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"Abusers do such heinous things that most people simply cannot believe that this caring, sensitive teacher, counselor, therapist, rabbi or principal can be so evil. They rely on that image because they are accomplished actors who lure their audience in, grooming them to believe their inherent and well-rehearsed persona."

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How They Abuse




They take advantage of people, especially children and teens, those who are young, or impressionable and easy prey. They also take advantage of adults – yes, they know how to play to adults too.

They are accomplished liars. They know how to draw victims in with a combination of charm and threat. They can be magically captivating. They do not hide; rather they interact openly with their victims and families. 

They tend to be fearless and if caught they can be convincing in their denials. If caught on video molesting a child they can just as easily deny that it is they, despite the pictures, as they are to blame their victims. Very few are willing to acknowledge that they have a problem controlling their abusive tendencies, the first and most necessary step to address their problem.

They take advantage of the fact that the organizations they work for provide them with a pool of likely victims. And if someone reports them to their superiors at work, they believe that the desire to protect the school, camp, youth organization, whichever organization they work for, will act as cover for them – for that is the way it usually is.

They also know that if caught and confronted they can usually slip away and go to some other organization because traditionally no one is likely to warn anyone else.

Abusers are both so convincing and threatening that the idea of reporting to the authorities does not usually arise. No one can believe that such a nice person is so bad. Unfortunately, too many people are also lured in by the idea that they should not report to the police, telling rabbis instead. While rabbis may have the best of intentions, they are not trained investigators.

Abusers do such heinous things that most people simply cannot believe that this caring, sensitive teacher, counselor, therapist, rabbi or principal can be so evil. They rely on that image because they are accomplished actors who lure their audience in, grooming them to believe their inherent and well-rehearsed persona.

They threaten the people they victimize so that in most cases the offended are afraid to tell what was done to them.

They are child sexual abusers. They prey on children of all ages. Some abusers target young children. Some victimize adolescents, some target teens or older teens. Some select young adults. It has been estimated that these abusers usually harm as many as 100 people over the course of their predatory lives.

In spite of some very recent serious efforts to educate, we are still naïve about the plague of sexual abuse and how children are groomed. We still believe that we can send our children off to school, camp, seminary, or yeshiva without doing a serious investigation of the facility and teaching our children to properly protect themselves.

This is not a new phenomenon. In the last eight years, we have begun to hear more about it, not because CSA is a new trend but because some very brave individuals are finally coming forward and talking about what happened to them at the hands of their abusers. I have treated and spoken with individuals in their 40’s, 50’s, 60’s and older who were abused in a school, dormitory or camp setting.

I have written extensively about this issue and I am compelled to continue to do so. Parents are very trusting. “It won’t happen to my child,” they say. “What can happen to my daughter in seminary? She can take care of herself.” Summer camp has begun and hopefully there will not be any incidents but that is unlikely.

Soon all those students spending a gap year or more in Israel will be on their way to study and grow. If not well prepared these young adults, aged eighteen to twenty, even older, are all vulnerable. There is no doubt that some will fall into the hands of abusers.

There is talk about training vast number of educators. I have my suspicions about how effective that training may be, particularly if it is watered down to suit the needs of misplaced modesty.

We may not be able to stop all sex abusers but we can certainly do more to reduce their horrific impact. We must do a better job to train our children and ourselves with an awareness of the reality of CSA. We must do a better job of reporting to the proper, trained authorities as soon as we suspect. After all, that is the law, and it is the law for a very good reason. If we do not act swiftly and properly, we are assisting abusers to continue their offenses.

Finally, a language exists that allows us to begin to understand and tackle the problem of CSA. It barely existed 50 years ago. We should all learn the jargon; it is the minimum necessary to address this scourge.

http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/how-they-abuse/

"At YU, no one who committed child sex crimes went to jail, no one who covered-up the abuse was fired or forced to resign, the details of the abuse were concealed, and YU didn’t pay a dime to its victims."

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Yeshiva University’s Child Molesters


The Yeshiva University campus. Photo: Jim Henderson.

In 2013, Yeshiva University was sued by 34 plaintiffs alleging that they were sexually abused when they were students there. Although the Torah does not recognize a statute of limitations, YU invoked this arbitrary secular law to get the lawsuit dismissed, arguing that the plaintiffs filed their claims too late.

Due to the scandalous revelations contained in the lawsuit and the resultant public outcry, YU hired a law firm to investigate it. YU’s Board of Trustees pledged to make public the “specific details” of the investigation. But before the report could be made public, the law firm claimed that a “Special Committee” (it doesn’t say who was on the committee)intervened and directed it not to report the details, reneging on YU’s public pledge of transparency. The result was that the law firm issued a 53-page report that said nothing about the pervasive sexual and physical abuse of YU students except, for a vague 3-paragraph summary buried on page 8.

The summary stated the obvious — that numerous students were indeed sexually and physically abused over the course of many years by a number of individuals in positions of authority. It also stated that the abuse wasn’t just limited to YU’s high school, but extended to other YU facilities that were not identified. It further stated that members of YU’s administration were aware of the abuse, and on multiple occasions did not act to protect students — and sometimes didn’t even respond to allegations of abuse.

The report did not name a single child molester known to YU and its rabbis. It did not name a single rabbi or administration official who knew about the abuse, covered-up the molesters, ignored victims, and did nothing to protect YU students. It did not identify who quashed the full report. It did not reveal how many students were molested, during what time period, or if the abuse extended beyond just the boys or if it also included girls and women at YU educational facilities.

The report did not explain why YU officials did not warn other Orthodox institutions who subsequently hired its child sex predators. It did not explain why YU has assumed no responsibility for caring for, healing, and adequately compensating students who have suffered their entire lives due to being sexually assaulted by YU staff in YU buildings. The report did not explain why no one at YU was fired over the monstrous abuse of its own students, by its own staff.

Warning the public about dangerous men with a history of harming Jewish children is a basic Torah requirement. Begging forgiveness and fully compensating victims who were abused is the least YU could have done, as this embodies fundamental Jewish concepts. Nevertheless, it seems that YU’s rabbis, Torah scholars, and officials ignored Torah law, Jewish morals, and basic human decency and did nothing.

YU was willing to pay lawyers to fight its own students to prevent them from receiving money that could have helped them recover. YU was willing to pay its investigative law firm a reported $2.5 million to issue a censored report that held no YU staff or administrators accountable for their failure to protect its students.

According to The Jewish Forward, in 2014 (the year that the lawsuit was dismissed), YU lost a reported $150 million and its credit rating was downgraded to junk-bond status. Despite YU’s desperate financial situation, it nevertheless paid president Richard Joel a compensation package of more than $2 million above his base salary. His base salary just by itself made him the highest paid president of any Jewish non-profit.

To see how disgracefully a major Torah institution and rabbinical seminary deals with sexual abuse, it’s helpful to compare YU’s actions to a secular university that had a similar abuse case.

Penn State faced allegations that popular coach Jerry Sandusky sexually abused his students for 40 years. As a result, Penn State commissioned a truly independent investigation led by former FBI head Louis Freeh. Unlike YU, Penn State’s detailed report was made public. Sandusky was sent to jail for at least 30 years, top Penn State officials who covered-up the abuse were criminally charged, fired, or resigned. Penn State will pay 32 victims more than $92 million. And the press has written scathing reports saying that Penn State didn’t do nearly enough.

By contrast at YU, no one who committed child sex crimes went to jail, no one who covered-up the abuse was fired or forced to resign, the details of the abuse were concealed, and YU didn’t pay a dime to its victims.

Instead of enriching its lawyers and president, YU could have offered that same money to its students, and taken this opportunity to show the world that rabbis, Torah scholars, and Orthodox institutions are willing to accept responsibility for their failures and show caring and compassion to defenseless kids who were victims of horrific sexual abuse.

But instead, YU chose money over morals, rabbis over victims, and cowardice over accountability.

Eric Aiken is the owner of www.protectjewishkids.com and an advocate for Orthodox victims of child sexual abuse. “The List” is the world’s largest database of Orthodox child molesters.

According to the research, made by Israeli TV Channel 10, in the book, distributed by emails only to her friends before her death, she explained her leaving reasons: she claimed that she had to undergo sexual abuse and deviation - outrageous demands by her husband. As a result, she had a mental breakdown, was hospitalized and tried to put an end to her life. In such closed community it is unacceptable to complain to police in such cases. Everything stays inside, with silent approval of the leader, the Rebbe. Eventually, she was forced to leave.

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“My husband made me sex-slave and disconnected me from my daughters”


Not in those words, but that implies from the shocking book of Esti Weinstein, a former Ultra-Orthodox, who committed suicide last week in Israel. The death is still shocking the Israeli society


NOTE OF WARNING: Israel Nonstop editor announces hereby that all the facts mentioned here were taken from reliable sources. Yet, as a legal precaution, Israel Nonstop advises to every reader to use his/her own discretion as to the correctness of the facts. Please use your discretion also when exposing this written material in front of small children. Thank you
 
By Ben Landeck

Esti (Esther) Weinstein, a former ultra-Orthodox woman from Jerusalem, has committed suicide a few days ago. The book she left behind her, makes waves of shock in the Israeli society, particularly among followers of Gur Hassidic congregation, which once she belonged.

According to a research, made by Israeli TV Channel 10 (“Friday” show, by Ayala Hasson), in the book, she reveals not only the reasons that caused her to commit suicide, but also – part of the mystery that surrounds the Gur Community and the repressive regime, especially for women.


“Jacob (which obviously is her husband) was practical as always. ‘Take off your clothes and let the man do his job. Avi’, he said to the masseur, ‘undress her completely, well, take off her panties. ” “I feel like I’m doing crimes,” I stammered to Jacob. “I’m your husband and I’m here with you.” 
Esti, while still there. Mother model, wife model
Esti, while still there. Perfect Mom, wife model

Esti Weinstein, Gur Hassid, married at the age of 19 with S. They had seven daughters. An exemplary mother and wife model. She worked with her husband in the thriving fish shop in the ultra-Orthodox Geula neighborhood of Jerusalem. One morning, eight years ago, Esther left her beloved daughters, left her community and went to Tel-Aviv.

According to the research, made by Israeli TV Channel 10, in the book, distributed by emails only to her friends before her death, she explained her leaving reasons: she claimed that she had to undergo a sexual abuse and deviation outrageous demands by her husband. As a result, she had a mental breakdown, was hospitalized and tried to put an end to her life. In such closed community it is unacceptable to complain to police in such cases. Everything stays inside, with silent approval of the leader, the Rebbe. Eventually, she was forced to leave.

 S., Supposedly, an abusing husband

S., supposedly the abuser-pixellate
S., supposedly the abuser (Taken from “Friday” TV show, Israeli Channel 10)

But this was only the beginning of her journey of agony. According to Israeli Channel 10, she could not explain to her young and pure daughters what she went through in those dark nights and why she had to leave them. And then, her husband took advantage of her absence and told to the girls a lot of lies about their “treacherous” mother, with the support of the Hassidic community. Subsequently, so she tells, he prevented her from all contact with her daughters. Only one of her daughters, Tammy Montag, was in constant contact with her after leaving the community like her Mom. “My sisters and my father cut off all contact with us,” said Tammy on Channel 10. “Everything Mom tried to do, did not succeed. My sisters would not accept it and she (Esti) broke slowly, more and more. She had a very serious crisis but tried to contact my sisters and explain to them what made her to leave – but without success.”

Page 148 of the book of Esti:

“Jacob (which obviously is her husband, B.L.) was practical as always. ‘Take off your clothes and let the man do his job. Avi’, he said to the masseur, ‘undress her completely, well, take off her panties. “

“I feel like I’m doing crimes,” I stammered to Jacob. “I’m your husband and I’m here with you.” (Taken from Israeli TV Channel 10).

Later, on channel 10: “Page after page Esti describes how her husband, supposedly, drags her to Tel Aviv, bringing her to masseuses, strange men, and watched delightfully at his naked wife while he was full with satisfaction”.

“That husband actually exacerbated each time the acts”…

Israeli 10 Channel TV, interviewed Attorney Moshe Yitzhak Ausditcher, who represented the deceased during her divorce from abuser husband: “That husband actually exacerbated each time the acts. It started with a massage and it went on until couples swinging. Then he told her that according to Jewish law, now, after being with a stranger, she is prohibited for him at all. So if you aren’t allowed to me, so let’s enjoy ourselves to the end. That did it. But what finally broke her, was that he cut her off from her children”. It is quite clear that in such closed congregation, many knew about the ordeal Esti went through, but did nothing.

Attorney Ausditcher: “Well, she left. So, man, because your sex-slave ran away from you, you hang her up from the children? Why the kids should be in the middle?”

Supposedly, Brainwashed Daughters

The attorney presents one of many letters she received from her daughters, in response to the request of their begging mother to meet. This one, written by a 13 year old....
Esti, with Tami, her only daughter who hasn't turned her back
Esti, with Tami, her only daughter who hasn’t turned her back

 “I’m mad at you, I will not forgive you, you are mentally ill. You are vile and cruel. I Hope not to see you forever.” With similar language, also replied another daughter, 11 year old. “It is clear”, says the lawyer, “that someone feed them with those words and attitude”.

Even during Esti’s funeral, in eulogy for her mother, one of the older girls continued with those brainwashed accusations, blaming her dead mother of leaving them seemingly without reason…
Last week Esti was found dead in her car near the beach in Ashdod. In the suicide note, accompanying by the book manuscript, Esti wrote that she committed suicide mainly because she misses her daughters…

Hassidic Gur Congregation: “Sexual asceticism, confidentiality regulations”

The tragic death of Esti Weinstein and the book she left behind, opened a Pandora’s box about the mysteries of Gur Hassidic Congregation, the biggest in its kind in Israel. One of their prominent figures today – the Israeli Health Minister, Rabbi Yaacov Litzman.

“Holy Company”

In the closed community, people refuse to talk and respond. But some secrets are well known: Extreme sexual asceticism, total control over the lives of individuals, psychiatric balls – and a double life. Some Hassidic women, agreed to talk, but provided that their name not be mentioned.

They told the reporter about the term “Holy Company” – Holiness between man and wife, plus a lot of restrictions and hardware beyond what the “Halacha” (Religious Jewish code) wishes. “For example, if Jewish law requires that spouses will be distant for two weeks during the female period and after, the Gurs expand it for life time. Another restriction: A total ban on any contact between husband and wife (including a touch of affection). So far, that it is not allowed even to pass any object between husband and wife directly from her hand to his and vice versa, but to put it first in a “neutral” place… it is also forbidden to sit on the same chair. ”

“Any deviation is reported to the ‘Guide’”

There is also a strict limitation of the number of times permitted to maintain sexual relations during the month (only twice); Very long period of celibacy after each birth of a child, and being careful not to call women with their given names. The regulations cannot be found in any official document of the Hassidic group, deliberately. They are whispered from the “Guide man” to the ears of the young couple before the wedding and after. Any deviation of one partner – is reported and executed by the guide. In fact, all communications between the couple in the first period of the marriage is conducted through the “guide” that guides the parties how to proceed, and how to respond to any request or inquiry.

“A ‘shattered Rebbe’ who started it all”

The first figure who’s responsible for those unusual regulations, that had caused a real storm in the Haredi community – was “The Israel House”, Rebbi Israel Alter. The Rebbe lost his entire family in the Holocaust, and this left him broken down into pieces. Those Gur women, who volunteered the information, say that probably “Something was wrong with him, regarding his sexual life, with a need for sacred asceticism”. The current rabbi’s, they tell, is spiritually far below Rabbi Alter. “He is just a person with a lot of money, leaning on his ancestors who were great rabbis. The top persons of Gur just use all the power and money that they have to keep control of them all. ”

“Pills for killing sexual desire”

There are also complaints about the use of psychiatric pills originally used for severe diseases – to suppress the libido, for those who do not comply with the stiff rules. In the “Yeshivot” (ultra-orthodox colleges) there are supervisors who ‘persuade’ students to use such pills, as a condition for continuation of their studies. Some psychiatrists have collaborated and wrote prescriptions for these drugs.

Dasi just wanted him to call her name… 

According to these women, the driving is not spiritual values or content, but only the oldest desires of human beings: power, control, money and sexism. There are couples there who are not allowed to have sex beyond a few seconds in the dark. Women tell of a lack of love, affection or just a hug.

Dasi, the heroine of Esti Weinstein’s book, tells how her husband hadn’t called her by her name. “My husband, like all the Gur Hasidim, called me ‘come here’, or ‘tell’. That was my name among those first years after the wedding … I felt very strongly that I want to hear him pronounce my name on his lips. sometimes I’d go after him in like a shadow, and imagine how suddenly he turns around and uses that wonder word “Dasi”. I was trembling while imagining this special moment. ” 
Gur Congregation reaction: Through all the media, used for this report, Gur denied all the facts but refused to refer to the details mentioned here.

