geek7 wrote: 08 Aug 2017 09:33
А посторонних они тоже вставляют не работать по субботам и запрещают им есть свинину?
вот как посторонних учат уважать чужую религию, традиции:
Ultra-Orthodox Protesters Shatter Bus Windows After Female Passenger Refuses to Sit in Back
geek7 wrote:
Персональные наезды про детские травмы это фирменный ход защитников РПЦ или Ваш личный любимый прием?
ну а какая у меня есть альтернатива?
катить бочку на ВЕСЬ еврейский народ
из-за "одного чудака на букву м"? это некошерно
хотя наш дружок да и вы тоже вполне себе не стесняетесь в нападках на большую,
а может и лучшую часть русского народа,
которая связана с РПЦ.
кстати на счет мракобесия, как вам такая причина для доместик abuse?
American Orthodox Jewish Women and Domestic Violence
The set of Jewish laws that dictates rules of modesty and relations between men and women, Tzniut, includes a relevant prohibition on men listening to the sound of a woman singing. The idea behind this prohibition is that men should not be aroused by, or feel pleasure from, such sounds; therefore, the only exemptions to the singing law are when women are singing to their children or singing songs for the dead – activities considered household necessities (Jachter 2002).
While this law only applies to singing, not speaking, there is an underlying implication that women’s voices have a dangerous quality. Men are warned not to listen to women, for fear that they will be greatly moved or swayed from their course of action. Men are allowed to listen to women speak, but it seems that if women’s voices are to be avoided in one context, they may not be given much respect in another context. The responsibility seems to lie with the women who must not sing around the men, for it will not always be possible for a man to leave the presence of a singing woman. The message to women, then, is that it is their duty to keep quiet in any situation when they might be overheard. Perhaps they will even refrain from singing in situations where they think they are alone, just in case a man was to unexpectedly enter. Orthodox women are thus raised to always be wary of what comes out of their mouth, and who is listening. Silence is safer than making forbidden sounds.