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Hasidic Mother of 10 Becomes Doctor
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Amarante




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 10:16 am
I am exhausted just reading about her life. Smile

https://www.nytimes.com/2021/0.....ion=2

‘The Rabbi Said It Was OK’: Hasidic Mother of 10 Becomes Doctor

An ultra-Orthodox mother navigated strict cultural norms to become one of the few Hasidic female doctors in the country.





Alexandra Friedman, who graduated from medical school last month, with nine of her 10 children. She did not want their faces shown online for privacy reasons.Sara Naomi Lewkowicz for The New York Times

Years ago, Alexandra Friedman saw a T-shirt bearing a message she never forgot: “Become the doctor your mother always wanted you to marry.”

It seemed like an impossible goal for a Hasidic woman in Monsey, N.Y., a predominantly Orthodox Jewish enclave some 30 minutes north of the city that is home to some of the strictest Orthodox communities.

Many women marry young, and their lives revolve around caring for children, speaking Yiddish and abiding by inflexible lifestyle and dress guidelines to adhere to Hasidic traditions.

She and her husband, Yosef, have 10 children, ranging in age from an 8-month-old son to a 21-year-old daughter.

But last month, she became an anomaly in Monsey by graduating from medical school and obtaining a residency in pediatrics. Dr. Friedman’s graduation makes her one of the few female Hasidic doctors in the country, said Dr. Miriam A. Knoll, president of the Jewish Orthodox Women’s Medical Association.

“It’s unusual for medical students to have any children, let alone 10 children,” Dr. Knoll said. “So to come from a conservative background and have that many children, you’re fighting an uphill battle, one that just takes extraordinary drive and commitment.”

When Dr. Friedman began thinking about medical school five years ago, even her best friends had doubts. One of them, a mother of 14 children, thought Dr. Friedman’s already busy schedule as a wife and mother would never allow her to handle the rigors of medical school. Another urged her to become a store cashier instead.

Dr. Friedman believed that pursuing medicine would augment her spirituality, not detract from it.

“In Judaism, there’s a belief that if you don’t use the gifts given to you by God, you’re not really honoring God,” she said in a recent interview.

Even while struggling with the arduous academic demands over the past four years, she met the domestic responsibilities expected of an ultra-Orthodox mother. She continued tending to her children and refrained from studying on Jewish holidays and on the Sabbath, each Friday evening through Saturday evening.

None of her obligations seemed to hurt her grades or keep her from graduating on time within four years, and she even gave birth during her studies to three children: her 8-month-old, Aharon; and her 3-year-old twin girls, Mimi and Layla.

She graduated first academically of the 135 students in her class at Touro College of Osteopathic Medicine in Middletown, N.Y.

Dr. Friedman was not always Hasidic. As the daughter of a U.S. Army general, she was part of a secular Jewish family that moved around the country a lot.

She considered herself a feminist — and still does — and earned a bachelor’s degree in biology. In her 20s, she began medical school but dropped out and developed an interest in Orthodox Judaism, following its strict guidelines and avoiding many distractions of the outside world.

She studied Yiddish and began wearing a wig and modest, full-length clothing. She stopped driving and having casual conversations with men or even looking them in the eye. Smartphones and the internet were off-limits.

In 2008, after she had moved to a Hasidic section of Crown Heights, Brooklyn, to study at a Hasidic seminary, she met Yosef Friedman, a widower with two daughters from his previous marriage. They married and eventually settled in Monsey.

After she had had several children, her mind turned back to her medical education.

“Being religious was kind of a full-time job, but once I got the hang of motherhood and Orthodox life, that yearning sort of came back,” said Dr. Friedman, who approached her religious mentor, Rabbi Aharon Kohn, and asked him in her still-imperfect Yiddish for guidance.

Dr. Friedman’s children adorned her anatomy and surgery textbooks with brightly colored stickers.
Dr. Friedman’s children adorned her anatomy and surgery textbooks with brightly colored stickers.Sara Naomi Lewkowicz for The New York Times
Both realized that medical school would be doubly challenging for a mother from Monsey. The Hasidim in Monsey largely handle judicial issues among themselves, shop at Jewish stores and send their children to religious schools.

Also, there would inevitably be clashes between academic requirements and Hasidic guidelines. Dr. Friedman would need to use the internet and interact with male students, teachers and doctors. What if emergency medical treatment lasted into Shabbos? And since Hasidic women are discouraged from driving, how would she even get there?