                                           * * *

NOTE OF WARNING: Israel Nonstop editor announces hereby that all the facts mentioned here were taken from reliable sources. Yet, as a legal precaution, Israel Nonstop advises to every reader to use his/her own discretion as to the correctness of the facts. 

https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=21519732#editor/target=post;postID=1390671416942613352

תקנות חסידי גור
חלק ב' - בנות הסמינרים
1. אסור ללכת לאכול במסעדה.
2. אסור חוגים מחוץ לסמינר.
3. אסור להסתכל לגברים בעיניים.
4. להמעיט בדיבור עם אחיינים מעל גיל 13.
5. אסור לדבר עם גיסים.
6. אין לשיר ליד אחים.
7. אין מגע עם אב/סב.
8. אסור פלאפון.
9. אסור להתחבר לבנות מחוץ לחסידות, גם לא חסידויות אחרות.
10. אסור חולצת לייקרה.
11. חצאית אורך אמצע בלבד (אורך עד האמצע בין הברך לקרסול).
12. אסור שום איפור בסמינר, עד שמתארסים, או ממש לפני כן.
13. אסור מסקרה או כל איפור עיניים.
14. אסור להתנדב בארגוני חסד לא גוראים.
15. אסור להעביר לשום גבר שום דבר מיד ליד. היתר מיוחד אם מדובר בחפץ גדול ואין שום אפשרות להניח (וכך נוצרת הסיטואציה המלבבת של בחורה שמתכופפת לרגליו של אברך כדי להניח שטר כסף על הרצפה).
16. לזוז לקצה המדרכה כשגבר עובר.
17. אסור לבת בסמינר לגעת בפלאפון, אפילו כשר. אם חייבים, הן נותנות לאחות הקטנה להחזיק את הפלאפון ולהתקשר בשבילן.
18. להחביא את הגוף. כל המתבגרות נהיות כפופות, כדי להסתיר את החזה, ומי שלא מבינה לבד שזה נדרש - מקבלת הכוונה.
19. אסור לשבת ליד נהג מונית.
20. אסור להישאר בחתונות של חברות אחרי 11:00.
22. אסור לשמוע רדיו, גם לא תחנות חרדיות.
23. אסור להגיד שלום לגיסים.
24. חובה להקפיד על הוצאת מילות התפילה בהגייה החסידית המדויקת (ואם טועים אפילו בנקודה אחת, כל התפילה לא שווה כי אינה מצטרפת לזכות אבות).
25. אסור ללכת לים בנות לבד.
26. אסור לפגוש את החתן.
27. אסור לדבר עליו עם חברות.
29. אסור ללכת בלי חלוק בים.
30. במחנה, אסור ללבוש בגד ים בבריכה רק בגדים. 3 חלקים וגרביונים.
31. אסור לשמוע שירים חסידים מודרנים.
32. ליפא שמעלצער - מנודה.
33. כשהולכים לביסמדרש בשבת, צריך לצאת אחרי 'כתר'.
34. אסור ללכת דרך הרחוב שבו נמצאת יציאת הגברים, ולא בשעות שהגברים הולכים.
35. אסור לענות אמן בקול בתפילה.
36. אסור להעמד לקדיש, כי רעש הכסאות יפריע לגברים.
37. כשאת מדברת עם גברים תשפילי מבט ותשמרי על מרחק. אם יש רהיט בחדר- שהוא יפריד ביניכם. ההוראה חלה על כל הגברים כולל בני משפחה.
38. כשהמנהל נכנס לסמינר, כולן עולות קומה או ממהרות להתרחק לצד.
39. אסור להגיד לגבר זר 'אתה'. אם מדברים עם רופא או מנהל או מישהו שחייבים לדבר איתו, אומרים לו 'אתם'. במשפחה מותר להגיד 'אתה'רק לאבא, סבא או אחים. השאר (כולל גיסים) - 'אתם'.
40. אסור חולצות בחוץ.
41. אסור תיק צד, ובטח שלא תיק אלכסון. רק תיק עם ידית להחזקה ביד.
42. אסור מסטיק ברחוב.
43. פעם בחודש מתפללים ביחד באולם, ובנות והמנהלת הן 'חזניות'בתורות, כדי להרגיל את הבנות להגייה החסידית הנכונה.
44. מדלגים על רש"י בפסוקים 'בעייתיים'בוויקרא, ואומרים "זה הסבר דקדוקי אפשר לדלג".
45. לא שרים באוטובוס בטיול.
46. אסור לראות סרטים לא חרדים.
47. לא כותבים י"ב אדר, אלא י"ב באדר.
48. כשנוסעים באוטובוס צריך לעלות מקדימה ולשלם, ואז לרדת ולעלות מאחורה כדי לא לעבור בין הגברים בקדמת האוטובוס.
49. לנגן בגיטרה 'פחות מתאים'לבחורה חסידית.
50. חובה לאסוף את השיער. בשום אופן לא פזור. אסור שיער פזור באורך יותר מעד האוזניים (=איסוף לקוקו עכברוש).
51. אסור ללכת בקבוצה של יותר מ-4 בנות יחד ברחוב.
52. אסור חצאיות לבנות או בהירות.
53. אסור ללכת ברחוב יפו.
54. לא אומרים הריון, אומרים 'מצב'.
55. אסור עגילים מתנדנדות.
56. אסור צמיד עם תולים.
57. חלילה מלהזכיר קניון.
58. בפגישה עם הבחור, אסור להגיש שתיה, כי זה עלול לקרב את הלבבות.
59. אסור לשבת על מדרגה או על גזע עץ.
60. אסור לשבת בת על בת.
61. לא ראוי לשבת רגל על רגל.
62. לא לשבת בפיסוק רגליים.
63. לא ישנים אצל חברות.
64. אין לחבק חברה חיבוק ארוך.
65. אסור להשאר לבד עם ילדים מעל גיל 9.
66. אסור לרכב על חמור או סוס.
67. אסור לנסוע באופניים.
68. אסור ללכת לאתרים שפתוחים בשבת (אז כל שנה בטיול נוסעים לאותו מקום).
69. אסור לסדר גבות.
70. עדיף דאודורנט בלי ריח, דאב או ספיד סטיק.
71. לא לשים בושם.
72. אסור לצבוע ריסים.
73. לא הולכים לארועים חילונים.
74. לא מדברים על מחזור.
75. לא אומרים חזייה ר"ל, אומרים 'פריט עליון'.
76. צריך להימנע מלהגיד את המילה משגע.
77. אסור להגיד מחזור, אומרים 'ימים מיוחדים'.
78. אסור ללבוש מותגים. אם קונים מותג צריך להוריד את הטיקט שלו (גם אם הטיקט תפור באופן חיצוני וכחלק מהעיצוב).
79. חובה להגיד 3 פרקי תהילים, וללמוד הלכות שמירת הלשון.
80. אסור טמפונים לפני החתונה. רק תחבושות.
82. מי שסוגרת כפתור ראשון, זוכה מיידית לבנים תלמידי חכמים עד סוף הדורות.
83. אסור נעליים עם עקב יותר מ-5 ס"מ.
84. אסור חולצות עם חצי שרוול מעל חולצה אחרת.
85. כשלומדים למבחנים, אסור יותר מ-4 בנות יחד.
86. במחנה אסור שתי בנות לבד בחדר.
87. כנ"ל אסור לנעול את החדר.
88. בשישי לפני שיש שבת סטאנציע בסמינר, צריך להחביא את כל הספרי קודש בארון שמא יראו שם של בחורה.
89. אסור לעשות לחברות נעימי בגב. גם לא עם עפרון.
90. אסור לרקוד הורה ביותר מידי התלהבות.
91. לפני הסטאנציע מכסים את כל התמונות במסדרונות, שהיה בהן בנות או זכר לבנות.
92. אין הסרת שיער, אלא בשעת הדחק.
93. מחולות, מוגבלים בתנועות המותרות לביצוע, ומורה מבוגרת תשגיח על תהליך היצירה והחזרות.
94. אסור לרוץ ברחוב.
95. אסור להתייחס לגיסים בשמם כאשר משוחחים אודותיהם אלא רק "בעלה של".
96. אסור נעלי ספורט.
97. אסור רוכסן מקדימה.
98. אסור חצאית קומות.
99. אסור פלטפורמה.
100. אסור קפוצ'ון או אפודה עם כובע.
101. אסור שום דבר עם כיתובים, למשל חולצה עם כיתוב, או אפילו פיג'מה.
102. אסור גולגול בשיער, או קליפס.
103. אסור נשיקה או חיבוק מאבא, ומקפידים גם להמעיט במגע בכלל.
104. גם בת שהתארסה עם בחור לא גוראי, נאסר עליה להפגש איתו.
105. אסורה חצאית עם כיסים מאחורה, או רוכסן בולט או בצבע אחר.
106. לא הולכים ברחוב עם אבא או אח.
107. לסעודה שלישית בארגון מותר להביא רק זיתים, מלפפונים חמוצים, חומוס, טחינה, תירס, וחלה יבשה.
108. בארגון, אסור לשיר בקול שמא ישמעו ברחוב.
109. אסור לדבר עם הבנות מהסמינר של האמריקאיות, כי הן מקולקלות.
110. אסור ללכת עם תיק או חצאית או אקססורי מבד חאקי, כי זה של חיילים.
111. אסור לצאת לרחוב בשיער רטוב.
112. אסור לסדר את השיער עם ג'ל שיש לו מראה רטוב (הכלל חל גם על בעלות שיער אפרו).
113. בבני ברק: אסור ללכת דרך רח'רבי יוסי, כי שם ממוקמת הישיבה.
114. רישום לחדר כושר (גם חרדי) מצריך אישור מיוחד.
115. אסור ללכת להופעות זמר חסידיות, אפילו אם ההופעה נפרדת. אם המשפחה הולכת - צריך להישאר בבית.
116. אסור להראות לחברות תמונות של החתן מהווארט.
117. אסור להירשם לספריה שאינה ספריית הסמינר.
118. אסור להתחבר עם בנות שאינן מהכיתה, קל וחומר שלא משכבה אחרת.
119. אסור נעל או סנדל פתוח מקדימה שרואים את האצבעות.
120. אסור לטוס לחו"ל בלי אישור הנהלה, אפילו אם מדובר בחתונה של אח או אחות.
121. לא אומרים תודה לנהג, מאבטח או נותן שירות.
122. שיער מתולתל חובה לאסוף, אפילו אם הוא ממש קצר.
123. אסור ללבוש סוודר מבד פוטר.
124. אסור ללבוש גרביים בהירות מצבע "נטורל", ואם התבהרו בכביסה יש לרכוש חדשות.
125. לבנות לפני סמינר אסור ללבוש גרביים.
126. אסור לרוץ ברחוב.
127. אסור לאכול ברחוב.
128. אסור ללכת לטייל בליל שבת, ואם צריך לצאת להימנע מלעבור ברחובות הראשיים.
129. אסור לגרוב גרביים שחורות.
130. אסור ללבוש חצי-מגף.
131. בבני ברק: אסור ללבוש מגפיים אלא אם ירד גשם בחצי השעה שלפני היציאה לסמינר.
132. אסור להביא לסמינר מותגים של מכשירי כתיבה.
133. אסור לגרוב גרבי כותנה משום סוג.
134. אסור לכלות לדבר על ההדרכה.
135. בנות שנישאו עוברות לכיתה מיוחדת לנשואות, כדי למנוע דיבורים מיותרים בין נשואות לרווקות.
136. חדש מהשנה האחרונה: אסור לתת נשיקה על הלחי בין בנות, גם לא לכלה שהתארסה.
137. אסור לשוחח עם חברות על מחזור וכדו'.
138. אסור ללבוש או להחזיק באקססוריז מבד ג'ינס או בדים המזכירים את הצבע או המרקם (כולל ארנק וקלמר).
139. אחרי הליכה לבריכה, לא מורידים את בגד הים הרטוב, אלא לובשים את הבגדים מעל הבגד הרטוב, ומזדרזים הביתה.
140. לאחר הרצאה לא מוחאים כפיים, אלא רק נעמדים לאות כבוד.
141. אסור לשרוק.
142. במהלך המחנה או תוכניות חברתיות אסור בשום אופן לצעוק "אוווו"או לשרוק, או לעודד בכל דרך מלבד שירה ומחיאת כפיים.
143. אסור ללבוש שמלות מקסי לאירועים. גם לא לחתונה של אח/ות.
144. מן הראוי שלא לסדר גבות.
145. אסור לעשות ביביסיטר / להתנדב כשיש גבר בבית.
146. אסור לקנות שום דבר בקופיקס, ואסור לבנות הסמינר להיכנס לקופיקס.
147. אסור לפנות למורה בגוף שני אלא בגוף שלישי בלבד. "המורה יכולה לבדוק בבקשה..."
148. אסור לצאת מהסמינר בהפסקה לקנות אוכל.
149. אסור להגיד "גזעי" (בבני ברק הפכו את זה ל"גיזייגינען").
150. אסור להיכנס לbody shop.
151. חובה ללבוש גופיה מתחת לחולצת התלבושת גם בימים חמים מאד.
152. אסור ללבוש חזייה חלקה אלא רק עם תפר.
153. אסור להסתכל על אחים של חברות מעל גיל 9.
154. אסור ללבוש חולצה עם 'פנסים'כי היא מדגישה את צורת הגוף. גם לא אחת עם 'פנסים'רק מאחורה.
155. אסור להציע שתיה לפועל שמגיע הביתה. אפשר רק להניח בקבוק וכוס בחדר ולצאת.
156. צריך להתחבא בעזרת נשים של הבית כנסת כשעוברים שם גברים.
157. כשנכנסים למונית יש לומר מיד בקרירות "תכבה את הרדיו", ואסור להגיד "אתה יכול לכבות את הרדיו בבקשה?"
158. אם רואים את החתן ברחוב צריך לברוח.
159. אסור להתעמל עם מכנסיים בלבד, חייבים להתעמל עם חצאית מעל למכנסי ההתעמלות.
160. אסור לעשות אסיפות כיתה עצמאיות.
161. אסור לקרוא ספרים שאינם חרדיים.
162. אסור לקרוא את רוב ספרי הוצאת 'פלדהיים'.
163. תיק גב מותר רק בטיולים, ורק על 2 הכתפיים. אסור ללבוש רק על כתף אחת.
164. מי שמקפידה לא לשיר גם ליד אבא, תזכה לזכויות עצומות.
165. אין ללכת בלבוש מרושל כמנהג המתנחלות.
(הרשימה ראשונית, וחלקית בלבד)

 VERY LOOSELY AND QUICKLY TRANSLATED:

Regulations Hasidic Gur
Part b - girls seminars
1. Shouldn't go eat at the restaurant.
2. Forbidden activities outside of the seminar.
3. Never look  men in the eye.
4. No contact with  nephews over the age of 13.
5.  not allowed to talk with in-laws.
I don't have a title by 6. Brothers.
7., no contact with Father / grandfather.
8. Not allowed a phone.
9. You cannot build outside
10. Forbidden shirt lycra.
11. Skirt only (Mid-length length half way between the knee, ankle).
12. No  makeup seminar
13. Forbidden mascara or any makeup eyes.
14. Forbidden volunteer organizations
15. Must not pass any man anything from hand to hand. Special permit if it's a large object and there is no option to assume (thus forming the situation of lovely girl that bends at the feet of the bid to get bill money on the floor).
16. Go to the edge of the sidewalk when a man goes through.
17. Forbidden daughter seminar cell  phone, even kosher. If you have to give to the little sister hold your phone and call for them.
18. Hide the body. All teenage girls getting bent, to hide his chest, and who doesn't understand alone it required - getting directions.
19. No sitting next to a taxi driver.
20. Not allowed to stay at weddings of friends after 11:00.
22. Must not hear radio stations, nor orthodox.
23.-in-laws can't say hello.
24. Must keep his words exact pronunciation
Not allowed to go to the beach 25. Girls alone.
26. Not allowed to meet the groom.
27. Should never discuss with friends.
29. We should not go without a robe in the sea.
30. in the camp, not allowed to wear a bathing suit in the pool just clothes. 3 parts and tights.
31. Must not hear songs modern disciples.
32. Lipa şmʻlẕʻr - outcast.
When you go 33. On Saturday, need lbysmdrş out after 'Crown'.
34. Shouldn't go through the street where the exit is men, not the hours  men go.
35. Not allowed to answer out loud in prayer. Amen
36. Forbidden to kaddish, because noise interferes with chairs for men.
37. When you talk with men lower and keep your distance. If there's a piece of furniture in the room. He separates you. Order applies to all men, including family members.
38. When the manager came in for the seminary hurry to get away to the side.
39. You can't say to a stranger. You '. Speaking with a doctor or a manager or someone that gotta talk to him, telling him 'you'. Family can say ' you just get to dad, grandpa or brothers. Rest (including brother-in-law) - 'you'.
40. Shirts are not allowed outside.
41. Forbidden a satchel, much less bag diagonal. Just a bag with a handle to holding in my hand.
42. Forbidden Gum on the street.
43. Once a month. Praying together in the hall, and girls are the principal
44. SKIPPING problematic
45. Don't sing on the bus trip.
46. Must not see movies not orthodox.
Don't write 47. Th Grade Maple, but senior baader.
48. Driving past the bus needs to come up front and pay, then to go up and down the back so as not to pass between the men in the front of the bus.
49. to play guitar on the bottom right " Hasidic girl.
50. Must pick up my hair. No way down. Forbidden hair length than just ears (= pickup rat's nest).
51. We should not go in a group of more than 4 girls on the streets together.
52. Forbidden skirts girls or clarity.
53. We should not go on Jaffa Street.
54. Don't say pregnancy, say ' way '.
55. Forbidden dangling earrings
56. Forbidden Bracelet with hanging.
God forbid 57. Mention Canyon.
58. Meeting with the guy, not allowed to serve drinks, because it might bring those hearts.
59. No sitting on or step on a log.
60. years old. No sitting on Beth.
61. Don't deserve to sit with her legs crossed.
62. No sit straddling legs.
63. Don't sleep with friends.
No girlfriend.

 64. NO Hug a long hug.
65. Must not be left alone with children over the age of 9.
66. Forbidden to ride a donkey or a horse.
67. No riding a bike.
68. Restricted sites open on Saturday (so every year on the trip going to the same place).
69. Shouldn't fix eyebrows.
70. Preferably Unscented Deodorant, dove or speed stick.
71. No perfume.
72. Not allowed to color eyelashes.
73. Not going secular events.
74. Don't talk about recycling.
75. Don't say bra  " to, say ' Top item '.
76. Need help saying the word gorgeous.
Class of 77. are not allowed to say, say 'special days'.
78. Must not wear designer labels. If you buy a brand.
79. MUST SAY 3 Psalms, and learn of chief keeping tongue.
80. Forbidden Tampons before the wedding. Just bandages.
82. Who closes a button first, gets immediately white students by the end of the ages.
83. Forbidden shoes with a heel for more than 5 inches.
84. Forbidden shirts with half sleeve over another shirt.
85. When you're studying for the boards, not allowed more than 4 girls together.
86. Camp must not two girls alone in the room.
87. Likewise forbidden to lock the room.
88. On a Friday before having shabbat stʼnẕyʻ seminar, shouldn't hide in the closet all holy hasfari lest they see a girl's name.
89. You can't do the back. Friendship Naimy Even with a pencil.
90. Forbidden dance parent too much enthusiasm.
91.covering all the pictures in the hallways, had them build a girls or a male.
92. No hair removal, but in times of displacement.
93. Dances, limited movement luxury to commit, and tutor an adult watch the creative process and returns.
94. No running in the street.
95. Can't think of in-laws on their behalf when chatting about them but only the "husband of".
96. Must not wear sneakers.
97. Forbidden Zipper in front.
98. Forbidden Skirt floors.
99. Not allowed platform shoes.
100. Forbidden a hoodie or a sweater with a hat.
101. Forbidden anything with a caption, for example, a shirt with writing on it, or even pajamas.
102. Forbidden hair clip.
103. Forbidden kiss or a hug from dad,  also diminish in contact at all.
104.- Getting engaged to a guy forbidden to meet him.
105. Forbidden Skirt with pockets in the back, or fasteners bolt or a different color.
106. Not walking down the street with dad or brother.
107. Third feast in the organization allowed only bring olives, pickles, hummus, tahini sauce, corn, dry and there was a problem.
108.  Not allowed to sing aloud lest they hear on the street.
109. Are not allowed to talk with the girls from the seminary of American, because they are broken.
110. We should not go with a skirt  khaki cloth, because it's soldiers garb.
111.? Can't be out with wet hair.
112. Shouldn't fix your hair with gel has wet look (rule apply to hair Afro).
113. Bnei Brak: never go through st Jose, because seating is located there.
114.  the gym too (Orthodox) requires special permission.
115. Shouldn't go to concerts singer performance, even if you broke up with. If the family going to stay home.
116. Not allowed to show friendship photos of groom
117. Forbidden Library register non library seminar.
118. Shouldn't make friends with girls who aren't from class, let alone not another layer.
119. Forbidden Shoe or sandal open front sight on my fingers.
120. Not allowed to go abroad without management approval, even if it's at the wedding of a brother or sister.
121. Don't say thank you to the driver, security guard, or giving service.
122. Curly hair a must pick up, even if he is really short.
123. Should not wear a sweater cloth potter.
124. Should not wear socks bright color for "naturelle", If cleared up in the wash. Have to purchase new.
125. Build before seminar should never wear socks.
126. No running in the street.
127. No eating on the street.
128. Shouldn't go for a walk on Sunday morning, and if i have to go out and avoid the main thoroughfares.
129. Should never wear black socks.
130. Not allowed to wear a boot and a half.
131. Bnei Brak: never wear boots unless it rained half hour before the exit for the seminar.
Nobody can bring to the seminar 132. Brands of stationery.
133. Must not wear cotton socks of any kind.
134. Brides should not talk about mentoring.
135. Girls who got married on travels to class special or avoid talking too much between married single gals.
136. New in the last year, you do not give a kiss on my cheek between the girls, not even for a bride that got engaged.
137. Not allowed to talk to friends about recycling and stuff '.
138. Not allowed to wear or hold  cloth jeans or fabrics that resemble the colour or texture (including wallet
139. After walking to the pool, don't do the wet bathing suit, but wearing my clothes wet clothing above, wherever. Home.
140. After a lecture not clapping, but just stand up an honorary one.
141. Forbidden to whistle.
142. During camp or social programs absolutely cannot shout "ooooh" or whistling, or encourage any way other than  applause.
143. Not allowed to wear dresses maxi events. Nor for the wedding of siblings.
144. Shouldn't fix eyebrows.
145. Not allowed to babysit / volunteer when there's a man in the house.
146. Can I not buy anything
147. Forbidden to approach the teacher but the second person in the third person only. " teacher can check please..."
148. Seminary on break can't go buy food.
149. I can't say " cool "
150. Aren't allowed in to the body shop.
151. Compulsory to wear a tank top under your shirt outfit too extremely hot days.
152. Should not wear a bra smooth only with stitch.
153. Aren't allowed to look at siblings of friends over the age of 9.
154. Should not wear a shirt  because it emphasizes the shape of the body.
155. Shouldn't offer drinks carried that comes home. One can only assume a bottle and a cup in the room and out.
156. Should hide with women of the synagogue when there are men.
157. Entering the cab have a coldly say immediately "turn off the radio", Forbidden to say " you can turn off the radio please?"
158. If you see the groom in street should run away from him.
159. Shouldn't exercise with pants only, must exercise with a skirt over pants gym.
160. You can't do independent assemblies.
161. Not allowed to read books.
162. Don't get to read the most books pulled ' FELDHEIM Publishers '.
163. Backpack allowed only for hikes, and only about 2 shoulders. Not allowed to wear only on one shoulder.
164. Do not sing near dad,
165. Doesn't have to go dressed sloppy

