
Bnei Brak Set to Implement Gender Segregation on Two Main Streets
The Bnei Brak municipality is working to establish gender-segregated sidewalks inside the largely ultra-Orthodox city. In accordance with a decision by the city's rabbis, Bnei Brak plans to segregate the bustling Shlomo Hamelech and Ezra streets with barriers and signage to prevent men and women from crossing each other's paths. The plan has been in development for several years and is likely to be expanded to other busy streets in the city, municipal officials said.
An official message from the city instructed residents of all ages to abide by the new guidelines. The municipality said the rabbis' instructions are “very clear and speak for themselves,” adding that the city's public, which is committed to obeying the great Torah leaders and heeding their words, will comply with their request. Bnei Brak's roughly 231,000 residents are mainly ultra-Orthodox.
Yael Yechieli, director of the 5050 initiative, which works for gender equality in Israel, decried the move. “Religious leaders want to exclude women from everywhere, and if we don't stop them, it will continue,” she said, noting that only men made the decision at the municipality. “The disaster of segregation must end, and the public needs to fight for it,” she added. The plan proceeds despite a 2017 Supreme Court order requiring the Beit Shemesh municipality to remove “modesty” signs instructing men and women to walk on opposite sides of streets in an ultra-Orthodox neighborhood.
(TOI/VFI News)
"He hath shewed thee, O man, what is good; and what doth the LORD require of thee, but to do justly, and to love mercy, and to walk humbly with thy God?" – Micah 6:8