Monday, June 24, 2013

Case of Rabbi Boruch Leshes

Case of Rabbi Boruch Leshes
(AKA: Rabbi Boruch Dov Leshes)


Former Senior Leader, Yeshiva Centre - Sydney, Australia
Monsey, NY


Enabler of alleged and convicted sex offenders.  

Rabbi Boruch Leshes blames survivors sex crimes for the offenses committed against them.

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Table of Contents:


2013
  1. Rabbi's Shocking Comments on Sexual Abuse (06/23/2013)
  2. Victims may have consented: Rabbi (06/23/2013)
  3. Australian rabbi apologizes for saying sex abuse victims may have consented  (06/24/2013)

Also see: 

  1. Case of Rabbi Manis Friedman
  2. Alleged Enablers of Sex Offenders in Jewish Communities

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Rabbi's Shocking Comments on Sexual Abuse
Sydney Morning Herald - June 23, 2013

Rabbi Boruch Lesches, a former senior leader at Sydney's Yeshiva centre, talking about sexual abuse in the Jewish community.



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Victims may have consented: Rabbi
By Richard Baker and Nick McKenzie
Sydney Morning Herald - June 23, 2013


A senior Australian rabbi who failed to stop an alleged paedophile from sexually abusing boys at a Sydney Jewish school said some of the victims may have consented to sexual relations and has warned that involving police now would ''open a can of worms''.
Former senior Sydney Rabbi Boruch Dov Lesches made the extraordinary remarks in a recent conversation with a person familiar with a series of alleged child rapes and molestation by a man associated with Sydney's Yeshiva community in the 1980s.



Rabbi Lesches' comments are likely to increase public scrutiny of Australia's senior rabbinical leaders' handling of child sexual abuse cases, amid allegations of cover-ups, victim intimidation and the hiding of perpetrators overseas.



In a legally recorded telephone conversation heard by Fairfax Media and provided to NSW detectives investigating the Sydney Yeshiva cases, Rabbi Lesches admitted to counselling the alleged abuser upon learning he had sexually abused a boy a decade his junior


Rabbi Lesches is now one of New York's leading ultra-Orthodox figures.
Rabbi Lesches said he told the man that both he and the boy would be forced to leave the Yeshiva community if he could not control his urges.

''If not, both of them would have to leave,'' he said.

Rabbi Lesches, who never informed police of the abuse, said he did not know the man had ignored his warning and gone on to sexually abuse at least three other boys in the late 1980s.

He said other Yeshiva leaders were responsible for supervising the man.

In the conversation, Rabbi Lesches suggested one of the man's victims, who was aged about 11 at the time of the abuse, may have been a consensual partner. ''Everyone was telling different stories and trying to put the blame on someone else,'' he said.

''We are speaking about very young boys … everybody says about the other one that 'he agreed to this'.''

When challenged on his position that young boys could give consent, Rabbi Lesches replied ''you would be surprised'' and added that some non-Jewish boys, who he termed ''goyims'', began acting or thinking sexually ''from the age of five''.

He said teenagers from poor backgrounds had ''nothing else to do in life, only thinking 24 hours about sex'' with each other, members of their own families and even ''dogs''.

Rabbi Lesches also said reporting the alleged abusers to police so many years after incidents occurred would ''destroy them and their children'' and cause pain for victims.
''Do not talk this way … when it is such a long time ago, everybody suffers,'' he said. ''If you start to do something about it will not be productive and not be good for nobody.''

A traditional rule, mesirah, prohibits a Jew from reporting another's wrong-doing to non-Jewish authorities; it remains a powerful influence in some ultra-orthodox communities.
Rabbi Lesches, who did not respond to questions from Fairfax Media, is the third senior rabbinical leader to be identified as having known something about the abuse of boys at the Sydney Yeshiva in the 1980s.

In February, Fairfax Media reported how the alleged perpetrator, who was sent overseas, had recently admitted guilt to some of his victims. He told of how the centre's spiritual leader, Rabbi Pinchus Feldman, once warned him to stop what he was doing.

In response to that story, Rabbi Feldman released a statement saying he had no recollection of anyone confessing to him their involvement in child sexual abuse 25 years ago.

In early March, another senior rabbinical leader, Rabbi Moshe Gutnick, admitted he did not contact police after a young boy contacted him more than 20 years ago to report sexual abuse at Bondi's Yeshiva.