FOR BOYS AND MEN:

As stage one, for community’s benefit, we’ve gathered together several dozen hasidei Gur, strained our memories, and written down the regulations pertaining to unmarried yeshiva students (preliminary version only):

1. It’s forbidden for two students to sit at the same time on one bed.
2. It’s forbidden for two students to be alone in a room.
3. It’s forbidden to touch another student.
4. It’s forbidden to change your suit all at one time; rather one must remove half; dress – then remove the other half and dress.
5. It’s forbidden to sleep in pajamas. One must sleep in a white shirt, woolen tzitzit, and long underwear that is changed only under the blanket.
6. It’s forbidden to bath / shower at home – only in the mikveh.
7. It’s forbidden to be awake after 10 p.m.
8. It’s forbidden to take an afternoon nap in bed – only in the beis medrash or shteibel.
9. You must wear a hat during prayer.
10. You must eat with a hat.
11. One says Birchat HaMazon with a tissue under his kippa (when a hat is not available).
12. One does not speak to his aunts.
13. Yeshiva boys do not attend weddings.
14. Brothers are not present at the Mitzvah Tantz.
15. Yeshiva boys are not present at the Chuppa.
16. It’s forbidden to say the word “kallah”.
17. It’s forbidden to go to the mikveh every day.
18. Yeshiva boys do not sing “Eshet Chayil”.
19. Yeshiva boys do not wear a velvet kippa.
20. It’s forbidden to use deodorant or cologne.
21. It’s forbidden to bath with soap during the week – only on Erev Shabbat may soap be used.
22. It’s forbidden to sleep when at home on Shabbat afternoon.
23. Eyeglasses must have plastic frames only.
24. One may only use “Hawaii” shampoo.
25. One must tuck his peyote under his kippa, except when in Jerusalem, where they be left hanging loose.
26. It’s forbidden to comb one’s hair.
27. It’s forbidden to look in a mirror. One who looks in a mirror is called a “woman”.
28. It’s forbidden to enter the kitchen of the yeshiva.
29. It’s forbidden to have a Walkman or MP3 player.
30. One does not go to the mikveh after morning prayers.
31. Prayers are said standing (even those portions where one is permitted to sit).
32. It’s forbidden to lift another boy on your shoulders.
33. Even Tachanun is said standing.
34. It’s forbidden to say the words “woman” or “girl”.
35. It’s forbidden to sing non-Gur nigunim.
36. It’s forbidden to say “my mother”, “my sister”, “my aunt”.
37. It’s forbidden to say toilets or urinals – only “beis kees” or “maichen” or “asher yotzar”.
38. One is obligated to be tested on 125 pages of Talmud every year.
39. One must learn every day applied Jewish law (halacha) for an hour.
40. One writes a kvitel (note) to the Admur only together with the mashgiach (spiritual adviser) of the yeshiva.
41. It’s forbidden to wear a wristwatch. Watches are kept in one’s pocket.
42. On weekdays, only a stringlike gartel (belt) is worn.
43. One wears a white shirt with the buttons on the right side only.
44. Ones wears a plain white shirt only. Not one with a woven pattern.
45. It’s forbidden to read a newspaper (the neighbors of all the yeshivot are familiar with this regulation).
46. A weekday suit jacket has three buttons. A Shabbat suit jacket has 6 buttons in the front and two in the back.
47. On Shabbat it’s permitted to wear a thick gartel woven of 12 strands.
48. One doesn’t ask a boy who’s just become engaged the family name of his prospective in-laws – and how much more so, not the name of the kallah!
49. One does not say that “paloni almoni just had a baby girl” – only “paloni alomoni is making a kiddush”.
50. One must bid “goodbye” to the Admur (during communal gatherings) – otherwise no one will risk riding with you on the return autobus.
51. One does not cut his peyot. If they are extremely long, one may shorten them by burning the ends somewhat – but it should not look like he cut them with a scissors.
52. It’s forbidden to have a “number 1” or “number two” haircut – only a “zero” bald buzzcut.
53. One does not wear a gartel in the street – only when the yeshiva in order to separate oneself from “machshavot zarot” (strange thoughts).
54. One walks with one’s head downcast in the street in order not to see forbidden things.
55. It’s forbidden to ride a bike.
56. It’s forbidden to use even a “kosher” (non-internet) cellphone.
57. It’s forbidden to speak freely when not wearing a long jacket – only “nu?” or “uh?”.
58. One must wear one’s pants tucked into black stockings.
59. 10:00 p.m. is bedtime.
60. One must learn 5 hours during the six weeks of the shovavim (a period between Chanukah and the month of Adar).
61. One must wash his feet before 10 p.m.
62. One must recite the 3 chapters of Psalms every morning, as specified in the order of the Beis Yisroel (Gerrer Rebbe from 1948 to 1973).
63. Every day one says the chapters of Psalms that the Rebbe gave him at the time of his bar-mitzvah.
64. Once in bed at night it is forbidden to speak – only to say “uhh”.
65. It’s forbidden to go to your married brother’s house, only to your married sister’s.
66. It’s forbidden to go to the “oofroof” of one’s sister’s chosan.
67. It’s forbidden to go to the Sheva Brachot of one’s brother.
68. When attending Sheva Brachot, one leaves before the recital of the actual brachot.
69. It’s forbidden to go to the Sheva Brachot given by your relative’s in-laws family.
70. A regulation for the “advanced”: one does not say the word “copper”.
71. One does not say “X is engaged” – only “X became a chosen”.
72. It’s forbidden to attend the engagement party of one’s brother – only of one’s sister.
73. It’s forbidden to wear shoes with laces, only old fashioned chasidishe “loafer” style shoes.
74. It’s forbidden to smoke.
75. It’s forbidden to speak with the security guard of the yeshiva.
76. One calls the yeshiva’s cook “klafteh”.
77. One does not sing “Kol Chatan veKol Kallah” – only “Kol Sasone veKol Simcha”.
78. Yeshiva boys do not wear a vest.
79. One does not speak should he wake up before dawn.
80. It’s forbidden to sit on any bed but your own.
81. It’s forbidden to go to the beach.
82. It’s forbidden to go to a hotel.
83. One does not go to a Shalom Zachur.
84. One never wears boxer shorts, only “gatkes” – long underpants.
85. A chosen after his engagement must act as if he forgot that he was engaged.
86. One never says he has to take a piss – only “number one”.
87. One doesn’t go to other rebbes – only the Gerrer.
88. One always enters the yeshiva dining room wearing a hat.
89. A person who uses improper language is yelled at “fehhhh!”
90. It’s forbidden to have a casual chat on Shabbat during the breaks in the schedule of the yeshiva.
91. One doesn’t chat during Seudah Shleesheet on Shabat.
92. It’s forbidden to eat chocolate during the break in the schedule on Shabbat morning.
93. It’s forbidden to eat sunflower and pumpkins seeds.
94. Three boys are forbidden to sit together at one table.
95. It’s forbidden to take a walk in the street for no purpose.
96. It’s forbidden at communal meals to use a fork on one’s private plate; rather one uses a fork to take food from the communal plate.
97. It’s forbidden to say “the Rebbe doesn’t sleep”.
98. When one says a bracha without a hat, one puts one’s hand one his kippa.
99. Sweaters without buttons or with a zipper are forbidden. Only sweaters with buttons are permitted.
100. On Shabbat one prays in a kappotah only. Never in a flowered “dressing gown”.

Elie Wiesel - ‘Mr. Jew’ - "My life has been the pursuit of meaning, not joy.” “In this generation, the pursuit of pleasure is at the expense of happiness. Pleasure is instant pleasure. Everything we are obtaining is instant. Instant meaning, instant love, instant philosophy, instant truth."

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“You came for me?” asked a bewildered Mikhail Gorbachev.

“As a Jew, I owe you that much,” responded Elie Wiesel.

French president Mitterand sent Wiesel aboard a government plane to Moscow, where he met Gorbachev immediately after the 1991 coup failure, several months before the dissolution of the Soviet Union.

“When Gorbachev saw me he was moved. I asked myself, why was he moved, with tears in his eyes? Because he had just realized that his friends were not his friends. Every single one had betrayed him. Those whom he had elevated, abandoned him. I have rarely seen a man as lonely as he was. And here comes a young Jew, and says I’m here to help you, to give you support. I was thinking: I’m a yeshiva bucher from Sighet, and all of a sudden I’m involved with presidents, bringing personal messages, and traveling in government planes. I was surprised.”

Wiesel’s life-long self-image as “a yeshiva bucher from Sighet” provided important hints not only into his pre-Holocaust life, but also insights as to how the 1986 Nobel Peace Prize laureate viewed himself. Wiesel has been described as a modem prophet, a moving writer, a brilliant teacher and even a Jewish superstar. He is best known, however, as a survivor of Nazi horrors. Yet to keep describing Wiesel in all the obituaries as a survivor does an injustice to the totality of his life and accomplishments. Elie Wiesel did not merely survive, he triumphed. And if he would have paused long enough to consider it toward the end of his remarkable life, he might even have said he was happy.

Passing away at 87, Wiesel marked nearly 60 years since the publication of the best-selling Night and almost three decades since being awarded the Nobel Peace Prize. “I can’t believe it,” he said in a conversation with this writer, smiling and shaking his head at the incredible path his life had taken.

Books were everywhere at Wiesel’s home on the 26th floor of a nondescript Upper East Side Manhattan apartment building. A visitor is first confronted by thousands of books in Hebrew, Yiddish, French, and English that cover nearly every inch of space between the floor and ceiling of the L-shaped living room. One upper shelf in a corner is devoted to the more than 30 titles bearing Wiesel’s name. People are not aware that when he was a candidate for the Nobel Peace Prize, he was also being seriously considered for the Nobel Prize in Literature.

Two framed pictures are the lone exceptions to the otherwise book-lined walls. When Wiesel sat at his large desk, he faced on the far wall a sketch of Jerusalem. When he turned around to use the computer, he looked right into a dark black-and-white photograph of the house in Sighet where he grew up, which is featured in his memoirs along with 16 pages of family photos.

“Since I began writing, I always face that house,” he said in a television interview. “I must know where I come from.”

Eliezer Wiesel was born in the picturesque town of Sighet, below the Carpathian mountains that were once home to the Ba’al Shem Tov, the father of Chasidism. Tantalized by Chasidic tales his grandfather told, Wiesel’s happiest childhood memories were punctuated with singing Shabbat songs, eating chocolates and studying a page of Talmud under a tree while the other youngsters played ball.
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“He was a little sickly and certainly what we call bookish,” recalled Professor David Weiss Halivni, who studied in cheder with Wiesel in Sighet. Halivni, a former professor of religion at Columbia University and one of Wiesel’s closest friends, said that even as a child, Wiesel was “artistically more sensitive” to the mystical teachings of their teacher. Halivni believed Wiesel's sense of humor was conditioned as a child. “Maybe he had a premonition,” he said.

“We were in the ghetto together. He was on the last transport. I was on the first. I left on Monday, he left Thursday,” recalled Halivni. “So we came to Auschwitz at different times.”

“We met in Auschwitz,” said Rabbi Menashe Klein. Wearing a black Chasidic robe, tzitzit, white beard and sidelocks, Klein strikes one as Wiesel’s Old World alter ego. This is perhaps how Wiesel himself might have looked had his life, his studies, and his preoccupation with mysticism not been interrupted by history. “Somehow we got to Buchenwald and were liberated there together,” he said. “We went to France then, and Professor Wiesel attended the Sorbonne. I, on the other hand, kept dwelling in our Torah.”

Rabbi Klein, whose study in Brooklyn was also crowded with religious books, explained that Wiesel took a different path after the war as a result of the shock of his experiences during the Holocaust.

After the war, Wiesel studied in Paris, where he earned money directing a choir. Later he became the Paris correspondent for the Israel daily, Yediot Aharonot, earning $30 a month. His big break came when he moved to New York to work with the Yiddish Forward, earning $175 a month as a copy editor; writer and translator. “I remember when he lived on 103rd Street,” says Halivni. “He had only a small room, narrow, dark—you could see the poverty. I remember him sitting on the floor surrounded by records of Bach. At that time he was practically starving.”

In 1956, Wiesel stepped off a curb in Times Square and was struck by a speeding taxi. Following the accident, which left him hospitalized for seven months, Wiesel desperately needed money and tried covering the United Nations on crutches for Yediot. Golda Meir, then foreign minister, took pity on the young journalist and would invite him back to her hotel suite, where she would prepare omelets and tea and brief him on the day’s events. In 1967, his books, which had been commercial failures, began to sell, and Wiesel was able to leave daily journalism to concentrate on book writing.

So powerfully embedded in the popular psyche is Wiesel’s association with the Holocaust that many would find it surprising that the topic rarely came up in his classes or in his writings.

“When people didn’t talk about the Shoah, I felt I had to. So many people are doing it now, I don’t need to any more,” he explained. In fact, he always thought twice about raising the issue. “I’m afraid of making it into a routine. I want it that whenever I mention the word Shoah, I should stop for a second and my voice should tremble, my whole being should tremble before pronouncing that word.”

Halivni left public speaking about the Holocaust to Wiesel. “But when he comes to see me,” he said, “He listens and I shout.”

While the Holocaust rarely figures prominently in Wiesel’s public life in the later years of his life, his sensitivity as a survivor gave him an appreciation for every moment, and for life’s fragility. He and his wife, Marion, used to travel on separate flights. “Just in case,” he said, like a quick prayer, eyes flashing toward Heaven.

It also drove him to work hard.

“There are people who want to do more than they can. Wiesel is one of them,” said Rabbi Klein, who, like Wiesel, went to sleep late and woke up early to study and write. “For Wiesel, the Nobel Peace Prize is no more than a ladder, a step, toward fulfilling a goal for which he remained alive: to do for the Jewish people.”

“A person cannot live with the feeling that they have achieved the highest,” said Halivni, who claimed that the Nobel Prize had been a mixed blessing for Wiesel.

“The Nobel Prize did not become an end, rather a new beginning.

 He realizes that the Nobel Prize was given to him as ‘Mr. Jew,’ and therefore he owes it to the Jewish people. In a sense it entails a greater responsibility. It has imposed a burden on him; the possibility of extending help, because of his connections, is much bigger. There is nothing more frightening for a sensitive person than having power.”

While New York is far from Sighet, Elie Wiesel was never far from the forces that molded his childhood: chasidism and the Holocaust. And the struggle of these two forces to coexist in one soul is what shaped Elie Wiesel until his last day, providing the creative tension for his achievements and writings. Deep within him lay a young yeshiva bucher from Sighet; deep within he believed he survived the Nazi horrors for a purpose.

* * *

Clad in a well-tailored gray suit and hugging a velvet blue Torah scroll, Elie Wiesel danced in a tight circle with his friends and sang songs of praise to the God he had so often challenged. Wiesel was glowing; gone was the trademark somber look that is naturally chiseled in his sullen, handsome face. It was Simchat Torah for the Jewish people. Yet for Wiesel it was more; it was also his birthday.

“We never celebrated birthdays at home,” Wiesel said of his childhood. He rarely celebrated the occasion because “to me every minute is a victory.”

Wiesel credited his sanity to his family and friends. “I read, I listen to music, I speak with friends. My life is full. The main thing is not to waste time.” But then he added, “Sometimes I think that I too am insane. I was always in the minority, like the madman. When I began to talk about trying to teach the Shoah, how many others were there? When I began for Russian Jewry, how many others were there then?”

 “What keeps Wiesel sane?” pondered Rabbi Menashe Klein. “We sing together, eat together, daven together, walk together. He comes here before every holiday. Mostly we meet, we talk.” Klein says that Wiesel, who sang in a choir as a child, still loved to sing Chasidic melodies. “He would begin singing Friday night at 5:30 p.m. and wouldn’t stop until after 2 a.m.”

Wiesel said that his daily study of Jewish texts was essential for him. “I love to study. It gives you a good sense of proportion. After all, what Rambam says maybe is more important than the article I wrote for The New York Times.”

Wiesel's preoccupation with books began early. When others were hording food and valuables, the young Wiesel brought books to study onto the cramped cattle car to Auschwitz.

Dr. David Weiss Halivni and Wiesel expressed their friendship by always speaking Hebrew to each other. Halivni was one of the few who could really make Wiesel laugh. “The lightest moments we have are when we bring up characters from Sighet,” he said.

What kind of characters? There was the shadchan (matchmaker), Ziegenfeld, who always walked with an umbrella. And then there was the tall shochet (ritual slaughterer) and his short wife. And many others. “Hardly a conversation passes when we don’t talk about Sighet,” Halivni said. “When describing these things, recapturing the comical aspects of Sighet, then I see him having a hearty laugh.”

Was Wiesel happy? To his friends, the question seemed irrelevant. “We never think in those terms,” said Halivni. He explained that Chasidic spirituality gave Wiesel freedom—a second liberation—and that Wiesel “needs the joy of Chasidut because he cannot always live in the shadow of the Holocaust.”

Wiesel, hesitant to allow an affirmative answer, gave a traditional response. “We don’t speak about happiness in our faith, we speak about simcha vesasson (joy and gladness). What do we ask for? Shalom, yes. We mainly ask for Yirat shamayim (fear of heaven), for study, for chaim shel Torah (life of Torah). What is Torah? Meaning. My life has been the pursuit of meaning, not joy.”

For Wiesel, without a Jewish context there was no enjoyment. When asked. about simcha vesasson in his own life, he paused briefly, and then his words flowed in his soft French accent. “Nineteen forty-eight, when Israel was born. I remember that Shabbat in Paris. I felt joy that came from history. Then the ‘67 war. Shichrur Yerushalayim (the liberation of Jerusalem), something that remains with me. And Simchat Torah in Moscow with young people.”

