Hoping to Better Represent Chasidic Community, Freier Urges Voters to Support Her Supreme Court Bid

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BROOKLYN (VINnews/Sandy Eller) – With Democratic party judicial delegates meeting shortly to fill ten open seats in Kings County Supreme Court, one nominee is calling on Brooklyn’s Chasidic residents to contact their district leaders and advocate for her to be tapped for a seat on the bench.

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Judge Rachel Freier has served on the bench in Brooklyn’s civil court for nearly six years and has been working hard to earn a Supreme Court nomination.

Freier got her long-awaited approval this year from the judicial screening committee, which is presenting a pool of 26 qualified nominees to Brooklyn’s district leaders as potential Supreme Court candidates to fill 10 available spots.

The road to Supreme Court judgeship is one that is relatively unfamiliar to the public.  District leaders vote on a list of approved candidates, with party leaders having the ability to share their input as well as the process unfolds.

The district leaders’ list of nominees is sent to judicial delegates, who can propose their own candidates before the roster of judicial hopefuls that will appear on the ballot in the November elections is finalized.

There are already five Orthodox Jewish judges currently seated on the Kings County Supreme Court representing the broader Charedi population.  But Freier noted that none of them are members of the Chasidic community, the largest segment of Brooklyn’s Jewish population.

“I embrace all Jews, but I do feel that if you are trying to give representation to the Chasidic community, you need to be sensitive to their needs and concerns,” Freier told VIN News.

As a Chasidic Brooklynite, Freier feels confident that she is the most qualified nominee to represent the community’s needs.

She also feels strongly that she brings additional sensitivities to the bench, with her role as a wife, mother, grandmother, daughter and sister giving her a unique ability to understand the complexities and nuance of marriage, divorce, family issues and even learning from past mistakes.

 A July 12th letter sent by Rabbi Aryeh Ralbag to the Kings County Democratic County Committee heartily endorsed Freier for the Supreme Court position as a qualified, accomplished nominee, whose unique vantage point as a Chasidic woman would fill an existing void on the bench.

In addition to being the spiritual leader of Young Israel of Avenue K, chief rabbinical judge of Union of Orthodox Rabbis of USA and Cana, Chief rabbinical judge of The Conference of European Rabbis and Chief Rabbi Emeritus of Amsterdam, Rabbi Ralbag is also an alternate judicial delegate for the Kings County Democratic Party.

Freier’s appeal transcends the Chasidic world. In a recent Jewish Press (www.bit.ly/3Bjqshz) article she spoke about how much she enjoys campaigning throughout Brooklyn’s diverse neighborhoods and building bridges between communities, sharing “traditions and values with people who have questions and may be unfamiliar with our practices.”

With nominees vying for just 10 slots when district leaders meet to narrow down the field on August 2nd, Freier knows that she is fighting an uphill battle.

But this isn’t the first time that Freier has faced difficult odds and she hopes that the community she hails from will fight for show their support for her as the most qualified candidate to represent their needs by calling up the district leaders they voted into office and asking them to support her nomination.

Freier also expressed her full confidence in the district leaders, the Kings County Democratic Committee and its leaders, Assemblywoman Rodneyse Bichotte and Frank Seddio, as the process unfolds in the days ahead.

“I do feel it is time for a Chasidic woman to be on the Supreme Court bench,” said Freier.  “Supreme Court justices can have a profound effect on people’s day to day lives and the average person has the ability to sway the district leaders’ vote.

Call up your district leader and advocate for your choice, in Borough Park, Williamsburg, Sea Gate, Crown Heights, Kensington, Marine Park and Flatbush, because democracy is all about representation.”


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think
think
1 year ago

i Hope she makes it. a true trailblazer, a whirlwind. Very few people have done so much for our community a true Askanis. Everything she did was an uphill battle , she accomplished a lot while facing opposition from some who don’t know better.

anaymous
anaymous
1 year ago

Appointment ot the Kings Coounty Supreme Court should be made on the basis of best qualified not by corupt political left wing hacks.No wonder NYC is in such terrible condition

Pekak
Pekak
1 year ago

A judge does NOT represent any community. A judge is supposed to represent the law.

HeshyEmes
HeshyEmes
1 year ago

Why shouldn’t the Dem leaders do as they please? They know that as long as the Govt spigots are open, the Rebbes who lead the various Chasidic groups, will endorse, approve, & rubber stamp whatever the Dem politicians ask them to.

lipa99
lipa99
1 year ago

this is not a democracy – it is a Socialist party called DemocRATS – we NYers need to have FULL REPRESENTATION of its constituents

chosid in willy
chosid in willy
1 year ago

So far there is NOT 1 Single Chasidic Judge on the Supreme Court, the Chasidim in New York are the biggest bloc-vote who made so many mayors, governors, congressmen win with the power of them voting.

Howcome the chasidim dont get representation on the supreme court, out of 10 vacant seats, not 1 seat goes to put on a chasidic judge ?

Lets see how many of the 10 seats are going to the african-american and hispanic community, why dont the chasidim stand up for their rights to get represntation, the politicans only come to the chasidmi for their votes!

Wondering
Wondering
1 year ago

the Chasidic community, the largest segment of Brooklyn’s Jewish population.”

Does she have statistics to back up that claim?

Triumpinwhitehouse
Triumpinwhitehouse
1 year ago

I’m sure the a$kanim who donated to bichotte will get things right as they have the interests of the community at heart. Maslow is quasi Orthodox at best maybe at young israel type in the 1950s he’s the one who chaired the committee on trans rights. Bichotte is as liberal as they come. Didn’t rabbi ralbag endorse her as did FJCC AND Aguda board members? Don’t they have influence on her?

ah yid
ah yid
1 year ago

Isn’t justice supposed to be blind why do we need such a diverse court? I think for every political office we should have a black, brown, Latino, Asian, woman, progressive, liberal, woke, menuval, Jewish, chasidic, modern orthodox, breslev, Chabad. Did I miss any group?

YitzchokM
YitzchokM
1 year ago

Judith says what?

Triumpinwhitehouse
Triumpinwhitehouse
1 year ago

Does she have david schwartz in her corner?

Enough
Enough
1 year ago

Yes check statical analysis of population on us.gov or NYS.gov. It will give you brakedowns

Shmuel
Shmuel
1 year ago

If she is serious, she should change her name.

FYI
FYI
1 year ago

She went to the “mainstream” Beis Yankev, not the Hasidic versions such as Bnos Zion, Bais Ruchel, Beth Rivkah, Bais Frimah, Tomer Devorah, Bnos Malkah, etc.

Kol kevuda
Kol kevuda
1 year ago

A true baas yisroel does not belong in such a public position. It lacks basic common tznius. A womans role is to be an aim biyisroel.

Libs are crack babies
Libs are crack babies
1 year ago

We’re in galus. Let it go. Make a kiddush hashem in your current position.

Yid
Yid
1 year ago

What has she done so great to deserve this job. She has made a great Chillul Hashem fighting Hatzalah. Who are her volunteers on EN? Does any of the Rabbonim who supposedly endorse her know the facts who her volunteers are? Are they religious or they just have a feminist LBGTQA objective?