredi Integration Program
    4.3 International Program
    4.4 Cyber Elite
    4.5 Israel’s top-ranked nursing program
    4.6 Israel’s First Master’s Program in Health Informatics
    5 See also
    6 References
    7 External links
    History[edit]
    The college, founded in 1969 by Professor Ze’ev Lev, specializes in high-tech engineering, industrial management and life and health sciences. JCT is particularly known for its electro-optics faculty. The institution is fully accredited by the Council for Higher Education in Israel, the main authority overseeing Israel’s academic institutions. Some 5,000 students are currently enrolled in JCT, with a faculty of over 500 professors, instructors and researchers. The mission of the college is to educate students “who see the synthesis of Jewish values and a profession as their way of life; to provide manpower for Israel’s developing high-tech industry and who will establish industries of their own; to produce industrial leaders strongly committed to Israel, a Jewish way of life, and for the betterment of the Jewish People and the world.”[2] JCT’s goal to bring higher education to under-served communities is most evident in their Program for Students from the Ethiopian Community and Haredi Integration programs.
    JCT has separate campuses for men and women in order to allow the Orthodox and Haredi communities, who comprise the majority of its student body and insist on gender-separated classes to study comfortably.
    JCT is a key driver of women’s empowerment in the science and technology sectors. The college trains 20 percent of Israel’s women engineers. One out of every five Israeli women studying for a BSc in computer science and/or software engineering does so at JCT, and 53 percent of the school’s computer science students are women—18 percent higher than any other Israeli university.[3]
    Branches[edit]
    The Jerusalem College of Technology comprises the following campuses:
    Lev Campus – academic studies combined with yeshiva studies for men. This campus also includes the Naveh program for Haredi men.
    Tal Campus – academic studies combined with midrasha (religious) studies for women. This campus also includes the Tvuna program for Haredi and Hassidic women.
    Lustig Campus – founded in 1999 and geared toward Haredi women.
    Degrees awarded[edit]
    Bachelor of Science[edit]
    Electronic Engineering
    Applied Physics/Electro-Optical Engineering
    Applied Physics/Medical Engineering
    Software Engineering
    Communication Systems Engineering
    Computer science
    Bioinformatics
    Industrial Engineering ? 0 and Marketing
    Nursing (BSN)
    Bachelor of Arts[edit]
    Accounting & Information systems
    Business Administration
    Masters Degree[edit]
    (M.B.A.) – Business Administration
    (M.Sc) – Telecommunications Systems Engineering
    (M.Sc) – Physics/Electro-Optical Engineering
    (MSN) – Nursing
    Special Programs[edit]
    The Reuven Surkis Program for Students from The Ethiopian Community[edit]
    JCT was the pioneer among Israel’s leading institutions of higher education in advancing the integration of Ethiopian immigrants. The Reuven Surkis Program for Students from The Ethiopian Community [4] consists of a preparatory year program (Mechina)and a full degree program; most of the students studying in the full degree program participated first in the preparatory year program. The Reuven Surkis Program has produced 158 graduates, with a 97 percent employment rate.
    Haredi Integration Program[edit]
    The Center for Advancement of Haredim at JCT encourages Haredi men and women to pursue academic careers and consists, much like the program for the Ethiopian community of a preparatory year program (Mechina) and a full degree program. The Haredi Integration program has graduated thousands. There are currently more than 2,000 Haredi men and women studying towards degrees at JCT. According to Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics, about 50 percent of Haredi men in the country were employed by the end of 2017.[5] JCT’s Haredi graduates have attained an 89-percent employment rate, including 77 percent that are employed in their field of choice.[6] Among the 1,000 Israeli Haredim who studied computer science in 2017, two-thirds of them studied at JCT.[7]
    International Program[edit]
    The International Program in English[8] at JCT allows students from around the world to learn religious studies at JCT or with rabbis in other yeshivot in the Jerusalem area, while also providing them with the opportunity to obtain a prestigious academic degree.[9] It is a three-year-long program with majors in Computer Science, and Business Administration.
    Cyber Elite[edit]
    JCT’s Cyber Elite program[10] provides intensive cyber training to outstanding graduates of the college’s degrees in software engineering and computer science, while simultaneously placing them in cyber departments of multinational, aerospace and defense companies, and in cyber startups. This opens up the cyber field to the Haredi community and to others who previously experience difficulty attaining cyber positions because they were not represented in cyber units within the Israel Defense Forces.
    Israel’s top-ranked nursing program[edit]
    JCT’s BSN (bachelor’s of nursing) program in nursing accounts for 20 percent of all nursing students in Israel. The college’s Nursing Department[11] was awarded (2018) the Israeli Ministry of Health’s National Prize for Excellence,[12] ranking first among 24 departments nationwide in all measured criteria.
    JCT’s nursing graduates have a pass rate of virtually 100 percent every year on the national accreditation exams— and the highest average scores as well. There are currently over 1,000 students studying towards degrees in nursing at JCT. Among them are 460 Haredim, 180 new immigrants, and 34 Ethiopian-Israelis. The nursing faculty at JCT has producing more than 500 graduates in the 11 years since its founding. It now produces over 200 graduates annually.
    Israel’s First Master’s Program in Health Informatics[edit]
    JCT’s Nursing Department is launching Israel’s first master’s degree program in the growing field of Health Informatics, which focuses on managing and analyzing data to support the best clinical decisions and treatment for patients. Health informatics utilizes the study and application of clinical information and computer science to design and deploy effective technologies that support the delivery of health care services and improve information management.
    JCT’s health informatics program is open to registered nurses with a bachelor’s degree and was developed with the assistance of the University of Toronto’s Institute of Health Policy, Management and Evaluation,[13] in addition to the support of the Canadian Friends of JCT. The certificate program that ran this year as a prelude to opening the MSc programt completed its studies in April (2018), just as Israel’s Council for Higher Education approved the Master of Health Informatics degree for the 2018-2019 academic year. The partnership between JCT and U of T was facilitated by Professor Judith Shamian, past president of the International Council of Nurses and a member of JCT’s board of trustees.[14]

