Monday, August 29, 2005

Trust and Teshuvah

© (2005) Carrie Devorah 
Goldberg Memorial - August 29, 2005 


Vicki Polin and Rabbi Yosef Blau speaking at the JWI (2005)
Jewish Women International Magazine published an excerpt from David Berger's last letter written, 1941, before he was murdered by the Nazis. It stands to consider that David, like many other victims of Nazi degradation, was stripped of his sexual identity, head shaved, dressed in shapeless clothing, then dehumanized with verbal, physical and sexual abuse. When dead, Nazis left their victims, forgotten. David was committed to living eternally. He wrote, "I should like someone to remember that there once lived a person named David Berger." 

Victims of other abuses wish to be seen and heard, while still living. Some speak up. Social pressure and religious beliefs step in the way of their allegations being paid credence, so the abuse continues, a tradition, so to speak, passed down within families, even Jewish families, along with recipes for Passover's French toast, gefilte fish or chicken soup. Victims are reproached with, "he's a Rabbi," "you must be lying," "God forbid people should find out," "what would they think," and "it is your fault, he/she wouldn't have done it without you starting it." Plausible, except sometimes victims are toddlers, or younger. 

Abuse is no longer a Jewish myth. Trusted people- grandparents, aunts, uncles, cousins, teachers, rabbis, baby sitters, friends, and youth coordinators- are being reported as encouraging sexually inappropriate behaviours. The abused struggle to shed their shame. The abuser moves forward public in their life, their secret kept too often, allowing them to abuse again. Sometimes, the victim becomes an abuser themselves, even toddlers. On a recent airing of the TV show, "yes, dear," a pre-schooler mooned his kindergarten classmates. He told the teacher, he watched his Dad mooned a picnic. So, he thought it was ok to moon his classmates. Mooning may be a mild example. What does one say when a toddler performs fellatio on classmates, that children live what they learn? 

Cycling non-sectarian behaviours of violence, neglect, emotional and sexual abuse within the community, is a recipe for Jewish disaster. Crossing economic, ethnic and religious boundaries including Judaism-Orthodoxy, Reform, Conservative, Ashkenazi, Sephardic, Mizrachi, interfaith balabustahs and homemakers, "abuse" is now part of the contemporary Jewish vocabulary, with victimizations being reported from Jewish spouses, elderly parents and children. 

There is a finger to be pointed but not at the victims often shunned after making public allegations.
Two such people holding molesters and communities that harbor them accountable are The Awareness Center's Rabbi Yosef Blau and his colleague, Vicki Polin. Rabbi Blau is a member of the RCA, a graduate of Yeshiva University's Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary. Polin, establishing a network of Jewish practitioners experienced with sexual victimization issues and Judaism, is familiar with special needs of Jewish sexual abuse survivors. She advocated empathetic support for victims prior to starting her own Center. 

Rabbi Blau stood at the lectern, front of the Capitol Hilton meeting room, up the street from the White House in Washington, DC. Co-hosting a session with Polin, at the Jewish Women's International Conference on Domestic Abuse, "Lost In The Shuffle: Jewish Survivors of Sexual Victimization," Rabbi Blau focused his audience on the challenge the Center faces educating Jewish community leaders and others, lacking training, to recognize signs of abusive relationships and to understand victims' needs of religious and physical healing. Blau and Polin addressed victims' spiritual struggle to maintain faith in traditional teachings, such as Sanhedrin's "one who teaches another's child torah, is regarded by the tradition as one who gave birth to the child," in light of their abuser being an outwardly religious individual. 

Rabbi Blau's and Polin's eclectic audience was filled with people wanting to make a difference. Men, women, old, young, North American, Middle Eastern, were "called to action" at Jewish Women International's conference to pursue, within the framework of the Jewish Community, justice and righteousness from abuse. A representative from "Shalom Bayit," a Northern California domestic abuse shelter for women and children was present. "Shalom Bayit" advocates to victims they do not have to suffer alone, they are not to blame as often they are accused by congregants, family and community members. "Shalom Bayit," "Peace In The House," advocacy that no one deserves to be abused, recalls a hand drawn poster, probably long forgotten, victims need to reminded. A young boy is pictured. Under him the words, "God don't make no junk..." 

The US Conference of Catholic Bishops and the National Review Board requested New York's John Jay College of Criminal Justice examine Catholic clergical abuse against under 18 year olds. The report investigated 10,667 abuse claims lodged against 4, 392 priests in 52 years. Some clergy reported they were abused as children. 50% plus of their victims were children aged 11 to 14 years old. 81% of their victims were male. The surveyors were asked to profile alleged abusers characteristics. They studied diocese and church records of the accuser, the accused, and the lay leader. The surveyors concluded sexual abuse is under reported. And the surveyors requested corresponding data from Muslim, Buddhist, Protestant, Jewish and other denominations and movements. 

