Charedi rabbi claims: ‘Israel worse than Nazis over gender segregated buses’
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Charedi rabbi claims: ‘Israel worse than Nazis over gender segregated buses’

Prominent rabbi in the right-wing United Torah Judaism party, Rabbi Aviezer Piltz says Israel is worse than the Nazis as it won't separate men and women

A Dan bus labelled mehadrin, which served the ultra-Orthodox neighbourhoods in the city of Bnei Brak. Photo taken in January 2006. (Wikimedia/קהילות יעקב)
A Dan bus labelled mehadrin, which served the ultra-Orthodox neighbourhoods in the city of Bnei Brak. Photo taken in January 2006. (Wikimedia/קהילות יעקב)

When it comes to the issue of gender separation on buses, Israel is worse than the Nazis, a leader of a Charedi political party in Israel said at a campaign rally.

Rabbi Aviezer Piltz, who is prominent in the right-wing United Torah Judaism party, and heads a yeshiva in southern Israel, criticised Israel for not allowing gender separation on buses.

“Start to organise, to ride separately,” he said at the event Saturday night in the Charedi enclave of Bnei Brak. “It’s forbidden to travel on gender-separate buses. Is there a state in the world where they don’t allow [gender] separation on buses? Apart from this country, here they don’t allow it. This is a state of idol worship. Even the Nazis, may their names be erased, knew that there should be separate living quarters for men and women.”

His remarks were first carried by the Hebrew-language news website Maariv.

Israel’s Supreme Court ruled in 2011 that gender separation on public buses is illegal. Private bus services can have separate seating and there are such bus services running between Charedi communities.

United Torah Judaism is part of a Charedi bloc with Agudat Israel and Degel HaTorah for the April 9 elections that could be part of the government coalition whether Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu or Benny Gantz of the Blue and White party emerges as the winner.

Holocaust scholar Efrain Zuroff, director of the Israel office of the Simon Wiesenthal Centre, told The Jerusalem Post that Piltz’s comments were “unfortunate.”

“I’m hoping that he didn’t really want to convey a message that Israeli society is worse than the Nazis,” Zuroff said. “That a rosh yeshiva could say something like that is shocking and unacceptable. The honourable rabbi should apologise for this comment, which at least would be a constructive step.”

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