The Jewish Chronicle

Israel sends sex abuse suspect to Australia

- BY NATHAN JEFFAY

MONDAY WAS a momentous day for the fight against sex abuse in the Jewish community. Malka Leifer, the alleged paedophile that Israel seemed unable to extradite, was finally loaded on a plane to Australia.

“This is an incredible day for justice,” announced Manny Waks, an activist who has been campaignin­g for extraditio­n, as Leifer boarded one of the last flights out of Israel before its new coronaviru­s-induced airport closure.

For the last 13 years, three heartbroke­n sisters have been desperatel­y hoping that the woman who allegedly abused them at Melbourne’s Adass Israel school would face trial. But Leifer, the ultra-Orthodox institutio­n’s former principal, could not appear in court in Victoria to face her 74 charges, as she flew to her native Israel almost as soon as allegation­s surfaced.

In 2014 Israel arrested her but her lawyers managed to evade extraditio­n proceeding­s for years, largely by arguing that she was in no mental state to face trial. These arguments by her legal team continued even after Israeli authoritie­s arrested her over allegedly faking mental illness in 2018.

I sat in a Jerusalem court for dozens of court dates, watching the build-up of frustratio­n among state prosecutor­s, activists, and, on several occasions, the sisters alleging abuse who had flown in from Australia. The pain of Dassi Erlich, Nicole Meyer and Elly Sapper at the drawn-out proceeding­s was palpable. And there was nothing anyone could say to reassure them.

The case hinged on Israel’s state prosecutor­s proving a negative, namely that Leifer was not mentally ill, and time and time again as they appeared to make progress, the defence team presented arguments or expert witnesses to dispute this conclusion.

There were endless twists and turns, including a police recommenda­tion in 2019 that then-deputy

Left: Malka Leifer, a former Australian teacher accused of dozens of cases of sexual abuse of girls at a school. Above, left to right: Australian sisters Elly Sapper, Dassi Erlich and Nicole Meyer are the alleged victims health minister Yaakov Litzman was indicted for allegedly pressuring state psychiatri­sts to declare Leifer unfit for trial. Mr Litzman denied wrongdoing.

The cycle of indecision in the case was broken in the last year as the judge gathered more expert opinions and made a final decision in May that Leifer was mentally fit to face extraditio­n proceeding­s, which took place in September. Leifer was approved for extraditio­n, the Supreme Court rejected the inevitable appeal from her lawyers, and the Justice Minister signed the extraditio­n order.

The drama is over — or rather, the Israel episode, is over. The deep friction that the chaotic proceeding­s caused between Israel and the Australian Jewish community, and on a diplomatic level between Jerusalem and Canberra, can start to heal. And for abuse survivors everywhere, it is encouragin­g to see that progress can be made even in a seemingly intractabl­e case.

But for the sisters, this is just step one in their attempt to heal. They now face the prospect of an emotionall­ywrenching trial in Victoria.

They prayed for the wheels of justice to turn, but it will still be a deeply painful process.

In 2014 Israel arrested her but she evaded extraditio­n for years’

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PHOTOS: FLASH 90, GETTY IMAGES

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