General10:03 · 13m ago

Experts Warn Excessive Parental Pressure Backfires on Haredi Youth Facing Outside Influences

Kikar HaShabbatReligious
Translated & summarized from Kikar HaShabbat by baba
The story · English

In the sixth episode of the podcast series "Talking About Education," Rabbis Asaf Ratzon and Moshe Rabbi address a common challenge in Haredi families: managing the influence of secular culture on children. Many parents, especially those who have returned to religious observance, experience deep anxiety when their children adopt slang, hairstyles, or gadgets associated with the outside world. This fear often leads to strict and harsh pressure on the children to conform.

However, research and real-life examples show that such rigidity tends to have the opposite effect, making forbidden behaviors more attractive to youth. Excessive parental pressure can cause children to rebel or develop negative feelings toward religious study and prayer. The rabbis emphasize that total control is an illusion, and trying to isolate children completely from secular influences is ineffective.

They introduce the "traffic light" parenting method: red lights signify absolute boundaries (such as banning unauthorized smartphones), green lights indicate issues not worth fighting over, and yellow lights represent gray areas requiring calm explanation and trust in divine guidance rather than force. Often, silent tolerance can be a powerful educational tool.

The podcast highlights the importance of creating a warm, loving home environment that fosters a child’s sense of belonging and pride in their identity. One example shared is a 16-year-old yeshiva student who developed a crush on a girl; his mother responded with understanding and humor rather than anger, which helped the feelings pass without conflict.

Ultimately, the rabbis argue that children exposed to strong external influences need a fortress of love, encouragement, and positive values at home. When children feel secure and valued, they are less likely to seek acceptance or escape in the outside world.

Read the original at Kikar HaShabbat
Open the live terminal