Mindy Pollak, far right, with the Equipe de Montréal Outremont borough association. Photo via Flickr user Etienne Coutu
Pollak first came to attention in 2013 when she was elected to city council representing the Outremont region—an area where Hasidic Jews comprise about one quarter of the population. Her campaign generated lots of buzz not just because of her age (she was only 24 when she ran), but because she became the first Hasidic Jewish woman ever elected to Montreal's city council. This is an impressive feat for any young woman, but particularly one coming from an ultra-conservative religion where women typically don't work in co-ed environments.She decided to run for office after sitting on an intercultural council in Montreal and realizing that if she wanted to make a difference, it would have to be on the city council itself."The only reason I decided not to run was because it had never been done before," she said. "But what is fear itself going to do? Is it going to make the situation better off?"Her platform focused mostly on a simple idea: reestablishing trust and communication between Outremont's Hasidic residents and city council—a fairly daunting task given the long list of strained relations between the two groups.Those tensions include a bathing suit ban for parks (which was shot down in court), forcing a gym to frost its windows because of revealing clothing, neighbourhood resistance to a small expansion of a synagogue, and accusations of a powerful so-called "Hasidic lobby."Pollak's unlikely role as the political voice of the Hasidic community pushes back against Quebec's strict secular ethos. Despite the epic defeat of Pauline Marois' attempt in 2013 to ban religious clothing in the public sector, secular Quebec generally abides by the belief that religion inherently oppresses women. Among many Montrealers, the idea of valuing traditional female "modesty" is about as welcome as saying you find Toronto more charming than Montreal.
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