Thursday, February 25, 2010

Looking For "Survivor Friendly Shuls" for Purim for Adult Survivors of Sexual Violence

The Awareness Center is looking for shuls in Brooklyn, NY; Baltimore, MD; Chicago, IL; Lakewood, NJ; and Monsey, NY that are "survivor friendly". 

A few survivors contacted us looking for safe places to go for a megillah reading motzi shabbos. 

The survivors have been disconnected after sharing their stories with family members or other community members. If you know of any please let us know ASAP.



You may also be interested in reading:  
      Purim and Survivors Childhood Abuse (emotional, physical and sexual abuse)

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Disclaimer: Inclusion on  this list does not constitute a recommendation or endorsement. Individuals must decide for themselves if the resources meet their own personal needs. The names listed were suggested to us by those who are either survivors, family members of survivors or those who have a special interest in helping survivors heal. 


Baltimore, MD

Netivot Shalom
7602 Labyrinth Rd., Pikesville, MD
Megillah reading Feb. 27 at Weinberg Park (7:30 pm)
Megillah reading Feb. 28 the shul (8:15 AM)
443-630-9520


Ohel Yakov
Rabbi Peretz Dinovitzgo
3200 Glen Ave., Baltimore, MD
410-358-5517
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Teaneck, NY
600 Roemer Ave., Teaneck, NJ 07666
201-907-0180

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Brooklyn, NY
117 Remsen Street, Brooklyn Heights, NY
Megillah Readings on Saturday, Feb. 27
7:30 pm & 10:30 pm

IYYUN Center
450 Union St. (Between Bond & Nevins), Brooklyn, NY
8:30 megillah reading At the IYYUN Center
The Awareness Center has been told IYYUN is known for having the best purim party in town following megillah reading so its worth sticking around.

Sunday, February 21, 2010

Purim and the Impossible Dream

Purim and the Impossible Dream

This film is dedicated to all of the "Queen Esther's" living in the world today who are struggling to accomplish goals in their lives that many believed were impossible, especially to the women who are risking their lives to make the world a better place for us all. I especially dedicate this film to the women who are fighting to survive after being sexually victimized and are being shunned, shamed and blamed for the actions committed against them by their perpetrator.

I too have been facing a great number of challenges over the last 18 months. I know that soon the dream that at times felt was impossible will soon become reality.

They say Purim is one of the most joyous and fun holidays on the Jewish calendar since it commemorates a time in which the Jewish people were saved from extermination while living in Persia. What always concerned me in this story is that all of the Jewish people were freed, except for Queen Esther. After risking her life, she was left behind, cut off from her people.

© (2010) Photographs by Vicki Polin 
 Music: The Impossible Dream sung by Sarah Connor