Non-denominational statistics that bear heeding are; 95% of the abusers are men; one of every three to five women, one of every five to seven men have been sexually abused by their 18th birthday; 2.78 million men have been victim to attempted or completed rape; one out of every eight reported rape victims was male. By the time they are high schoolers, 28% of students, have experienced abuse. 48% of the abused are in grades 5 through 12. Women teachers sexually molest children too; Seattle teacher Mary Kay Letourneau, married mother of four, Florida teacher Debra LaFave, 23; Oklahoma basketball coach Elisa Nielson, 29; Tennessee physical-education teacher Pamela Turner, 27; and California teacher trainee Margaret De Barraicua, 30. Each of the four was charged with sexual assault of a male student aged between 12 and 16. A Jewish statistic- 20 to 30% of Jewish families in Israel and the United States suffer domestic violence 

Victimization practitioners are encouraging women to come forward and get help. Often, victims are unaware they are being abused. They think the behaviour is 'normal' or 'acceptable,' a sign the abuser 'likes them,' rather than danger signals. Industry practitioners release information outlining abusive behaviours. Signs of abusive behaviour include "approval withheld as punishment, locked into or out of the house, held against ones will or pushed around, punched, shoved, slapped bit, kicked, burned, choked or hit, personal items destroyed, abandoned in strange places, ridiculed or insulted, abandoned in strange locations, harassed about fictitious affairs, publicly or privately humiliated, criticized, or shamed with names called, isolating victim from family and friends, makes them feel bad, demands to know whereabouts, does not want victim to share time with others, threatens to hurt or kill sell if victim leaves," 

Rabbi Blau said, the Jewish commandment against "lashon harah," gossiping, in the matter of suspected abuse, is waived, overridden by the teaching of Lev. 19:16, "Thou shalt not stand idly by the blood of your neighbor." Abusers must be reported. It is a "hilul hashem," a moral desecration, of God's name and of the Ten Commandments, for a Jewish individual not to report suspicions of abuse. Abuse is a matter the "law of the land," "dina demalkhuta dina," can adjudicate in secular courts and must pursue. Enforcement has raised its own concerns for responding to claims of abuse within Jewish communities. Officers have reported being charged with anti-semitism in the course of their doing their job, responding to a citizen's call for help. 

As Rabbi Blau waited for his ride to the airport, I told him, a few blocks away in Lafayette Park, there stands a monument titled "Military Instruction." A sculpted older man is seated, a naked young man at his side. Then I pointed kitty corner to the hotel, a Planned Parenthood abortion clinic. September 4, 2004, I told him, a pregnant twelve year old was escorted by her mother past right-to-life advocates. Blocks away from the hotel, on Constitution Avenue, I described a display at the National Gallery of Art. Mythological statues. Mercury, in all his glory, stood above a crowd of NE DC junior high schoolers. Down the corridor, on a marble pedestal, stood Bauccus, with a pan, half-boy, half goat. The pan's eye is level with Bauccus' erection. I noticed that in the photo I took of the junior high schooler's walking by, giggling. In a media week, when ober-icon Michael Jackson was accused of feeding Jesus-Juice in a can to a kid alleging sexual abuse, it was no wonder, some kids grabbed their crotches emulating the one-glove wonder's Moon Walk as they passed by. Sometimes truth is stranger than fiction. 

Rabbi Blau shook his head. In a world of mixed signals children are expected to sort better than adults can, distinctions between good touch bad touch, appropriate behaviour versus inappropriate, being told not to talk to strangers but answer the "nice man" talking to grandma since "convicted sex offender" isn't stamped on his forehead, get lost. 

The night before, details of the confirmed murder of 9 year old Jessica Lunsford, by a man who lived across their street, were being released. I told the Rabbi, one interview from the Couey killing stands out as textbook to facilitating citizen's understanding why abusers remain at large until a murder trips them up. A restaurant owner in Jessica's town told reporters he employed Couey, until he fired him. The restaurant owner aware of Couey's colorful background, felt badly for "the loser." So, he hired him, firing the 30' old only after Couey wrote a love letter to a 14 year old co-worker. No one complained to authorities about the incident. Until, Jessica was kidnapped, raped and sexually abused over days, before being murdered. Her community failed her. Not just the community in which she died but the global community in which other children still live. 

Heading towards the Metro, I leafed through the Jewish newspaper in my hands, filled with holiday activities for children, puppet making, noisemaker activities followed by megillah readings for kids. Growing up I heard about a rabbi, sent packing, for abusing bochers at a Yeshiva, north of our house. Eventually, news filtered north the rabbi had been accused of molesting bochers at the American yeshiva that sent him north. His resume listed many attributes Sexual offender and deviant were not amongst them. Nor did it contain those warning when he was sent packing, again. 

I looked inside the information packet for conference attendees. Amongst letters from various Democratic Congressmen was Gary Ackerman's. He wrote "If we are serious about tikkun olam, repairing the world, we need to begin in the home, the place where our values are most strongly rooted," "one home at a time." 

As I walked, I wondered if parents would ever take as much time to vett their children's caretakers- teachers, babysitters, friends parents, the kids friends themselves, families they marry into- as they take in selecting holiday outfits they wear. An ad caught my attention. A Rabbi offering Jews "may the Lord bless and protect you," if they prayed in the language of their forefathers. I thought about the young girl attacked by three classmates in the basement bathroom of her yeshiva. An older boy came to her rescue. Her parents refused to take action, after all, it had to be her fault. I stepped off the curb, asking myself who protects victims from those who prey in the language of their forefathers. Trust must be earned; granting of tikkun, repentance, sought by some abusers, remains in control of the abused.. 

BIO: Carrie Devorah is a DC based investigative photojournalist. Trained as a PI, mediator, crime analyst and profiler, she writes on themes related to faith, homeland security and terrorism. I dedicate this piece to the memory of Yechezkel Chezi Scotty Goldberg, www.goldbergmemorial.org. He will never be replaced.

Sunday, August 28, 2005

Letters to the Editor - Convicted abusers just tip of the iceberg

Convicted abusers just tip of the iceberg

Baltimore Sun - August 28, 2005

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/oped/bal-ed.le.27aaug27,1,1791458.story?ctrack=1&cset=true

It's important for there to be stricter laws regulating convicted sex offenders. But the proposed laws are only a Band-Aid to a much larger problem ("Governor promotes sex-crime measures," Aug. 21).

