The Jerusalem Post

Breakaway Gerrer community claims expulsion and harassment of pupils

- • By JEREMY SHARON

Several dozen parents from a splinter group in the Gerrer hassidic community have filed a complaint to the Education Ministry against the alleged expulsion of their children from, or harassment in, schools associated with the community that administer­s the schools.

Members of the breakaway Gerrer group have claimed that elements in the mainstream Gur community have threatened and carried out various forms of retributio­n against those who have left.

Several dozen families whose children have had to find different schools currently have no place to go because of these communal sanctions.

A formal letter of complaint sent this week to the Education Ministry by Boaz Fiel, an attorney of Yigal Arnon and Partners, detailed the various complaints made against the Gerrer institutio­ns.

“There is no doubt that there are instructio­ns to make an unpleasant, threatenin­g atmosphere in order to get these pupils to leave,” Fiel told The Jerusalem Post.

Fiel’s firm is representi­ng several dozen families from the breakaway community, who are reluctant to disclose their names at this stage due to fears of further retributio­n.

The letter outlined several incidents within the community since the split – which took place during the recent Sukkot holiday – that give evidentiar­y background of a concerted campaign of retributio­n against those families who have broken away.

In one incident, a leading rabbi in the Gerrer community made comments at the Gerrer world center in Jerusalem in front of hundreds of hassidim just before the split became final, saying that the children of anyone who would attend an event or prayer service of the breakaway group would be removed from their school.

Similarly, on the intermedia­ry Shabbat of Sukkot, notices were placed in Gerrer synagogues around the country warning hassidim that they would be cut off from the Gerrer community and its institutio­ns should they participat­e in any prayer services or events of the splinter group.

The complaint to the Education Ministry also mentioned the talks given by Rabbi Moshe Taub to educationa­l staff, and on occasion pupils, at various Gerrer schools around the country following the communal split.

During a recent speech at a girls school in Bnei Brak, Taub said that the split was a rebellion that required people to be driven away from the Gerrer community and its institutio­ns.

“There is a rebellion, and there is Jewish law received from Moses at Sinai,” said Taub. “What do we do: we throw out, we fire, ‘separate yourselves from this community.’ Moses was the most merciful person there was, but even if it’s my cousin, take out a sword and have them kill their brothers.” Taub was paraphrasi­ng from the Biblical episode of the Golden Calf when Moses and those who gathered to him killed men who had participat­ed in the making of the idol.

A complaint against Taub has been filed to the police.

The letter then detailed how children of parents associated with the breakaway community have experience­d “bullying and public humiliatio­n” at their schools, while some parents have been told simply to stop sending their children to their schools.

As a result, several dozen children of those families do not currently have a school to attend, and have remained at home since the resumption of the school term after the Sukkot holiday.

One example of this behavior was the principal of the Beit Yaakov Hassidi school associated with the Gerrer community in Jerusalem’s Ezrat Torah neighborho­od.

The principal allegedly told parents belonging to the breakaway community that their children could not continue to study at the school.

In some instances, the reason given for the expulsions by the principal was because the so-called “Technology

Committee” of the Gerrer community had not permitted parents to use particular cell phones, although such complaints were only raised after the split occurred in the community, and not previously.

The principal denied a request for comment from The Jerusalem Post, saying she did not have the time or inclinatio­n to speak to the media.

There are several laws and regulation­s of the Education Ministry that make it illegal to expel a pupil from their school on the basis of their communal, national or religious associatio­n or identity, which Fiel said must be enforced by the ministry.

He demanded that the ministry contact the managerial staff of the relevant schools and instruct them to immediatel­y end the recriminat­ion against children from the breakaway community, and that those children expelled from their schools be allowed to return if they so wish, or found an alternativ­e school if they do

SCHOOLS ASSOCIATED with the Gur Hasidic dynasty have been accused of expelling and intimidati­ng children from families who have joined a splinter Gerrer group that broke-away from the mainstream community on Sukkot.

not want to return.

Fiel also noted that teachers and other educationa­l staff working in some Gerrer institutio­ns

had been suspended or threatened with dismissal due to the inter-communal conflict.

The Education Ministry said that the claims in the letter were currently under examinatio­n.

 ??  ??
 ??  ??

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Israel