http://www.cbsnews.com/8301-501363_162-57450886/orthodox-nyc-counselor-on-trial-in-sex-abuse-case/
Orthodox NYC counselor on trial in sex abuse case
NEW YORK — The abuse went on for nearly three years before the
schoolgirl told anyone that her spiritual adviser was molesting her
while he was supposed to be mentoring her about her religion,
authorities said.
“They imagine they're the wave of the future, but it's only sewage flowing downhill”
Weberman attends fundraiser event for himself in May
But in Brooklyn's ultra-orthodox Jewish
community, 53-year-old Nechemya Weberman has been embraced and defended
as wrongly accused. The girl has been called a slut and a troublemaker,
her family threatened and spat at on the street.
The rallying
around Weberman, who goes on trial this month, and ostracizing of his
accuser and her family reflects long-held beliefs in this insular
community that problems should be dealt with from within and that elders
have far more authority than the young. It also brought to light
allegations that the district attorney was too cozy with powerful
rabbis, a charge he vehemently denies.
"There are other people
that claim misconduct and they can't come out because they're going to
be re-victimized and ostracized by the community," said Judy Genut, a
friend of the accuser's family who counsels troubled girls.
Brooklyn
is home to about 250,000 ultra-orthodox Jews, the largest community
outside of Israel. Step onto a Williamsburg street and tall guys in
skinny jeans and tattoos are mingling with a flush of men in dark coats
and hats carrying prayer books and speaking Yiddish. The Hasidic Jews
appear to outsiders as though they come from another time; embracing
centuries-old traditions, they wear black clothes, tall hats, long
beards and earlocks. Women wear long skirts and cover their heads after
they marry.
They have their own ambulances and schools, called
yeshivas, their own civilian police and rabbinical courts. Members are
encouraged to first speak to a rabbi before going to secular authorities
— and as a result, cases rarely make it to outside law enforcement.
The topic has been studied and reported in the Jewish media for years and has recently made headlines in New York papers.
"They
think that anyone who turns over anyone to the outside authorities is
committing a transgression to the community at large," said Samuel
Heilman, a professor of Jewish studies at Queens College.
The
girl, now 17, was sent to Weberman at age 12 because she'd been asking
theological questions and he had a reputation for helping people back on
the spiritual path. He often counseled people, though he had no formal
training. But during sessions, authorities say, he forced the girl to
perform sex acts.
The girl started dressing immodestly, was
deemed a troublemaker and removed from her school — one Weberman was
affiliated with — and sent to another, family friends said. The
allegations surfaced in 2011 when she told a guidance counselor there
she'd been molested.
The Associated Press typically doesn't identify people who say they are the victims of sexual assault.
Weberman
has pleaded not guilty, and articles in Hasidic newspapers have
proclaimed his innocence and begged the community for support. More than
1,000 men showed up for a fundraiser aiming to raise $500,000 for his
legal fees and, if he's convicted and jailed, money for his family.
"It's
very hard for the town to believe the things that he's being accused of
because he has a reputation of doing good and being good," Genut said.
George
Farkas, Weberman's lawyer, said his client isn't guilty but is damned
regardless because the allegations will taint his reputation.
The
family has said they would've preferred to handle the allegations
within the community. But when accusations are managed from the inside,
victims are rarely believed and abusers aren't punished — in part
because the word of an elder is respected over the word of a child,
victims and advocates say.
Joel Engelman said he tried to work
with yeshiva officials, finally confronting them at age 22 about a rabbi
who abused him as a child. Engelman was given a lie detector test and
encouraged to keep quiet about the allegations, and the rabbi was
temporarily removed — long enough for Engelman to turn 23, making him
too old under state law to file a complaint.
"It's that they
don't want to believe that the rabbis that they've been raised to
respect could be so cruel and could be so criminal," said Engelman, now
26.
His mother, Pearl, herself an activist, said the community is
overwhelmingly good and believes people must be educated about the
crime to start standing up for the victims.
"I'm not an
anarchist, I'm not a rebel," said the 64-year-old mother of seven. "I
love this community, and I want to change it for the better and make it
safer for children."
Outside law enforcement has also had a
difficult time. Before 2009, only a handful of sex abuse cases were
reported within the ultra-orthodox community. Then, District Attorney
Charles Hynes created a program called Kol Tzedek (Voice of Justice)
aimed at helping more victims come forward about abuse, an underreported
crime everywhere.
Part of the deal, along with a designated
hotline and counseling, is that prosecutors don't actively publicize the
names of accused abusers. The cases are still tried in open court,
where the names are public.
Before Kol Tzedek, Hynes said, he
struggled to mount a successful prosecution. "As soon as we would give
the name of a defendant ... (rabbis and others) would engage this
community in a relentless search for the victims," he said. "And they're
very, very good at identifying the victims. And then the victims would
be intimidated and threatened, and the case would fall apart."
Since
then, 100 of the total 5,389 cases in the borough have come from the
ultra-orthodox community, the district attorney's office said. Hynes
also started a taskforce to combat intimidation attempts — and has said
rabbis have a duty to come forward if they have been told of abuse.
But
victims' rights advocates say Hynes has purposefully ignored some cases
and hasn't pushed as strongly for full prosecutions of others — bowing
to powerful rabbis in exchange for political support, a charge he
strongly denies.
"He doesn't take care of victims," said Nuchem
Rosenberg, a rabbi who says he was ostracized for speaking out about
abuse. "He takes care of those in power, so they can all keep power."
Genut said the accuser is ready to testify. Her family, though, is looking for a higher judgment than criminal court.
"They
believe that God's going to take revenge on him," she said. "They're
suffering a lot and they say one nice day God's going to show us that he
did stick up for us."
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