  15. The
    Haredi College of Jerusalem

    “?? ? ? ??? ???? ,???? ?? ?? ?? ?? ???”
    “The more schooling,
    the more wisdom”
    ???? ???? ??? ?‘ ???? ?‘
    Ethics of the Fathers, Chap. 2, Mishna 7
    ??the haredi college
    • The first academic institution in Israel specifically for the Haredi public.
    • Has gained an outstanding reputation over the past 10 years.
    • Currently enrolls 1,421 men and women students.
    • In 5 years student body expected to reach 2,650.
    • Each year it graduates hundreds of men and women.
    • Holds courses in conjunction with leading universities and colleges.
    • Courses authorized and budgets allocated by the Council of Higher Education (CHE).
    “ The Haredi College is of great benefit to Torah scholars.”
    Rabbi Ovadia Yosef
    Former Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel
    Courses of Study
    Degree Track
    Under the auspices of Bar Ilan University Social Work
    Social Sciences
    Education
    Music Therapy
    Educational Counseling
    Logistics and Economics Communications and Political Science
    Under the auspices of Ben-Gurion University of the Negev
    Psychology
    Clinical / Educational Psychology Conflict Management and Resolution
    Under the auspices of Hadassah Academic College Jerusalem
    Computer Science
    Medical System / Human Resources Management Communications Disabilities (clinical)
    Medical Laboratory Sciences
    For Degree
    Men, Women
    Women B.A. Women B.A. Women M.A. Men, Women M.A. Men B.A. Men B.A.
    Women B.A. Women M.A. Women M.A.
    Men B.A. Men, Women B.A. Women B.A. Women B.A.
    B.A., M.A.