These proposed laws pertain only to convicted sex offenders. And it's important for residents of Maryland to be aware of the fact that the majority of sex offenders have not been convicted of their crimes.

As we all know, childhood sexual abuse and rape of adults are often crimes of secrecy and silence. The problem is compounded by the fact that only 32 percent of sexual assaults against people 12 or older are reported to law enforcement.

According to another study, 84 percent of respondents who identified themselves as rape victims did not report the crime to authorities.

And according to the U.S. Department of Justice, the majority of survivors of sexual violence are afraid to report sexual assault to the police.

Reasons include fears that reporting could lead to further victimization by the offender; fears of other forms of retribution by the offender or by his or her friends or family; concerns about the arrest, prosecution and incarceration of an offender who may be a family member or friend and on whom the victim or others may depend; concerns about others finding out about the sexual assault or about not being believed; and concerns about being traumatized by the response of the criminal justice system.

Vicki Polin

Baltimore

The writer is executive director of The Awareness Center Inc., the Jewish coalition against sexual abuse and assault.

Thursday, August 04, 2005

Letters to the Editor - A friendly state for sex offenders?

Letters to the Editor

A friendly state for sex offenders?

Baltimore Sun - August 4, 2005

http://www.baltimoresun.com/news/opinion/letters/bal-ed.le.04aaug04,1,1740958.story?coll=bal-opinion-letters&ctrack=1&cset=true

As I was reading "Registry for sex offenders has gaps" (July 28), I couldn't help but ask myself if Maryland is a "sex offender-friendly" state?

It's really pretty scary to think that out of the 4,300 registered sexual offenders in the state database, 3,000 are no longer supervised.

I believe that sex offenders need to be monitored for life.

According to a 1997 study, the recidivism rate for child sex offenders over a 25-year period is 52 percent. Given such statistics, how can it be that Maryland only requires sex offenders to be on the state registry for 10 years?

I agree with Maryland Attorney General J. Joseph Curran Jr. that we need specialized training for parole officers who work with sex offenders and better treatment for sex offenders while they are incarcerated.

The problem is that as of today there is no known treatment for sex offenders that is really effective. Research in treating offenders is still very much in its infancy.

I believe it is imperative that parole officers visit offenders in their homes at least once every six months, as a way to verify the offender's residence. I also believe that a sex offender should automatically be placed on a registry and that this should not be left up to a judge.

Let's remember that the goal is to protect unsuspecting individuals (adults and children) from becoming the next victim of sexual violence.

Vicki Polin

Baltimore

The writer is executive director of The Awareness Center Inc., a Jewish coalition against sexual abuse and assa

Monday, August 01, 2005

Case of the Unnamed Cook at Camp Kee Tov

Case of the Unnamed Cook at Camp Kee Tov

Camp Kee Tov - Troy, MO (near St. Louis)
12 Milestone Campus Drive, St. Louis, MO 63146


Camp Kee Tov was accused of covering up sexual abuse by an employee.

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Disclaimer: Inclusion in this website does not constitute a recommendation or endorsement. Individuals must decide for themselves if the resources meet their own personal needs.



  1. Youth: Camp Kee Tov (08/01/2005)
  2. Youth: Camp Kee Tov (09/01/2005)
  3. Vianney Accuser Has Filed One Previous Sexual Assault Lawsuit (02/22/2006)
  4. Judge Changes Mind; Family Suing Vianney Priest Can Remain Anonymous (02/23/2006)
  5. Camp accused in abuse suit will be closing this summer (02/24/2006)



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Camp Kee Tov - August, 2005

About Us
Camp Kee Tov is...
an overnight summer camp experience for boys and girls entering 3rd, 4th, and 5th grades. Established in 1978, Camp Kee Tov is located one hour from St. Louis at the Edison Retreat Center in Troy, Missouri on 111 acres of forest with hiking trails, fields, and a creek. Facilities include a main lodge with fan-cooled dormitory sleeping and indoor plumbing, an air-conditioned dining hall, an outdoor chapel, an athletic field, and a beautiful swimming pool.

place to belong...
Camp Kee Tov offers an ideal first camping experience in a close, intimate setting. We can offer a special one-to-five relationship between campers and counselors because of our small numbers -- 40 campers per session. Counselors are selected on the basis of their educational background, maturity, camping experience and ability to work with children. Michelle Brooks is the Director and Shelley Dean is the Co-Director.

Every summer, two counselors from Israel bring alive the Jewish homeland through creative programming for the entire camp. In addition, a registered nurse is on site full time to administer all medications and tend to first aid needs. All camp staff is trained and certified in American Red Cross First Aid and CPR. Camp Kee Tov is a family -- a place to love and be loved -- and a community to which every camper belongs. As children play, study, pray, sing, and eat together, they develop deep and lasting Jewish friendships and feel a sense of belonging as never before.

A place to nurture the body...
Part of the excitement of summer is being outdoors using our bodies and feeling good about them. Activities include swimming, Maccabiah games, team sports, archery, and more! Campers are encouraged to develop their personal skills, to try new activities and to work cooperatively with others on the playing fields and in the pool. Everyone loves the food at camp. Menus are planned to consider both their nutritional value and the favorite foods of campers, including vegetarians.

At Camp Kee Tov, we know that you want to choose your own special interest activities. We offer a wide variety of elective activities every day. There chugim change every week, so you have an opportunity to take advantage of many new experiences.

A place to live and love Judaism...
Camp Kee Tov offers an opportunity for Reform Jewish living 24 hours a day. Arts and crafts, Jewish music as well as general camp songs, Israeli dance, drama, Hebrew, prayer services, and special campfires are all integrated into the total camp program. In addition, Jewish values are practiced in all aspects of daily living. Each week has its own unique theme with special guests. It is a place where we build self-esteem and where Jewish pride is always in the air!

