One day before the verdict in a sexual assault case against
Rabbi Mordechai Elon, one of the most prominent modern Orthodox rabbis of his
generation in Israel, a website serving the religious community released a
dated recording in which another senior rabbi claimed that the charges brought
before the court omitted far graver acts committed by Elon.
“The victims don’t
want to reveal what happened; their wounds are bleeding and they don’t want to
stand before a cross examination and be revealed,” said Rabbi Yaakov Ariel of
the acts allegedly committed by Elon.
Some of those acts, he said, were
“whales” when compared to the charges brought before the court, which he
described as “small fish.”
Elon was charged in a Jerusalem Magistrate’s Court with two
counts of sexual harassment and sexual assault.
In February one of the alleged victims refused to take the stand
and testify against his former teacher, leaving a single complainant remaining
and placing the reputation of the religious group that brought the alleged
misconduct to light in doubt.
Ariel is a prominent member of the group, Forum Takana,
which was founded in 2003 and has attempted to police its own community on
matters relating to sexual misconduct.
Although the 30-member forum, consisting of leading rabbis
and several female religious leaders, has received hundreds of phone calls over
the past decade and dealt with dozens of cases, the most prominent by far has
been the case of Elon — the son of a Supreme Court justice who rose to the
position of yeshiva head at 28 and gathered around him an ever-widening circle
of followers on account of his singular charisma and the insight of his
learning.
In July 2005, the forum, originally founded in order to
address claims from women who said they had been sexually assaulted and “found
themselves maligned,” summoned Elon and confronted him with the charges filed
by two men, both of whom said they had been sexually harassed by the rabbi.
According to the Takana website, Elon, when confronted with
the charges, “declared that he had completely overcome his problem, that the
complaint referred to an old incident and that there were no other additional
cases.”
One year later, the committee heard another complaint, “more
serious than the first.” Elon was forced from his post as head of Yeshivat
Hakotel and, although he left Jerusalem and largely receded from view, the
forum finally made the accusations public, because, the group wrote, “we fear
we have no other way to protect the public from possible further injury.”
Ariel said in the recording that Elon had admitted to
committing a series of indecent acts with young students. “The bottom line is
that he admitted to the facts,” Ariel said.
“If we don’t stop these acts there will be more victims. The
trial doesn’t interest me; I won’t be happy if he’s found guilty and I won’t
cry if he’s exonerated.”
Speaking to Army Radio on Tuesday morning, Ariel called the
publication of the recording on the website Kippa and subsequent articles “a
travesty” and said he had intended for the interview to be used only in case it
became necessary to further deter Elon and not in order to sway the upcoming
verdict.
In the recording, which was made in 2012, Ariel likened
those who still cling to Elon to the followers of the false messiah Sabbatai
Zevi. “The phenomenon is similar to Sabbateanism,” he said. “Even when Sabbatai
Zevi converted to Islam, his followers didn’t believe it” and were not
dissuaded from supporting him.
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