And yet, one paragraph from the article struck me.
Rabbi Youlus was also accused of writing $344,000 in checks to himself from the bookstore’s account, charging about $200,000 in personal expenses to a credit card issued to the bookstore and using $90,000 in the bookstore’s money to pay private school tuition for his children and his relatives’ children.I honestly believe that it started with the tuition. Facing the crushing burden of his kids' tuition bills, he "found a way," and when it worked once and people started giving him money, he was already hooked, and he found himself stealing the money for other things as well. After all, we all know well the Talmudic dictum that the first time one sins, he feels guilty; the second time it's already "permitted," and by the third time, he sees it as a mitzvah. It's not that hard to imagine.
This story to me represents an egregious example of a probably far more widespread phenomenon. How many Torah Jews fudge their taxes with the self-righteous justification that, "Well, I'm not using the public school system, so I should get a break." Necessity truly is the mother of invention, even if all we're inventing are the lies that justify acts of fraud and criminality.
I'm not, by any means, suggesting that most Orthodox Jews are criminals. But I do think that the crushing burden of paying private school tuition is having a devastating impact on the Jewish community in ways that we are only beginning to consider.
As for his punishment, simply sending Rabbi Youlus to sit in jail seems to me to be a waste of his talents. He clearly has the knowledge and skills to preserve and repair damaged Torah scrolls. Instead of throwing him in jail where he'll simply be a burden to the government (which cannot afford incarcerating more people), I suggest to the presiding judge a more creative sentence: He stole money under the "cover" of repairing Torahs. Fit him with an ankle bracelet, give him house arrest for however long seems appropriate, and during that time, sentence him to many, many hours of community service, repairing Torah scrolls of any and all comers - starting with the congregations that he bilked, free of charge.
What's more important - keeping the Torah or teaching it? Would the Rabbinate be OK with frum parents putting their kids in public schools if it meant avoiding the temptations you mention above?
ReplyDeleteThat reminds me of an old question that students used to ask: is it better for a freshman in college to daven every day or to dress tzanua. the answer of course is both. i don't acknowledge your choice. you should send your child to day school and not steal to do it. i know - easier said than done.
DeleteExcept that in the students' question, the options are unrelated - it is no harder to daven if you're dressed properly and no harder to dress properly if you daven. Here, your blog post suggests that there is a cause and effect: enter a system with enormous capital requirements, and many people will be tempted? forced? to cheat to meet those requirements. Since cheating violates both the spirit and the law of that system, wouldn't it be better not to enter the system and just live a Torah life? Wouldn't you be teaching your children core Torah values that way?
DeleteNot sure if I would want my shul's sifrai torot repaired by him
ReplyDelete