Yet “there is something missing, and when something is missing, happiness can’t be present because happiness means nothing is missing. What is missing?” The Boston University professor paused and then answered the question. “Certainty. You have the haunting feeling that history is trying to purge itself of its demons, of its nightmares with the pursuit of violence of bloodshed, of hatred.

“In this generation, the pursuit of pleasure is at the expense of happiness. Pleasure is instant pleasure. Everything we are obtaining is instant. Instant meaning, instant love, instant philosophy, instant truth.

“The Gaon of Vilna said that the hardest mitzvah to accomplish is ‘v’samachta bechagecha' (rejoice in your holidays). ‘Do not steal,’ ‘do not kill,’ everything is easy. ‘Vesamachta bechagecha!’ To make sure that you rejoice,” Wiesel said energetically.

Wiesel’s voice then became barely audible, his downward gaze was steady. His consciousness seemed to have been transported to another time. “Another kind of joy, even deeper than that, and more personal, was the birth of my son... even more, the brit of my son. To me in my life, it has the importance of the birth of Israel, the reunification of Jerusalem. I felt it in my body, in every cell of my body....”

The phone broke his trance, and Wiesel walked over to his executive-size mahogany desk to answer it. On it sit two photographs: One of him with his wife and their son Shlomo-Elisha, and one a close-up of their son, both taken at least 35 years ago. Wiesel named his son after his father, who was in the camps with him and died only weeks before Wiesel’s liberation. “I was 16 years old when my father died,” writes Wiesel in his memoirs.

“My father was dead and the pain was gone. I no longer felt anything. Someone had died inside me, and that someone was me.”

“My father had no official position in the community, he was a kind of intercessor in the community, he was a grocery store owner,” Wiesel said in a tone of great respect. “Somehow, I don’t know how, he always defended the Jews with the authorities. Therefore, when something would happen, they would come to my father.” At times his father was so busy with Jewish communal business that the young Wiesel would only see him at home on the Sabbath.

Wiesel himself had no official position in the Jewish community, yet he has served as an intercessor with heads of state, including President Reagan prior to his trip to Bitburg and President Clinton, to ask him to do more to help the Bosnians. As Prime Ministers, both Ehud Olmert and Binyamin Netanyahu tried convincing Wiesel to accept the position of President of the State of Israel. “The need to help Jews, I think I am following in my father’s footsteps and I think he would have wanted it that way,” said Wiesel. Wiesel said that he has only recently realized the similarities between himself and his father, and explains that it took a long time to come to this conclusion “because of kibbud av (respect of one’s father), I didn’t dare compare myself with him. He saved Jewish lives; I didn’t. I try to teach, but he saved Jewish lives. He was arrested, he was tortured. I was not. So how can I compare myself to him?” Just as Wiesel struggled with being a son, he also wrestled with being a father. “The hardest is to be a good father, always” confessed Wiesel. Halivni says that it is not easy being the son of a great man. Shlomo-Elisha, a Yale graduate who now works in finance, had been heard to say, half-jokingly: “It’s hard growing up in a house where your dad is the arbiter of morality in the 20th century.”

Wiesel believed that “the father-son relationship is a test, both for the father and for the son. When the son leaves home, it is harder for the father than for the son,” he said, hoping not to betray the privacy of his family life while trying to convey the love and understanding he had for his son. “The son has to free himself on the one hand, and at the same time be loyal,” he said, speaking perhaps about both his relationship with his father and his son’s with him. “The hardest things are the most rewarding.”

Yosef I. Abramowitz, Elie Wiesel’s student, serves as CEO of Energiya Global Capital and can be followed @KaptainSunshine

"More than 2,400 U.S. doctors have been sanctioned for sexually abusing their patients, according to a new report that, for the first time, surveyed records from all 50 states and reveals the nationwide scope of a problem that may be almost as far-reaching as the scandal involving Catholic priests."

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The New Sex Abuse Scandal: 2,400 Doctors Implicated by Patients

 

 


More than 2,400 U.S. doctors have been sanctioned for sexually abusing their patients, according to a new report that, for the first time, surveyed records from all 50 states and reveals the nationwide scope of a problem that may be almost as far-reaching as the scandal involving Catholic priests.

State medical boards, which oversee physicians, allowed more than half the sanctioned doctors to keep their licenses even after the accusations of sexual abuse were determined to be true, according to a yearlong investigation by The Atlanta Journal-Constitution

“We found a culture of secrecy,” said Carrie Teegardin, a reporter on the paper’s investigative team for the project. 

“It’s treated with a sort of secrecy that we don’t see in other arenas when we’re talking about allegations this serious,” she told ABC News. “It’s still swept under the rug in so many cases.”
Some high-profile cases have led to criminal prosecutions. 

In New York City the former head of clinical research at the Mount Sinai hospital emergency room, Dr. David Newman, is facing charges that he abused four of his female patients, including one he allegedly drugged while she was in the ER. 

Newman has pleaded not guilty to charges, and the hospital said he no longer works there.
If convicted, he could face up to seven years in prison. 

“It doesn’t matter if you’re a famous physician or if you’re a famous anything, you got to follow the law,” said Michael Hestrin, the district attorney in Riverside County, California. 

Hestrin’s office is prosecuting a doctor in his county accused of 26 felony counts of sexual assault. 

Dr. John McGuire has pleaded not guilty to the charges and is being held in jail on a $3 million bond. His license has been suspended by the state medical board. 

According to a civil complaint, McGuire sexually assaulted a patient recovering in a private room from the effects of anesthesia. He allegedly lifted the “plaintiff’s gown and placed his ungloved hands on her bare breasts and felt all around looking for ‘swelling.’” 

In another alleged incident, the lawsuit claims McGuire “rubbed plaintiff’s vagina with an ungloved hand and fingers,” supposedly to check on a rash. 

“Dr. McGuire stands charged of at least three forcible rapes,” according to John Mittelman, a lawyer representing a group of female patients suing McGuire. 

“When you have a predator like Dr. McGuire, they’re not thinking like the rest of us, the rest of doctors,” said Mittelman. “They’re concerned only about one thing, and that’s their personal gratification. How else can you explain a doctor having sex with an unconscious patient?”
Even after being convicted of sex crimes and losing their licenses, doctors are often able to reapply to practice again. 

Dr. David Mata, once praised on the floor of Congress as a “great humanitarian” and named doctor of the year in Oregon, was accused of 140 counts of sexual abuse of patients. 

He pleaded guilty to six counts of sexual acts with patients but was not sentenced to prison and served his probation at home. 

The California medical board revoked his license, but only after a three-year investigation, during which he was able to see patients, as long as an observer was in the examination room. 

Asked if he wanted to apologize to his patients, Mata told ABC News, through a screen door, that he “empathized” with them but maintained his innocence. 

He is eligible to reapply for his license, although he said he is now retired and does not plan to practice again. 

The Journal-Constitution investigation began with a story about one Georgia doctor that led to efforts to document the problem nationwide. 

By combing through news reports, state medical board records and court files going back 16 years, the Journal-Constitution's reporters compiled a list of physicians who were either convicted in criminal cases or disciplined by state medical boards. 

The reporters found many of the doctors were accused by large numbers of their patients, in most cases females being seen by male doctors. 

“One thing we found that was shocking to us is some of these doctors are the most prolific sex offenders in the country, with hundreds and, in some cases, thousands of victims,” Teegardin said.
She said doctors who abuse trade on the trust their patients put in them. 

“When you go to a physician, you’re in a private room, and you disrobe because you need to have an exam,” she said. 

Reminiscent of the early days of the Vatican’s handling of sexual abuse allegations involving priests, the American medical establishment has sought to downplay or ignore the issue with doctors. 

“Those who are in charge of licensing physicians have a belief that they can be safely returned to exam rooms,” said Teegardin. 

There are around 900,000 doctors licensed the practice in the U.S., according to the Journal-Constitution. Requests from ABC News to interview the newly elected president of the American Medical Association, Dr. Andrew Gurman, were turned down by association officials. 

The AMA declined to comment specifically on the new report and, when pressed, provided only a copy of the AMA ethical guidelines on sexual misconduct. 

ABC News’ Esther Castillejo contributed to this report.

"So what gives? Could it possibly be that we had leadership in other eras which didn’t spend so much of its time hyping up every incident in the country and portraying the cops, the colleges and every other institution in the nation as inherently racist?"

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Survey: under Obama, race relations in the US reach 20 year low

 

I would call this breaking news, but the only real headline here is that Time Magazine felt the need to point this out as if it were some sort of surprise. Ask anyone of any race, gender, age or religion how they think things are going in terms of race relations and unrest around the country these days and you’re going to get a fairly gloomy response. But one recent survey shows that it’s even worse than some of us imagined… in fact, it hasn’t been this bad since the bad old days under Bill Clinton. (Time)
Perception of U.S. race relations have reached a 20 year low after several high-profile deaths of black Americans at the hands of police officers, according to data from a new Wall Street Journal/NBC News poll.
Only 34% of Americans said race relations in the country are fairly good or very good, the lowest since October 1995, shortly after the O.J. Simpson trial concluded in an acquittal for the former football star.
The inauguration of Barack Obama as the country’s first black president saw Americans’ view of race relations reach a high of 77% in January 2009. However, the Wall Street Journal notes, there has been a precipitous decline in Americans’ perceptions of race relations since July 2013.
As I said, the idea that race relations are at near historic lows won’t come as any shock for anyone who either owns a television or ever leaves their home. But it’s the analysis provided by Time which is likely more interesting than the raw numbers. Right in the sub-title of the piece the author references the period following the acquittal of O.J. Simpson on double murder charges. That’s something of an odd choice because, as many people have noted over the years, the phrase which might have been chanted in the streets afterward – if there had been anyone in the streets- was, No Justice, No Rioting. I have no doubt that there were many people (and yes… I’m including many white people) who were upset with the verdict of someone who seemed so obviously and completely guilty. But for some reason we didn’t see armies of whites out in the streets burning down Hollywood. Not that there aren’t some sections of Hollywood that could do with some abrupt renovation, mind you, but the rioting didn’t happen.

Still, if all we’re measuring is “racial tension” in terms of how people answer questions on a survey, I’m sure things were going downhill at that point. But what about the longer trends? Take a look at the WSJ/NBC chart covering 25 years.

RaceRelations

The article’s author takes great pains to point out that the low point came at the OJ trial and not, for example, the actual riots which took place in LA at other times. They then skip over more than a decade and a half and point to Barack Obama’s election as a high point. But do you notice when the country first had more people saying things were going well than going badly? It was in 2000. And the trend was an almost complete, unbroken upward curve for the next eight years. Further, in 1996 things were already on the way down. When you go back further in history by looking at Gallup’s historical numbers, you see that that low point we’re talking about was after a sustained period of better views of race relations in the eighties and early nineties.

Whether there’s a causal relationship or not, it’s a darned curious thing. Views of race relations were actually better under Reagan and Bush 41, they got worse under Clinton, then climbed steadily throughout Bush 43’s tenure, and then steadily cratered under Obama. It’s ludicrous to suggest that government policy regarding the treatment of minorities was somehow more abusive under the Democrats. (Unless you count Hispanics under Obama’s record setting deportation numbers… which are still debatable.) So what gives? Could it possibly be that we had leadership in other eras which didn’t spend so much of its time hyping up every incident in the country and portraying the cops, the colleges and every other institution in the nation as inherently racist?

Food for thought.

http://hotair.com/archives/2015/12/17/survey-under-obama-race-relations-in-the-us-reach-20-year-low/

After Thursday’s terrorist slaughter of policemen in Dallas, it’s fair to say that Barack Obama might well be the worst president in U.S. history. Here’s why...

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The keynote of America’s domestic politics for the last 60 or 70 years—from sometime between the Supreme Court’s 1954 Brown v Board of Education school desegregation decision and the 1964 Civil Rights Act—has been the nation’s effort to undo the heinous wrongs that slavery and Jim Crow perpetrated on black Americans ever since the first slave was brought here in the 1640s. I am old enough to have had friends who were Freedom Riders, white college kids who went to Mississippi to register black citizens to vote. One I’ll never forget returned with tales of old people, whom legal chicanery had blocked from voting all their lives, marveling in almost Biblical language that such a miracle could be occurring in their own lifetimes, in their own towns. I remember how Sherriff Bull Connor turned the fire hoses and German Shepherds on those civil rights protesters, black and white, in Birmingham, Alabama, in 1963, and how that same year governor George Wallace stood at the door of the University of Alabama to prevent the enrollment of two black students, proclaiming himself Jefferson Davis’s spiritual heir and vowing “segregation forever!” But what I most remember is skinny Deputy Attorney General Nicholas Katzenbach walking heroically down that hostile Alabama street—alone, but followed by federal marshals—to force Wallace to stand aside and let the two students enter. It was as heart stopping as Gary Cooper walking toward the showdown on Main Street in High Noon.

I also remember how civil rights zeal turned into zealotry. We made the integration of our schools, and then the closing of the black-white achievement gap, our principal educational goal for half a century, with the unintended consequence that we neglected actual education and turned urban schools into machines for perpetuating black failure. Judge-ordained busing in Boston, completely contrary to the terms of the Civil Rights Act, made the schools more segregated than ever. A judge-ordained Kansas City school-funding-equalization order, forcing local taxpayers to shell out $2 billion  over  a decade, including building a bizarrely unnecessary Olympic swimming pool, produced no educational gains whatsoever and proved to anyone with eyes to see that money was not the key to racial equality in education.

Then, the colleges turned to affirmative action in admissions, the ed schools taught their students not how to teach or what facts they needed to transmit but only “social-justice” ideology, and deans of diversity began to outnumber actual teachers on college campuses. The professors themselves brought the stupendous achievements of Western culture under the suspicion of creating nothing but racial inequality (and later an unimaginably broad smorgasbord of inequity). They replaced Plato with Ta-Nehisi Coates.

Believing that welfare payments constituted well-deserved reparations for 300 years of slavery and oppression, we New Yorkers created a come-and-get-it dole that ended up with one in eight of our neighbors on the welfare rolls—paid for by the rest of us and resulting in a multi-generational underclass. We entertained the foolish notion that black crime was a manly revolt against oppression—that black criminals were only protesting against the closure of all avenues of honest advancement for their race, as well as against the daily humiliation heaped on African-Americans.

The resulting depolicing of black neighborhoods and unwillingness of courts to punish black criminals drove crime to Hobbesian levels and turned minority neighborhoods into killing fields, where mothers put their kids to bed in the bathtub, trying to keep them safe from stray bullets. They would never send them out for a bottle of milk or take them into the street to learn to ride a bike. In those days, my upright, churchgoing cleaning lady had to pay the gang who controlled her block $20 of hard-earned money to allow Macy’s deliverymen to go past them to bring her the comfortable bed she had labored so long to earn. She lived, in other words, in something like the Middle Ages, when bands of ruffians ruled the land and extorted tribute from the peasants.

Thomas Jefferson had prophesied that God would punish America for black slavery, but he could never have foreseen how squalid that punishment would be.

As the Civil War, which cost 620,000 American lives, drew to a close, Abraham Lincoln gave his Second Inaugural Address, six weeks before one of the world’s perennial multitude of fanatics, this one opposed to votes for black citizens, blew the great president’s brains out. Lincoln had spoken in his address about the immense cost the country was paying for the sin of slavery. In the final accounting, he said, it might turn out that “all the wealth piled by the bondsman’s two hundred and fifty years of unrequited toil shall be sunk, and . . . every drop of blood drawn with the lash shall be paid by another drawn with the sword.” But as he looked toward the end of the war fought to end these wrongs, he urged reconciliation. He urged forgiveness. “With malice toward none, with charity for all,” he prayed, “let us . . . bind up the nation's wounds.”

Well, we tried. Despite the evil men who derailed Reconstruction, America took up again Lincoln’s charge “to finish the work we are in.” My whole life coincided with that effort. And for all the resistance and unintended negative consequences, the nation had come very close to succeeding by 2008, when Barack Obama, a black man, was elected president of the United States. A friend had called from London shortly before and asked incredulously, “Surely, America would never elect a black man as president?” “Of course it would,” I said. And when it happened, the resounding shout of joy that went up from the buildings of my ultra-left-wing Manhattan neighborhood was something I had never heard before. My wife and daughter wept. And though no admirer of Obama’s politics, I too felt awe at the historical momentousness of it all.

Not everyone shared that sentiment—most notably the new president and his wife, who had sat for more than a decade in the pews of Jeremiah Wright’s Chicago church listening to the reverend firebrand pray for God to damn America for its ineradicable racism. Though the new president had sworn his oath of office on Lincoln’s Bible, anyone who thought that his election marked the fulfilment of Lincoln’s dream soon heard him and his even more race-obsessed attorney general lambaste America for a racism so deep that white citizens couldn’t even see it, bred in the bone as it was. Colleges even made up a term for this molecular-level racism: micro-aggression. It was hard not to think of Robespierre’s fanatical vow that the revolution had indeed erased monarchy and aristocracy from France, but it wouldn’t end until it had erased the very idea of them from every man’s heart as well.

Central to the nation’s Herculean effort to end the wrongs of racism was the new determination of police departments, led by New York City mayor Rudy Giuliani and his police commissioner William Bratton, to restore law and order to ghetto neighborhoods, so that civil society could come back to life there, and people wouldn’t have to pay tribute to armed thugs controlling their lives. The old policing had ignored all but the most heinous ghetto crimes. Its spirit was: If they want to kill each other uptown, fine, as long as it stays up there. But for the new policing, all victims deserved police attention, regardless of race. All neighborhoods deserved police protection, regardless of the color of their residents. And since the perpetrators of crime are overwhelmingly young minority men, they properly received a very large proportion of police scrutiny. The alternative, to repeat, was to let them kill each other.

But unlike Lincoln, America’s first black president didn’t bind up the nation’s wounds but scratched them open every time police killed a black man—rightly or sometimes wrongly, because when society arms men with guns and authority, it will inevitably attract some bullies, making a police chief responsible for policing his own men vigilantly, as the NYPD especially has striven to do, and as Plato told us was statecraft’s thorniest problem. Anytime a non-black man killed an African-American, Obama cried racism and said it could have been him or his son, if he’d had one. Every time a cop, white or black, killed a black American, Obama’s reflexive instinct was to blame the cop. About the mayhem of black-on-black murder in the nation’s ghettoes, he gave only a single speech.

When the president praises the Black Lives Matter demonstrators, as if they alone of his fellow countrymen know that platitudinous truth, he is only reinforcing black grievance, when his proper role is to convince ghetto blacks that their lives matter enough for them to take responsibility for them, to stop going around with chips on their shoulders and Glocks in their waistbands, to be fathers to the children they beget, and to set for them an example of the responsible citizenship that is theirs for the asking, thanks to the efforts of so many of their countrymen, white and black, living and dead.

True to form, Obama went into grievance-mongering mode on July 7, commenting on the killings of Alton Sterling and Philando Castile by cops in Louisiana and Minnesota. He noted that “all of us as Americans should be troubled by these shootings, because these are not isolated incidents. They’re symptomatic of a broader set of racial disparities that exist in our criminal justice system.” And he went on to detail law enforcement’s racial disparities, as if there were not even more stark and troubling racial disparities in lawbreaking. His familiar conclusion: “If you add it all up, the African American and Hispanic population, who make up only 30 percent of the general population, make up more than half of the incarcerated population. Now, these are facts. And when incidents like this occur, there’s a big chunk of our fellow citizenry that feels as if because of the color of their skin, they are not being treated the same. And that hurts.”

