Jewish Week By Gary Rosenblatt editor & publisher
It is sad, if not maddening, when this newspaper is labeled  “anti-Orthodox” for its reporting on scandals and other disturbing  incidents in a segment of the community whose culture places a high  value on policing itself.
Such accusations are not new, but they have ratcheted up  significantly in recent days following the tragic death of young Leiby  Kletzky of Borough Park, and The Jewish Week’s report and Editorial  (July 22 issue) calling into question the role of the much-respected  community watchdog group, Shomrim, in terms of its procedures and  relations with law enforcement authorities.
The headline last week of an Orthodox magazine, Ami, used the word  “slander” in referring to our reporting on Shomrim. Rabbi Avi Shafran,  director of public affairs for Agudath Israel of America, wrote in Ami,  where he is editor at large, that The Jewish Week “seems bent on viewing  and portraying the charedi community with” a “jaundiced eye.”
Marvin Schick, an expert in the field of Jewish education who writes a  paid-for column in The Jewish Week, goes further in his criticism,  proclaiming in a blog that “Orthodoxy-bashing is alive and well” at The  Jewish Week, which he said has reached a new low in offering up “a vile  exercise in group libel.” 
if not maddening
ReplyDeleteRosenblatt has long been mad, and can't get much madder.