    Ovadia Yosef
    Rishon Lezion
    And President of Torah Sages Council
    Jerusalem, 29 Tishrei, 5771 (October 31, 2011)
    Among the tribes of Israel, I am greatly blessed to faithfully inform you of the activities of the Haredi College, in our holy city of Jerusalem (which shall shortly be rebuilt in our times, Amen). At the college, students learn, in an academic setting, for various professions and receive an appropriate degree so that work in their blessed and needed communities and in the general economy.
    My beloved and blessed daughter, who comes from a holy home, Mrs. Adina Bar Shalom, heads the Haredi College. She manages the college in the holy spirit of the people of Israel, and with the blessings of God-fearing Rabbinical figures and Torah scholars. God desires it to succeed.
    Now, I call from the depths of my heart that the Haredi College is in desperate need of assistance so that they can continue their blessed activities, to grow and enhance our great and important Torah.
    I therefore issue a holy call to help God and beseech you to support this important college that is working to build a new campus and needs to strengthen its students who cannot afford to study by awarding scholarship funds for their studies and for their additional needs.
    The Jerusalem Foundation has joined with my daughter and has spearheaded efforts to raise funds for the Haredi College for its new campus where thousands of men and women will learn for their academic degrees. Mr. Arie Zehavi will lead this project on behalf of the Jerusalem Foundation in your country and I would be grateful if you could assist him in this assignment.
    With Torah blessings.
    Rav Ovadiah Yosef
    Rishon L’Zion
    President of the Torah Sages Council
    ??????“A person should always teach his son a clean and useful trade, and pray to the one to whom
    all wealth and assets belong.“ Talmud, Tractate Kiddushin 82
    “????? ???? ??? ???? ?????? ???? ???? ????? ????? ??? ?????? ??????? ??? ???? ????? ?? ??????? ????
    ?????? ?? ??????? ??? ??? ?????? ???” ?????? ?”?
    ????
    For illustration purposes only
    Who bene ts?
    • 30% of the Jewish population in Jerusalem identifies as Haredi.
    • Jerusalem has the largest Haredi population in Israel, about 152,000.
    • The Haredi community is Jerusalem’s largest Jewish community living under the poverty line.
    • Haredi participation in the work force is much lower than non-Haredi average in Jerusalem.
    • Despite poverty, Haredi men have great employment potential, tending to be well- educated and well-disciplined.

    ??Why?
    Unique needs:
    “?? ? ? ? ??? ????? ?? ?? ??, ??????????? ????? ?? ??? ? ?? ?? ??.”
    “He who learns for the sake of learning, will learn and teach. But those who learn for the sake of action, will be able to learn, teach and do.”
    ???? ???? ??? ?‘ ???? ?‘
    Ethics of the Fathers, Chap. 4, Mishna 5
    • Conditions in regular universities (mixed classes, immodest dress, subject matter) are often not suited to Haredi students.
    • Incoming Haredi students lack secular knowledge required for ‘regular’ universities; the Haredi College successfully bridges these gaps.
    Growing potential student body:
    • Between 2001 – 2010, the number of Haredi students in Israel rose from 2,000 to 6,0001 most in pre-professional disciplines.
    • More and more men are choosing vocational study after Yeshiva studies.
    • The Haredi population is expected to reach 17% of general population in Israel in next 20 years
    (today it is 8%).
    Today, the College’s space is rented and not sufficient to meet the needs of its students and faculty. We seek to build a permanent campus for the Haredi College.
    1 Bank of Israel press release, published 27 March 2011
    ??