Camp Kee Tov is a program of the Commission on Reform Jewish Education of the Central Agency for Jewish Education. Both Camp Kee Tov and the Edison Retreat Center are accredited by the American Camping Association. Camp Kee Tov is partially funded by the Jewish Federation of St. Louis.

A limited number of scholarships are available at member congregations.
For more information, contact Camp Kee Tov at (314) 442-3751, fax (314) 432-6150 or email our registrar, Laura Daigh, at ldaigh@cajestl.org.

Recruitment Presentation Schedule
Meet Shelley Dean, Camp Kee Tov Co-Director and learn about an exciting camp experience at the following recruitment presentations:
January 9 Temple IsraelJanuary 16 Shaare EmethJanuary 30 Kol AmFebruary 13 Temple Emanuel

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Youth: Camp Kee Tov

http://www.cajestl.org/y-campkeetov.php

Thanks for visiting us. Camp Kee Tov is no longer in operation (as of September 2005).



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Vianney Accuser Has Filed One Previous Sexual Assault Lawsuit

KSDK, MO - February 22, 2006
http://www.ksdk.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=92650

The father of a teenager, who says he was sexually assaulted by the president at Vianney High School, has filed one lawsuit before involving the alleged sexual assault of his son.
The case against Father Robert Osborne was filed on Tuesday. The popular priest stepped down that same day, for a leave of absence.

The older case is tied to a criminal case that resulted in the conviction of the boy's mother. The older case goes to 1999, and says the boy's mother, who was 41 at the time, had the boy at her apartment, as part of her weekly visitation stemming from a divorce.

The criminal case, reported by Kirkwood Police, says the mother sexually assaulted the ten year old over a period of hours. In 2003, four years later, police began their investigation.
In late 2004, a jury couldn't agree to convict her on 10 of the 11 charges against her. She was found guilty of exposing herself to the boy, but in a later plea bargain, was sentenced to 7 years in prison, where she remains.

During the court proceedings, one of the prosecution witnesses was Father Osborne, the same man who is accused of sexual contact with the teen. Osborne testified that the teen was having behavior problems at school, as the court date approached.

In other filings in the criminal case, one of the mother's bosses says she was a very proper woman, and would blush at the use of the word "butt" in mixed company.

The second case is also related to the mother, and her alleged sexual assault on her son. That case involves an incident that is alleged to have happened at a Silex, Missouri, summer camp, where the woman was working as a cook.

Court papers indicate her son was visiting the camp, when they were seen during intimate moment. An attorney familiar with the case says the suit alleges the camp operators didn't report the incident, nor stop it. No criminal charges were ever filed.

The operators of the camp declined comment. Newschannel 5 is not naming the teen, because he is the victim of at least one sexual assault. We are also not naming his mother or father, in an effort to protect his identity.


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Judge Changes Mind; Family Suing Vianney Priest Can Remain Anonymous
KSDK, MO - February 23, 2006
http://www.ksdk.com/news/news_article.aspx?storyid=92712

St. Louis County Judge Carol Whittington has had a change of heart on whether the family suing the president of Vianney High School can remain anonymous.

Wednesday, Judge Whittington signed an order after John Doe 26, and his son, John Doe, filed suit against Father Robert Osborne, the president of St. John Vianney High School in Kirkwood. The suit alleges that Father Osborne sexually touched the student.

The judge first ordered that the anonymity must end. But Kenneth Chackes, the attorney for the family, countered with a request the order be rescinded. Chackes says publicizing the family's name would subject the teenager to ridicule and humiliation in the community.

However, an attorney who has represented several priests in similar cases, says it would be good to shine daylight on this case. Attorney James Martin says the family has already been through a previous sex abuse case, and publicity would do little damage.

Thursday evening, Judge Whittington reversed her previous order, and ruled that the suing family can continue to be listed as John Doe on the legal papers.

Meanwhile, the names of the family in question, the father, the alleged victim, his brother, and the boys' mother, are all included in a lawsuit filed in Lincoln County.

In that case, the father and two sons are suing a Jewish summer camp, saying the camp directors knew the boys were being sexually molested by their mother, and the camp did nothing to protect the boys.
The suit says the mother worked as a cook at the camp, and molested the boys when they visited her as part of court ordered custody arrangements.

The mother is currently serving a prison term for molesting the same teenager who is accusing the priest. That case ended in January, when the mother was sentenced to prison.

Prosecutors say the woman assaulted her son in 1999, when he was 10 years old. But the case wasn't prosecuted until 2003. The incidents at the summer camp happened between 1999 and 2000, but weren't reported until May 2005.

Newschannel 5 is not naming the family in this story, since it is our policy to protect the identity of sexual abuse victims.


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Camp accused in abuse suit will be closing this summer
By Aisha Sultan
St. Louis Post-Dispatch, MO - February 24, 2006

A summer camp accused of covering up sexual abuse by an employee will shut down this summer due to declining enrollment - not in response to the allegations in a lawsuit by the alleged victim's father, according to the agency overseeing it.

"We are very upset by the allegations," said Jeffrey Lasday, executive vice president of the St. Louis Central Agency for Jewish Education. "There is absolutely no truth to it."

The agency had run Camp Kee Tov, near Troy, Mo., for two weeks each summer for more than 20 years, Lasday said.

