With majority of newly-diagnosed within the community below the age of 26, the sector braces for yeshiva students, who might be unknowingly carrying the virus, returning to visit their large families in red Haredi cities; 'The situation is catastrophic,' says one official

With Israel's surging number of new coronavirus cases showing no sign of declining, the situation in densely populated ultra-Orthodox communities grows dire by the day and might become entirely out of control by the time the holiday period ends.

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The Charedi community has been among the hardest hit by COVID-19, with the majority of Israel's "red" cities and towns having an ultra-Orthodox majority population. The latest data shows 514 out of 817 newly-infected within the community are below the age of 26, indicating they most likely became infected at yeshivas and other religious institutions.


Thousands of yeshiva students are set to go on a study break during the holiday of Sukkot and visit their large families in "red", virus-hit ultra-Orthodox communities, after spending the last 40 days under strict social distancing conditions. Health officials worry that many of the students going on holiday might be unknowingly carrying and spreading the virus. Read more at YNET