Haredi Cult Allegedly Purchased A 14-Year-Old Girl And Married Her To A Cult Member
A 14-year-old girl was allegedly purchased from a matchmaker outside the cult. A newly religious member of the haredi community, she was hired as an au pair by a haredi family in Brooklyn. She was encouraged by that family to marry a man who was part of the Lev Tahor sect and by a matchmaker hired by the sect because there was a shortage of women. The family that encouraged his sister to marry was given $5,000 by the matchmaker to help assure the match. The matchmaker was paid by Lev Tahor. Search warrant information shows that the ‘bride’ was 14-years-old.
Above: Lev Tahor girls (file photo)
Jason Magder of the Montreal Gazette reports:
Lev Tahor's finances questioned as ultra-Orthodox sect moves from place to place, paying in cashWith cramped homes, many children in each family, and the fact that few of its members work (because they speak neither English nor French), you wouldn’t expect the 250-member ultra-Orthodox Jewish sect of Lev Tahor to be awash in cash.
Yet last November, when three buses pulled in to Ste-Agathe-des-Monts, community leader Mayer Rosner paid for the $9,650 trip to southern Ontario in cash, according to testimony related to police, and released to the public last month. The community left the neighbourhood it called home for more than a decade ahead of a date in St-Jérôme youth court to address allegations of extreme neglect, child abuse and not providing the children with proper education. The sect was, and continues to be, the subject of a Sûreté du Québec investigation on allegations of human trafficking, producing false documents and kidnapping.
Documents issued in court by police to obtain warrants allege girls as young as 13 and 14 are routinely married off to men who are much older. The minimum legal age for marriage in Canada is 16. The documents also allege sexual and physical abuse of children within the sect. None of the allegations have been proven in court.
The community lives in extreme isolation, and men and women are not permitted to see each other, except for immediate family. Women are dressed in full chador-type black robes, with their faces covered, hair shaved, and they are always wearing socks, stockings and shoes, even when indoors. Men have shaved heads, and extra-long sideburns and beards. Children are home-schooled, and only taught in Hebrew and Yiddish in order to understand the teachings of the group’s leader, Rabbi Shlomo Helbrans. Helbrans has said he encourages children to marry at a young age, but has denied allegations that he married children who were under the legal age.
After leaving Ste-Agathe, the community shelled out money for temporary accommodations in a motel, and then spent more money to relocate in a number of townhouses in Chatham-Kent, Ont., near Windsor. The community also paid lawyers to attend several custody hearings. When it seemed the community’s finances might have been stretched to the limit, most members inexplicably flew off and relocated once again to Guatemala, where the bulk of the community has been since June. In Guatemala, the sect has already moved once. After a clash with the local tribe in the village of San Juan La Laguna, they boarded buses and headed to Guatemala City in August.
The community is said to be planning another move from the converted office tower it currently occupies, to a nearby town, where they intend to settle around an abandoned school.
With four cities to call home in the span of a year, and legal expenses piling up, Lev Tahor should logically be running out of cash, so where does all its money come from?
Partly from its members, say sources close to the sect.
The search warrants detail testimony from former members of the community who said they were forced to turn over much of their savings to the community when they joined. Members who have children turn over their child support payments to the community’s leaders. The police documents say members turn over all sources of revenue to Rosner, said to be the group’s treasurer, as members are told they don’t have the wherewithal to manage their finances.
The community’s food needs are provided by its leaders, but not for free. One member told youth protection workers that the community’s leader, Helbrans, provides coupons that community members use to purchase their necessities.
A Toronto-based advocate for one of the families in Israel, George Berger, said he has heard that the rabbi convinced a couple who were new members of the community to sign over their apartment in Jerusalem and their factory to the sect. The properties were sold and the sect pocketed the money. Helbrans had apparently been asking this family for donations for many years, and then finally convinced the couple and their three children to leave Israel and join the sect in Ste-Agathe.
A source close to that family (who can’t be identified because of youth protection laws) said the husband was taking psychotropic drugs while living in the sect. They stayed only for six months, and then the woman and her three children returned to Israel homeless and broke. The man was in a terrible psychological state for several years after he left the sect, the source said.
'COLLECTING MONEY FROM AROUND THE WORLD'
Berger said Lev Tahor advocates are collecting money all around the world going around to ultra-Orthodox synagogues during prayer services, and relating false stories about children suffering cancer, or other terrible afflictions to solicit donations. He said one Lev Tahor member had been heard bragging that he raises $3,000 per day for the sect in this fashion.