The lawsuit, filed last summer, says a woman employed as a cook at the camp abused her son and another boy while they visited her there. The suit describes the boys as "participants" at the camp from 1998 until 2000, but Lasday said the boys were visitors.
The case came to the forefront this week after a separate lawsuit, in St. Louis County, accused the president of Vianney High School in Kirkwood of molesting the woman's son years later.

The earlier suit, in Lincoln County, alleges that the mother's abusive acts were witnessed by other camp employees and seen or reported to the camp director, Jan Goldman. It states that Goldman "actively attempted to cover up (the employee's) sexual activities and instructed camp employees to conceal them from investigating authorities."

Eric Selig, the attorney representing Goldman, declined to comment. A written response to the suit denies the allegations.

Lasday defended Goldman and other employees.

"First and foremost, we are very concerned with the health and safety of our students," Lasday said. When the allegations were made, the entire staff was questioned and a "thorough investigation" was undertaken, he said.

"We feel nothing happened," he said.

The camp lodged about 40 children from the third through fifth grades in each one-week session. Lasday said the camp in recent years faced increased competition from other Jewish camps and a smaller pool of children, prompting the decision to close.

The camp was accredited by the American Camp Association and conducted criminal background checks on all its employees. In unrelated cases, the accused cook was convicted by a jury in September of 2004 of sexual misconduct involving a child and indecent exposure involving her son, and she pleaded guilty in January of 2005 to statutory rape and statutory sodomy. She is serving a seven-year term.

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We believe this constitutes a 'fair use' of any such copyrighted material as provided for in section 107 of the US Copyright Law. In accordance with Title 17 U.S.C. Section 107, the material on this site is distributed without profit to those who have expressed a prior interest in receiving the included information for research and educational purposes.

For more information go to: http://www.law.cornell.edu/uscode/17/107.shtml . If you wish to use copyrighted material from this update for purposes of your own that go beyond 'fair use', you must obtain permission from the copyright owner.

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"Never doubt that a small group of thoughtful, committed citizens can change the world. Indeed, it is the only thing that ever has." --Margaret Mead



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Case of Cantor Mark Horowitz

Case of Cantor Mark Horowitz
Cantor Mark Horowitz
Cantor, Temple Am in Amherst - Getzville, NY
Bureau of Jewish Education, Temple Beth Tzedek - Amherst, NY
Executive Director - Jewish Early Childhood Education Initiative, New York City, NY
Adjunct Professor of Religious Studies and Fine Arts at Canisius College - Buffalo, NY


Officer Kevin Maria, was an undercover police officer, reported that  Cantor Mark Horowitz followed him at Ellicott Creek Island Park and grabbed the officer's groin.

Cantor Mark Horowitz is the Executive Director of the Bureau of JECEI (Jewish Early Childhood Education Initiative). and an Adjunct Professor of Religious Studies and Fine Arts at Canisius College.

Back in 2005 an associate of the Jewish Life Network contacted The Awareness Center suggesting they wanted to fund our organization. As the talks continued the stipulation for funding was that we would remove the case Cantor Mark Horowitz from our list of alleged and convicted sex offenders.  After further investigation into the case and learning that Cantor Horowitz was the executive director of on of the programs funded by the Starlight foundation and upon discussing the matter with officers involved with the case, The Awareness Center refused to remove Horowitz from our listing –– especially since Horowitz refused to follow our protocols to be removed.  The end result was that The Awareness Center was blackballed from receiving funding from many Jewish philanthropic organization.  The Jewish Life Network at the time was an offshoot of the Steinhardt Foundation.
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Disclaimer: Inclusion in this website does not constitute a recommendation or endorsement. Individuals must decide for themselves if the resources meet their own personal needs.

Table of Contents: 

1994
  1. Retired Priest Charged with Public Lewdness   (07/30/1994)

1995
  1.  Cantor Charged with Sex Abuse in County Park  (05/21/1995)

2005
  1. Canisius College - Faculty
  2. Jewish Early Childhood Education Initiative (JECEI)
  3. Canisius College - IFA Conference (06/ 9-12/2005)
  4. Group discusses lewdness in parks (10/18/2005)
  5. Basking Ridge's Zimmer pre-K is selected for national program (10/2005)
  6. Cantor Charged with Sex Abuse in County Park  (05/21/1995)
  7. Canisius College - Faculty
  8. Jewish Early Childhood Education Initiative (JECEI)
  9. Canisius College - IFA Conference (06/ 9-12/2005)
  10. Group discusses lewdness in parks (10/18/2005)
  11. Basking Ridge's Zimmer pre-K is selected for national program (10/2005)

2007
  1. New Fellows Program to "Guarantee The Future" of Jewish Early Childhood Education (05/312007)


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Retired Priest Charged with Public Lewdness
By Jay Tokasz
Buffalo News, The (NY) - July 30, 2004

The Catholic Diocese of Buffalo removed a retired priest from active ministry Thursday after his arrest on a public lewdness charge Wednesday in Ellicott Creek Park.

Town of Tonawanda police charged the Rev. Charles M. Werth, 76, following an undercover sweep in the park aimed at indecent behavior.

Auxiliary Bishop Edward M. Grosz, diocesan administrator, removed Werth from ministry after the arrest and it's unlikely he will function again as a priest, according to a diocesan official.

It was the second time Werth has been arrested in Ellicott Creek Park. In 1994, he pleaded guilty to exposure, a violation, in Tonawanda Town Court.

At the time, Werth was serving as pastor of St. Barnabas Church in Depew. He was fined $295, ordered to stay out of the park and to get counseling.

Werth is scheduled to be arraigned on the latest charge on Aug. 18, according to his lawyer, Phillip A. Thielman.

Thielman said he would not discuss the "merits of the charges" or how Werth would plead.