Later that day, a black former soldier assassinated five Dallas police officers and wounded seven more, sniping from above with a semi-automatic rifle. A sympathizer of the New Black Panther Party, which professes hatred of whites and especially Jews, the sniper, Micah X. Johnson, 25, told police who cornered and killed him that he was avenging cop killings of blacks by killing whites and especially white cops.

If you want to ignite race riots, a sure-fire way to do it is to stir up black hatred and suspicion of cops, which will in turn make cops warier of blacks and more trigger-happy, and so on, until an explosion occurs. So thanks, President Obama. You have set back American race relations by 50 years.

"Friends, Americans, countrymen, lend me your ears; I come to bury the US Constitution, not to praise it."

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But Hillary is an honourable woman

FBI Director James B. Comey, Jr., must know his Shakespeare because he seems to be playing the role of Mark Antony in Julius Caesar.

by Mark Langfan -The writer, who specializes in security issues, has created an original educational 3d Topographic Map System of Israel to facilitate clear understanding of the dangers facing Israel and its water supply. It has been studied by US lawmakers and can be seen at www.marklangfan.com.
Act 3, Scene 2: Federal Bureau of Investigation, Press Room
Enter FBI Director James B. Comey, Jr., stage left

Second Citizen:
Peace! let us hear what FBI Director Comey can say.
FBI Director Comey:
You gentle Americans,--
Citizens:
Peace, ho! let us hear him.
FBI Director Comey:
Friends, Americans, countrymen, lend me your ears;
I come to bury the US Constitution, not to praise it.
The evil that men do lives after them;
The good is oft interred with their bones;
So let it be with the US Constitution. The noble Hillary,
Hath told you the US Constitution was ambitious:
If it were so, it was a grievous fault,
And grievously hath the US Constitution for answer'd it.
Here, in the face of the US Constitution,
Hillary and the rest took leave and destroyed of thousands of State Department work e-mails that we will never know about or read--
For Hillary is an honourable woman;
So are they all, all honourable men and women--
Come I to speak in US Constitution's funeral.
It was my friend, faithful and just to me:
But Hillary says it was ambitious;
And Hillary is an honourable woman.
In the face of the US Constitution,
While at the State Department helm,
Hillary hath brought many bundlers like Rajiv Fernando
home to Washington DC,
Whose donations did the Clinton Foundation’s coffers fill:
Did this in the US Constitution seem ambitious?
When that the poor have cried, the US Constitution hath wept:
Ambition should be made of sterner stuff:
Yet Hillary says the US Constitution was ambitious;
And Hillary is an honourable woman.
You all did see that at the House’s Benghazi and State E-mail hearings,
In the face of the US Constitution,
Where Hillary hath thrice by thrice by thrice perjured herself in sworn testimony,
Was this the US Constitution’s ambition?!
Yet Hillary says US Constitution was ambitious;
And, yet, sure, Hillary is an honourable woman.
I speak not to disprove what Hillary spoke,
But here I am to speak what I do know.
You all did love the US Constitution once, not without cause:
What cause withholds you then, to now mourn for it?
Nay, dearest Citizens, to yearn for it?
O judgment! thou art fled to brutish beasts,
And men have lost their reason. Bear with me;
My heart is in the coffin there with the US Constitution,
And I must pause till it come back to me.
Alas, if it can ever come back to me.
First Citizen:
Methinks there is much reason in his sayings.
Second Citizen:
If thou consider rightly of the matter,
The US Constitution, and the United States of America,
Has been put to a great wrong.

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/Articles/Article.aspx/19170

Various rabbis who should know better, argued that this case "Wisconsin v. Yoder"should apply to Hassidic communities and should not be legally forced to educate their kids past the 8th grade. I present this article by Ms. Ungar-Sargon to demonstrate how out of touch those rabbis are and the damage these pseudo-intellectuals do to children because of their inability to interact in the real world outside of their cult-communities...Forcing them underground!

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 Wisconsin v. Yoder, 406 U.S. 205 (1972), is the case in which the United States Supreme Court found that Amish children could not be placed under compulsory education past 8th grade. The parents' fundamental right to freedom of religion outweighed the state's interest in educating its children. The case is often cited as a basis for parents' right to educate their children outside of traditional private or public schools.

hhttps://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Wisconsin_v._Yoder

"How did the Court come to that decision, and how do its reasons relate to the current situation of Satmar education?

First, the Court noted that the Amish are “productive…members of society; they reject public welfare.” Wisconsin could not convincingly argue that Amish children would grow up to be dependent on the state.

In contrast, Hasidic groups are greatly dependent on public welfare. Kiryas Joel is the poorest town in America, with about half the families receiving food stamps and a third eligible for Medicaid and housing subsidies.


Second, the Court believed that the “additional one or two years” of education between completion of eighth grade and leaving school at sixteen were too slight to stand up against the Amish interest in the free exercise of their religion. White, in a concurrence joined by Brennan and Stewart, wrote, “This would be a very different case… if respondents’ claim were that their religion forbade their children from attending any school at any time and from complying in any way with the educational standards set by the State. Since the Amish children are permitted to acquire the basic tools of literacy to survive in modern society by attending grades one through eight, and since the deviation from the State’s compulsory education law is relatively slight, I conclude that respondents’ claim must prevail…” 

But in the case of the Satmar, Skverer and similar groups, there is a large gap between actual learning and an adequate education. Whereas the Amish had full days of secular education from first through eighth grade, many Hasidic boys receive only 90 minutes of secular education a day, from third through eighth grade. According to Shulem Deen, regular Forward columnist and author of “All Who Go Do Not Return,” his two sons, raised in the Skverer town of New Square, cannot read, write or speak English, at ages 13 and 15."
 

Undercover atheists

Seduced by science and rationalism, yet tied to their families and communities, Hasidic atheists opt for a double life

byBatya Ungar-Sargon
 
Header hassidic

The moment Solomon lost his faith, he was standing on the D train, swaying back and forth with its movement as if in prayer. But it wasn’t a prayer book that the young law student was reading – he had already been to synagogue, where he had wrapped himself in the leather thongs that bound him to Orthodox Judaism, laying phylacteries and reciting the prayers three times daily.

The tome in his hands now was Alan Dershowitz’s The Genesis of Justice (2000), which used Talmudic and Hasidic interpretations of the Bible to argue that stories in the book of Genesis, from Adam and Eve eating the apple to Noah and his ark, constituted God’s learning curve – a means of establishing a moral code and the rules of justice that prevail today.

What struck him about the book was its depth, and a complexity of thought that he had been raised to believe was the exclusive domain of the rabbis whose authority commanded his community of ultra-Orthodox Jews. The book’s brilliance, coupled with its unabashed heresy, created the first of many cracks in Solomon’s faith. Seeing the scriptures interpreted in methods so compelling and yet entirely inconsistent with the dogmas of his youth caused Solomon to question everything he believed to be true.

From Dershowitz, Solomon moved on to evolutionary biology, and then to Stephen Hawking and cosmology, and then biblical criticism, until finally, he was unable to deny the conclusion his newly developed capacity for critical thinking had led him to: he no longer believed in the existence of God.

‘It was the most devastating moment of my life,’ he told me. ‘I wish to this day that I could find the holy grail that proves that I’m wrong, that it’s all true.’

And yet 15 years later, Solomon’s life looks exactly the way it did the day of that fateful train ride, give or take a few infractions. Solomon is still leading the life of an Orthodox Jew. He is married to an Orthodox Jew. His children are Orthodox Jews who go to study the Torah at yeshiva. His parents are ultra-Orthodox Jews. And so, with his new-found atheism, Solomon did nothing.
Solomon is one of hundreds, perhaps thousands, of men and women whose encounters with evolution, science, new atheism and biblical criticism have led them to the conclusion that there is no God, and yet whose social, economic and familial connections to the ultra-Orthodox and Hasidic communities prevent them from giving up the rituals of faith. Those I spoke to could not bring themselves to upend their families and their children’s lives. With too much integrity to believe, they also have too much to leave behind, and so they remain closeted atheists within ultra-Orthodox communities. Names and some places have been changed – every person spoke to me for this story on condition of anonymity. Part of a secret, underground intellectual elite, these people live in fear of being discovered and penalised by an increasingly insular society.
‘Religious fundamentalists want to have a monopoly on truth, a monopoly on morality, but the internet undermines those facades’.

But they are also proof of the increasing challenges fundamentalist religious groups face in the age of the internet and a globalised world. With so much information so readily available, such groups can no longer rely on physical and intellectual isolation to maintain their boundaries. In addition to exposing religious adherents to information that challenges the hegemony of their belief systems, the internet gives individuals living in restrictive environments an alternative community.

‘It helps people find others in the same boat,’ said Phil Zuckerman, a professor of sociology at Pitzer College in California who studies apostates and secularism. ‘Twenty, thirty years ago, if you were living in Borough Park, Brooklyn, or Alabama and you were surrounded by Hasids or Pentecostal Christians and you started to have doubts, well, you were alone. Now, you can find someone right away who is in the same boat as you and is also sharing your doubts. You can find community, you can find a connection that bolsters your own situation and gives you support – intellectual and emotional. Religious fundamentalists want to have a monopoly on truth, a monopoly on lifestyle, a monopoly on morality, a monopoly on authority, but the internet undermines all those facades.’

Yanky cut an incongruous figure. A tall ultra-Orthodox man with a short, scruffy beard and short side-locks wrapped behind his ears, wearing traditional Hasidic black-and-white garb, he was sitting on a barstool in an out-of-the-way dive bar in South Brooklyn on a Monday afternoon, sipping a Corona. But Yanky is an incongruous man. Like Solomon, he lives in an Orthodox neighbourhood, has many children who attend yeshivas, goes to synagogue to pray, hosts meals on Sabbath. His life, like the life of any Orthodox Jew, is punctuated a hundred times a day by the small demands the religion makes on its adherents’ lifestyle, demands on what they can eat, what they can wear, where they can go, what they can read, whom they can speak to, what they can touch, when they can touch it, and how often.

Somewhat tragically for a person so occupied, Yanky doesn’t believe in God.

Things didn’t start out that way. Yanky, who has a gentle, defeated air about him, and a shy, cynical sense of humour, was among the most fervent scholars of his cohort. ‘It’s hard to describe how earnest a person I was before,’ he told me. He had spent many years studying the Torah in the most prestigious yeshivas. ‘I had really suffered to be there,’ he said, by way of explaining how much it had meant to him and how deeply invested in the holy texts he once was. He even worked as a rabbi on the side, answering questions pertaining to religious law for lay people in his community.

But Yanky had always had philosophical questions, even as a child. At some point, all of the questions added up, coming to a head when his rabbi asked him to study with a man who had recently become observant. This newly religious man needed a study partner to take him through the religious answers to scientific questions. While able to answer the man’s religious queries, the partnership forced Yanky to think deeply about the issues he had been avoiding, such as the conflicts between the Bible’s claims and those made by science. He tried to put an end to their study sessions, but his rabbi was confident in his ability to stay the course. ‘No, no, it’ll be fine, it’ll be fine,’ Yanky remembers his rabbi telling him.

‘It wasn’t fine.’

That’s when his newly observant study partner took Yanky to a presentation by the British scientist and New Atheist Richard Dawkins, author of The God Delusion (2006). ‘It wasn’t so much that Dawkins was so convincing, or interesting even,’ Yanky told me between short sips of beer. ‘It was just, I was sitting there with this whole group of people who were having this one viewpoint.’ He experienced for the first time what religion looked like from the outside, a series of often ridiculous and always questionable ideas shattering its absolute hold on his psyche.

And something else crystalised at that Dawkins talk: Yanky had at that point hundreds of questions which no one had ever been able to answer to his satisfaction, ranging from scientific questions about the veracity of the Old Testament’s narrative (‘woman very clearly wasn’t taken from man’; ‘ancient humans were not vegetarians,’ he elaborated) to questions concerning the claims made in the Talmud (‘the laws of cooking on Shabbos and kosher cooking laws don’t match up with thermodynamics’; ‘bugs don’t spontaneously generate from plants’). It felt like there was a separate, unsatisfying answer for every burning question. And as Dawkins spoke, Yanky realised that there was one answer that took care of all of his questions – God did not write the Torah because He does not exist. ‘So that was basically it for me,’ he said.

He was an atheist forced to stay under wraps lest his boss fire him, his wife divorce him, and his children get thrown out of school.

Yanky was devastated by his realisation that there is no God. ‘It was very upsetting,’ he said, talking quickly. ‘I remember laying in bed and feeling like the world had come to an end. It wasn’t a relief. It was very painful.’

He was so upset that his first move after this realisation was to search out the smartest and most learned rabbis, hoping that they would have answers for him and be able to convince him that he was wrong – that there is a God, that the Torah is true. He wrote anonymous letters to a few respected rabbis, and posted them snail-mail (though this was 2000, he had little to no contact with the internet, as the most pious Jews don’t). The letters contained his questions, mostly culled from the contradictions between the first chapters of the Old Testament and evolutionary theory: evolution suggests that snakes, descended from lizards, lost their legs long before humans evolved – but Genesis states that they lost them after an encounter with man. The Adam and Eve story suggests that humans were created instantaneously, in a single day a mere 6,000 years ago – yet science reveals the slow evolution of human life on Earth, describing the gradual rise of our hominid predecessors over many millions of years.

The explanations he got from rabbinic scholars were weak and obscure. One rabbi sent him a bizarre note, including a story about sitting in a boat, ‘an elaborate allegory intending to describe how we only coast along over the deep waters of the Torah,’ Yanky recalled. ‘It was cool, but it didn’t help me. Thanks Rabbi.’ With nowhere left to turn, he was finally forced to admit what he was: an atheist leading a double life, forced to stay under wraps lest his boss fire him, his wife divorce him, and his children get thrown out of school.

They call themselves ‘Orthoprax’ – those of correct practice – to distinguish themselves from the Orthodox – those of correct belief. Every time I met one, they would introduce me to a few of their friends, though many refused to speak for fear of being discovered. There are far fewer women in this situation than men, and the women were even harder to draw out. They risk losing their children, especially in New York State, where custody is often given to the more religious parent.

Yet things have changed: once so isolated in their atheism, double-lifers passing for Orthodox, ultra-Orthodox and Yeshivish (known for devouring the Talmud) all gather online in chat rooms. I met undercover atheists from many different Hasidic sects – Satmar, Skver, Bobov – where the focus is mystical. They live in Williamsburg, Long Island, New Skver, Jerusalem. Wherever there is an insular Jewish enclave, there are individuals who have come to the conclusion that God does not exist, and yet they maintain their religious cover for social, familial and economic reasons. Many are well-established in their communities, even leaders. Many are financially successful, family men and women, moral people. ‘I am your neighbour with kids in your children’s class,’ wrote one undercover atheist anonymously on a blog. ‘I am one of the weekly sponsors of the Kiddush club… I was your counselor in camp… I do not believe in God.’

The Orthodox community has grown exponentially in the past 50 years. Ultra-Orthodox and Hasidic enclaves such as Lakewood in New Jersey and Kiryas Joel in Upstate New York have the lowest median ages in the entire United States due to their high birthrate. It is normal for families to have anywhere from five to 12 children.

‘We’re talking about a ghetto that’s locked from the inside’

These communities are organised around religion, explains Samuel Heilman, a sociologist at Queens College in New York, who studies contemporary Orthodox Jewish movements. As the population has expanded, so have attempts to keep members in line. But it has been a losing battle, overall. ‘As a sociological principle, one size can never fit all,’ he told me, ‘and the larger the community, the more difficult it is to control.’

That hasn’t stopped efforts. One method of control is limiting secular education for children in subjects such as mathematics and even English. The lack of skills necessary to navigate the outside world can be crippling to most who consider leaving their communities. Another strategy is turning everyone else into an enemy. The tactic is hardly unique. ‘Every fundamentalist group demonises the other – they tend to be very dualist; you’re either with us or without us.’ In the case of the ultra-Orthodox, ‘We’re talking about a ghetto that’s locked from the inside,’ Heilman said. You have to create a threat from the outside to keep those doors locked.

But even for those such as Solomon and Yanky who were educated enough to pursue outside professions, their own psychological states work just as well as any external rules to keep them put.

The self-policing mechanism kicked in most strongly through the matchmaking apparatus, the place where status is determined in these communities. A person leaving the community puts a blight on their entire family, stigmatising parents, siblings, children, and even cousins, limiting their ability to marry into ‘good’ families with no such stain.
Are double-lifer’s a danger to the fold? It depends on your point of view.

‘For every one of them, there’s five kids, 10 kids born,’ Heilman said.

‘We have 10,000 kids in school in Williamsburg alone. The majority will stay where they are,’ said a Satmar friend – a believer – in agreement.

‘I could pick off a person a day if I wanted to,’ countered an undercover atheist I’ll call Moishe.

If anything, the double-lifers are more like ‘agent provocateurs inside a besieged system’, Heilman contends. 

They know what’s real and what’s not real. They know how to game the system. And they have their own signals. Surely it’s only a matter of time before they begin to share their ideas with those who are still believers.

I’m sitting with Moishe, a scholarly luminary in the ultra-Orthodox world, in Solomon’s office in Manhattan; the two are colleagues and confidantes. Moishe is Hasidic, wears a graying beard, lives in the bosom of a Hasidic sect in Brooklyn and has many children. He has written books of exegesis that are studied in many yeshivas, uncovering the hidden secrets of the Torah.

Solomon, too, lives in Brooklyn, has a wife and a bunch of children, and a good job. He is clean-shaven, wears a suit to work and a black velvet yarmulke. Though both are staunch atheists, neither Moishe nor Solomon has any intention of leaving the Orthodox world.

But the similarities end there – Solomon is deeply emotional, the kind of man whose obvious kindness comes from bearing the weight of the world on his shoulders. He is still dogged by the emotional loss of faith. ‘I have an emotional bond to a God that I know does not exist,’ as he puts it.

Moishe, on the other hand, is driven only by the pursuit of truth, with that almost childlike quality that geniuses display during discovery, and a sense of humour wide enough to encompass all of his own foibles.

Solomon suffers from intense guilt; the psychological toll of leading a double life weighs heavily on him. ‘I used to be tormented by doubt,’ he said. ‘But now I’m tormented by certainty.’ Moishe can’t understand these feelings. He experienced his new-found intellectual freedom with the joy that comes from liberation.
Moishe is still publicly Hasidic. He wears a shtreimel – the traditional fur hat – on Sabbath. At one point, the Hasidic rabbi leading his sect asked him to become even more religious, referred to as ‘going right’.

‘At that time I was like, what do you mean more right? I’m already at the end! What’s north of the North Pole? But he knew what he was talking about.’ Moishe’s journey from believer to atheist happened in a matter of weeks, after a few passages from Maimonides convinced him that the greatest Jewish scholar was, like himself, an undercover atheist.

Moishe explained: on the one hand, Maimonides felt that the belief that the earth was eternal could be destructive to the Jewish religion. On the other hand, he also said that if the infinite character of the earth could be proven, he would accept it as true. Moishe’s conclusion? Maimonides ‘knew the first part of the Torah was iffy at best and bunk at worst’. Moreover, Maimonides’ attempts to reconcile what he thought was true with what he claimed was true were, in Moishe’s words, an ‘epic fail’.

The greatest tragedy for undercover atheists is the barrier it erects between them and their loved ones
‘Nothing he said made any actual sense,’ he explained. ‘So I was left with one option and one option only: he was an atheist but was hiding it. There, now that made sense. So now I look at myself as a reincarnation of Rambam [Maimonides]. I’m an atheist in hiding just like he was.’

