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BROOKLYN WEEKLY, AUGUST 30, 2020
BY ROSE ADAMS & TODD
MAISEL
A dozen Orthodox Jewish
women gathered in Midwood
to celebrate the offi cial
kickoff of the Ezras Nashim
volunteer ambulance corps,
an all-female paramedic
corps for Orthodox women
who don’t want to receive
medical treatment from
men, according to its director.
“Women now have a
choice of who to call, and
while there are still a few
against us, most average
people are so happy,” said
Leah Levine.
The group received its
license from the New York
State Health Department on
Aug. 13, allowing the corps
to purchase their own ambulance
and distribute lights,
sirens, and special plates to
emergency responders.
Ezras Nashim — Hebrew
for “assisting women” — was
founded in 2009 for women
who wanted to be treated by
female healthcare professionals
in cases of sickness,
injury, and childbirth. The
service received a license
to be a “basic life saving”
service, but was denied the
right to get an ambulance by
the city in 2019 after a push
by its rival, all-male ambulance
corps, Hatzolah.
Hatzolah bars women
from becoming fi rst responders,
reasoning women
must be modest in public
and are not equipped to
handle emergency cases.
Its members allegedly told
the founders of Hatzolah to
start their own organization
when they tried to join the
corps, so Levine was surprised
by the group’s opposition
after she founded Ezras
Nashim, she said.
“Hatzolah doesn’t accept
women paramedics, so they
even told us to form our own
group, the rabbi even told us
to, and then they fought us,”
Levine said.
The Aug. 13 decision reverses
the city’s 2019 ruling
— but the legal battle against
Hatzolah, who allegedly
hired attorneys to thwart
Ezras Nashim’s efforts, cost
the all-female group nearly
$100,000.
Despite the opposition,
Ezras Nashim has found
plenty of public support and
has already started a fundraising
campaign to secure
its fi rst ambulance, Levine
said.
“My husband has been
saying how excited he was
and so many people have
expressed support – this is
not the behavior of average
Jewish men,” she said. “But
there is still a few people
with a lot of power who are
using propaganda making
noise against us,”
The group didn’t wait
for its ambulance license
to begin serving the public.
So far, they’ve responded
to 450 emergency calls this
year, with members using
their personal vehicles to
bring two-way radios, medical
gear, and defi brillators
with them to wherever they
are needed, according to
Levine.
As of now, Ezras Nashim
are 21 women training to be
EMTs, and Levine is conducting
the training sessions
while running the
organization. There are currently
Chani Richter delivered her baby with the help of the all-female
Orthodox ambulance corps Ezras Nashim. Photo by Todd Maisel
45 EMTs in branches
in Flatbush, Borough Park,
the Five Towns in Long Island,
and 11 EMTs training
in Monsey, New York.
The volunteers dress
modestly and “appropriately,”
Levine said, with special
vests, and are trained
to make their patients “feel
right and feel comfortable.”
One volunteer said she
gave birth to her daughter,
who is now nine weeks old,
with the help of Ezras Nahim.
“I had them on speed dial
because they were incredible,
it was like boom the baby
is here,” said Chani Richter,
35, as she held her sixth
child. “The whole street
was then fi lled because 911
sent three ambulances and
police cars, but if Ezras
Nashim had an ambulance,
they could’ve taken me.”
Levine said that while
they have the license to
move forward, they must
now step up fundraising to
buy an ambulance and get
a garage to keep it. She said
they raised $30,000 in one
month and are starting new
branches.
Life savers
News ambulance corps serves Hasidic women by Hasidic women