We now offer classified advertisment bookings online - click here!!

Hamodia publishes informative, educational and entertaining content relevant and acceptable to the unique strictly ultra-orthodox (Haredi) Jewish community. Under careful stewardship, a style and content mix that is suited to our primarily Haredi readers is delivered every week - in the UK and via international partners in France, the United States and in Israel.


In a media-saturated world it is rare to have an exclusive news source that reaches an entire community, that by self-choice abstains from media consumption. Then again, strictly observant Jews live a unique lifestyle.

WHAT WE OFFER: Hamodia offers gatekeeper access to an audience with several unique lifestyle patterns.  More than just a newspaper, we promote a way of life that is based on family values and spiritual growth.

We are the sole access point to a community that shies away from mainstream media culture, avoiding the dangers of immodest images and innuendo found on the internet and opting for a life based on powerful tradition. Parents trust Hamodia as a ‘filter’ because it is seen as the only ‘safe’ option.

• What do Haredi Jews read to ensure they won’t see immodest advertising photos?

• What do Haredi Jews buy to be certain that their children will be exposed to ‘approved’ values?

• What’s the only newspaper that you will find in 10,000 ‘Haredi’ homes, and is read by 50,000 people on a weekly basis?

Hamodia.

 


Some figures about the community: *

• 84% are married
• 55% of the community have purchased a new car within the last 12 months
• 60% fly three times a year
• 75% own their own business
• 85% own at least one property
• Average time spent reading one issue - 67 minutes
• Average time each issue is kept - two weeks
• 50% of Jewish children are born to Haredi families **

If you advertise in Hamodia, what are your chances of reaching the vast majority of Haredi Jews in Britain? 100%.

* source: Hamodia survey 2007
**source: Board of Deputies of British Jews’ CPRG (Community Police Research Group) 2007