Police said Werth was arrested about 3:15 p.m. in a park men's room allegedly engaged in a lewd act.

During the sweep, police made three other separate arrests of men from Lockport, North Tonawanda and the Town of Tonawanda.

Werth was not accused of sexual abuse or involvement with a minor. "There have not been any accusations against Father Werth involving children or young people," said Kevin A. Keenan, diocesan spokesman.

After his arrest in 1994, the diocese suspended Werth's priestly faculties -- which means he could not celebrate Mass or sacraments or wear priestly garments.

Ordained in 1953, Werth has served at several parishes. He resigned as St. Barnabas pastor in 1994 and retired in 1995.

In 1998, after counseling, the diocese restored his priestly faculties, and Werth functioned as many retired priests do, filling in at parishes and celebrating Masses in the absence of vacationing or ill priests.

Thielman said his client "has been under continuing counseling since the previous incident" and hoped to remain in good standing with the church.
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Cantor Charged with Sex Abuse in County Park
The Buffalo News - May 21, 1995


A Getzville cantor was arrested on sexual-abuse charges Friday afternoon after he fondled a plainclothes police officer in a county park, Amherst police said.

Mark Horowitz, 42, a cantor at Temple Beth Am in Amherst, was taken into custody at 4:58 p.m. when Officer Kevin Maria said Cantor Horowitz followed him at Ellicott Creek Island Park and grabbed the officer's groin.

Cantor Horowitz was issued a ticket to appear June 5 in Town Court.

Residents in both the Town of Tonawanda and Amherst portions of the county park have repeatedly complained of lewdness, and police began intense surveillance efforts there last summer.

During 1994, dozens of men were arrested and charged with committing or attempting lewd acts at Ellicott Creek Park in the Town of Tonawanda and Ellicott Creek Island Park in Amherst. A Depew priest was arrested last August and a county judge last June.

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Canisius College - Faculty
November 11, 2005
www.canisius.edu/finearts/faculty.asp
Mark Horowitz
B.M. Manhattan School of Music
B.S.M. Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion
Ed.M. SUNY at Buffalo


Cantor Mark Horowitz received his early musical training at the Stecher and Horowitz School of the Arts. His advanced studies were at Indiana University and the Manhattan School of Music where he was a piano performance major. He received his cantorial investiture from Hebrew Union College-Jewish Institute of Religion's School of Sacred Music and a master's degree in education from SUNY at Buffalo. As a pianist, he has performed in both solo and chamber recitals throughout the country and has appeared with orchestras in Illinois, Indiana, Maine, New York State, Ohio and in Israel. As a tenor, he has presented many solo and ensemble recitals throughout the United States and Israel. Cantor Horowitz has served congregations in Greenwich, CT, Roslyn, New York and in Buffalo. He is presently the Executive Director of the Bureau of Jewish Education of Greater Buffalo and Chaplain at the Weinberg Campus. Currently he teaches in both the departments of Religious Studies and Fine Arts at Canisius College and is serving as advisor to the Chamber Music Ensembles.
 
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Jewish Early Childhood Education Initiative (JECEI)
http://www.jewishlife.org/programs.html#jecei

Jewish Life Network/Steinhardt Foundation
6 East 39th Street, 10th Floor
New York, NY 10016
tel: 212 279 2288
fax: 212 279 1155
info@jewishlife.org

At Jewish Life Network/Steinhardt Foundation, we recognize the power of early childhood education in inculcating Jewish identity and beginning a life-long commitment to Jewish learning and life. Moreover, outstanding Jewish preschools have the capacity to not only enrich a child's identity, but to inspire an entire family to choose Jewish living. Simply put, an excellent Jewish preschool experience is a gateway for the whole family to increased Jewish education and involvement in the synagogue and community.

Jewish Life Network / Steinhardt Foundation, in partnership with The S. Daniel Abraham Foundation, The Helen Bader Foundation, The Harold Grinspoon Foundation, Ben and Esther Rosenbloom Foundation, The Schultz Family Foundation, UJA-Federation of New York and Combined Jewish Philanthropies/JCCs of Greater Boston, has begun a national initiative designed to create models of excellence in Jewish early childhood education, increase the number of families with children attending quality Jewish early childhood centers, and raise the number of families continuing to engage in Jewish learning and living after pre-school. To accomplish this, granting, mentoring, accreditation, co-branding, and marketing processes will be developed and implemented with the aim of transforming Jewish pre-schools into centers of Jewish educational excellence.



Jewish Early Childhood Education Initiative (JECEI)
 At Jewish Life Network/Steinhardt Foundation, we recognize the power of early childhood education in inculcating Jewish identity and beginning a life-long commitment to Jewish learning and life. Moreover, outstanding Jewish preschools have the capacity to not only enrich a child’s identity, but to inspire an entire family to choose Jewish living. Simply put, an excellent Jewish preschool experience is a gateway for the whole family to increased Jewish education and involvement in the synagogue and community.

Jewish Life Network/Steinhardt Foundation, in partnership with S. Daniel Abraham Foundation, The Harold Grinspoon Foundation, Ben and Esther Rosenbloom Foundation and UJA-Federation of New York, has begun a national initiative designed to create models of excellence in Jewish early childhood education, increase the number of families with children attending quality Jewish early childhood centers, and raise the number of families continuing to engage in Jewish learning and living after pre-school. To accomplish this, granting, mentoring, accreditation, co-branding, and marketing processes will be developed and implemented with the aim of transforming Jewish pre-schools into centers of Jewish educational excellence.
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Canisius College - IFA Conference
Identity _ Faith _ Advocacy
June 9-12, 2005
http://64.233.179.104/search?q=cache:S1R5wiVyxxgJ:www.canisius.edu/images/userImages/stfgrad/Page_7722/Brochure.pdf+%22Mark+Horowitz%22+cantor&hl=en


Keynote Speakers
Identity


Cantor Mark Horowitz is an ordained cantor in the Jewish faith and has been an active leader in the Jewish community for several years.  In addition to his duties as cantor.  Mark has provided spiritual counseling for the homosexual Jewish community.  He currently serves as executive director of the Jewish Early Childhood Education Initiative, a national education foundation based in New York City.