Touro’s sensitivity to Orthodox students, she said, made it “an easier sale” to the rabbi, who recounted a story about how his grandfather, also a rabbi, once urged a woman in Israel to become a midwife to help other Hasidic women.

He ultimately agreed, even after Dr. Friedman wondered if her friend was right about her becoming a cashier instead.

“He said absolutely not — he wanted me to be of service to my community,” said Dr. Friedman, who interviewed for admission to medical school four days after giving birth to the couple’s seventh child.

Dr. Friedman’s new path raised eyebrows in her tightly knit Hasidic Jewish community.

“People would say, ‘What? You’re going to medical school?’ and I’d say, ‘The rabbi said it was OK,’” she recalled while sitting recently in her neat two-story home in a leafy section of Monsey.

She sat near shelves bearing a shofar and a menorah. Scattered on the floor were children’s toys. The family was packing for their upcoming move to Boca Raton, Fla., to begin her residency.

As a medical student, Dr. Friedman began assuming a sorely needed role advising Hasidic female acquaintances who had limited information on medical issues but many questions — ranging from menstrual and infertility issues to how gynecological treatment comported with Jewish law and cultural guidelines regarding modesty.

“People became excited to have a woman who understands the community and understands medicine,” said Dr. Friedman. When Monsey became a coronavirus hot spot last year, she began fielding calls from friends seeking more updated information than Yiddish weekly newspapers provided.

“They felt comfortable asking me, ‘Is it getting better, getting worse?’” she said.

She urged friends early on to wear masks, and in recent months, as more calls have come in regarding vaccination for the virus, she has recommended getting the shots.

She and her husband both contracted the virus last year but experienced no serious symptoms, she said.

Mr. Friedman, 50, who makes minimum wage as an aide for patients with disabilities, said the family has lived paycheck to paycheck to afford medical school and relied on various scholarships. Student loan money sometimes helped pay the rent.

“Every obstacle seems to get blown out of the way,” said Mr. Friedman, who received a dean’s award from Touro for being a supportive spouse. “It makes me realize that this was just meant to be. This is what she’s meant to do.”

He began working nights in order to tend the children during the day.

Far from being a distraction, Dr. Friedman said her busy family life provided balance and stress relief from the tense demands of studying for boards and exams.

Instead of hitting the library with her fellow students, she studied at home with her children around her. They quizzed her with flash cards and adorned her anatomy and surgery textbooks with brightly colored stickers. They watched her practice her sutures before bedtime.

While in labor for 12 hours with her twin girls, she studied for the microbiology part of the board exam.

“It kept my mind off the contractions,” she said.

While the internet is often discouraged among the Hasidim as overexposure to the secular world, Dr. Friedman secured the rabbi’s permission to buy a laptop and get internet service installed to access medical information and study guides that fellow students shared on social media. She got a smartphone for college-required apps on surgical procedures.

She also obtained rabbinical approval to drive the family car herself, but her husband continued to drive her out of their immediate neighborhood, then hop out and walk home, to avoid upsetting her Orthodox neighbors.

She continued to wear her wig during surgeries, but Rabbi Kohn agreed she could replace the traditional Hasidic head scarf with a surgical cap and wear scrub pants covered with a disposable surgical gown.

Shaking hands with male colleagues was still discouraged, but the rabbi agreed that accidental and necessary contact with male doctors during surgery was permissible, as was looking them in the eye during medical discussions.

When students began practicing osteopathic manipulations on one another in large classes, Dr. Friedman secured a female partner and wore full clothing instead of shorts and a sports bra like other female students.

Rabbi Moshe Krupka, executive vice president of the Touro College and University System, called Dr. Friedman a “poster child” for Touro’s emphasis on supporting particular needs of students from diverse backgrounds.

But Dr. Friedman’s biggest supporter was Rabbi Kohn.

Last June, he died from Covid-19 at age 69.

In September when her youngest child was born, Dr. Friedman honored the rabbi who encouraged her medical school dream by naming her son after him: Aharon.

“The last thing he told me,” she said, “was, ‘Don’t quit.’”
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mom2mysouls




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 10:23 am
Sounds amazing....May she continue having much success!
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sushilover




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 10:32 am
What a rock star!

The first person to start over-analyzing and nitpicking this woman or her community will be drawn and quartered. And this is coming from someone who loves over- analyzing and nitpicking Very Happy .
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finprof




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 10:47 am
It is amazing that she could do that with such a large family and I'm sure she will be an asset to the community. More proof that BTs are an asset to their communities and should be embraced.
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notshanarishona




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 10:52 am
That's awesome! She should be an example to others.
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sky




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 10:58 am
Amazing.
Think of the mother of 3 that was being discouraged on here.
Moving for residency with a family that size is huge!


