Protesters Denounce Brooklyn Yeshiva For Employing Alleged Child Abusers

NEW YORK
Gothamist

BY EMMA WHITFORD

A small group of protesters gathered on Eastern Parkway in Crown Heights on Sunday to denounce the longtime employment of allegedly abusive teachers at Oholei Torah, one of the largest and most prestigious boys yeshivas in Brooklyn’s Chabad network. The protesters—including members of the Lubavitch community, survivors, and alumni—held signs that read “What would the Rebbe say?” and “Abuse isn’t chinuch [education].” A row of strategically-parked yellow school buses blocked them from the yeshiva’s front entrance, where parents, teachers and rabbis ducked through the light snow into Oholei Torah’s annual gala dinner.

“The culture of violence is being celebrated tonight,” said Chaim Levin, an alumnus of the school and a survivor of sexual abuse. Earlier this month, Newsweek published a lengthy investigation into physical and sexual abuse across Brooklyn’s Chabad yeshiva network. Victims, Levin among them, accused Oholei Torah’s longtime principal, Rabbi Hershel Lustig, of deftly covering up child abuse and employing two known abusers.

In 2013, Rabbi Velvel Karp allegedly tossed a student so hard into a pane of glass that the child sustained a concussion. Multiple alumni told Newsweek that Karp often hit his students across the face, and even hung boys out of his fourth-floor classroom window by their shirts.

Another current teacher, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Zalmanov, allegedly hit a student so hard that the boy slammed into a closet, smacking his head on hardwood. According to the boy’s mother, Zalmanov showed little remorse. “For chutzpah [impudence], I patsh [smack],” he allegedly said.

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