Scam Artists or Victims?
The Hasidic Defendants of New Square
by Lawrence Auster Jan
2001
Note: the following article was written in June
1997, shortly after federal indictments were issued against
six members of the Hasidic community of New Square, N.Y.,
two of whom became fugitives from justice and four of whom
were convicted and jailed, then pardoned by President Bill
Clinton on his last day in office.
"Why wouldn't they let us settle this case?" the
Skverer Rebbe, David Twersky, says to me in his gentle, anguished
voice. "Why do they torture us?"
To the embattled Hasidim of New Square, a village
of 6,000 Orthodox Jews in Rockland County, N.Y., the recent
federal indictments against members of their community for
misuse of government education money represent a cruel double
standard.
Several point to the mild treatment accorded
Stanford University in a well-publicized scandal in the early
1990s. When it was discovered that Stanford had spent $231
million in federal research grants for such items as first-class
trips to Turkey, depreciation on the university's luxury yacht,
and cedar closets for President Donald Kennedy's mansion,
no one was indicted. Stanford simply had to repay some of
the money it had stolen, and Kennedy had to return to teaching.
Yet for similar misappropriations of federal
funds – and on a far smaller scale – the federal authorities
have unleashed all their formidable weapons against New Square,
subjecting it to aggressive and intrusive investigation for
four years (which has already cost the village $5 million
in legal expenses and fines), refusing to accept a settlement
offer that included repayment of funds and community service,
and charging six of its leading residents as criminals. (Two
of the six defendants did not appear at their arraignment
on June 4 and are now fugitives from justice.)
Issued by United States Attorney Mary Jo White,
the indictments allege, among other things, the fraudulent
misuse over a 10-year period of $10 million in federal Pell
grants that were earmarked for financially needy post-secondary
students. The defendants are accused of transmitting the funds
through bogus schools of independent study in which no real
study took place, in which students did not meet regularly
with their mentors as required, and where very few degrees
were awarded, even to students who had been registered in
the programs for years.
The residents of New Square (named after the
Ukrainian city of Skver, where their sect originated) insist
that nothing improper was done. "Without going into the
question of whether or not they were obeying the letter of
the law, the spirit of the law was always being complied with,"
declares Rabbi Mayer Schiller, an unofficial spokesman for
the group, who lives in nearby Monsey. The purpose of the
law was to support education, says Schiller, and that's exactly
what the money was used for, even if the studies were not
conducted in the formal manner required by the Pell Grant
Program.
Moreover, the Skveras are adamant in their claim
that the funds were not used to enrich anyone – "Nobody
here owns a yacht," one resident said to me sardonically
– but only to support needy Talmud students in a community
whose sole reason for existence is mastery of Talmudic law.
"The entire community's only leisure-time activity is
study," Schiller told me. "Even men who have regular
jobs spend two or three hours studying Talmud every evening."
As a visit to the modest village of New Square
indicated, it is a vocation that begins in childhood. At the
K-9 boys' school, neatly dressed 6-year-olds sat at tables
with the Hebrew Bible open before them, loudly chanting the
verses in Yiddish in response to their teacher's calls.
In another classroom the teacher kept an array
of little plastic cups on his desk, one for each boy, into
which he dropped a candy as a reward for correct answers.
"We bribe them," the principal, Rabbi Chaim Tambor,
said affectionately.
In every class that I visited (by age 13 the
boys already wear the adult Hasidic garb of long black coat
and wide hat), I was struck by the degree of the boys' attentiveness
and involvement. Not one seemed bored, restless or disobedient.
The contrast with a typical American public school of today
could not have been more striking.
At about age 15 the students begin studying
Talmud informally among themselves, a practice that continues
in the kollel, the school for married men (everyone in the
Hasidic community is married between the ages of 19 and 21).
In a pleasant, high-ceilinged study room in the kollel, young
men in pairs sat across from each other reciting and discussing.
The Hasidim's total absorption in the life of
the mind has some well-marked distinctions and boundaries,
within and without the community. While Talmudic learning
is a sacrament and religious obligation for males, it is not
required for females, although girls study the practical application
of the Talmudic code in high school and continue such studies
informally in later years. As a mark of their different spiritual
status, women are not even obligated to attend Shabbos services.
Moreover, knowledge of the outside world is
minimal in this Yiddish-speaking community. Not only do the
schools teach nothing of American history and civilization,
but many U.S.-born Hasidim speak English as though it were
a foreign language, with thick accents, incorrect grammar
and limited vocabulary – a linguistic separateness that seems
to have been deliberately pursued so as to avoid any contaminating
contact with contemporary America.
This cultural apartheid from the modern world,
combined with the religious demand to spend as much time as
possible in Talmud study, explains the Hasids' chronic dependence
on government. As many as 150 of the 600 married men at New
Square are full-time students, and many of those who work
have only part-time jobs. With an average of 10 children per
family ("Be fruitful and multiply" being their other
sacred obligation besides Talmud study), the people of New
Square consume large amounts of public assistance in the form
of Section 8 housing subsidies, Food Stamps and Medicaid.
