This study examines the subjective well-being (SWB) of ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) Jewish women in Israel experiencing prolonged singlehood within a society that prioritizes early marriage and mandates complete sexual abstinence before marriage. Using the Ecological Model for Health Promotion, SWB is conceptualized as shaped by interrelated factors across individual, interpersonal, organizational, community, and policy levels. Thirty Haredi single women aged 25–36 participated in semi-structured interviews. Thematic analysis identified patterns influencing SWB across ecological levels. At the individual level, participants experienced loneliness and failure mitigated by religious faith, therapy, and professional fulfillment. At the interpersonal level, family dynamics, including parental pressure and birth-order expectations, created distress, while peers offered support. The prohibition on physical contact during courtship intensified emotional challenges. Organizationally, seminaries reinforced gender roles and stigmatized singlehood, whereas higher education fostered empowerment and normalization. Community norms stigmatized independent living and prolonged abstinence, yet grassroots WhatsApp matchmaking groups promoted agency and belonging. At the policy level, participants felt invisible within welfare systems. The central theme is the tension between cultural ideals of early marriage and prolonged singlehood under sexual abstinence. Participants experienced conflict between embodied desires and religious devotion—and coped by selectively reinterpreting religious norms to maintain well-being. Reducing stigma and promoting well-being requires culturally sensitive mental health services, greater educational access, financial support for independent living, fertility information, and collaboration with rabbinic leadership.
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Sima Zalcberg-Block
Sexuality Research and Social Policy
Ariel University
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Sima Zalcberg-Block (Mon,) studied this question.
www.synapsesocial.com/papers/699e921bf5123be5ed0502d4 — DOI: https://doi.org/10.1007/s13178-026-01297-7