Arad Residents Fume After New Gerer Owners Of Local Mall Take Down All Female Images

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    JERUSALEM (VINnews) — The city of Arad in Southern Israel has been embroiled in controversy after the local mall, the only one in the city, was purchased by two Gerer chasidim, who are trying to make sweeping changes in the mall, including closing it on Shabbat and removing all pictures of females. Secular residents of the town are fuming over the proposed changes, saying that this is an attempt to destroy the character of the town and create charedi domination in the mixed town of 30,000 residents.

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    “The Mayor, Mr. Yair Maayan, informed me that in recent days an instruction was issued on your behalf to remove images of women or any female representation from all commercial areas of the mall,” the legal adviser of the Municipality of Arad wrote this week in a letter to the new management of the city’s mall.

    The letter was sent after the mall was transferred to the new chasidic owners. Following the transfer, the Israeli flag was removed from the building’s entrance, the background music played in the mall was changed, and advertisements containing images of women were taken down at the management’s instruction.

    “At the outset, I emphasize that this is a grave, improper, and unlawful directive, one that the municipality will not ignore. This instruction directly harms human dignity, gender equality, and the fabric of public life in the State of Israel in general, and in Arad in particular, which is a secular and liberal city,” wrote attorney Haim Shiman, the municipality’s legal adviser.

    The transfer of the Arad mall into the hands of the Gerer chasidim is seen as another chapter in the city’s ongoing religious transformation. This follows the recent allocation of extensive construction areas for charedi neighborhoods, as reported several weeks ago in Maariv, as well as the transfer of public buildings to leaders of the chasidic community.

    These developments sparked considerable anger among residents outside the community, and reactions on social media quickly followed. “Arad, the writing is on the wall,” an anonymous resident wrote on Facebook.Another resident posted a drawing depicting a sign that read: “This road leads to an area under charedi control. Entry for soldiers is forbidden and endangers your lives.” The post was captioned: “Coming very soon to Arad, courtesy of the bulldozer backing them.”

    One anonymous commenter wrote: “The demand to remove images of women is illegal. Any business that cooperates with the greed-driven demands of this draft-dodging sect and removes such images automatically loses me as a customer.”

    Former mayor Nisan Ben Hamo harshly criticized the current leadership: “The mayor sold us out to Gur, that’s a fact. We must save our city. He formed a coalition with them over the heads of the secular residents, handed them all the key positions, and now he complains?”

    According to Ben Hamo, residents have begun protest actions: “We are fighting. There have already been demonstrations and other protests. For two years now, residents have been struggling. The mayor was not even an Arad resident, he moved here just three months before the elections to meet eligibility rules. Today, residents are extremely angry.”

    Former deputy mayor Maxim Okanin expressed a more conciliatory view: “Arad is a city of diverse communities, and that is part of its strength. Property rights are fundamental, but Israeli law is clear: there is no place for the exclusion of women or harm to public rights in a commercial space open to all.”

    “The challenge in Arad is not to defeat one another, but to learn to live together : to recognize, respect, speak a shared language, and avoid coercion from any side. The city’s future success lies in maintaining the balance between individual rights and the shared public sphere. Live and let live, Arad must remain a home for everyone.”

    Mayor Yair Maayan responded firmly to the developments at the mall: “The municipality views with severity any attempt by the mall’s new owners to alter its character and exclude women from the public space.” According to him, the municipality sent a warning letter to the mall’s management demanding that all measures taken be revoked. “If the violations do not cease, the municipality will act to close the mall immediately.”

    Some residents expressed pessimism regarding the city’s future. Local resident Shlomi Tabachnik said: “We are heading toward disaster, and it’s not just Arad, it’s the whole country. I heard the mayor threatened to close the mall. That’s a joke. It’s all talk. What is he actually capable of doing? He has two seats on the city council; they have five. One word from Gur and he’s out of office. By issuing such a statement, he is effectively admitting that the situation is improper. But that’s not all. He brought students to the city, and today several female students traveling by bus were spat on. Arad is in terrible shape.”