    Rabbanit Adina Bar Shalom
    Rabbanit Adina Bar Shalom, CEO of the Haredi College of Jerusalem, is today one of Israel’s most influential voices in the ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) community.
    After raising a family, Adina was frustrated by the many smart and talented Haredi men and women who could not find employment because they lacked education. To Adina, the key to economic independence is education.
    Her original idea was to enable Haredi women to secure an accredited college education. Adina then sought the advice of her father Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, spiritual leader of the Shas Party and former Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel. The Rabbi gave his blessing on one condition – that his daughter lead the institution. Thus, the Haredi College was born. Starting with a handful of young women, the College now has more than a thousand students, men and women, with 96% of graduates securing employment.
    Her resounding success has made her a leader in Israeli society. She serves on the Boards of Directors of: Yachad Council which promotes reconciliation between secular, religious and Haredi sectors; Jerusalem Business Development Center; Association for the Advancement of Education. She is also a member of the Prime Minister’s National Economic Council.
    Adina is an Honorary Fellow of Ruppin College and the Interdisciplinary Center at Herzliya. She will soon be awarded an Honorary Doctorate at Ben Gurion University for her outstanding contribution to Israeli society. Indeed, her contribution to Israeli society has only just begun.
    For illustration purposes only
    “Whoever helps (the
    Haredi College), it is
    as if they are studying
    Torah day and night.”
    Rabbi Ovadia Yosef
    Former Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel
    Where?
    The campus will sit on an 8-dunam (2 acres – 8,000 m2) lot on the western edge of Jerusalem, between the neighborhoods of Givat Shaul and Har Nof. It will include several buildings upon completion and will be suitable for 4,000 male and female students, to study separately.
    It will include:
    • Entrance Halls (separate entrance halls for men and women)
    • Classrooms
    • Lecture halls
    • Seminar Rooms
    • Library
    • Computer laboratories
    • Cafeteria
    • Synagogue
    • Day care center – for all hours of the day
    How to help?
    Naming opportunities are available for the following donations:
    Wall of Friends
    Wall of Honor Seminar Room* Classroom* Computer Laboratory President’s Office Small Lecture Hall* Handicapped Access Cafeteria
    Day Care Center Large Lecture Hall Entrance Hall, men Entrance Hall, women Library
    Building Synagogue
    $18,000 $36,000 $60,000
    $120,000 $180,000 $180,000 $200,000 $300,000 $360,000 $360,000 $500,000 $500,000 $500,000 $1 million $3 million
    * We anticipate a need for several classrooms, seminar rooms and lecture halls, and more than one building.
    For illustration purposes only
    The Jerusalem Foundation and the Haredi College
    The Jerusalem Foundation was established in 1966 by then Mayor Teddy Kollek, with a mission to create an open, equitable and modern society in Jerusalem. The Foundation has left its imprint on nearly every corner of the city, with nearly 4000 projects to its name. The Jerusalem Foundation envisions a vibrant, modern, flourishing city, rich with culture, economic vitality and strong, caring communities for all its residents. We seek to create a society that responds to the needs of all its residents, which includes empowering the growing Haredi community in the city.
    Recognizing that only through higher education will Jerusalem’s ultra-Orthodox population be able to make a decent living and improve employment opportunities, the Jerusalem Foundation decided to take the initiative to enable the establishment of a new campus for the Haredi College of Jerusalem. The Foundation believes that the Haredi College is critical to the community’s socioeconomic prosperity, which will narrow existing gaps with the general population.
    The Jerusalem Foundation has taken upon itself the task of building the new college campus with friends from Israel and around the Jewish world. In doing so, the Jerusalem Foundation rededicates itself to all the residents of the city.
    To find the Jerusalem Foundation’s offices nearest you,
    visit: http://www.jerusalemfoundation.org, or email info@jfjlm.org
    Graphic design: Studio Sketch
    The Haredi College The numbers behind the story
    A Few Words About
    the Population of Jerusalem
    Jerusalem, the capital city of Israel, is the largest city in the country. Jerusalem is a religious and spiritual center for the three monotheistic religions and has been the focus of Jewish life since ancient times. The city is home to higher education and research institutions of world renown.