Rabbi Gutnick, who heads the Organisation of Rabbis of Australasia, said he received an anonymous phone call and alerted senior members of the Yeshiva to the boy's claims. He said that with the benefit of hindsight ''I would have probably called the police''.

Rabbi Gutnick is understood to have told Bondi detectives recently all that he could recall about the phone call. In a statement published in the Australian Jewish News this year, he said he ''felt deeply saddened that I had not recognised what I only now know was a legitimate cry for help''.

''I appeal to the entire community - to victims and their parents, to community members and leaders. If you have information please come forward to the police. Don't be afraid,'' Rabbi Gutnick urged.

The Sydney Yeshiva Centre said it has comprehensive child protection policies in place and the centre had liaised with police over the allegations. In a statement the centre said it ''unequivocally condemns any form of abuse'' and treats its child welfare responsibilities with the utmost care.

''Yeshiva … has always endeavoured to comply in full with all its legal and moral child safety obligations.''

Fairfax Media can also reveal that the family of the man being investigated by NSW Police over the sexual incidents at the Bondi Yeshiva are big financial supporters of the New York Monsey ultra-orthodox community led by Rabbi Lesches.

The alleged abuser was also appointed to the board of an Australian company involved in providing educational materials for Jewish students, years after his abuse of boys.
The alleged abuser has in recent years been sheltered by a leading Los Angeles Jewish welfare group, with 2011 emails between the man and one of the organisation's senior members showing he was in danger of having his past in Sydney exposed.

''I have no idea how anyone found out - but calls are coming daily from many sources. So far, we've been protecting you,'' wrote an executive director at the LA organisation in an email to the man.

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Australian rabbi apologizes for saying sex abuse victims may have consented

Rabbinical Council of Victoria says comments by former Sydney Chabad leader were appalling.
Jerusalem Post and JTA - June 24, 2013

A former senior Chabad leader in Sydney in Monsey, N.Y, has issued an apology for making comments suggesting that some of the Jewish victims of alleged child sex abuse in Australia may have consented, Australian media reported Monday.

In a legally recorded telephone conversation obtained by Fairfax media and posted on YouTube, Rabbi Boruch Lesches - who now heads the Lubavitch community in Monsey, NY - admitted to knowing about the alleged abuse of a boy but not going to the police with the information. Instead, according to Fairfax Media, the rabbi told the alleged perpetrator that if the abuse did not stop, both he and the boy would be dismissed from the community.
The phone conversations were provided to NSW police investigating child sex allegations against a man associated with Sydney’s Chabad community in the 1980s.

"We are speaking about very young boys... everybody says about the other one that 'he agreed to this,'" Lesches said in the phone conversation. When queried about young boys consenting, he said, “You would be surprised.”


Reporting alleged abusers to police so many years after incidents occurred would "destroy them and their children" and cause pain for victims, he warned, according to Australian news outlet Brisbane Times.

Lesches dismissed the reopening of the case now as a “can of worms." “When it is such a long time ago, everybody suffers,” he said. “If you start to do something about it, it will not be productive.”

The Brisbane Times reported that on Monday, Rabbi Lesches issued a statement, saying that he regretted making the comments in the recent telephone conversation. Lesches is quoted as saying, "I would like to apologize for statements made in a private telephone conversation that caused pain to the greater public... I would like to make my position absolutely clear: Without any reservation, I endorse the rabbinical rulings encouraging victims of abuse to report to the police." According to Fairfax Media, the alleged abuser, currently being investigated by police for sexually abusing at least four boys in the Sydney Yeshiva community, has admitted that Rabbi Lesches spoke to him regarding his activities with a younger boy.

The Rabbinical Council of Victoria issued a statement Sunday saying it was “appalled” by the comments. “It is deeply regrettable and shocking that there still do exist some individuals out there on the fringe in the religious leadership world who take positions contrary to the clear-cut contemporary halachic approach on the matter of child sexual abuse,” said Rabbi Meir Shlomo Kluwgant, president of the council.

Manny Waks, a spokesman for Jewish child sex abuse victims, also said the comments were “absolutely shocking.”


“Unfortunately this attitude and some of the views are fairly prevalent within the fervently Orthodox community,” he said. “After so many exposes, surely this is now undeniable.”

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