The former member confirmed that this is how the community collects some of its money.
“They went to synagogues, they went to houses. They even came to my house, collecting $1, or 50 cents,” said Alex Werzberger, a spokesperson for the Hassidic Community in Montreal. “It adds up, but it can’t be all that group has. They seem to have millions.”
He said most of the people collecting money for the group were not members of Lev Tahor, but were recruited by the community’s leadership.
Werzberger, who said he gave some small amounts to Lev Tahor collectors on a few occasions, explained that most ultra-Orthodox Jews will give money to people who ask for help feeding their families, because they believe there is a religious obligation to help out people in need.
“When it comes to (a request for food), we don’t check (if the claim is valid),” he said.
Meyer Feig, another member of Montreal’s Hassidic community, said he didn’t give money to Lev Tahor collectors when he saw them in synagogue.
“There are people collecting money every day for different charities,” he said. “We’re a very generous and charitable community.”
DISAGREE WITH SECT'S GUIDING PRINCIPLES
Both Werzberger and Feig are concerned that Lev Tahor is giving other ultra-Orthodox communities a bad name, and they disagree vehemently with many of the sect’s guiding principles, including young marriage and extreme isolation.
“A lot of people are concerned that people will generalize and think that this is how we live our own life,” Feig said. “We don’t want to be associated with them. There should be a differentiation between them and us. It’s like heaven and earth.”
Aside from paying for plane trips, lawyers and relocation costs, Lev Tahor has also used its money to buy new members.
Search warrant information mentions that a 14-year-old girl had been bought, and further details were redacted by a court order.
The brother of a Lev Tahor member — whose children are currently the subject of a youth court battle, so they can’t be identified — said his sister was sold into the group by a matchmaker.
As a newly religious member of the ultra-Orthodox community, she was hired as an au pair by another ultra-Orthodox family in Brooklyn. She was encouraged by that family to marry a man who was part of the Lev Tahor sect. Her brother said he found out recently the marriage had been arranged by a matchmaker hired by the sect because there was a shortage of women. The family that encouraged his sister to marry was given $5,000 by the matchmaker to help assure the match. The matchmaker was also paid.
The man added that after she joined the sect, she would routinely ask her family for money.
The man said the family stopped sending money recently because they realized it all went straight to Lev Tahor leadership, and that it was the community leaders that were telling his sister to ask for money.
“Most of the families in Israel have stopped giving money, especially since the group relocated to Guatemala,” he said. “They know it goes directly to (community leader Mayer) Rosner.”
However, some families in Israel continue to funnel money to the sect. One family recently gave $3,000, he said.
APPEARS TO HAVE AMASSED MILLIONS
While in Canada, the group appears to have amassed millions. Reports from the Canadian Revenue Agency show one tax-exempt religious charity registered to Lev Tahor, Congregation Riminov, claimed assets of $5.6 million in 2007. Lev Tahor also received a $4.3 million donation in 2011. Rosner, whose name is registered as one of the officers of Congregation Riminov, explained to the Toronto Star last year the money was for a real estate development that didn’t work out.
Now in Guatemala City, the group is living in a converted office building. Family members in Israel have heard of squalid conditions, with no access to running water, a makeshift kitchen in a parking lot, cramped quarters and an outbreak of typhus. The community is said to be looking into building showers and kitchenettes in its current quarters.
With no Jewish community nearby, and without access to their Canadian child support payments, some have suggested Lev Tahor’s funding will probably dry up the longer the community stays in Guatemala. The family member in Israel, however, believes the community still has deep pockets, and enough financial means to survive for at least a decade or two.
Related:
There was a shortage of women before she was sold and there remained a shortage after.
It may look as though children have rights, but they don't - not really. Not anywhere. They are chattel.
Posted by: dh | October 06, 2014 at 10:46 PM
$10,000 for a bride? Since when do Jews pay retail?
Lev Tahor could buy a hundred brides from ISIS for that kind of money. It would be a bargain, even after you add the religious conversion costs. And the girls would be marginally better off than with ISIS - at least Lev Tahor doesn't live in a war zone.
(Pro tip: Purchase the Yazidis and Christian girls AFTER ISIS has given them their quickie conversion to Islam, because it's easier for Lev Tahor to convert an already-monotheistic Muslim, as opposed to non-monotheistic Yazidis and Christians.)
[I hope my satirical remarks aren't offensive. My heart bleeds for the ISIS "brides" and martyrs. And the behavior of Lev Tahor disgusts me. But there are certain similarities in the way religious extremists suppress, objectify, and commodify women.]