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    92 Comments
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    potato head
    potato head
    16 days ago

    Yo that sounds so not democratic and progressive of israeli citizens. if you buy it you own it. duh

    Teshuva
    Teshuva
    15 days ago

    So when it was the other way around it was ok ? Why ?

    I own it I do as I please. U don’t like it. Don’t come.

    Stupid liberal left.

    Daas torah
    Daas torah
    15 days ago

    I’m shocked you have rights over something you own?

    Independent
    Independent
    15 days ago

    All images should be removed. Removing images of women results in men being considered the “default person.” This can result in bias against women.

    Zehava
    Zehava
    15 days ago

    YAY. KOL HAKAVOD!!!! Good news. HATZLACHA

    Alta Bubby
    Alta Bubby
    14 days ago

    What do we need wonens pics up for.

    thank you for your attention in this matter
    thank you for your attention in this matter
    15 days ago

    Owners are free to as they please on their biz. Can’t compromise on Shabbos, that defines Yahadut at it’s core. As far as the women ads, can shops sell non-tziunus clothes? Allow scantly-clad female customers? Where do you draw the line??

    If I’m the new owner, the most I’d to is create a frum mall section for frum customers / glatt businesses for truly concerned being nichshal – since I’d want foot traffic from everyone to keep my shop tenants happily there.

    lazy-boy
    lazy-boy
    15 days ago

    It is their private business and should be able to do as they like.

    Religious profiling and discrimination
    Religious profiling and discrimination
    13 days ago

    “in Arad in particular, which is a secular and liberal city,” wrote attorney Haim Shiman, the municipality’s legal adviser. ” Declaring a city to be religious or not religious is in contradiction with Freedom of Religion , Separation of religion and state. If secular Israelis are such big fans of imitating USA, then they should follow First Amendment of US Constitution

    The Silent Majority
    The Silent Majority
    11 days ago

    If this would be a brand new mall, then the other comments about owner’s rights would be valid. However, since this is the largest mall in town with existing businesses who rely on long standing repeat customers, its morally wrong to negatively impact their business and change the customer demographics because the mall now has new owners. Also, putting chilul shabbos in the same category as women’s pictures is just like the snake putting eating from the tree in the same category as touching the tree.

    Ugh
    Ugh
    10 days ago

    Hope they don’t up men’s pictures in the nail salon.

    frumguy
    frumguy
    10 days ago

    THEY DIT THE RIGHT THING! KEEP IT UP GERERS! I HOPE THEY DO IT IN TEL AVIV TOO!

    Straight Up
    Straight Up
    16 days ago

    I’m actually torn here. On the one hand this is private property and the owners are making a business decision. If these changes insult you to such a degree, then stop shopping there. If you and the other non gerrer band together to boycott, who knows… Protest with your wallets.
    On the other hand, don’t come into an established town and radically change a way of life. Start your own town and build it as you see fit (ie beitar ilit).
    I can’t imagine that these are Rav Shaul’s chevra.

    The Silent Majority
    The Silent Majority
    16 days ago

    All those who claim that they oppose the “shmad” IDF draft but then support this ugliness are hypocritical. Thousands of Jewish girls have gone OTD because of these fake chumras, zero to do with the IDF. And when a Jewish girl goes OTD, there goes generations of Jewish souls – the loss is immeasurably greater than with a boy. If you truly care about Torah, you would care about these thousands of lost girls.

    Education
    Education
    15 days ago

    It’s hard to say:

    שיהא שם שמים מתיהב על ידך

    That’s all I’m saying. When this would be the case — maybe we’d have more people more sensitive to Hareidi.

    It’s not a quick fix but something to look into.

    Moshe
    Moshe
    16 days ago

    If you read between the lines
    They are allowed to put up the pictures of. Hillary Clinton, Ilan Omar, Nancy Pellosi, otc,Golda Meir and that congresswoman wig head from California

    NoMan
    NoMan
    16 days ago

    חרדיות לא יהדות!
    זייפו תורתם

    Chaim2
    Chaim2
    16 days ago

    why do religious fanatics have the right to dictate anything to the public at large.?And “because they own it” is not an answer. It’s akin to having a mall here publicly refuse to post images of minorities