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Related: Editorials & Other Articles, Issue Forums, Alliance Forums, Region ForumsIsraeli woman refuses ultra-Orthodox dictate to move to back of bus
A woman passenger on a public bus from Ashdod to Jerusalem Friday was told by an ultra-Orthodox male passenger to move to the back of the bus. The man held the door of the bus open and would not allow it to move for approximately 30 minutes.
When other passengers began to complain about the delay, the driver called the police. The policeman who arrived on the scene spoke with the man and then also asked the woman, Tanya Rosenblit, to move to the back of the bus. When she refused, the man who had been holding the door alighted and the bus continued on its way.
Rosenblit, who said she was dressed modestly, was traveling on Egged bus 451 to get to work in Jerusalem. She said a Haredi man, who boarded two stops after she did, refused to allow the driver to close the door after he saw Rosenblit. Rosenblit said the man called her a derogatory word for a non-Jewish woman, and told the driver it was his right to have her sit in the back and that he had paid to be able to do so.
http://www.haaretz.com/print-edition/news/israeli-woman-refuses-ultra-orthodox-dictate-to-move-to-back-of-bus-1.402021
starroute
(12,977 posts)I'm glad that someone is standing up to them.
ellisonz
(27,711 posts)madmom
(9,681 posts)I decided to google the term Haredi to learn a little bit more of the beliefs and customs and found that in New York they post some signs in both Yiddish and English. Now I'm curious, is there as much back lash over this as there is over the signs printed in both Spanish and English?