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Friday, February 27, 2009

Orthodox, secular Jews wage Facebook war 



Jewish students at the University of California, Berkeley, recently clashed over insensitive advertising for a Hillel-sponsored Valentine's Day event. The ad, which labeled a newlywed Orthodox couple as "scary," was originally posted on the Facebook social networking Web site, and generated a heated response.

Hillel was attempting to attract students to a "speed friending" event in honor of the holiday. It was based on speed dating, a structured matchmaking process in which one meets many members of the opposite sex in a short period of time.

The ad, a Hillel staff member explained, was meant to poke fun at more traditional kinds of matchmaking. But some were not amused.

One Orthodox Jew sarcastically referred to the ad in a Facebook post: "Gasp, he has a black hat and a beard; PERHAPS it's his way of clinging to Chasidic religious tradition?"

Another commented, "How dare you? How can you be so insensitive? Are Orthodox couples frightening? Does the couple appear at all threatening?"

A secular student responded that the intention wasn't to paint Orthodox Jews as "scary," but rather the prospect of marriage.

"The caption was intended to convey the message, 'Does the idea of getting married right away seem daunting to you? Don't worry; this is a more light-hearted take on speed dating, playing to the reality that many college students are nowhere near a marriage-minded state of life, just yet, but they still might have fun with this event,'" he wrote.

But that didn't convince the increasingly aggressive commentators.

"This is disgusting and shameful," one wrote. "And this is not the first time Berkeley Hillel has offended the more observant Jewish community."

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satellite?cid=1235410730055&pagename=JPost%2FJPArticle%2FShowFull

Comments:
Isn't this an old pictue of Dovid & Chani Stern approximately 18-20 years ago?

 

So Berkeley Hillel was celebraing SAINT Valentines Day by making fun of the very foundations of Judaism... Marriage. How typical

 

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