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Group discusses lewdness in parks
by Gene Warner - NEWS STAFF REPORTER
Buffalo News, The (NY) - October 18, 2005


They came to an Elmwood Avenue church Monday night, about two dozen gay activists and supporters, to discuss a complex issue that has confounded the gay community for years:

What to do about the arrests -- and resulting publicity -- of men charged with public lewdness or sexual abuse in Ellicott Creek Park and other parks.

Madeline Davis, co-founder of Rainbow Elders of the Niagara Frontier, summed up the predominant thought of the small crowd in the Unitarian Universalist Church of Buffalo.

"The gay community is very concerned about these arrests and the psychological well-being of people who stay in the closet so long that they become desperate," she said. "We worry about them, and we want to help them."

Earlier, Danny Winter, the other co-chair, explained the stakes for those men who get caught and have their arrests publicized.

"They lose their jobs. Their families break up. They're scarred for life. And sometimes they even commit suicide over a minor offense."

Six panel members, including Town of Tonawanda Police Detective Lt. James S. Szabo III, discussed everything from police practices in the park to the psychological factors leading gay men, some of them prominent, to risk getting caught and being outed.

"Most of them are in the closet, I'd estimate about 99 percent," said attorney James Rolls, who has represented some of the arrested men. "These are people who hide who they are. Many of them are married, or used to be married and have kids. . . . They don't have avenues for their sex drive, so they go where they can for sexual gratification."

Szabo strongly suggested that Town of Tonawanda police make arrests only when the exposure, public lewdness or sexual abuse is blatant.

"There are no gray areas with us," he emphasized.

While the tone of the evening was highly conciliatory, one audience member questioned Szabo's assertion, suggesting he knew from experience that the undercover police officers' criteria weren't so stringent. Audience members also questioned whether any entrapment was involved, and whether police target gays, but not heterosexuals, for overt sexual practices.

Szabo rejected that suggestion.

"Since I've headed up this operation, nobody has gotten away with any sexual activity in the park," he said. "It's just a job we do. We're not picking on one segment of the community."

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Basking Ridge's Zimmer pre-K is selected for national program
by Elaine Durbach, NJJN Bureau Chief/Central
October 2005 - New Jersey Jewish News
 

Cantor Mark Horowitz - accused of groping a police officer
A preschool in Basking Ridge has been selected to participate in a national effort aimed at transforming early childhood programs into `'centers of Jewish educational excellence."

The Zimmer Preschool at the Chabad Jewish Center is one of 13 preschools around the country chosen for the new project, the Jewish Early Childhood Education Initiative. The 13 schools represent a range of educational philosophies, denominational affiliations, settings, and communal conditions.

Funded by a group of major Jewish philanthropic foundations and organizations, JECEI is intended to help make preschools more rewarding places for young students and more engaging for their parents. According to those spearheading the project, such engagement leads to more involvement in Jewish life and, through such involvement, to stronger Jewish communities.

"There are thousands of Jewish preschools out there, and the fact that they selected us is wonderful," said Malkie Herson, educational director at the Jewish Center, which includes the Zimmer preschool, the synagogue's religious school, and other programs. "When we were first asked to join, we were feeling proud of ourselves. It's always nice to know other people agree with your assessment."

The 13 sites will receive grants, and trained coaches skilled in early childhood education, Jewish education, and school transformation practices will be assigned to guide the school's projects funded by the grants. The school directors will participate in a training program with the JECEI staff. Schools that successfully complete the initiative will receive national recognition and will be named as JECEI centers.

The project is based on research that concludes that Jewish early childhood education is a vital building block for a positive Jewish identity and long-term Jewish commitment for children and parents. A press release announcing the new venture states: "When a family is engaged by the Jewish early childhood center in a rich and meaningful way, the experience translates into increased and ongoing involvement for the whole family."

JECEI principals say that research indicates that parents with children in Jewish early childhood programs are more likely to attend synagogue, participate in local Jewish communal activities, travel to and support Israel, send their children to Jewish day schools, and be involved in Jewish life.

"We can create an educational experience that involves the entire family and enriches Jewish home life," says JECEI executive director Cantor Mark Horowitz in the statement.

Herson said that so far, she and her staff appreciate the way JECEI has provided each school with a coach — to observe them, offer suggestions, and serve as a resource for ideas and supplies. Although the school is eligible for a JECEI grant as part of the program, Herson said, she does not expect to receive it until 2006, nor does she know the amount of the grant.

Herson also met with early childhood professionals from the other 12 schools. She said the group spent three days in a hotel, getting to know one another and discussing children and educational theories and activities.

"It was an unbelievable feeling of cohesiveness and support," Herson said. "We are partnering all together. We were like kids in overnight camp. We formed amazing relationships with people as passionate and caring about the same things as I am" — educating young children.

The funders aim to raise more than $3 million for the first three years of the initiative. Philanthropists Michael Steinhardt and Harold Grinspoon are chair and president, respectively, of the JECEI board of directors. In addition to the Jewish Life/Steinhardt Foundation and Grinspoon Foundation, partners include the S. Daniel Abraham Foundation, the Helen Bader Foundation, the Ben and Esther Rosenbloom Foundation, the Schultz Family Foundation, UJA-Federation of New York, and the Combined Jewish Philanthropies/ JCCs of Greater Boston.