It appears, then, that New Square's alleged
illegal use of public funds is but a logical extension of
its systematic legal use of such funds.
Which raises a troubling question: Why should
American taxpayers finance a community that keeps itself culturally
isolated from the rest of society, and that is unable or unwilling
to support its own Malthusian population growth? To the Hasidim,
the answer is obvious. Not only do they save the state as
much as $15 million every year by educating their own children,
but, as New Squarer Dave Braun said to me: "We contribute
to America more than other comminutes by producing law-abiding
citizens. How many rapes and murders and family abuse cases
have there been here in the last 40 years? None. There is
never any crime here, unless someone from the outside comes
in."
It is a refrain heard over and over from the
Skveras, who tend to speak of the larger society exclusively
in terms of its moral decadence – crime, rampant sexual disorder,
the degraded pop culture, and so on. While one can hardly
dismiss these criticisms (though at times they verge on caricature),
the problem is that the Hasids do not seem to see any positive
values in the larger American society; nor, one surmises,
can they contribute any positive values to that society because
they are so radically separated from it.
All they offer to America is the absence of
negative values, i.e., the absence of libertine and destructive
behaviors, which in their minds distinguishes them from the
debased mainstream culture and from other minority groups
who, like the Hasidim, rely heavily on the dole but who, unlike
the Hasidim, are immersed in illegitimacy and crime.
Ironically, then, this most rigidly conservative
of all groups fits right into the politics of multiculturalism
– the wondrous system we have created in which groups that
are alien or hostile to America's mainstream culture are awarded
the right to be officially recognized and financially subsidized
by that culture.
The Hasidim, of course, have nothing to do with
the leftist multicultural agenda to transform American identity.
Nevertheless, they are quintessential clients of the multicultural
welfare state, because it is their cultural differences from
the rest of society – namely, their religious duty to study
Talmud as much as possible and to have as many children as
possible – that create their economic dependence on society.
Apart from the current allegations of fraud,
the government seems to have had no problem with the Hasids'
permanent reliance on public assistance. Why should it, given
its relativist assumptions? After all, this is a government
that (in addition to more conventional subsidies such as transportation
or medical research) has massively subsidized illegitimacy
and the resulting culture of crime and poverty; a government
that funds Hispanic community colleges whose graduates can't
write English; a government that pays for heart surgery for
convicted illegal immigrant drug dealers; and a government
that teaches public-school children to "respect"
sodomy and places sexually perverse advertisements on publicly
owned buses. In that context, who could possibly object to
the earmarking of a few million dollars to help maintain a
small community devoted to studying the Torah and living a
righteous life?
Where the New Square defendants ran afoul of
this system was in cooking the books. It's one thing to avail
yourself of the welfare state's limitless compassion for the
disadvantaged or the culturally different; it's another to
engage in fraud. In addition to the misappropriation of education
grants, two of the defendants are charged with fraudulently
diverting more than $200,000 in Section 8 housing subsidies
to their own bank accounts, and one is accused of making federally
backed small business loans to local businesses with which
the officers and directors of the lending entity were affiliated
(though once again everyone I spoke to insists that none of
the defendants used this money to enrich himself, but only
to support needy Talmud students).
Enmeshed in a vast system of government largesse
that virtually begs diverse groups to take government money
on their own terms, a system based on the rejection of any
common moral or cultural standards, should the New Square
defendants be thrown in prison for failing to realize that
multicultural America has one remaining standard that it still,
though intermittently, enforces – the letter of the law? And
that transferring federal education grants to non-existent
students and diverting federal rental subsidies to non-existent
tenants were serious crimes?
According to the relativist axioms under which
our society now operates, the defendants' alleged behavior
ought to be seen as a manifestation of their unique culture,
bred of thousands of years of scraping by in a hostile world.
Opportunistic improvisation, not bureaucratic propriety, is
the traditional Jewish way. Is it not a bit unreasonable,
then, to expect that this small, unassimilated community,
whose affairs were run by just a few men, would not have had
some overlap of personnel between the local corporation licensed
to make federally backed loans to small businesses, and the
small businesses receiving those loans? To the American mind
such an arrangement is unethical and fraudulent; to the Hasidic
mind it is normal and routine.
With their alien demeanor and pre-modern way
of life, the Hasidim may be the ultimate test of multicultural
America's commitment to welcome and empower groups that have
nothing in common with America as a historic nation. In my
own view, it would have been far better if the multicultural
welfare state – with its inherent potential for abuse, dependency
and ethnic conflict – had never been erected in the first
place. But since we have erected it, it hardly seems fair
to single out the Hasidim for harsh treatment.
The question cries out for an answer: If it
was not criminal for mighty Stanford to stretch the meaning
of federally supported "research" to include wedding
parties for its president and luxury trips up the Nile, why
is it criminal for tiny New Square to stretch the meaning
of federally supported "education" to include its
members' lifelong commitment to the study of Jewish law?
Lawrence Auster can be reached at lawrence.auster@att.net.