    A few statistics as of the end of 2011:
    • Jerusalem’s population numbers 801,000 residents: 63% Jewish and 36.5% Arab (Muslim and Christian).
    • The city’s population is young, with a relatively high percentage of children (34% of the population is less
    than 14 years old) and a relatively low percentage of seniors (8% aged 65 and up).
    • A survey conducted by Israel’s Central Bureau of Statistics from 2008 to 2010 indicates that the percentage of Jews over the age 20 in Jerusalem who identified themselves as Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) was the highest among Israel’s large cities (29%, compared to only 2% in Tel Aviv or 8% nationwide).
    • Fertility rates in Jerusalem are high (an average of 4 children per family, compared to 3 per family nationwide). Haredi families have an average of 7.5 children.
    • TheHaredipopulationofmetropolitanJerusalemisexpectedtoreach300,000bytheyear2020.
    • The Haredi population growth rate greatly exceeds that of the non-Haredi Jewish population.
    • The high birth rate and low workforce participation in the Haredi sector are the main reasons that Haredim are the city’s largest Jewish community living below the poverty line.
    • In the 2011/12 school year, 58,900 pupils attended Jerusalem’s Hebrew-language state schools and religious state schools (38% of all Jewish 1st to 12th graders) and 95,700 pupils attended Haredi educational institutions (62% of all Jewish pupils) that are recognized by the Ministry of Education.
    *Sources listed on back of Architects page
    The Haredi College The numbers behind the story
    The Haredi community and the Higher Education System
    Recent years have witnessed sweeping change among the Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) population, in which more graduates of the Haredi education system are turning to academic studies. The reasons are varied,
    beginning with the socioeconomic distress of families, pressing them to secure a profession and gain economic independence. Moreover, contemporary reality increasingly demands academic credentials as a prerequisite to entering the job market.
    A few statistics:
    • In 1999, the Council for Higher Education devised a five-year plan to develop academic frameworks for the Haredi community.
    • The Council’s declared goal (according to Council Chairman Prof. Manuel Trajtenberg at the Council for Higher Education’s 2011 annual leadership conference in Jerusalem) is the integration of Haredim into the higher education system, with 10,000 Haredim registered by 2016.
    • Cultural differences prevent universities in Israel from responding to the unique morés of the Haredi sector (dress, mixed classrooms, etc.)
    • There has been a dramatic rise in the number of Haredi students (men and women) studying in programs geared to the Haredi sector in recent years, tripling the number of students from 2,000 in 2005 to 6,000 in 2010.
    • The number of Haredi men pursuing an academic education rose from just a few hundred in 2005 to around 2,500 in 2010.
    • A bit less than half of all Haredi students are men.
    • Most male Haredi students come from distressed socioeconomic backgrounds, and embarking on
    academic studies is primarily financially motivated.
    • Over 90% of Haredi students study subjects with a strong vocational orientation, enabling entry into the workforce.
    Haredi Students Overcoming Barriers
    • Haredi students are generally older than other students, especially men, due to years spent in Yeshiva (Talmud-Torah academies) or Kolel (Yeshiva for married men, usually paying a stipend). They also tend to already have children with limited time to invest in academic studies.
    • The fact that most Haredi students have families to support leaves them little means to finance academic studies.
    • For male Haredi students to begin academic studies, they must waive their Talmud-Torah study stipends, making it a more difficult decision.
    • A knowledge gap exists between the Haredi and general populations, primarily in the areas of science, English, mathematics and learning skills for academic study. Thus, for example, about 40% of all Haredi report they have no grasp of English, which is a significant obstacle to higher education.
    • The Haredi cultural environment does not encourage academic studies.
    Employment
    The Haredi College The numbers behind the story
    Israel’s Haredi community has been characterized as a “learning community”, with Torah studies manifesting the major life focus, taught over many years (over 16 years of study). However, Torah studies lack practical value in the Israeli job market. In Israel, a relatively small portion of Haredi work for a living, causing a growing dependency of Haredi households on Israeli society in general, and on the public social welfare system in particular. For various reasons, recent years have seen a process of change among the Haredi regarding academic studies and employment.