Still, despite his confidence that he could convert a person a day to atheism should he so desire, Moishe balked at the consequences. Perhaps the greatest tragedy for undercover atheists is the barrier it necessarily erects between them and their loved ones.

‘I’m desperate to tell my kids the truth,’ Moishe confessed. And yet, he doesn’t dare. Moishe is not alone.

Many I spoke to stay inside the confines of their Orthodox lives for fear of harming their children, opting instead to let them continue to believe what they themselves now consider to be fairy tales.

‘To me, lying to my children was the worst part,’ said another undercover atheist – I’ll call him Yisroel. Yisroel has a very good job – he makes in the high six figures – and is very attached to his wife and children, the opposite of the stereotype that prevails in religious communities surrounding those who lose the faith, namely that they are ‘liars who want to do drugs, cheat on their wives and eat cheeseburgers’, as he put it.

Yisroel’s greatest wish is that his children will learn to think critically and figure things out for themselves. But he has no plans to accelerate that process. ‘I take it one day at a time; I don’t have any long-term goal about that,’ he told me when we met in a Manhattan deli on a rainy afternoon.

Every person I spoke to had a different relationship with his spouse on the subject of belief. Moishe and his wife have an agreement that they will marry off the children before making any changes to their lives, though he doesn’t quite know what change would look like. ‘What am I going to do – move to Kansas?’ he joked.
Yanky felt immense relief after he confessed to his wife – he had felt like he was betraying her. ‘It was making me nuts,’ he said. He told her on Tisha B’Av – a fast day commemorating the destruction of the temple and the end of the Jewish Empire, because, as Yanky put it: ‘It was a good time to suffer, you know? She suffered a lot. She wasn’t too happy. She’s still upset.’ The way he told her was: ‘She hadn’t wanted me to go to the Dawkins talk. And I said: You were right!

But divorce is not an option – Yanky thinks children should have two parents in the same household. ‘It wouldn’t do good things for them in general, and in the religious world, it would damage them, all that stuff,’ he said. ‘And I don’t think moving them out of the religious world would be helpful for them, if that was even an option, so… that’s basically it.’

A few lucky men convinced their wives of their new-found convictions, giving them a partner in crime. One man I spoke to – Yechiel – who lives in Jerusalem told me it was not as painful for his wife when he convinced her. ‘Women are in a much more minor role in the community,’ he said. ‘Women are expected to express religious devotion by raising the kids, by much more physical things – getting a job, supporting their husband’s learning. Much less a direct spiritual experience, so for her to give it up wasn’t giving up much.’
But it was for him. He remembered the direct aftermath of his loss of faith. ‘I was praying to Hashem [God]: Give me back my belief, prove to me that it’s true, begging and begging. At some point, I realised it’s just plain stupid.’ Still, he said: ‘If you would see me in the street, my white shirt and black yarmulke, you wouldn’t know anything at all.’ His wife is now pushing for more changes to their lifestyle, but fear of hurting his parents keeps Yechiel in line.

One Hasidic woman I will call Fruma lives in the Satmar enclave of Kiryas Joel in New York State. Fruma’s husband doesn’t know she has lost her faith. If he found out, he would certainly divorce her and take away her children. The last time she showed signs of non-conformist behaviour, her husband consulted the community leaders. They sent her to see a mental health specialist, who medicated her. ‘The mental illness card has been used often in cases like mine,’ she wrote. She has since seen another mental health specialist; he gave her a clean bill of health.

Fruma lives in constant, crippling fear of her husband finding out her true beliefs, so much so that she refused to meet me, and would communicate her thoughts only via Facebook. The one time we spoke on the phone, she called me from a restricted number. Fruma lost her faith a few years ago, but she found that exercising new freedoms only added to her unhappiness.

‘Lying creates so much inner conflict: breaks down all forms of trust, makes you hate the person involved, but especially makes you hate yourself’

‘At first it felt extremely liberating to finally feel validated,’ she wrote. ‘That I’m not crazy – as some would like me to believe – because I can’t conform and because my thinking is different. After a few months it dawned on me that it’s not all that great. What happened was that those pockets of freedom where I got away for a bit contrasted too sharply to my daily existence, and made the staying so much harder. The feeling that I need to leave was very strong.’

Though Fruma never had a happy marriage, the toll that dishonesty is taking on her is immense. ‘Lying creates so much inner conflict,’ she wrote. ‘Breaks down all forms of trust, makes you hate the person involved, but especially makes you hate yourself.’

After Yisroel, the Manhattan high-earner, told his wife that he no longer believed in God, she was devastated. When he suggested coming out, she threatened to divorce him, ‘a non-starter’, in Yisroel’s words. She felt it would be too confusing to the children, and Yisroel more or less agreed. So, to save his marriage, Yisroel vowed to his wife never to break any of the religious laws, and he never has. And to mitigate his wife’s hopes that he might one day rediscover his belief in God, Yisroel buys a lottery ticket every week, ‘just to keep that door open. I buy the ticket, just for her, and I say: Please Hashem, let me win.’

It’s not all bad. Solomon, who lost his faith on the D train, says there’s a lot of good in the Orthodox community to ameliorate the psychological toll of living a double life, such as ‘the focus on family, the fact that I’m probably not going to have to worry that my daughter’s getting pregnant or stoned at 16. There’s a lot of good, even if none of it’s true. I think it’s a nice life.’

Yisroel calls it ‘performance art’. ‘To a certain extent everyone leads a secret life, showing different sides to different people,’ he said.

Do the undercover atheists herald the end of ultra-Orthodoxy, or only a new, more insulated and controlled beginning? Here, Solomon and Moishe disagree.

As long as ultra-Orthodox communities continue to marry people off at such young ages, doubters will remain stuck, Solomon contends. ‘Religion has survived a lot of major challenges,’ he said, and the recent turn towards fundamentalism within ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities is just that – a coping mechanism to weed out the non-conformists. ‘The radicalisation of ultra-Orthodox Judaism is a sign of its success, not its failure.’

But Moishe believes that the phenomenon of atheism is deeply entrenched in the Orthodox way of life. ‘Everybody’s faking,’ he insisted. ‘I think it’s all going to come crashing down. I say 20 years.’

has a PhD in the 18th-century novel. Her dissertation is entitled ‘Coercive Pleasures: The Force and Form of the Novel 1719-1740’. She is also a freelance writer living in Brooklyn, New York.

What Is a policeman?

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Race relations will be Obama's biggest failure

Obamacare is a huge problem that President Obama will leave his successor.  And there is Iraq, Libya, and so on.  Lots of messes for his successor to clean up, indeed.  

In retrospect, race relations will be his biggest failure.

Back in November 2008, I voted for Senator McCain but looked forward to our first black president bringing us together.  I was anticipating that he'd talk about the structural problems in the black community, such as the collapse of the black family unit and black-on-black crime in Chicago and other inner cities.

Instead, Obama has made things worse by focusing on the police and doing nothing about black districts lacking any hope and seeing no change.

A few months ago, Gil Troy, a professor of history at McGill University, wrote an article that looks rather interesting after Dallas:

The last Democratic president and the last Republican president both managed race relations more effectively than Obama has. Seven years after American voters made history by electing the country’s first black president, racial tensions have worsened.
  It didn’t rank on Obama’s one-item list of his “few regrets” during his State of the Union address. But signs of Obama’s failure are on our streets, on our campuses and among our leaders, left and right.“Ferguson” has become shorthand for African-American fury objecting to insensitive white cops harassing young blacks. 

 The “Black Lives Matter” movement has spilled into American campus culture, as privileged kids attending the world’s finest universities bemoan their alleged oppression — bullying anyone who challenges them.

This black backlash has prompted a white backlash, personified by Donald Trump. 
Every justifiable police shooting called “racist,” every Halloween costume labeled politically incorrect, every reasonable thought censored makes Trump look like America’s last honest man.
Amid this tension, Obama has been disturbingly passive — even during America’s first serious race riots since 1992. 
He acts like a meteorologist observing the bad weather, not a president able to shape the political climate.

How embarrassing that Obama’s most memorable act of presidential leadership on race may end up being inviting a black professor and a white cop to the White House for his 2009 “beer summit.”

Yes, President Obama will be remembered for two things:

a) The articulate president who could not articulate a message to bring us together.  In other words, the man can speak but has little of consequence to say.

b) The first black president who did not understand the real problems in black communities.

His legacy will be that he left us more angry and divided than ever.

The Court Looked At The Farce That Was The Trump Fraudulent Conversion by Lookstein, Hershel Schechter & the RCA...and Made the Correct Ruling!

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Supreme Rabbinical Court declines to recognize Rabbi Lookstein's conversions.

Israel’s Supreme Rabbinical Court on Wednesday night ruled it does not recognize conversions by US Orthodox rabbi Haskel Lookstein, forcing a woman seeking to get married to reconvert and calling into question other people converted by Lookstein, including the daughter of Republican presumptive nominee Donald Trump. 

In a hugely controversial step, the Supreme Rabbinical Court asked a female convert of prominent US Jewish leader Rabbi Haskel Lookstein to declare her acceptance of the religious commandments in court so as to avoid doubt as to her Jewishness. 
The ITIM religious services advisory group which was representing the convert, Nicole, in court denounced this step, saying it amounted to a rejection of Lookstein’s conversions and constituted blackmail, while Nicole herself said she felt she had been humiliated. 
US Jewry and critics of the religious establishment in Israel have denounced the ongoing failure of the rabbinical courts system to recognize Lookstein’s conversions as “extremist,” saying that such a stance drives a wedge between Diaspora Jewry and the Jewish state. 
The judges of the Supreme Rabbinical Court said they did not want to get involved in whether or not her conversion through Lookstein was valid, and so requested that she undergo what is known as “a conversion for stringency.”
This type of conversion is performed in a case when the Jewishness of an individual is in doubt, and involves a declaration of Gods oneness and an acceptance of the commandments of the Torah. 
Due to a wish to get married on the wedding date she and her fiancee have set, Nicole reluctantly decided to do the conversion for stringency out of a fear that a failure to do so would require her to postpone the wedding. 
The court then affirmed her declaration and said she could now marry her fiancee.  
In a statement made to ITIM, Nicole expressed disquiet at the way she had been treated by the court. 
“I feel humiliated, what they are saying is that they don't recognize my Judaism,” she said. “I love Rabbi Lookstein, he is my rabbi, he led me into the Jewish world and I don't want his conversion to not be recognized.”
ITIM director Rabbi Seth Farber was strongly critical of the court’s actions, saying that the judges had “blackmailed” Nicole into performing the conversion for stringency by implying that actually clarifying whether or not Lookstein’s conversions are valid could lead to the postponement of her wedding. 
“Today, the Supreme Rabbinical Court has imposed a heavy cloud upon the conversions of thousands of converts, who were converted by orthodox rabbis in the United States,” said Farber. 
“This is a sad day for the converts and this is a sad day for the relations between the state of Israel and the United States Jewry. In their ruling, the Rabbinical judges have humiliated not just the convert, but also hundreds of rabbis in the diaspora and their congregations.” 
Although both chief rabbis David Lau and Yitzhak Yosef have said publicly that they do recognize the validity of Lookstein’s conversions, a statement was released in the name of the Chief Rabbinate praising the Supreme Rabbinical Court’s solution.

Chairman of the Executive of The Jewish Agency for Israel Natan Sharansky said in response to the incident that "today’s decision by the Supreme Rabbinical Court, which effectively delegitimized a prominent rabbi in the American Jewish community, demonstrates why Israel is in danger of being delegitimized as a center of religious authority in the eyes of world Jewry. I call on the Government of Israel, which recognizes the vital importance of the Israel-Diaspora relationship, to take immediate steps to change the attitude of Israel’s religious authorities toward the spiritual leaders of the Diaspora."

http://www.jpost.com/Israel-News/Supreme-Rabbinical-Court-sidesteps-recognition-of-Rabbi-Looksteins-conversions-460321

"For any other female convert, emulating the types of posts Ivanka puts on Instagram would be unthinkable....PUBLISHED MARCH 25, 2016..."

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IVANKA TRUMP POST ORTHODOX JEWISH CONVERSION BY HERSHEL SCHECHTER

Ivanka Trump and Double Standards for Jewish Converts

Jewish converts are often unfairly scrutinized and face intense pressure to obey Orthodox observances. But they should be treated with open arms, just like Ivanka Trump.

  By Bethany S. Mandel


At AIPAC, Trump diverted attention from his controversial appearance there by acting the part of a collected, telepromter-reading, ultra-hawkish-on-Israel politician, including his sharing with the crowd the fact that his daughter would soon have a “beautiful Jewish baby.” Altogether, his flip-floppy, “believe me” performances have made me realize that Trump’s double standards extend beyond himself, and to the rest of his family, particularly his daughter, Ivanka. Somehow, she seems to have been exempted from the invasive scrutiny, questioning, and disrespectful treatment so often aimed at converts to Judaism like her.

Ivanka converted in 2009 (while living with Kushner throughout the entire process - The RCA and Hershel Schechter knew it), before her marriage to Jared Kushner. She rarely discusses her conversion or her Judaism. There is the occasional glimpse on her Instagram feed: Shabbat dinner preparations or mishloach manot baskets and costumes for Purim. She is an involved Jew, but not necessarily one that fits the Orthodox stereotype, posting about non-Kosher food and not-tznius outfits on social media.

Now, let me be clear: there’s nothing wrong with any of this (WRONG). No one has the right to judge Ivanka’s Jewishness or religiosity as as convert just as no one has the right to judge—or question, or pry into—mine. Yet it is hard for me to believe anyone in her well-heeled congregation is giving her a hard time about this. Why, then, am I and the majority of converts I know, constantly the subject of such scrutiny? For any other female convert, emulating the types of posts Ivanka puts on Instagram would be unthinkable.

While conversion revocations aren’t common (but are done retroactively in rare cases) in the United States, there is intense communal pressure for converts to stay on the straight and narrow because of a perception that they often “fall off the derech,” or stop being observant. And the very fact that some conversions have been revoked puts intense pressure on converts, especially women (for whom the issue of modest dress is much more germane and whose Judaism their children’s identity hinge on). Who will see it? Will they “inform” on you? Will the impression of laxity give them cause to stop eating at your home, or having their children avoid yours?

As an active member of the conversion community I’ve heard enough horror stories to fill a book: shadchans (matchmakers) refusing to work with converts, probing questions at a Shabbos table with strangers, conversions overseen by rabbis who want to take a walk around the block (if you catch my drift) with their shiksa conversion candidate before she becomes officially Jewish. And throughout my own conversion process—and long after—close friends, family, and strangers would tell me: But you’re not really Jewish.

Then there are the horror stories of conversions revoked or questioned for “offenses” like wearing pants or not keeping Shabbat after the conversion. The Israeli Rabbinate—a kind of College of Cardinals for global Jewry—has lent credence to this absurdity, sending a chill through converts and conversion candidates in the United States.

All of which makes much of the Jewish community’s response to Ivanka Trump’s Orthodox conversion—or better yet, the apparent lack thereof— so astounding. Somehow Ivanka has managed to obtain what no other Orthodox convert I know has: acceptance from the Jewish community while at the same time flouting convention that the rest of us could hardly get away with. Apparently having wealth, fame and power buys you a lifetime supply of indulgences. I don’t think the Jewish community has begun to grasp how this makes us look.

To be clear, Ivanka should be treated this way—welcomed with open arms and never having her commitment to Judaism questioned or tested by nudniks. But the rest of us commoners should also be afforded the same consideration. In fact, It’s Jewish law. In Exodus 23:9, God makes quite clear how he feels about how the convert—a stranger within the Jewish community—should be treated. “Do not oppress a stranger; you know how it feels to be a stranger, because you were strangers in Egypt.” And yet, infuriatingly, this clear Biblical prohibition about abusing the convert, the ger, is one of the most ignored parts of Jewish law. Plainly, it states: treat converts with acceptance. And not just the famous, glamorous ones.

The Torah’s commandment to accept the stranger is specifically worded as a warning against hypocrisy. Clearly, that’s a lesson we still haven’t learned.

http://www.tabletmag.com/scroll/198879/ivanka-trump-and-double-standards-for-jewish-converts

PS - Rabbi Moshe Feinstein states the very marriage of a gentile woman to a non observant Jew, is equivalent to an open declaration that she will not observe the precepts. This is so, because it is highly unlikely that the gentile member of such a union, will be more committed to Judaism than her remiss Jewish husband (certainly when they are living together prior to their marriage). Unlike mental or tacit negations, explains Rav Feinstein, open declarations do invalidate conversions. When such cases appear before a rabbinical court, its members actually become witnesses to an acceptance declaration that is not sincere. Therefore, it is no longer a tacit insincerity, but rather an obvious one. As such, they are forbidden to sanction the conversion. Regardless of what this Jewish court may declare, the conversion is invalid and the person is not deemed a member of the Jewish nation. In Iggros Moshe, Letters of Moshe (Yoreh De’ah, no. 157), he writes that “According to the Law, it is certain that one who converts for the sake of marriage, does not intend to keep the commandments, and is not a proselyte at all.” 
Paul Mendlowitz - 2009

L'Hagdil Torah (HAHA) Ul'Hadira


Private b-day

Ivanka Trump and Jared Kushner celebrated Kushner’s 31st birthday with an intimate dinner rather than a blowout Tuesday, when they were seen at “a cozy corner table” at Jesse Schenker’s West Village hot spot Recette. Spies say the pair nibbled on hamachi with uni, fluke with shellfish congee and s’mores with graham cracker ice cream, topped off by a candle. Trump then presented her hubby with two maroon Polo Ralph Lauren waffle shirts and other gifts.




http://pagesix.com/2012/01/12/private-b-day/

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R' Hershel Schechter Av Beis Din Of The RCA Conversion Court In The U.S.A. - "Converted" Ivanka Trump To Judaism! PUBLISHED MARCH 14, 2010.

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Photo Of Ms. Trump - Wikipedia - June 2009
InJuly 2009, after studying with Rabbi Elie Weinstock from Ramaz School, Trump converted from Catholicism to Judaism,[11][12] , and took the name Yael.[13] The beth din that converted her included Rabbi Haskel Lookstein. On October 25, 2009 she married Jared Kushner, owner of The New York Observer,[14][15] in front of 500 guests at Trump National Golf Club in Bedminster, New Jersey. [Wikipedia]


By Yechiel Sever - Deiah V'Dibur News - 2008:

Following an agreement signed by the Rabbinical Council of America (RCA) to set up a network of regional botei din in cooperation with the Chief Rabbinate of Israel, Eternal Jewish Family (EJF), headed by HaRav Leib Tropper which works extensively to uphold proper conversion practices around the world based on consultations with gedolei Yisroel, is warning against certain Chief Rabbinate officials who are offering support and recognition for modern rabbis who do not operate in accordance with halacha and is urging the Chief Rabbinate to announce publicly that it will not back these rabbis. According to reports in the foreign press the list of rabbis approved for these botei din includes individuals whose kehillas hold minyanim for women.

Recently officials at the Chief Rabbinate have recognized a number of new rabbis outside of Israel, some of whom are upstanding dayanim. But there are also a number of modern rabbinical organizations whose dayanim do not operate in accordance with halacha and Jewish hashkofoh, and their actions are liable to create major breaches in Kerem Beis Yisroel.

