NYTimes | The coronavirus has hit the Hasidic Jewish community in the New York
area with devastating force, killing influential religious leaders and
tearing through large, tight-knit families at a rate that community
leaders and some public health data suggest may exceed that of other
ethnic or religious groups.
The city does not track deaths by religion, but Hasidic news media report that roughly 700 members of the community in the New York area have died from Covid-19, the disease caused by the virus.
Borough
Park is a leafy neighborhood of low-rise buildings and small businesses
like the kosher bakeries and Judaica shops on Raoul Wallenberg Way that
cater to the local Hasidic population. More than 6,000 people there
have tested positive for the virus, with one of the neighborhood’s ZIP
codes being the city’s fifth most heavily affected, according to data
released by the city.
Other
neighborhoods with large Hasidic populations, like South Williamsburg
and Crown Heights, have some of the city’s highest levels of positive
Covid-19 test results, the data show.
Hasidic
groups say they prepared for the pandemic — for example, making
decisions on the closure of schools and events — by taking their cues
from the state and federal authorities, whose response to the crisis has
been at times halting and inconsistent.
But
community leaders say Hasidic enclaves in New York were also left
vulnerable to the coronavirus by a range of social factors, including
high levels of poverty, a reliance on religious leaders who were in some
cases slow to act and the insular nature of Hasidic society, which
harbors a distrust of secular authorities that is born of a troubled
history.
That
distrust has manifested itself in ways that have risked spreading the
virus and have drawn the attention of law enforcement, which in recent
weeks has been called to disperse crowds at events like weddings and
funerals in Hasidic areas of Brooklyn, upstate New York and New Jersey.
That, in turn, has led to concerns over anti-Semitism in places like Rockland County, which has one of the highest per capita infection rates in the nation and was also the site of an anti-Semitic attack in December that killed one Hasidic Jew and injured four others.
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