Milchemes Dor Hamabul
Grand Rabbi Nuchem Rosenberg Shlit"a
מלחמה לה' נגד אנשי דור המבול
מרביה"ק רבי נחום ראזנבערג שליט"א
דף יב
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PAGE
12
גליון "קול השופר
2009"
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12
כסלו תשס"ט לפ"ק
מי מעכב את הגאולה? הציונים
או הרבנים הרוצחים אשר חתמו
את החרם
ושלחו רוצח להרוג את
רבינו הקדוש?
מי ירה עם רובה בערב שבת בראשית
בראשו של הצה"ק
רבי נחום רוזנבערג שליט"א
וניצל בדרך נס?
בקרוב
יתגלה הכל
אלו הם
הרבנים שיש להם חלק ברציחה שכמעט ורצחו את
הגה"צ רבינו נחום שליט"א על שעורר
אותנו
להיזהר מעון דור המבול!!!
היוצא
לנו מכל זה!
הרבנים
האלו הם שותפים ומכשירים את כל מעשים
המנובלים שעושים המלמדים והראשי ישיבות
והם הם
האשמים על כל מעשה רציחה
שהרוצחים עושים
על חשבונם כמו שתראו!!!
אלה הם
הערב רב רבנים!!!
בקרוב
יתגלה לעיני כל חי איך שהרבנים לבד הם
מאלעסטעריס מספר 1
ראה
להלן בדף
.........................................
נעתק מאתר:
ISRAEL613.COM
ha-zohar.com
אנו
מבקשים מכל העשירים, תפסיקו להוזיל להם
כספי צדקה, כי בהכסף שלכם
אתם עוזרים ח"ו
להרבות עון דור המבול רח"ל
---------------------
מה
עושים משמרת הצניעות של הסאמעריסטען, השכל שלהם היא מגעת להשכל
של הבת היענה,
שמסתרת הראש שלה וחושבת שכמו שהיא לא רואה אף
אחד, כך לא רואים אותה גם כן,
הסאטמעריסטען הם בתוך אותה החור של הבת היענה, והם עוד לא
רוצים להבין
כי כל מעשיהם שעושים בהסתר יתגלה בכל העיתונים,
לכן אם
אתם לא רוצים לעשות תשובה ולהפסיק את המעשה עון דור המבול,
לכל
הפחות תפסיקו עם המעשים תעתועים שלכם להרבות ולעזור ולהפיץ
בעון דור המבול,
תדעו כי כל מעשיכם יתגלו לעיני הכל, ואז יהיה
הבושה שלכם מאוד גדולה!!!
השאלה
הגדולה היא:
למה אף
ישיבה לא נלחמת נגד רבינו הקדוש, רק אתם הסאטמעריסטען!!!
אתם
חושבים שלא יודעים?
יודעים
וידעים הרבה, רק אנו מחכים לעוד ידיעות!!!
ובקרוב
יתפרסם בע"ה!
המשך בדף
110 ובדף
267
Hella Winston and Larry Cohler-Esses
Special
To The Jewish Week
| Oct 29, 2008
A group of alleged survivors of sexual
abuse from strictly Orthodox backgrounds and
victim advocates have joined together to
encourage Orthodox victims to seek justice
in New York’s secular courts, rather than
quietly within their communities.
- Read More - |
Alleged Abuse Victims Urge Going To
Police
by Hella Winston and Larry
Cohler-Esses
Special To The Jewish Week
A group of alleged survivors of sexual abuse
from strictly Orthodox backgrounds and
victim advocates have joined together to
encourage Orthodox victims to seek justice
in New York’s secular courts, rather than
quietly within their communities.
The new group, Survivors for Justice, will
also lobby the state legislature to pass a
long-pending bill to extend the statute of
limitations on such crimes so that victims
can get into court.
The organization, the first of its kind,
will work to break an intimidating communal
code of silence, said Mark Weiss, one of its
founders.
“It’s about time that people start
recognizing the destructive effects of
people’s fear of being stigmatized for
talking about this issue,” said Weiss.
“People need to realize that being
associated with [the issue of sexual abuse]
creates a stigma only if they allow it to.
Fear and intimidation under the guise of
upholding the reputation of the Torah should
have no place in our midst.”
The group declares that one of its prime
aims will be to support individuals who have
been victimized as children by adult staff
in yeshivas and other Orthodox institutions
in going to law enforcement authorities.
Such victims, said co-founder Joel Engelman,
“have to deal with all the shame and stigma.