Friday, February 19, 2010

Ultra Orthodox Jews - The high price of religious defection

TEL AVIV -- When she left, she left everything behind -- even her name. She no longer wanted to be known as Sarah, the name her parents had given her. She'd felt imprisoned by that name for too long; it made her feel different and subject to laws that others imposed upon her. So, she started her new life with a new name, Mayan, the Hebrew word for "source."
It's been seven years since Mayan "landed on planet Earth," as she puts it. But the 27-year-old doesn't feel completely at home here yet. She's a young, modern Israeli woman. Still, despite the dragon tattoo on her shoulder and the loose top offering occasional glimpses of her bra, there are always some moments that betray her past. For example, when her friends talk about old TV series, classic pop music or their first schoolyard crushes, Mayan can't join in. Until she was 17 years old, Mayan lived in another world, a world where those things simply didn't exist.
A life completely focused on religion
The "parallel universe" Mayan used to live in has around 550,000 inhabitants. It is the world of the Orthodox Jews in Israel, whose adherents live in tight-knit communities where everything revolves around religion. They radically shield themselves from modern life. Television is frowned upon, as is non-religious music, telephones and the Internet. News that is important to the community is disseminated via notices posted on walls. Boys and girls go to school, but their education is primarily focused on religion.
"Everyone can read and write, but math was over after simple multiplication," Mayan says. "When I left school, I didn't even know what New York was, and I had never even seen a dog because nobody kept any pets."
According to Irit Paneth, it is this lack of education, in particular, that makes it almost impossible for doubters in these communities to break out of the inflexible corset of their belief. Paneth is a member of Hillel - The Right To Choose, an organization that helps those leaving the Orthodox faith start a normal life. "We are not against the religion," Paneth explains. "But Ultra-Orthodoxy is more like a cult that intellectually cripples children in the name of religion." For most young people who break away from the Orthodox life, she explains, it's like leaping off a cliff into the unknown. "They come without money, without education in the classical sense, without any chance of employment," Paneth says.
One of the fastest growing groups in Israel
According to government estimates, ultra-Orthodox Jews make up one of the fastest-growing groups in Israeli society. By 2025, the government forecasts that roughly 22 percent of school-age Israeli children will come from one of the groups with strong religious beliefs.
Over the 19 years it has been operating, only around 2,000 defectors have turned to Hillel. "There are tens of thousands who have doubts and want out," Paneth says. But only a small number are ready and willing to make the sacrifices that defection demands. For example, most families completely break off contact with defectors. "Some even hold wakes," Paneth says, "as if the daughter or son has actually died."
Mayan grew up in Beitar Illit, an Orthodox settlement just south of Jerusalem in the Judean Mountains of the West Bank. There, men wear black suits and wide-brimmed hats. The women -- whose style of clothing is intended solely to denote chastity -- wear high-necked blouses, long skirts and often a head scarf. Likewise, the men don't hold jobs but, instead, devote their lives to studying the Bible. The women feed their families and often raise up to 12 children.
Mayan's childhood finished when she was seven, when her widowed mother remarried. From then on, she had to wear socks and long pants to bed under her nightgown -- even in the summer -- lest the bed cover slip off and expose here bare skin to her stepfather. And since her stepfather was not a blood relation, he was not allowed to touch her. In fact, he barely spoke with her, either.
No preparation for puberty
Puberty was a time of great anxiety for Mayan. As her breasts began to grow, Mayan thought she had cancer. The taboo about anything physical was so great that she snuck off to the doctor rather than having to ask her mother what was happening. Her first period brought renewed panic and shame. Mayan hid her dirty undergarments. And when her mother found them, she was scolded rather than given an explanation. What if her stepfather had found her dirty panties?
Mayan first began to doubt her lifestyle when she switched to a school in central Jerusalem. She saw fashionably dressed young people and noticed that the boys "from the other world" looked at her with interest. At 14, she hatched a plan together with some other curious school friends. They told their mothers that there was a study-group meeting. But then the girls used money they had earned babysitting to take the bus to Luna Park, an amusement park in Tel Aviv. Even today, Mayan beams when she talks about the lights and the music. "I felt like Cinderella," she says, "like I was in a dream."
No more contact with family or friends
Still, the second expedition Mayan organized with her girlfriends ended in disaster. They took a trip to the beach, but their fresh tans gave them away once they arrived home. The result -- for Mayan, at least -- was a three-year odyssey through various ultra-Orthodox reformatories and foster families. Her insubordination had to be driven out of her -- if need be, by lies. "We were contantly told that the secular world was only waiting to turn us into prostitutes or slaves," Mayan explains, "that there was nothing but drug addiction waiting for us out in the modern world."
With help from Hillel, Mayan eventually managed to make the leap out of her religious life. The organization helped her financially so she could go to a boarding school and get her high school diploma. Mayan then completed the obligatory military service that all Israeli women must perform and, today, she is studying special education in college. She no longer has any contact with her family, and she suspects that her sisters have paid a high price for her defection. "When my sisters' marriages are arranged," Mayan says, "they won't get the men they deserve."
"Staying would have meant death"
Every week, 25-year-old Shimy Levy gets to re-pay the price for abandoning his religion. The rabbies in the ultra-Orthodox divorce court granted him two hours a week with his two children. And whenever they are up, Levy realizes once more the price of his freedom. "But leaving was still the right thing to do," Levy says. "Staying would have meant death -- and I couldn't kill myself for the sake of my children."
Levy grew up in the Orthodox faith, and -- like Mayan -- he began to have doubts when he reached puberty. The rules of the religious school he was supposed to spend the rest of his life in were increasingly getting on his nerves. "With the help of the Bible," he says, "they manage to control every small detail of everyday life." Then he begins to count the ways: In the morning, you have to put the right shoe on before the left shoe. Then the shoes had to be laced up the opposite way -- left shoe first, then right. On the Sabbath, you could only eat fish if you managed not to touch any bones. At most, a young man was only allowed to meet his potential bride in an arranged marriage twice -- and then only for an hour during a chaperoned conversation. After that he had to decide whether he would marry her.
Eventually, Levy bought a small radio with earphones. At night, under the covers in the communal sleeping hall of the yeshiva -- the male-only religious institution where he studied -- he would eavesdrop on the outside world. But, like Mayan, he was caught and spent time in reformatories. At 20, he was married -- in another attempt to tame his desire for freedom. For four years, he played the role of the strictly religious husband and father before coming to the decision that he couldn't live like that any longer. He confessed to his wife that he had lost his faith, and he asked for a divorce.
"If God exists, he wouldn't want this"
Then, without any particular regrets, he cut off the long, traditional sidelocks he had worn his whole life. "It was already clear to me that all of these rituals were just empty gestures," he says.
For Levy, the last year has been one long attempt to catch up on what he's missed. At breakneck speed, he has developed his taste in music -- everything from Abba to techno -- and he's gone from a being a television novice to owning an iPhone. His first sneakers, his first movie, his first pork chop. "Every day I tick off another thing that was previously withheld from me," Levy says. He is already concerned about the indoctrination that his children will be exposed to. "Every time I see them," he says, "they tell me that the whole family is praying for my return to the faith."
Irit Paneth of Hillel hears stories like those told by Mayan and Levy with mixed emotions. Of course, she says, she is as proud "as any mother" when her charges find their way in the modern world. "But what about the many others," she asks, "the ones not strong enough to tear themselves away?" They have to adapt to a life of pretending to be pious, she explains, and of following the rules of a religion they don't believe in. "If God exists," Paneth says, "he wouldn't want this."