"The innovation and research they have and bring to our school in a very personal way is amazing," Herson said. "It's emotional and educational support. We've always believed in quality Jewish education, and we wanted to make it as good as can be. Our educational philosophy is to hone a child's natural creativity and curiosity — that curiosity is what will make him or her a learner."

Various successful educational models will be considered for inclusion in the JECEI blueprint, especially the work done at the Reggio Emilia schools in northern Italy, which are regarded as "particularly consonant with Jewish values and Jewish life," according to the press statement.

The philosophy fits in with what Herson and her husband, Rabbi Mendy Herson, who is executive director of the Basking Ridge synagogue, are trying to accomplish — reaching out to families.

"Parents very often come to our school because our reputation precedes us, and they come despite the fact that we're a Jewish school," Malkie Herson said. "We're that child-focused. Jewish preschools have a wonderful reputation for being very loving, but it's not enough. It's also important that children learn and grow in the most optimal way. I tell parents the teachers don't teach — they help children learn. It's not semantics — it's a world of difference."

Herson said she was pleased to see several preschool families who previously did not attend synagogue at Rosh Hashana and Yom Kippur services.

The other schools in the pilot program are in Dallas; New York City; Stamford, Conn.; Baltimore; Boston; Deerfield, Ill.; Chevy Chase, Md.; San Rafael, Calif.; North Miami Beach, Fla.; Great Neck, NY; and Phoenix.
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New Fellows Program to "Guarantee The Future" of Jewish Early Childhood Education

The Covenant Foundation - May 31, 2007 

Special Projects | Early Childhood Education

New Fellows Program to "Guarantee The Future" of Jewish Early Childhood Education

18 "Leader-Activists" from across US Named JECEI-Covenant Fellows 

JECEI Partners with Bank Street, Harvard, and the Covenant Foundation to provide Summer Institutes, Seminars, Mentorship, Trip to Israel


JECEI (the Jewish Early Childhood Education Initiative) and The Covenant Foundation announced the names today of 18 promising "leader-activists" chosen for intensive training and mentorship under the new JECEI-Covenant Fellows Program, created to "guarantee the future of Jewish Early Childhood Education" in North America.

Training Exceptional Leaders
The new program responds to studies showing that 79% of Jewish early childhood education directors will reach retirement age within 5-10 years. "The Fellows program addresses an urgent need," says JECEI's Executive Director, Cantor Mark Horowitz. "If we're going to keep Jewish early childhood education alive, excellent, and keep our families and children in Jewish learning environments, we need to train promising young educators to become exceptional leaders in the field."

To that end, 18 Jewish early childhood educators have been chosen as Fellows. They are: Peter Blair of Seattle, Washington; Sarah Cunin of Reno, Nevada; Ellen Dietrick of Charlottesville, Virginia; Julie Eisman of Waterford, Michigan; Anna Hartman of Atlanta, Georgia; Kathy Kaberon of Evanston, Illinois; Shosh Korrub of Deerfield, Illinois; Sandra Levi of North Miami Beach, Florida; Valerie Lustgarten of Aventura, Florida; Veronica Maravankin of Wellington, Florida; Michal Mendelow of Stamford, Connecticut; Beth Raz of Oak Park, Michigan; Rivkie Spalter of Mequon, Wisconsin; Marcy Stieglitz of Los Angeles, California; Rebecca Swartz of Boulder, Colorado; Debbie Weinberger of Silver Spring, Maryland; Jordana Weiss of Southfield, Michigan; and Hannah Williams of Atlanta, Georgia.

A "Wraparound Support Network"
In collaboration with Bank Street College of Education, a recognized leader in child-centered education, and Project Zero at Harvard University, the JECEI-Covenant Fellows Program will include two summer institutes and frequent seminars featuring cutting edge leadership development, systemic thinking, and dialogue-based Judaic learning. In addition, the support services for this group of eighteen will include monthly phone conferences and guided online discussion groups as well as individual mentorship.

"Much as we believe an excellent Jewish Early Childhood Center encompasses not only the child and the family, but the community as a whole, we plan to give the fellows the same sense of a wraparound support network throughout their experience as JECEI-Covenant Fellows," says Horowitz. The Fellowship also includes a trip to Israel to meet with counterparts in order to share work, familiarize the participants with the land, and study at some of Israel's foremost Early Childhood Centers.

Harlene Appelman, Executive Director of The Covenant Foundation, says that this type of mentorship and training is integral to the future of Jewish education. "We are investing in a cadre of leaders who will have what they need to work together," she says. "Through intensive training, regular meetings and travel, the cohort will create a group of colleagues on whom they can depend and turn to for advice."

About the Sponsors:
The Jewish Early Childhood Education Initiative (JECEI) was launched in 2005 to create a group of vanguard Jewish early childhood centers across North America using the best practices of early childhood, adult, and family education, the most recent studies in brain development and social/emotional learning, and the accumulated lessons of organizational change efforts throughout the educational world. JECEI works to realize a vibrant vision of early childhood education framed by and embedded within foundational Jewish values that are meaningful and compelling to contemporary Jewish families seeking supportive communities and the highest quality education for their children.

The Covenant Foundation was established in 1990 to celebrate and support innovative approaches in Jewish education. It pursues this vision through two programs: the Covenant Awards, which honor individual accomplishment by outstanding Jewish educators, and the Covenant Grants, which support innovative programming.
 

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