She graduated from Stanford last year with a degree in computer science and works as an app engineer and NFT developer. Today Miriam Haart, 22, lives in the Bay Area. In the show’s second season, which began streaming last month, mom Julia struggles to keep her role in her talent management company, Elite World Group, following a nasty divorce from her second husband, with whom she co-owned the company oldest daughter Batsheva goes through her own divorce Miriam considers marrying her girlfriend, Nathalie, to keep her in the country oldest son Shlomo loses his virginity and youngest son Aron delves further into religion. “My Unorthodox Life” follows the Haart family nearly 10 years after matriarch Julia left the haredi community in Monsey, New York, taking three of her four children with her. One of the stars of the hit Netflix reality series “My Unorthodox Life,” Haart recounted this story during a conversation about the tensions between Orthodox Judaism and modern life with Manny Yekutiel at his San Francisco cafe on Jan. “I turned on, I think it was a shower,” Haart said. It was a Friday night, and she broke the laws of Shabbat.
Miriam Haart took her first step outside of her Orthodox community during a birthday trip to Paris a few years ago.