Israel’s real Rosa Parks takes to the buses
Now Horowitz turned around and said loudly and clearly: “What do you mean by ‘men’s area’? A geographical area?” she wondered. “What is mehadrin? Are you talking about an etrog, a lulav?” she queried, referring to two of the principal symbols used during the festival of Sukkot. “Nowhere in rabbinical law does it say that it is forbidden to sit behind a woman, not in the Shulchan Arukh and not in the Yoreh De’ah [two classical compilations of Jewish law]. What is written in the Torah and in rabbinical law is that it is forbidden to humiliate sons and daughters of Israel.”
Like a deflated balloon, the man became quiet, and maintained his silence for the rest of the bus ride.
‘Men’s scorn for women’
“That people tell a woman to go to the back of the bus and repeat this like a mantra - ‘Women to the back’ - is outrageous,” explained Horowitz a few hours later. “The man who shouted at me could have said gently, courteously, that this is a segregated bus. That women and men don’t sit together. But he shouted again and again, ‘Women to the back.’ The expression ‘to the back’ shows that that’s the main thing. The word [back] shows how much men scorn women. It’s like in South Africa when the blacks were several rungs below the whites. And it’s a huge blasphemy, to behave like that. The Torah strictly forbids us from behaving like that. It’s called ‘villainy invoking the Torah.’
“People cite all kinds of statements from the sages, and in that way cover their wickedness and hatred for women. And that is the worst of all, because women have not studied those things. And they don’t know what is correct and what isn’t.”