Recently, we paid a visit to the cinema to see a couple of Israeli films centering around the contemporary haredi world, thinking that they might take us away from the mayhem that surrounds us every day and night. Maybe we were being optimistic.

The first film was Pink Lady, written by a Mindi Ehrlich and directed by Nir Bergman. He was one of Ehrlich’s teachers at the Sam Spiegel Film School in Jerusalem. The film explores the more hidden aspects of the haredi world in Jerusalem, namely homosexuality, sexuality in general, and the violence that is generated in the closed world of fanatically religious Jews, to which I have termed with a neologism, superdox. The film was chosen to represent the country in a number of international competitions.

Pink Lady centers on the family of Bati and Lazer and their three young children who are residents of the superdox Mea She’arim neighborhood in Jerusalem. Lazer works and studies in a yeshiva with regular partners, when he is not in his workshop. Bati is a supervisor at a local mikveh. But then comes the catastrophe: Lazer is attacked and wounded by a local mafioso. It turns out that Lazer is being blackmailed. The reason is his homosexuality which, if discovered, would turn him into an outcast in his very closed community.

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