    A few statistics:
    • The Haredi portion of the working-age population of Israel is expected to reach 17% within twenty years.
    • The Haredi sector, particularly men, is characterized by a very low labor force participation rate, and low
    employment rates.
    • About 38% of all Jerusalem families were living beneath the poverty line in 2010.
    • Thereisapositivestatisticalcorrelationbetweenthelaborforceparticipationrateandeducationlevels:the more years of education, the higher the labor force participation rate.
    • Accordingtofiguresfrom2008to2010,thelaborforceparticipationrateamongnon-Haredimaged20and up in Jerusalem stood at 66%, while in contrast the labor force participation rate among Haredim of the same age stood at 44%.
    • The more Haredi men gain employment-directed education, the higher their salaries will be from those jobs, relative to alternative sources of income outside the labor market (government allowances or unemployment insurance).
    • Recent years have seen a change in Haredi behavior as it relates to integration into the job market.
    • The data from the labor force surveys points to a constant and significant increase in the employment
    rate of Haredi women.
    • The state has taken several steps to motivate the Haredi population to enter the workforce, including professional training and placement, stipends for academic studies and employment support. As a corollary, the state has reduced child allowances, benefits and support for married Yeshiva students, placing further pressure on the families to seek employment.
    • The employment rate of Haredim with higher education (over 70%) is significantly higher than among the overall Haredi population (40%).
    • Haredim with higher education find higher quality employment and receive better wages than Haredim lacking higher education.
    *Sources listed on back of Architects page
    The Haredi College The numbers behind the story
    The Haredi College of Jerusalem
    The Haredi public actively seeks educational frameworks that can respond to its special needs. Existing frameworks are not equipped to respond to needs stemming from the sector’s special characteristics. As such, there is a need for academic frameworks specifically for the Haredi population.
    Establishment and Founders
    In 2001, the first Haredi College was established by Rabbanit Adina Bar-Shalom, the daughter of Rabbi Ovadia Yosef, the former Sephardic Chief Rabbi of Israel and spiritual leader of the Shas political party. It was at first intended only for women and in recent years the college has also conducted separate programs for men.
    The College was attended by 982 students in 2010-11 (684 women and 298 men), and 1,192 attended in 2011 -12 (833 women and 359 men). In the fall of 2012 there are 1,421 students enrolled. In 2017 – 18, 2,600 students (1,600 women and 1,000 men) are expected.
    The College has 13 academic departments, in which men and women study separately.
    The College is sanctioned by the Council for Higher Education, receives government funding and maintains close academic contact with various universities and colleges in Israel.
    The College developed an array of supportive programs in various fields in order to facilitate the studies of Haredi students. This includes:
    • Personal Accompaniment and Support. There are significant knowledge gaps in English, mathematics and science, hindering integration in academic studies. Students receive academic assistance and professional, individual instruction to facilitate the transition from Yeshiva to academic learning. A pre-academic preparatory program is also offered to enable students to close gaps.
    • Guidance and Job Placement. Graduates of the College have high-level professional skills, but lack experience in choosing specific occupational paths and finding jobs. The College provides career guidance and helps secure employment after graduation. 96% of all graduates find job placements.
    • Daycare and Babysitting Services. Many students are married with children and therefore require support services enabling them to study. The College has a small nursery, but this service must be expanded in order to respond to increasing need as the number of students grows.
    • Computers and Library Services. Most students lack computers at home. The College’s goal is to provide students with computers linked to the college’s computer network. Likewise, the College must acquire twice as many books and texts so that men and women can read them separately and simultaneously at any given time.
    The Haredi College The numbers behind the story