Seder for Adult Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse

As we all know when you come from an abusive family holidays can become difficult, especially for incest survivors who either can't be with relatives for safety reasons or find it difficult to be around family members.


Several adult survivors of childhood sexual abuse are looking for a place to go this year for Pesach. I wish The Awareness Center had the funds and staff to organize a seder in every community.  We would love to find people who would be interested in doing this.  Anyone up to organizing a seder for survivors on the east coast or anywhere else?  


Back in 1986 my friend Evy Gershon wrote the Survivors Haggadah for Adult Survivors of Childhood Sexual Abuse.  I thought it might be inspirational to anyone who might want to volunteer and organize something for survivors.  


Thursday, February 18, 2010

Oprah's Conversation with Child Molesters

Part 1 of Oprah's frank, graphic conversation with admitted child molesters. Learn how to identify sex offenders and prevent more children from becoming vitcims of abuse. This video is for adults only.


Oprah's Conversation with Child Molesters, Part 1



Monday, February 15, 2010

Case of Goel Ratzon

Case of Goel Ratzon
(Hatikvah) Tel Aviv, Israel

THIS PAGE IS UNDER CONSTRUCTION

Arrested and charged with incest, sexual assault, slavery  and domestic violenceRatzon is also accused of cult like practices and mind control.
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Table of Contents:

2010
  1. 'Israel's Fritzl' Arrested on Charges of Incest, Sex Abuse  (01/15/2010)
  2. 'Israeli Fritzl' with harem of up to 30 wives and 60 children arrested on suspicion of incest and sexual abuse (01/15/2010)
  3. In Israel, the Messiah with more than 30 Wives' (01/30/2010)
  4. Goel Ratzon accused of raping minors (02/14/2010)
  5. Israeli ‘harem’ leader Goel Ratzon charged with rape and incest (02/15/2010)

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'Israel's Fritzl' Arrested on Charges of Incest, Sex Abuse
London Times -  January 15, 2010

Residents of Tel Aviv’s quiet Hatikva neighborhood were shocked yesterday to discover a self-styled Jewish sage living in their midst with a harem of 30 women kept as "slaves" in squalid apartments.

Goel Ratzon, 60, is accused of fathering 37 children since 1993 with his "wives" and daughters. Ratzon, who was dubbed by the local media as "Israel’s Josef Fritzl," is under arrest on suspicion of incest and sexual abuse.

"The evidence shows the suspect controlled his women with a firm hand, including their possessions and their money," police said. Ratzon even wrote a list of commandments to ensure that the women were kept in "conditions similar to slavery," police said.

In addition to turning over all their wages, the women were forbidden from making telephone calls or talking to men other than Ratzon. If they broke the rules they would pay a fine or receive physical punishment.

Mickey Rosenfeld, the Israeli police spokesman, said that Ratzon convinced his victims that he had godlike status. "The women didn’t really understand what their situation was, they didn’t understand what freedom was," Rosenfeld said.

In one case, police raided a three-bedroom apartment where 10 women and 17 children were found living in "horrible conditions."

The women wore conservative orthodox dresses covering their entire bodies and bore tattoos of their captor’s face — and name. He was married to 17 women but it was unclear how many others he had relations with, police said. All his offspring had names with a variation on his — Goel, which means redeemer in Hebrew.

