![]() ![]() And before you realise, your world has shrunk."īy the age of 19, she was forced into an arranged marriage. Then it was 'cover yourself head to toe'. Then it was 'okay Julia, you can't wear shorts anymore'. That very basically means you can't eat at your friend's houses anymore and can onlyĮat certain foods, and have to eat in a certain way. It started with, 'okay Julia we're going to keep kosher'. "That's the danger of when people are taking away rights - you don't even realise because it's so gradual. It was a confronting 'cautionary tale' to have drummed into you as a child. And ever so slowly, her world was shrinking - and so was her autonomy, particularly dueįrom a young age, Julia was taught that if any part of her body was uncovered in public, she would go to a "special kind of hell" reserved for just her and her mother. ![]() ![]() Her community and its people were the 'chosen ones'. She was taught that all non-Jewish people or irreligious Jewish people were dangerous. Women are not educated, they're married off and they're told they are inferior to men," Julia said to Mia Freedman on Mamamia 's No Filter. "Go back a couple of hundred years and the life women lived in the 1800s is exactly the life I lived in Monsey. But in Monsey, particularly the community Julia was a part of, this was far from the reality. When we think about New York, visions of Sex and the City, progressive politics and a 21st Century life come to mind. While she loved being Jewish, it was the fundamentalist lifestyle that Julia couldn't accept - a world where she says little boys were taught to thank God every morning "for not making me a woman". And initially, it was something she was comfortable with. They soon decided to join an ultra-Orthodox Jewish community in Monsey that practiced Haredi Judaism - a branch of Judaism known for its religious conservatism and social seclusion.įrom a very young age to her early 40s, Julia was part of this community. But for the majority of her years, she had no control over her anything - what she ate, what she thought, what she wore and what she was allowed to do in a day was regulated by a strictĪfter emigrating from Russia to America with her family, Julia's parents settled in Monsey, New York. “I saw this coming, and I planned for it.In her 51 years, My Unorthodox Life star Julia Haart has lived a big life. “When I took over Elite World Group, the only reason I took over is because I started avatars, the metaverse, all of this digitalizing the company, transforming ourselves into a media conglomerate – the day I took over,” she told NBC before her first EWG lawsuit. The venture aimed to transform celebrities into avatars to allow closer fan interaction and the ability to be “everywhere at once”. ![]() Julia set her sights on the tech industry with her metaverse-based business Haart Sphere. The designer and entrepreneur went on to release a book titled Brazen: My Unorthodox Journey From Long Sleeves To Lingerie and has continued her TV career on and off-screen as My Unorthodox Life’s executive director. Where is she now? Tech venture is at a pause She can’t.”įurther developments of the lawsuit are unknown. She apparently thinks she can mislead the media. She forgot to include that fact in this latest lawsuit. “Moreover, her own testimony and documents in that trial proved she knew before she filed the case that she did not own 50 per cent of Mr Scaglia’s parent company assets. ![]()
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