[....] As the neighborhood shifted from Yiddish to Spanish, artistic to
artisanal, the Home of the Sages became home to fewer and fewer sages.
With not much need for its four-story religious and nursing home, the
board recently decided to sell the 76-year-old institution, which first
opened as a synagogue on Henry Street, to a developer for $13 million.
But
congregants of the Home of the Sages are charging in court that the
deal is motivated not by self-preservation but self-enrichment: that the
proceeds would largely flow to the president of the board, Samuel
Aschkenazi, along with a Hasidic sect with no affiliation to the
organization or the Lower East Side.
The state attorney general’s office gave the sale its blessing in March
but it has since withdrawn its approval and is reviewing the
allegations. [...]
Mr.
Aschkenazi has been running Home for the Sages for four decades, taking
over from his father. With the number of its Orthodox residents
declining, the nursing home business was sold in 1996 to an operator
from New Jersey. Court filings claim the new operator was a business
partner of Mr. Aschkenazi’s son, now deceased. [...]
Only
after the sale was before the court did congregants file their
challenge. They maintain that in 2014 Mr. Aschkenazi had in 2014
systematically replaced the largely inactive board with several new
members coming from the Gur sect who had no connections to the synagogue
or the neighborhood. [...]
Mr.
Aschkenazi has not answered the allegations that he is using the sale
for personal gain, other than to say that they are “without merit.” He
has also not addressed why the bulk of the proceeds from the sale would
go to the Gur sect. [...]
After
services last week, many congregants said they would have no objection
to the sale if it benefited Jews on the Lower East Side. “We need all
the help we can get,” Nussin Fogel said as he took off his tefillin. [...]
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