EJF has voiced its strong support for steps the Chief Rabbinate has taken to strengthen conversion abroad by cooperating with the organization, but at the same time EJF is warning not to submit to pressure of any kind, and to ensure that conversions are performed only by dayanim who have yiras Shomayim and are qualified to uphold the halacha passed down through the generations — especially in the area of conversion, a matter held dear by Torah-true Judaism.

The organization also notes the importance of distinguishing between rabbonim, who may be very capable of heading a kehilloh, but they are not dayanim who have specialized training and experience — including shimush — needed to sit on the bench of an orderly, permanent beis din. Without this training and experience they should under no circumstances be authorized to serve as dayanim in conversion courts. Proper conversion courts require an av beis din widely recognized as an expert and two other dayanim worthy of the title.

Recently, with the encouragement of EJF, 13 botei din have been set up around the US to hear cases related to all areas of Jewish law, including conversion. All these botei din include a well-known av beis din.

EJF welcomes the RCA's initiative to transfer the authority to perform conversions from individual rabbonim to fixed, regional botei din, but at the same time calls on the organization to ensure that the sitting rabbonim are properly trained to serve as dayanim.

In a related matter, EJF wishes to clarify that information regarding the agreement reached between the Chief Rabbinate and the RCA is being distorted in reports in the general press due to the efforts of several people who have ulterior motives.

Chief Rabbi Amar has told Rav Tropper that the Chief Rabbinate has only approved seven regional RCA botei din and not 15 as has been widely reported in the press. Also Chief Rabbi Amar has said that rabbis whose kehillas have prayer groups for women will not be approved as dayanim.

In a conference call among Rav Nochum Eisenstein, chairman of the Vaad HaRabbonim Haolami LeInyonei Giyur founded by HaRav Chaim Kreiswirth zt"l, Rabbi Peretz of the Chief Rabbi's Office, and a reporter for the Jerusalem Post, this message was clearly conveyed. Nonetheless, the Jerusalem Post refused to print a correct of the incorrect information in their previous articles, saying that it was not "interesting" to their readers.

Ivanka Trump: Officially Jewish and engaged; membership has its privileges.
By Allison Hoffman | 1:05 pm Jul 17, 2009 - Tablet Magazine
It’s been a big week for Ivanka Trump, the lovely heiress/socialite/real-estate developer. First, she became a Jew! Rabbi Haskel Lookstein of Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun, the Modern Orthodox synagogue on Manhattan’s Upper East Side, earlier this week formally certified the conversion of the daughter of real estate mogul Donald Trump (himself raised Protestant, by way of the positive-thinking pastor Rev. Norman Vincent Peale). Oh, and then Ivanka went and got engaged, to her boyfriend, New York Observer owner Jared Kushner, for whom she converted in the first place. Mazel tov to both.

The Forward:

....On October 25,2009, The New York Times announced the marriage of Jared Kushner, whose family name graces a New Jersey Orthodox Jewish day school, to Ivanka Trump, glamorous daughter of business tycoon and ubiquitous public personality Donald Trump. This unlikely union seemed so unremarkable that it didn’t even merit the “Vows” spotlight the Times frequently reserves for couples from divergent or unique backgrounds. Instead, the Times announcement straightforwardly noted: “Rabbi Haskel Lookstein is to officiate,” leaving it for those who read between the lines to understand that Ivanka had undergone a traditional religious conversion to Judaism prior to the Orthodox nuptials.........


Is Ivanka Trump Jewish?

In: Judaism [Edit categories]

[Improve]

She may have converted but most conversations done these days are for the sake of marriage, and no REAL conversion panel [like in Orthodox] will allow one to convert for this reason alone. One must have had a genuine feeling of being a Jew as well as living the full Orthodox Jewish lifestyle. Conservative and Reform conversations are not authentic and do not actually make you Jewish.

No, she is NOT Jewish.



Look for the (Triple K) KKK hashgacha on every authentic UOJ psak. Accept no substitutes! KOSHER - from corruption. KOSHER - from bribes. KOSHER from mattress gelt.

Rely only on the KKK. Our yarmulkes are black!

RCA GEIRUS STANDARD AND POLICIES:

http://www.judaismconversion.org/GPS_Policies_and_Procedures.html

"a. Where the Conversion is Primarily for the sake of Marriage

i. Where marriage to a particular Jewish partner is a major incentive to a prospective conversion, there is an increased possibility that the geirus may come with less than the complete commitment necessary for a conversion that would be in keeping with the standards we are trying to set for the regional Batei Din. Nonetheless, experience also shows that such a motivation can result in converts of the highest caliber. Conversion for the sake of marriage therefore requires the Beit Din to constantly reevaluate if the candidate and future partner are likely to subscribe to the requisite beliefs and practices. The Beit Din must be convinced that if the potential spouse were to disappear from the candidate’s life, his or her commitment to the Jewish faith and people would not waver. These factors inevitably prolong the process and make examination of the prospective convert more intense. Indeed, should the couple mention a proposed wedding date as a deadline or goal, the Beit Din should respond that the process will take significantly longer than that......"

c. Requirements of Other People in a Candidate’s Life

i. When a candidate is previously intermarried or is converting for the sake of an individual Jew (as per above), the spouse’s observance level and attitudes must be consistent with the present and future Torah observance of the candidate and not be a source of conflict or opposition to the convert’s adopting a halachic lifestyle. The Beit Din should also consider whether other significant individuals in the candidate’s life such as parents, or any existing minor children, will have an impact on the success or failure of the process and the aftermath of conversion.

שולחן ערוך יורה דעה הלכות גרים סימן רסח סעיף יב

אפי'נודע שבשביל דבר הוא מתגייר, הואיל ומל וטבל יצא מכלל העובדי כוכבים, וחוששים לו עד שתתברר צדקתו


They also like spending time at home. "I've learned how to cook," Trump says. "Once a week, we have a night in and I cook for just the two of us. We turn everything off and spend time together and talk about what we're working on." PUBLISHED ORIGINALLY IN 2009!

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Ivanka Trump Converts to Judaism for Fiancé

 

Jared Kushner got got back together with girlfriend Ivanka Trump! Really, how could he not, they have so much in common: Both are attractive, both rich due to inherited real estate wealth and both have fathers who get extremely nasty while feuding with enemies. But Kushner is a Jew and Ivanka's a shiksa, and this has been a problem for Kushner's Orthodox family. In fact, the religious divide may very well have been behind the couple's mysterious breakup in April, around the time of their one-year anniversary. To get Kushner back, Ivanka has promised that, if things get more serious, she'll convert to Judaism. So sweet! And I'm sure the socialite feels a profound, authentic connection to the religion. Totes! Well, sort of. A friend tells Page Six the conversion is "a possibility, but that's way down the line." A brief recap of the Kushner-Trump romance, for those who have not been following along at home:

(GAWKER GETS IT - HER$HEL $CHECHTER DOES NOT!?)

 


Ivanka Trump Converts to Judaism for Fiancé
Jared Kushner and Ivanka Trump
07/17/2009 AT 12:00 PM EDT

After a lengthy courtship, some celeb-watchers may have wondered what was taking Jared Kushner so long to propose to Ivanka Trump.

The answer was rooted in religion: until Trump converted to Judaism, they could not be engaged.

This week, however, Trump completed the lengthy process.

"Jared is my best friend for many reasons,” she tells New York magazine. "I've allowed him to see who I truly am and he still loves me. I don't feel like I have any defensive walls built up around me."

She continues: "He's a bit of a hero of mine. His ability to remain focused – he lacks an anxiety that's natural for someone his age handed so much responsibility."

 After meeting through mutual friends, Trump tells the magazine, the couple began dating – a "slow” courtship, as she describes it.
"It's very rare we're featured [in the press] out at some fancy restaurant on a date," she says. "We're very mellow. We go to the park. We go biking together. We go to the 2nd Avenue Deli. We both live in this fancy world. But on a personal level, I don't think I could be with somebody – I know he couldn't be with somebody – who needed to be 'on' all the time."

Homebodies

They also like spending time at home. "I've learned how to cook," Trump says. "Once a week, we have a night in and I cook for just the two of us. We turn everything off and spend time together and talk about what we're working on."

And unlike her parents, Trump says don’t expect the happy couple to work together any time soon.

"I think it's healthy to have a separation in our interests," she explains. "I love being able to talk business with my father [but] I don't know if I'd want to have a difference of opinion come between me and my boyfriend, or me and my husband, or whatever it may be. And, neither of us would naturally assume a secondary-type role."

But, the best part about her husband-to-be? "He'll be a great father," she gushed, adding that he has a "beautiful" relationship with his own dad. "He knows how to prioritize what's important."

http://www.people.com/people/article/0,,20291939,00.html

fromHuffington Post





Ivanka Trump Plans Conversion To Judaism For Jared Kushner

 

Ivanka Trump Plans Conversion To Judaism For Jared Kushner
Jared Kushner got got back together with girlfriend Ivanka Trump! Really, how could he not, they have so much in common: Both are attractive, both rich due to inherited real estate wealth and both have fathers who get extremely nasty while feuding with enemies. But Kushner is a Jew and Ivanka's a shiksa, and this has been a problem for Kushner's Orthodox family. In fact, the religious divide may very well have been behind the couple's mysterious breakup in April, around the time of their one-year anniversary.To get Kushner back, Ivanka has promised that, if things get more serious, she'll convert to Judaism. So sweet! And I'm sure the socialite feels a profound, authentic connection to the religion.Totes! Well, sort of. A friend tells Page Six the conversion is "a possibility, but that's way down the line." A brief recap of the Kushner-Trump romance, for those who have not been following along at home:


(GAWKER GETS IT - HER$HEL $CHECHTER DOES NOT!?)







  • Jared Kushner owns the New York Observer. He also helps run his father Charles' real estate company. Charles Kushner is a convicted felon following schemes to funnel campaign donations throuh the names of real estate partners, and also because he hired a prostitute to seduce, and thus help Kushner get revenge against, his brother-in-law.
  • In March 2007, Jared paraded Ivanka, daughter of famed loudmouth and Rosie O'Donnell hater Donald Trump, through the Observer offices in a suspicious way.
  • In April 2007, Kushner's spokesman said the couple were just buddies, but this was irrefutably proven false when word leaked about the Observer trip, which for some reason Observer staffers had kept to themselves.
  • Almost exactly one year later, Ivanka is spotted going to parties by herself. Speculation about the breakup centers on the religious issue, and also on speculation that maybe Charles wants to seem more independent and mogul-ish.
  • A depressed Ivanka lost a very important online catfight.
  • Now they're back together, with Ivanka pledged to maybe convert some day. No word on how the Donald took all this.
They even got back together in time to catch Dark Knight together. Something tells me that, against all odds, these two kids might make it. It's the feel-good heir-love story of the summer!



http://gawker.com/5027609/ivanka-trump-plans-conversion-to-judaism-for-jared-kushner

Rabbi Moshe Feinstein states the very marriage of a gentile woman to a non observant Jew, is equivalent to an open declaration that she will not observe the precepts. This is so, because it is highly unlikely that the gentile member of such a union, will be more committed to Judaism than her remiss Jewish husband (certainly when they are living together prior to their marriage). Unlike mental or tacit negations, explains Rav Feinstein, open declarations do invalidate conversions. When such cases appear before a rabbinical court, its members actually become witnesses to an acceptance declaration that is not sincere. Therefore, it is no longer a tacit insincerity, but rather an obvious one. As such, they are forbidden to sanction the conversion. Regardless of what this Jewish court may declare, the conversion is invalid and the person is not deemed a member of the Jewish nation. In Iggros Moshe, Letters of Moshe (Yoreh De’ah, no. 157), he writes that “According to the Law, it is certain that one who converts for the sake of marriage, does not intend to keep the commandments, and is not a proselyte at all.” 
Paul Mendlowitz - 2009

 BOGUS CONVERSIONS FOR SALE:
L'Hagdil Torah (HAHA) Ul'Ha(HAHA)dira

To ignore this abuse is to be a party to it!

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Heading towards the Next Charedi Woman’s Suicide?



After Esti Weinstein was found lifeless in her car, discussions raged online about what motivated her to end her life. Some blamed the restrictive Gerrer community for the creating the circumstances that led her suicide. Others rushed to say, “We cannot judge! It is their lifestyle! It is their culture.” As if somehow, they are an alien culture beyond our understanding or concern. As if calling out damaging behaviors of a community is the same as hating a community. 

But this is not about “lifestyle.” This is about abuse, at many levels. And there are times when the Jewish community is not only allowed to pass judgement, but required to do so.
 
Ger promulgates an extreme set of rules called takanot. Instituted after World War II in a number of Hasidic sects, the takanot of Ger are the most restrictive and are even at odds with Jewish law, according to most, in the area of marital intimacy. They control the lives of the Hasidim (followers) in everything from wives having to walk behind their husbands, to husbands not calling their wives by name, to how often a couple can be intimate (no more than twice each month).

In theory, any couple can opt not to follow any rule that they do not like. However, in actuality, the structure of the community and the expected obedience often leaves couples without choice. This is not unique to Ger. In Satmar, customs such as head-shaving for married women is enforced by community leaders with modesty patrols and mikveh attendants who are charged with enforcement and snitching.

In this way, the community is kept under the control of the leadership, and people who do not follow the rules find themselves threatened with things such as isolation, children’s expulsion from school, or loss of a job.

After Esti’s suicide, investigative articles and the book she had penned about her life reported details of a difficult marriage and her struggle with the takanot’s effect on her as a person and on her marriage. She also wrote of the extreme suffering she endured from her forced isolation (post-divorce) from six of her seven children. It was this isolation, she claimed, as the reason she could not go on. The same alienation commanded by community leadership has been the major factor in the suffering and even suicide of other women and men who have left Hasidic marriages and communities.

The Next Esti?

Rachel is another Gerrer Hasida who also wanted out of her marriage. Divorce, despite being permitted by Jewish law, is forcefully discouraged in Ger and other Hasidic sects. After Rachel requested a divorce, the rabbis sent her to therapists and psychologists who tried to convince that her she was crazy — to the point of pressuring her to take psychiatric medication.

After Rachel mustered the courage to file for divorce in the Israel’s rabbinic court, the heads of the hasidic community called for everyone close to Rachel to sever ties with her, including her grown children, parents, and siblings. And they did.

Over the course of the years during which she sought assistance from the court, Rachel continued to live in her home with her husband and children. Under directives from community leaders, the family ignored her existence. She ate meals alone in one room while her husband sat at the shabbat table with their children in another.

Despite begging, Rachel’s husband refused to divorce her. He went on to accuse her of being a rebellious wife (a halachic term that has specific ramifications) and committing adultery. Though this was the perfect opportunity for the court to order her husband to give Rachel her divorce, the court instead allowed him to deny her and keep her in the home as a ‘shifcha’ (maidservant), to keep house but not be a wife.

Rachel continued to suffer near complete isolation and get refusal with Israel’s Rabbinic Court in Ashdod and its dayanim complicit in both. It wasn’t until Rachel, represented by the Center for Women’s Justice, filed a suit in a secular court for emotional damages that her husband agreed to a divorce, on condition that she pay hundreds of thousands of shekels in extortion money.

Rachel got her divorce. But she is still being tormented. The rabbinic court is now deciding on custody of her minor children and once again, it is allowing the Gerrer leadership to run the show.

Unlike Esti, Rachel remains a dedicated Gerrer follower. And yet, for the crime of divorcing against the will of the Rabbi, she is being alienated from her children who miss her. See this heartbreaking letter from her son who states that he loves his mother but is being forced to not speak to her out of fear of what they will do to him if he disobeys.

The community has sent letters to the rabbinic court saying that Rachel is not a good enough chasidah (female chasid) to have custody of her children, letters which the dayanim have accepted as evidence but refuse to include in the official case files. This is illegal and a breach of court procedures.

Now, one of Rachel’s children is about to get married. Rachel was not invited to the wedding, and is experiencing deep pain because of it. During court proceedings, the father announced that the Rabbi of Ger in Ashdod is the one who will decide if Rachel can come to the wedding. And so, she waits, her fate in the hands of those who seem want to make an example out of her.In both cases of Esti and Rachel, Gerrer leadership violated Jewish law and falsely presented the people involved. In Esti’s case, her husband forced her into abusive sexual encounters with other men against her will, yet they turned her into the one who to shun for violating Jewish law for fleeing. In Rachel’s case, her husband was obliged to divorce her based on numerous factors, yet they did their best to prevent it. In both cases, they worked to alienate the children and vilify the mother. They violated halacha in favor of control.
 
Not Our Problem?

There are many villains here. From the leadership of the community that commands the abuse, to the community that fulfills its command. From the dayanim on the religious courts that add legal strength to the abuse, to the the silent majority who says nothing and does nothing to save the Estis and Rachels of the Jewish community.

To ignore this abuse is to be a party to it.

To say, “We cannot judge,” is to discard our morality and God-given intellect and obligation to discern right from wrong.

We are obligated as Jews, to stand up for those being harmed.
If we are silent, if we allow this to happen, we cannot react with shock when we find the next Esti: alone, bereft, and unable to suffer any longer, alienated from her children by the leadership and community that betrayed her and the silent majority that allowed it to happen.


The UOJ Bais Din Is Now In Session - Rosh Bais Din - Dayan UOJ Presiding!

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There have been many requests that I crack open the culture of corruption that exists in today's batei din. It's not one or two batei din that are impossibly corrupt, there are only a handful that perhaps you can trust. The vast majority of batei din are run by crooks and hooligans. If I went after all of them, I would not have time to eat, never mind tend to my personal life.

So...I decided to open my own online bais din. Hazmanas are free, and there is no charge for a psak din. The criteria for "UOJ - House Of True Din" to accept a case, is that the case has to be unusual.

If you want to know if your neighbor has a right to open a ladies clothing store in his basement, where he or she would be selling tube socks that you have in your basement mens store (an ugly case of hasagat g'vul), ask your local posek.

But if you want to know if your kid should be sent to a boot camp because he wears a kipa sruga, that's where the "UOJ - House Of True Din" will render a psak without consulting with the former SS guard Aaron Schachter from Coney Island Avenue.

So, I hope you get the drift of what the UOJ bais din will focus on.

Having said that, I'm certain that there will be cases that I will need to consult with "real ppposkim -- gggggedoiiilei Torah", and I will. (I always stutter when I say those words, I wonder why?) I have no ego issues; if you wanted to know, for example, if you should invest your last dime with Leib Pinter's mortgage company, I would be certain to call Shmuel Kaminetzky, and if for some strange reason he refuses to come to the phone, I would rely on his precedent ppppsak as applied to the Pinter case..."If Pinter did not scam someone in the last three months, one would have to assume Pinter did teshuva"... so by all means invest your last dime with him.

Another case that the UOJ bais din could consider even though it enters into the realm of medicine. If you had the fear of flying in an airplane, and you had a heart condition where you could drop dead if your plane had to land safely in a body of water, but the pilot was Captain Sully, there's a better than even chance I would try to get Avi Shafran on the phone. (As long as I had him on the phone I'll check on your investments with Madoff - no charge)

Now the next one is a tough one, but we will NOT shirk from our responsibility to Klal Yisroel. Your wife gets pregnant, but you DID NOT have relations with her for 9 years; after consultation with the ppppposkim in Los Angeles, Monsey and Baltimore, the UOJ psak would be -- wait until the kid is born, if it looks like Sholom, Mordecai or Aron Tendler -- the UOJ - House Of True Din would pasken that the collective Tendler families would be liable for that kid's tuition, bar/bat mitzvah, wedding, and a lifetime in kollel.