There are no visible people out there saying
we are here, we went through what you went
through, and we’re here to help.” Rabbinic
leaders, he added, often apply pressure to
keep matters within the community.
Last month Engelman himself came out with
his story of alleged sexual molestation at
age 8 by Rabbi Avrohom Reichman of United
Talmudical Academy, a yeshiva in
Williamsburg, Brooklyn, affiliated with the
Satmar chasidic sect. (“A Charge Of Double
Betrayal In Williamsburg,” Sept. 5) He has
filed suit against Rabbi Reichman, UTA and a
Satmar summer bungalow colony that also
employed the rabbi, charging the
institutions were told of the abusive
conduct but did nothing.
Weiss, 41, is an alleged survivor of abuse
by Rabbi Avrohom Mondrowitz, who was
indicted in 1984 on four counts of sodomy
and eight counts of sexual abuse in the
first degree for allegedly abusing four boys
in Brooklyn. Mondrowitz fled to Israel,
where he escaped law enforcement until last
year, when he was arrested and now awaits a
decision on his extradition to the United
States.
Another founding member of the group is
David Framowitz, 50, who alleges he was
molested by Rabbi Yehuda Kolko of Torah
Temimah in Flatbush. The group also includes
a man who says his son, now 9, was also
abused by Rabbi Kolko. Like Rabbi Reichman,
Rabbi Kolko now faces civil suits from some
of his alleged victims, as do the yeshiva
and its principal, Rabbi Lipa Margulies. The
plaintiffs charge that the school and its
administrators knew of Rabbi Kolko’s conduct
but protected him.
Rabbi Kolko was indicted twice by a Brooklyn
grand jury on felony sex abuse charges but,
in a controversial plea bargain offered to
him by Brooklyn District Attorney Charles
Hynes, pleaded guilty last spring to two
misdemeanor counts of endangering the
welfare of a child.
This week, Baruch Sandhaus, 41, another
alleged survivor of childhood molestation in
a yeshiva, came out for the first time in
connection with formation of Survivors for
Justice.
Sandhaus, who has been active behind the
scenes on this issue for several years, says
he is a survivor of molestation by both
Rabbis Kolko and Mondrowitz. A civil suit he
brought against Torah Temimah as a “John
Doe” was recently dismissed due to the
statute of limitations.
The group plans to make extending both civil
and criminal statutes of limitations for
childhood sex abuse one of their main goals.
A bill to extend the statute has passed
several times in the state Assembly but has
stalled in the Senate, where it is opposed
by the Catholic Church and the insurance
industry. State Senate Majority Leader Dean
Skelos (R-Rockville Centre) has voiced
concern that it would be difficult to have
credible prosecutions of abuse that took
place long ago.
Under current law, a victim must bring a
civil suit against his molester or against
the school he alleges failed to protect him
by between one and six years after his 18th
birthday, depending on the nature of the
allegation. But childhood victims are often
unable to process what has happened to them
and act on that awareness until decades
later, well into their adulthood, according
to psychologists.
The pending bill, backed by Survivors for
Justice, would extend the statute of
limitations for civil suits and criminal
prosecutions to the victim’s 28th birthday.
It would also open a one-year window during
which victims could file civil claims
regardless of when their abuse took place.
The pending bill was among the issues
highlighted at a press conference at Cardozo
Law School on Wednesday focusing on
legislative reform to protect children from
predators. The event was organized by SNAP,
a Roman Catholic group that has fought
comparable patterns of sexual abuse by
priests — and protection of such priests by
fellow clergy and religious institutions.
“There is going to be a price tag which will
give the organizations no choice but to
cease and desist from their protection of
the pedophiles,” said one member of
Survivors for Justice, who asked to remain
anonymous because of his sensitive role as
an advocate in the community. “They simply
cannot afford to pay the massive amount in
damages and hope to continue operations.”
The idea of establishing Survivors for
Justice came about as a result of
discussions among survivors and advocates,
who have connected with one another through
their involvement in this issue.
One of the group’s financial backers is Matt
Olim, a co-founder of CDNow.com, one of the
first successful global online retailers and
now a part of Amazon.com. Olim, a
philanthropist, is not from a strictly
Orthodox background himself. But he began
volunteering several years ago as a math
tutor for ultra-Orthodox adults working to
obtain their GEDs. Through this work and his
own research, Olim said, he “learned about
the prevalence of sexual abuse in some of
those communities, and how it was
systematically covered up.”
Approached by some of his contacts for help,
Olim eagerly offered support “in the hopes
that it will help give a voice to the
survivors and stop the abuse from
continuing.” |