Group: soc.culture.pakistan
From: Anti-Muslim Bigots
Date: Thursday, March 13, 2008 1:47 PM
Subject: Jewish Principal 'molested schoolgirls'

Principal 'molested schoolgirls'

Barney Zwartz and Bridie Smith
March 14, 2008
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THE principal of a private Jewish girls' school in Melbourne has fled Australia facing
accusations that she sexually molested some of the students.

Outraged parents claim that the Adass Israel Girls' School in Elsternwick paid for Malka
Leifer, a mother of eight, to return to Israel before reporting the complaints to the police.

She left Melbourne on Wednesday last week, 24 hours after being investigated and sacked by the
school's board.

The Adass community is a small, ultra-orthodox and reclusive group of about 150 families based
in Elsternwick and Ripponlea. They have little contact with the wider Jewish community and
non-Jewish society.

It is believed the complaints against Mrs Leifer involve girls aged 15 and 16.

The president of the Adass Israel synagogue, Benjamin Koppel, has confirmed that the school
acted after receiving a call suggesting that inappropriate behaviour may have taken place with
one or more of the school's present or former students.

Mr Koppel did not return calls from The Age, but in a statement to The Australian Jewish News,
he said a "relevant authority" had been informed. He would not confirm whether that was police,
a religious court or an independent schools board.

A spokeswoman for Victoria Police said the force was aware of the claims but could not confirm
whether there was an investigation because the victims might be under age.

Raphael Aron, a counsellor with Gateway Family Counselling Centre in Caulfield, said his agency
had referred some families with children at the school to specialists. "This has hit the
community like a ton of bricks, it's absolutely out of character with the nature of the school,
staff and faculty," he said.

Mr Aron, who is also director of Cult Counselling Australia, which tries to get people out of
cults, said he was concerned for the girls' welfare. "In a school where kids don't have much
exposure to the outside world, there is a possibility of vulnerability … they may not have the
street wisdom to recognise that something is wrong," he said.

Parents of present and past students said Mrs Leifer had molested students at school, at her
home and probably at school camps. They said one victim had attempted suicide.

The parents, who would not be named, said that Mrs Leifer would share her bed with different
students when her rabbi husband was away. She would tell the students she was scared, although
she had five children, aged five to 12, in the house.

The parents said that Mrs Leifer always went on school camps — five or six a year — and would
stay an extra night with two or three girls to "clean up".

One parent said problems emerged a year ago when a daughter, 16, stopped eating and became
unsociable. Her parents took her to a psychologist, and it came out that she had been molested
but was too embarrassed to tell her parents.

"It's very sensitive, because a girl who has been molested would find it hard to get married,
so it's very secret, hush-hush — no one wants to admit their child is a victim," the parent said.

Girls and boys in the community are segregated from kindergarten, are not allowed television or
to mix with the wider community and do not attend university until after they are married.

They leave the Adass schools at 16 and go to seminaries, usually overseas, until they marry,
usually much younger than the Australian norm.

One parent told The Age that Mrs Leifer, who is believed to be in her late 40s, was hand-picked
from Israel to teach at the girls' school eight years ago, not because of her teaching
abilities but for her ultra-orthodox beliefs. The parent said she was widely regarded as the
second holiest person in the community, behind spiritual leader Rabbi Avrohom Zvi Beck.

Some parents are livid with the way the school has handled the claims and frustrated by the
"silence of the establishment".

At a meeting with parents yesterday, Mr Koppel avoided answering repeated questions from
parents about the identity of the "relevant authorities".

Parents were also concerned that the psychological treatment of the girls had been compromised
because the school had refused to release information to outside psychologists. Students and
parents were instead referred to school-nominated psychologists.

There are also claims that Mrs Leifer left Australia with up to $100,000 borrowed from a family
within the community, two days before she flew to Israel. She is also alleged to have taken
about $20,000 from a pool of money earned from some students' part-time jobs.

The money, managed by Mrs Leifer, was pooled in a community fund and then lent to people in need.

The Age was told that Adass leaders at one stage sought the advice of Mark Leibler, a prominent
leader of the wider Jewish community, but he declined to get involved.

Barrister Norman Rosenbaum confirmed that he had been retained by the community. "For reasons
of privacy, and to protect those affected, we are not saying anything further, other than that
all issues are being addressed by pre-eminent qualified professionals," he said.

The Australian Jewish News also reported that on Saturday last week, Rabbi Beck addressed the
community and said they should not consider Mrs Leifer guilty of any crimes because there had
been no investigation. He told the congregation that if they discussed the matter, it would be
considered lashon hara (malicious gossip), the paper reported.

This story was found at: http://www.theage.com.au/articles/2008/03/13/1205126111228.html

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