    Sources
    The Haredi College The numbers behind the story
    1. Figures taken from: Jerusalem Facts and Trends 2012, the Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies (JIIS): http://www.jiis.org
    2. The Ultra-Orthodox: Fearing for Their Future, 2008, the Jerusalem Institute for Israel Studies: http://www.jiis.org/.upload/publications/haredim.pdf
    3. “The Ultra-Orthodox to Academia: A Position Paper On Academic Studies In the Haredi Community” [Hebrew], the National Union of Israeli Students: http://www.
    nuis.co.il/wp-content/uploads/2012/05
    4. “Education and Employment in the Ultra-Orthodox Population“, Bank of Israel press release, March 30, 2011: http://www.bankisrael.gov.il/press/
    eng/110327/110327d.doc

  16. I won’t say that the author of this article lies outright. But he certainly does a lot of malicious cherry-picking of facts. In fact, the haredi community has in recent years been sponsoring and financing secular, employment-oriented colleges for its young men and women. For example,

    The Haredi Campus – The Academic College Ono
    From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

    Ono Academic College
    ?????? ????? – ????? ??????? ????
    Ono Academic College – Haredi Campus.JPG
    Type Private
    Established 2001
    Chairman Rabbi Ychezkel Fogel
    Dean D.R. Eyul Maose
    Students Close to 3,000[1]
    Location Or Yehuda, Israel
    Website http://www.ono.ac.il
    The Haredi Campus – Ono Academic College (Hebrew: ?????? ????? – ????? ??????? ?????, romanized: Ha’kampus Ha’charedi – Ha’kiryah Ha’akademit Ono) is a satellite campus of Ono Academic College, specifically intended for haredi Jews. It is the largest haredi college in Israel, with an undergraduate population of nearly 3,000. It is also the only haredi college that offers courses in Legal Studies.
    The main haredi Campus is in Or Yehuda, and there is an extension in Jerusalem.
    The Haredi Campus – Ono Academic College was the first college for haredim in Israel. The college was established in 2001 by Renan Hartman. In 2003, Rabbi Yehezkel Fogel was appointed chairman of the campus.

    Contents
    1 Study tracks
    2 Campus features
    3 Important events in the history of the campus
    4 References
    Study tracks[edit]
    Program tracks include first degrees in the following subjects: Law (. LL.B), Business Management (. BA, with specializations in accounting, information systems analysis, finance and capital markets, and marketing and management), Occupational Therapy (BOT), communication disorders (. BA), and advertising and marketing communications.

  17. I know I’ll be shouted down for even suggesting this, but unfortunately Israel is a pure democracy so it would not be acceptable to permit the Haredim to vote ONLY if they comply with the suggestions in this article, OR ONLY if they (or as long as one spouse) pays Israeli income taxes. That might get them off their collective tochases. It might even get more voters for Likud who want strong security for Israel but are turned off by the necessary concessions that must be made to provide Likud a majority.

  18. The problem with Israel’s electoral system is Proportional Representation.

    Without First Past the Post, there’s never a clear majority. Thus, to govern, a lot of backroom negotiation with the fringe parties has to occur so that a coalition with sufficient number of seats can be assembled to rule.

    The horse trading necessary to do that means that the more maniacal Behatted parties, who’d otherwise be ignored by a sane electorate and relegated to a seat or two in the Knesset at most must instead be courted/wooed so they’ll throw their lot in with the party trying to govern. And THAT means as usual their most imbecilic and dearly held beliefs will again as usual be over-valuable bargaining chips.

    Thus it’s the religious fanatics who can influence state policy as a consequence, forcing the implementation of moronic rules on an essentially secular society that no sensible person would countenance were the Nutcase Parties not so vital.

    Scrupulous fairness actually enables insanity.

  19. I just took a quick scan of this article. In the final paragraph it says haredi are suing i guess the u s or n y gov. of not providing equal level of secular studies for all children. Is this the gov. fault.? Or the haredis for not allowing secular education into their schools.
    A local rabbi’s 13 year old son was sent to yashiva in Michigan for higher education of what type I don’t know . The current local rabbi’s 2 older sons receive education via the internet they are aged about 6 and 8, speak English, Yiddish and learn Torah in hebrew. So will they learn a trade, guess it’s somewhat the responsibility of the family in the end. Guess they won’t go to local high school as from what I see today the standards seem to be somewhat lacking. We know in Israel many orthodox Jews are in professions and are well educated.