Posted by: Michael-Meir | October 07, 2014 at 03:42 AM
I think that there is here some very encouraging news, too. It shows that while there is a number of very deranged individuals who joined this sect, women (who are even more disadvantaged by this sect than men) seem less willing to join, and hence they have a shortage of women. It will limit their growth potential.
Posted by: PulpitRappi | October 07, 2014 at 06:33 AM
Apologies to Fiddler on the Roof (Matchmaker):
Wife snatcher, wife snatcher
Fetch me a wench,
Find me a kid,
Snatch me a snatch
Wife snatcher, wife snatcher
Look at her nook,
And make a perverted match
Chaim:
Wife snatcher, wife snatcher,
Want bait for jail,
I’ll be the goon,
Callow and pale.
Bring me a fling for I'm longing to be,
The image of lunacy.
Hirschel:
For Papa,
Bake him a challah.
Chaim
For mama,
Visit me at Sing-Sing.
Chaim and Hirschel:
For me, well,
I wouldn't holler
If she were as sexy as shiksa queen.
Wife snatcher, wife snatcher
Steal me a wench,
Find me a kid,
Snatch me a snatch,
Night after night with my hand all alone
So find me snatch,
Of my own.
(spoken)
Tzvi:
Since when are you in a match, Chaim? I thought you just had your eye on your books.
(Hirschel chuckles)
Tzvi con't:
And you have your eye on the Rabbi's son.
Hirschel:
Well, why not?
We only have one Rabbi and he only has one son.
Why shouldn't I want that pest?
Tzeitel:
Because you're a boy from a poor family.
So whatever Yenta brings, you'll take, right?
Of course right!
(throws scarf over his head, imitating Yenta)
(singing)
Hirscel, oy Hirschel,
Have I made a snatch for you!
She's winsome, she's young!
Alright, she's 22.
But she's a nice wench, a good snatch, nu?
Nu.
I promise you'll be horny,
And even if you're not,
There's more to life than that---
Don't ask me what.
Chaim, I found him.
Won't you be a lucky guy!
She's winsome, she's tall,
That is from side to side.
But she's a nice wench, a good snatch, right?
Right.
I’ve heard you have a temper.
You'll beat her every night,
But only when you’re sober,
So you'll do alright.
Did you think you'd get a quince?
Well, I'll steal the best I can.
With no dowry, no money, no yichus
Be glad she’s a woman!
Chaim:
Wife snatcher, wife snatcher,
You know that I'm
Quite very hung.
Please, give me mine.
Hirschel:
Up to this minute,
I misunderstood
That I could get stuck with wood
Chaim and Hirschel:
Dear Yente,
See that she's not gentile
Remember,
You were also pried [from your home].
It's not that
I'm sentimental
Chaim and Hirschel and Tzvi:
It's just that I’m a parasite!
Wife snatcher, wife snatcher,
Plan me no plans
I'm in no rush
Maybe I've learned
Playing with snatches
A guy can get burned
So,
Bring me the bride
Find me no find
Snatch me no snatch
Much better a mikvah lad.
Posted by: Yochanan Lavie | October 07, 2014 at 08:15 AM
I was working on a "Jail House Bait" parody, but I yield to YL's masterpiece as we celebrate the 50th anniversary of the opening of Diddler on the Roof.
Posted by: Office of the Chief Rabbi | October 07, 2014 at 08:31 AM
Thanks OCR.
Posted by: Yochanan Lavie | October 07, 2014 at 08:46 AM
YL, quite evil!
OCR, not a bad idea.
Posted by: Sarek | October 07, 2014 at 09:16 AM
Thanks, Sarek.
Posted by: Yochanan Lavie | October 07, 2014 at 09:40 AM
Yochanan. I hold you fully responsible for the "snatch me a snatch" earworm that's been playing in my head all morning at work. It's a miracle that I haven't hummed it out loud.
Posted by: dapper danny | October 07, 2014 at 12:21 PM
DD: Glad to help.
Posted by: Yochanan Lavie | October 07, 2014 at 01:06 PM
Yochanan, that was one of your best works! I nearly spit my drink out at the screen, I was laughing so hard.
Posted by: Tova | October 07, 2014 at 06:44 PM
Thanks, Tova.
Posted by: Yochanan Lavie | October 07, 2014 at 07:25 PM
YL :-)
Posted by: Jeff | October 07, 2014 at 07:31 PM