Last edited by sky on Fri, Jun 25 2021, 10:58 am; edited 1 time in total
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Zehava




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 10:58 am
What a classic INTJ
These women are barely human
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vintagebknyc




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 10:58 am
sky wrote:
Amazing.
Think of the mother of 3 that was being discouraged on here.


I actually posted an article about this woman on that thread.
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tigerwife




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 11:00 am
Awesome. The poster who was considering medical school should read this.
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flowerpower




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 11:02 am
Typical the NYT- “The rabbi said it was ok”. They hd to write something stupid...

Their lives revolve around speaking yiddish, inflexible schedules, etc
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IsraeliSoul




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 11:06 am
Wow! What an inspiration. I’m proud of her. And everything according to daas Torah, amazing!
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Ema of 5




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 11:08 am
Amazing! I’m going to tell my almost 12 year old daughter about her!
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sequoia




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 11:27 am
Zehava wrote:
What a classic INTJ
These women are barely human


heh?
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PeanutMama




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 11:41 am
NICE!!!!
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ChassidishMommy




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 11:45 am
Just wanted to point out that Rabbi Aharon Kohn is a son of one of the ultra, ultra Chassidish Rebbes in Israel, Meah Shearim style - Toldos Aharon Chassidus. I'm truly amazed by his open-mindedness.
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Amarante




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 11:50 am
flowerpower wrote:
Typical the NYT- “The rabbi said it was ok”. They hd to write something stupid...

Their lives revolve around speaking yiddish, inflexible schedules, etc


You do realize that supplying this kind of background makes her accomplishment even more astounding.

Without educating those who are reading it as to exactly the specific obstacles she had to overcome, the article would no longer make sense.

Should there never be anything that accurately portrays a community. There was nothing in the article that was negative IMO but only that it was amazing that she managed to do this within the constraints of both time issues (children) and the mores of her community which were dealt with in a way that enabled her to achieve her dreams and ultimately become a benefit to her community.

The article dealt with how even as a medical student she was able to be a trust source of medical information to other women.
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Zehava




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 11:53 am
Amarante wrote:
You do realize that supplying this kind of background makes her accomplishment even more astounding.

Without educating those who are reading it as to exactly the specific obstacles she had to overcome, the article would no longer make sense.

Should there never be anything that accurately portrays a community. There was nothing in the article that was negative IMO but only that it was amazing that she managed to do this within the constraints of both time issues (children) and the mores of her community which were dealt with in a way that enabled her to achieve her dreams and ultimately become a benefit to her community.

The article dealt with how even as a medical student she was able to be a trust source of medical information to other women.

Accurately portrays a community?
Does your life revolve around speaking English?
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pause




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 11:59 am
She got married in 2008 and already has 10 kids? Wow! (OK, there's a set of twins there, but still...) I wonder if her DH's two kids are counted in the 10 total.

But what's up with the moving from CH to Monsey to Florida?
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Amarante




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 12:01 pm
Zehava wrote:
Accurately portrays a community?
Does your life revolve around speaking English?


If there is a community that doesn't speak whatever the native language is, then it is generally mentioned. Like an Amish community for example.

I don't understand how supplying accurate information about a community is somehow wrong and evidence of anti-Semitism. If you look at the world through these kinds of glasses where anything that is mentioned which accurately portrays reality in a neutral manner, it is very sad.

To me, emphasizing how much she overcame and how her rabbi mentor enabled her to realize her dream was inspiring and probably would be viewed as inspiring to people reading the article who knew nothing about her community.
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Zehava




 
 
    
 

Post Fri, Jun 25 2021, 12:04 pm
Amarante wrote:
If there is a community that doesn't speak whatever the native language is, then it is generally mentioned. Like an Amish community for example.

I don't understand how supplying accurate information about a community is somehow wrong and evidence of anti-Semitism. If you look at the world through these kinds of glasses where anything that is mentioned which accurately portrays reality in a neutral manner, it is very sad.

To me, emphasizing how much she overcame and how her rabbi mentor enabled her to realize her dream was inspiring and probably would be viewed as inspiring to people reading the article who knew nothing about her community.

Sure
But saying their life revolves around speaking said language is weird and sensationalized.
This isn’t accurate information. It’s making it seem more exotic and weird on purpose, as these sites are prone to do.
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