NY Times The men were spiritual leaders, held up before the children around them
as wise and righteous and right. So they had special access to those
kids. Special sway.
And when they exploited it by sexually abusing the children, according
to civil and criminal cases from different places and periods, they were
protected by their lofty stations and by the caretakers of their faith.
The children’s accusations were met with skepticism. The community of
the faithful either couldn’t believe what had happened or didn’t want it
exposed to public view: why give outsiders a fresh cause to be
critical? So the unpleasantness was hushed up.
This is not a column about the Catholic Church.
This is a column about Orthodox Jews, who have recently had similar misdeeds exposed, similar cover-ups revealed.
And I’m writing it, yes, because the Catholic Church over the last two
decades has absorbed the bulk of journalistic attention, my own
included, in terms of child sexual abuse. There are compelling reasons
that’s been so: Catholicism has more than one billion nominal adherents
worldwide; endows its clerics with a degree of mysticism that many other
denominations don’t; and is just centralized enough for scattered
cover-ups to coalesce into something more like a conspiracy. The pattern
of criminality and evasion has been staggering.
But some of the same dynamics that fed the crisis in Catholicism — an
aloof patriarchy, an insularity verging on superiority, a disinclination
to get secular officials involved — exist elsewhere. And the way
they’ve played out in Orthodox Judaism illustrates anew that religion
isn’t always the higher ground and safer harbor it purports to be. It
can also be a self-preserving haven for wrongdoing.
Early this month, 19 former students of the Yeshiva University High School for Boys in Manhattan filed a lawsuit alleging sexual abuse
by two rabbis in the 1970s and 1980s who continued to work there even
after molestation complaints. The rabbis were also allowed to move on to
new employment without ever being held accountable. School
administrators, the lawsuit alleges, elected not to report anything to
the police.[...]