The first Hasidic woman elected to public office in the U.S. just assumed the bench
Rachel “Ruchie” Freier, an attorney, grassroots community organizer, and member of the ultra-Orthodox Hasidic Jewish community, started her work as a civil court judge in Brooklyn on Tuesday. She is believed to be the first Hasidic woman ever elected to public office in the United States.
Freier was elected to preside over the 5th Judicial District in King’s County after a three-way Democratic primary race this past fall—a win heralded as “a step for the ultra-Orthodox community at large” by her campaign co-manager and New York political fixture Yossi Gestetner, who spoke with the Associated Press this week.
Freier, 51, has been a longtime trailblazer in New York’s Hasidic community, where—in addition to her career as an attorney—she helped found a series of non-profit organizations, including Ezras Nashim, an all-female, all-volunteer EMT company that serves the largely Orthodox Jewish neighborhood of Borough Park, Brooklyn.