One final example, just to make certain that you understand the depth and breadth of the UOJ bais din and the diverse range of topics we're willing to tackle. You want to know if you are permitted to picket your child's school, because the principal and 4 rebbes were gang-banging your son in the back of the bais midrash after mishmar -- I would certainly consult with the Novominsker Rebbe, although he and I may not see eye to eye on this one.

Send in your shailos, no unorthodox shaila will go without a psak din from the UOJ - House Of True Din.

Respectfully and humbly submitted,

Av Bais Din - UOJ PPPPPosssek.

Look for the (Triple K) KKK hashgacha on every authentic UOJ psak. Accept no substitutes! KOSHER - from corruption. KOSHER - from bribes. KOSHER from mattress gelt.

Rely only on the KKK. Our yarmulkes are black!



"This is the real issue that has plagued my mind for so long. The fact that this man was never, ever fit to be an educator. The fact that knowing all the Torah in the world does not on its own make you trustworthy enough to be given a classroom’s worth of young, impressionable souls. The fact that long before anyone suspected inappropriate sexual behavior, it was glaringly clear that this person employed all kinds of unhealthy teaching methods in order to cultivate relationships with students. And the fact that no one but a few innocent teenage girls seemed to notice."

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On ‘hard’ and ‘soft’ charisma in Jewish education: Toward a taxonomy of risk



Meir Pogrow is but the latest in a long list of charismatic rabbis and Jewish educators who fell from grace when the world finally learned how they manipulated students emotionally in order to take advantage of them sexually — a list that includes Baruch Lanner, Motti Elon, Marc Gafni, and many others.

Obtaining sexual favors certainly ranks as one of the worst misuses of charisma, but it is by far not the only misuse of charisma. In 2006, Paul Shaviv first posted the draft of an essay profiling “Pied Piper” educators. Among the dangers he points out are:
  • A charismatic teacher will deeply affect and influence some students, but will almost always leave a trail of emotional wreckage in his/her wake.
  • The emotional dependency and entanglement between teacher and student leads to boundaries being crossed.
  • The teacher becomes party to knowledge about students and their families that reinforces the teacher’s view that they are the only teachers who ‘really’ are reaching the students.
  • A really charismatic teacher can end up running a ‘school within a school’.
  • The teacher will often employ techniques (and texts) which take students to the extremes of emotion or logic, and will then triumphantly show them how they are holding they key to resolution (‘At this moment, you have agreed that life has no meaning — but here is the answer’).
  • The moment [the students] realize that they are not [protégés] (sometimes when the teacher ‘moves on to the next’), deep emotions come into play.
  • Many charismatic teachers will lavish attention on a student or group of students as long as the student(s) do things the teacher’s way, or accept every piece of advice or ‘philosophy’ or Torah uncritically. The moment the student shows independence or objectivity, they are dropped.
  • As soon as they are disillusioned or dropped, they are written out of the teacher’s story. Often such students, very hurt, leave the school.
Perhaps the most fundamental point in Shaviv’s critique is: “The problem is that at core, these are not educational relationships.”

Charisma in general is a deeply problematic and risky trait in a teacher of Torah, as, by definition, the student is attracted more to the charm and personality of the teacher than to the material that is being taught. The unfortunate reality is that each of the offenders mentioned above used deeply problematic methods long before there was any general awareness of the sexual aspect of their predations. This point was articulated well by Shayna Goldberg:
This is the real issue that has plagued my mind for so long. The fact that this man was never, ever fit to be an educator. The fact that knowing all the Torah in the world does not on its own make you trustworthy enough to be given a classroom’s worth of young, impressionable souls. The fact that long before anyone suspected inappropriate sexual behavior, it was glaringly clear that this person employed all kinds of unhealthy teaching methods in order to cultivate relationships with students. And the fact that no one but a few innocent teenage girls seemed to notice.
She concludes:
I hope that in the wake of this scandal, we don’t just talk about one outed, sick educator and then move on as if everything were okay. Let us not get so distracted by the outrageous details that we forget what was so grossly inexcusable about his conduct as a teacher, even had he never touched anyone….
Let’s talk about it.

Indeed, let us talk about the role of charisma in our educational system. Let us discuss whether there is such a thing as “good” or “safe” charisma (I am skeptical, but realize that I’m still in the minority); how a school, parents, and/or students can learn to recognize subtle warning signs; and — to paraphrase Rabbi Noam Stein of the Akiva School in Detroit — whether and how young charismatic teachers can be trained to use their talents in an educationally safe and sound manner.

There are three or four basic categories of charismatic teacher. The first is comprised of cases where the teacher has clearly crossed a line into psychological, physical, and/or sexual abuse, as in the cases mentioned at the beginning of this column.

The second category is one where  certainly no crime or abuse has taken place, but the techniques used by the teacher are unhealthy and unsound.

The third category is teachers who use charisma to manipulate students, but to positive effect. I am skeptical about the existence of this category, but many students of Rabbi Aharon Bina would vehemently contend that he fits this category, and that, indeed, he changed their lives for the better by breaking them down and building them back up. There is no doubt that R. Bina’s methods cause considerable damage as well. Is it possible to fashion a situation in which all such collateral damage will be eliminated? Perhaps, but I am skeptical.

The final category is “soft charisma,” a term I first heard in the name of Rabbi Menachem Schrader, the founding director of OU-JLIC (and thus my former boss), and which he uses to describe the educators he seeks for his program. He explained that, as opposed to “hard charisma,” in the case of “soft charisma,” the educator never becomes more central to the experience than the Torah that s/he is teaching.

In 2010, in the wake of the Motti Elon scandal, Rabbi Aryeh Klapper of the Center for Modern Torah Leadership explained why this distinction is so crucial: the Torah develops the self. Hard charisma effaces the students’ sense of self and replaces it with the teacher’s “self.” The difference between soft and hard charisma is thus the difference between developing the student’s sense of self — and distorting it.

The problem is that is it not always easy to differentiate hard and soft charisma. Building off of R. Klapper’s essay, the following is a preliminary taxonomy for identifying charisma and its dangerous manifestations. It goes without saying that teachers and students, and especially administrators and parents, must be vigilant even about “soft” forms of charisma, lest boundaries be crossed. “Failing” one of these tests should not automatically brand the teacher as a dangerous charismatic, but failure of multiple tests should raise red flags.
  • Charismatic energy is easily transformed into eros, so any sort of physical contact or seclusion is a breach that warrants dismissal for a first or (at most) second offense.
  • Does the teacher seek to persuade the student to see value in what the teacher values, or to persuade the student to see value only in what the teacher values?
  • Is the teacher replacing the student’s friends?
  • Has the student begun to imitate the teacher’s idiosyncratic practices and mannerisms?
  • Is the student able to restate the teacher’s views in his own words and defend them without falling back on “but my teacher said”?
  • What is the ratio of content to unmoored emotion in a teacher’s “inspirational” talks? Can the talks or lessons be quantified in terms of thinking, textual, or interpersonal skills, or only (or mostly) in terms of emotion and inspiration?
  • How does the teacher respond to a student who questions, challenges, or rejects his/her assertions?
  • How has the student’s relationship with his/her parents changed since s/he first came under the teacher’s influence?
Charisma is attractive and even tempting. It sometimes seems as though a life of virtue, or spirit, or value is immediately attainable, but, to quote a great rabbi (who had a great deal of soft charisma), “There are no shortcuts. Ein patentim.” Education is a long and arduous process, and the voice of God is not in the earthquake, the great gust, or the fire, but in the still, small voice.

The elusive rabbi has been handed over to the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol), finally paving the way for his extradition to Israel, where he will stand trial for a variety of sex crimes.

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Extradition of Eliezer Berland begins, as own son shuns him

Berland's son Nahman condemns 'criminal' father, as Breslov rabbis warn public to 'keep away' from fugitive rabbi.


Rabbi Eliezer Berland
Rabbi Eliezer Berland

The four year international odyssey of Rabbi Eliezer Berland is about to come to an end.

The fugitive rabbi and spiritual leader of the Shuvu Banim yeshiva in Jerusalem fled Israel four years ago, following allegations of sexual misconduct with female members of the religious movement he founded within the Breslov stream of Hasidism.

Since then, Israeli authorities have sought his extradition, tracking him across the United States, Italy, Morocco, and Switzerland.

Finally, in 2015, Berland was arrested in South Africa, though he was not transferred for extradition until this week.

Now, however, the elusive rabbi has been handed over to the International Criminal Police Organization (Interpol), finally paving the way for his extradition to Israel, where he will stand trial for a variety of sex crimes.

While officials at the Shuvu Banim yeshiva maintain Berland’s innocence, Berland’s son, Nahman, and leading Breslov rabbis have condemned him and warned the public to steer clear of the fugitive rabbi and his teachings.

On Monday, BeHadrei Haredim publicized a recording of Nahman Berland lambasting his father as a “criminal”.

“[H]e pretends to be a great saint,” the younger Berland said. “My father has no shame….when people know about his crimes they won’t come near him; my father is such a criminal – either he’s totally wicked or he’s mentally ill, and I don’t care which.”

Nahman Berland also railed against some of his father’s followers who he claimed dismissed his crimes.
“So they say my father is god, so everything is permitted to him,” said Nahman, calling such ideas “Christianity”. “You’re Christians, you are.”

A number of prominent Breslov rabbis, including Yaakov Meir Schechter, Shmuel Moshe Kramer, and Natan Libermentch, released a joint statement condemning Eliezer Berland and warning the public to “keep their distance”.

“We hereby announce our view that we have no part or share or ties with this man or any of his followers, and anyone who cares for his own wellbeing will keep his distance from him.”

http://www.israelnationalnews.com/News/News.aspx/215125

Hillary Clinton Must Never Become President of the USA!

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The Hypocrisy and Naivete of American Jews


*The Jewish Vote in Florida, Ohio and Pennsylvania Will Decide This Election! (PM)*



Do you mean to tell me a stupid red star, which may or may not be taken as anti-Semitic, is THE issue that inflamed American Jews?  Are we really that dumb?

I am an observer. I love to watch people, read about people, even though I sometimes don’t really like them. Like now. I am receiving “news” posts forwarded to me with urgency from many in the Jewish community about Donald Trump, saying no Jew should support him, that he is a racist, a demagogue and a… Oh my gawd, an anti-Semite. He is a rabid anti-Semite because of imagery of a red star with Hillary Clinton and money. Oh, and David Duke supports him so that is enough to show that DT is also a racist.

Of course, when Hillary sings the praises (NY Post headline, April 14, 2016) of Al Sharpton, a known race agitator, anti-Semite, tax cheat, and liar, nothing is said.

I also just received the following “personal” note from Jonathan Greenblatt (a former Democratic operative in the Obama administration), CEO of the Anti-Defamation League (ADL):

Hi, I haven’t heard from you! A few days ago I sent you the message below about the alarming hate the presidential campaign has stirred up—and what ADL is doing about it. Mr. Trump tweeted a message critical of his opponent Hillary Clinton with an image apparently created by a white supremacist site. The meme showed a six-pointed Star of David on top of a stock art image of American bills. After broad backlash from across the political spectrum, the tweet was deleted, but then surrogates for Mr. Trump blamed the media and the Clinton campaign for creating the controversy.  

This is offensive on many levels, especially since the meme was created by a Donald Trump staffer who came forward, apologized and was adamant that it did not have any anti-Semitic overtones in it. 
There is nothing like yelling ‘Racist’ or ‘Anti-Semite’ in a crowded Jewish theater.

The fundraising letter mentions Bernie Sanders, but it was mostly about Trump supporters. Nothing about Hillary Clinton. A recent Reuters/Ipsos poll showed that Hillary supporters were also racist, yet no mention of Hillary.

The letter speaks about rising anti-Semitism, especially on campus, without mentioning that most of this rising anti-Semitism is coming from Muslims.

It is clear from this and other letters that the ADL is becoming highly politicized and is now really just another arm of the Democratic Party. Now they have J Street and the ADL and a bunch of sheep who believe everything that they hear.

In the same week as this “horror” we receive a new report now from Germany that Iran was indeed looking to purchase nuclear weapons, and/or chemical weapons. Germany, one of the supporters of the Iran deal, is also cautioning the world that Iran is not honoring the deal.  Wow, big surprise here.

If that wasn’t enough, there was another direct call from a head of Iran’s military for the destruction of Israel. They were bragging about the more-than-100,000 missiles placed all around the Middle East, especially in Lebanon. Iran could simply push a button, if they decide, and destroy Israel.

I was waiting for the avalanche of posts, emails, alerts and another personal letter from Jonathan Greenblatt ADL. What I got was nothing, no posts, emails, just CRICKETS. Why? This is not the party line of the Democratic Party to which 70 percent of Jews pledge their fealty.

Now we have two obviously troubling videos on Facebook of policemen shooting blacks. However troubling and tragic those videos may be, we are a nation of laws and we don’t know the other side of the story. Immediately there were protests, more letters from the organized Jewish community, front page articles on how we (the Jewish community) are going to deal with this supposed rash of shooting black people. Statistics, of course, do not support this narrative. Any unnecessary death is sad, however, the rule of law must prevail. If it is shown that these two situations were racist in nature, then they will be tried by a jury of their peers and punished.

The Black Lives Matter movement is being paid for by people like George Soros – one of the world’s 30 wealthiest people and a supporter of liberal causes – and has now joined forces with anti-Israel organizations. The left is making the association between “oppressed” Palestinians and the Black Lives Matter victims.

Once again our people are falling for this, hook line and sinker. Today’s Black Lives Matter is not yesterday’s Selma or Schwerner and Goodman of the civil rights movement.

To somewhat paraphrase a line from Michelle Obama, this is the first time in my life that I am embarrassed to be a Jew.

Now let’s qualify this. I don’t look at Israelis as the same Jews that we have here in the States, and I certainly do not feel embarrassed to be a Jew in general. However, the larger American Jewish community is so brainwashed, so far to the left now, that I almost have nothing in common with them.

Sure, Donald Trump has said some questionable things, but he is no anti-Semite. He speaks without a teleprompter and he exaggerates. Not the perfect candidate, but an anti-Semite?

Is a person who has women in important positions throughout his organization a woman hater?

 Yes, he was a playboy, but that didn’t seem to affect the Democratic Party’s feeling about Kennedy.

After all, Kennedy’s women were all lined up while he was still married. Same for Bill Clinton. He had so many that he installed a number system at his front gate. It still didn’t work, as Monica Lewinsky showed up at the same time as Eleanor Mondale, the former vice president’s daughter. 

‘Now I Understand How the Holocaust Happened’

 

In recent years I have found myself at odds with some in our community who, frankly, no longer make sense to me. There are many useful – actually, useless – idiots in our community. Now I can understand how the Holocaust happened. Sad to say, but I am sure that there were Jews who didn’t want to believe what was happening in Europe. They didn’t want to rock the boat. They once again pledged their fealty to Roosevelt (Democrat) and did virtually nothing to stop the Holocaust from happening.

I am being dramatic here. Where is the passion, the logic, when it comes to Israel? We watched as most of our elected Jewish leaders marched in lock step with this overtly hostile administration in putting this Iran deal hoax over us.

Where were our pulpit rabbis when it came time to speak up? Do you mean to tell me a stupid red star, which may or may not be taken as anti-Semitic, is THE issue that inflamed American Jews?  Are we really that dumb?  A people that is over-represented in our most important fields of medicine, economics, business, education? Dumb?  Naaaaah, we are deluded. We are being led by the lost-in-the-’60s generation who are living their second childhoods. They are stuck in a time warp of civil rights and another generation.

Where was the reaction from our community when our government sent $350,000 to One Voice to fund an anti-Netanyahu campaign in Israel? The political firm hired was the same firm that Barack Obama used.  Where is the outrage?

In Europe there are stories coming out of France of Jewish-owned businesses being burnt to the ground and a temple almost destroyed by a firebomb. All coming from Arabs and North African immigrants to France. This is a population among which 85 percent hate Jews and Christians. Europe is on fire with increasing anti-Semitism. So what do our “geniuses” say?  Let’s bring them here… brilliant!

Yes, there is anti-Semitism and there is always going to be racism, but our country is not the same country as it was in the 1960s.  After all, we elected and reelected a black president, didn’t we?  That at least means that the majority of Americans are not racist.

We are facing real threats, and as a community we don’t vote our real interests. Today’s Democrats are not your Daddy’s Democrats. They are more like apparatchiks, bureaucrats of the failing Soviet system, than independent Democrats.

Today’s Republicans are not yesterday’s Republicans. There is still a divide with social issues, however, most of them are now considered to be settled. Christians are entitled to believe whatever they want to believe in. The country in general is more accepting of alternative lifestyles, etc.

The love for Israel on the Republican side is infinitely more reliable and from the heart than from the leftists on the Democratic side.

I remember watching Nixon resign in dishonor because he destroyed evidence and lied to the American people. Today, the Democratic candidate is involved in so many scandals, lies, obstruction of justice, that she has made a career of it. Most important, her constituency lets her get away with it. Where is the passion about the rule of law and telling the truth from the Democratic side?

Where are the people who invented the law when they see it so obviously been torn to shreds?

Which brings me back to what I said at the beginning of this blog. I have to believe that I am not the only Jew that is embarrassed by the way that our community has reacted.

I’m tired of the hypocrisy, partisanship (on the Democratic side) and lack of support from the American Jewish community for our fellow Jews. I’m tired of the hypocrisy and acceptance of the “party line” by the party to which 70 percent of Jews have pledged fealty.

I am just tired… sad and disappointed.

https://unitedwithisrael.org/the-hypocrisy-and-naivete-of-american-jews/

Friedman allegedly sexually assaulted the boy, shoved a rag in his mouth and threatened him with a gun....

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Brooklyn math tutor charged with allegedly molesting 6-year-old student: prosecutors  

Moshe Friedman makes his way into a courtroom for a hearing as he faces charges related to the repeated sexual abuse of a six-year-old child at Brooklyn Supreme Court in Brooklyn on Wednesday, July 20, 2016. (Credit: Byron Smith for New York Daily News)

Moshe Friedman makes his way into a courtroom for a hearing as he faces charges related to the repeated sexual abuse of a six-year-old child at Brooklyn Supreme Court in Brooklyn on Wednesday, July 20, 2016. (Credit: Byron Smith for New York Daily News)

(Byron Smith/New York Daily News)
A Brooklyn math tutor charged with repeatedly violating a six-year-old student is expected to go to trial in the fall.

Moshe Friedman was hired by the young boy’s parents to conduct in-home tutorials in 2013. Instead, for over 10 months, Friedman allegedly repeatedly assaulted and sexually abused the child.

Friedman, 30, was arrested in January 2015 for first-degree sexual conduct against a child and other shocking charges.

After several routine court appearances, prosecutors informed Brooklyn Supreme Court Justice Raymond Guzman on Wednesday that they are ready for trial in the fall.

According to court documents, Friedman allegedly hit the child in the back of the head, causing his glasses to fall off and injuring his hand.

On another occasion, while the boy’s hand was in a cast, Friedman allegedly followed him into the bathroom and violated him, according to the criminal complaint.

Friedman allegedly sexually assaulted the boy, shoved a rag in his mouth and threatened him with a gun.

"You'd better not tell your parents or I'll kill you and your family," Friedman allegedly said to the boy.


If convicted on the top charge, Friedman faces up to 25 years in prison.

Friedman and his attorney Arthur Aidala both declined comment outside court.

http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/brooklyn/brooklyn-math-tutor-busted-molesting-student-article-1.2718757
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