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'Israeli Fritzl' with harem of up to 30 wives and 60 children arrested on suspicion of incest and sexual abuse
By Sara Nelson
(UK) Mail online - Jan 15, 2010 

Israeli police have arrested a 60-year-old self-styled Jewish sage with a reported harem of up to 30 wives and 60 children on suspicion of incest and sexual abuse.

Goel Ratzon, who has been dubbed by the local media as ‘Israel’s Josef Fritzl’ is alleged to have kept the women and children as ‘slaves’ in squalid apartments around Tel Aviv.

Ratzon was remanded in custody on Tuesday, a police spokesman said after a gagging order was lifted on Thursday. 

An undercover investigation was started in June last year after one woman came forward to complain of abuse. 

'The evidence shows the suspect controlled his women with a firm hand, including their possessions and their money,' said a police statement, which added that Ratzon had written a 'rule book' for women he kept in 'conditions of slavery'.

'He would dictate what they could and could not do, limit their movements and impose sanctions and various punishments, including the use of violence if they refused to obey.'

Among the more serious allegations, police said Ratzon was suspected of fathering children with some of his own daughters. Police said 17 women and about 40 children were involved.

Several women who identified themselves as Ratzon's wives appeared in an Israeli television documentary aired last year. They were filmed feeding him and combing his hair.

'He is the messiah everyone is talking about,' one said. 'He is already here and he hasn't been revealed yet. The day he decides to reveal himself, the land will shake.'

The women wore the heavy dress of Orthodox Jews and bore tattoos of the bearded, bespectacled Ratzon's face.

He was also interviewed, introducing several of his children, all of whom had names with variations on Goel -  Hebrew for 'redeemer'.

'I'm perfect,' Ratzon said in the documentary. 'I have all the qualities a woman wants.'

Ratzon's lawyer, Shlomtzion Gabai, said about 30 women and 60 children were linked to her client: 'As far as he is concerned, no sexual crimes have been committed,' she told Israel Radio. 'The women consented willingly to relations.'  

The children have been taken into care and some of the women have been let free.

Ratzon is on remand in a Tel Aviv jail, awaiting a court appearance.

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In Israel, the Messiah with more than 30 Wives'
By Matthew Kalman
(UK) Times - Jan. 18, 2010 

Goel Ratzon's Facebook profile shows the bespectacled Israeli with shoulder-length white hair and neatly trimmed beard and says he is currently dating and has 36 friends. His real status is somewhat more complicated. When Israeli police raided the self-styled healer's four homes in Tel Aviv last week they found two legal ex-wives, plus another 30 women as well as 89 children — all reputedly his. Ratzon was arrested on suspicion of enslavement, rape and sexual abuse and remanded in custody by a local magistrate. 

Police described the apartment block in the city's downscale Hatikvah neighborhood as a slum harem. "The living conditions of the women were tragic," Israeli police spokesman Micky Rosenfeld told TIME. "When I entered one of the houses, I was shocked by what I saw. The filth was horrible, and there was nowhere to walk without stumbling on something. It was a three-bedroom apartment, where 10 women and 17 children were living." 

Ratzon's unusual domestic arrangements first came to light in a documentary broadcast on Israel's Channel 10 in January 2009. It showed Ratzon's "wives" cooking, cleaning and shopping together, eagerly anticipating the arrival of "Daddy" and competing over whom he would choose to spend the night with. On the show, Ratzon explained the secret of his magnetic attraction was that he was "perfect." "I have everything a woman wants, all the qualities a woman wants. I give women the attention they want. It's made of many things, but fortunately, I have everything," he said. Because there was technically no multiple marriage (no ceremonies or documents were involved), authorities had no basis for charging Ratzon with polygamy.

The women, too, appeared to be content, if not happy. They wore modest clothing that neighbors likened to those of religious Muslims, and they had Ratzon's image tattooed on their bodies. The children's names all included a version of Ratzon's own. One wife had Ratzon's portrait tattooed on her upper left arm, his head surrounded by snakes with the legend "Goel Ratzon, my love forever." A similar tattoo on her upper right arm portrayed him with a cobra crowning his head and the legend "My Goel, my love." Her neck was inscribed twice: "To Goel, with love."

"No one has love like we have here. I went through a lot before I arrived here and he is the ultimate for me," she explained on television. One of the other women defended Ratzon's little kingdom, saying, "People think we are in a place where we are imprisoned and forced to become some kind of poor Cinderella. They don't understand that there is humanity, respect. He has something special and good." Said one of her companions: "He's the Messiah that everyone talks about. The day he decides to reveal himself, this country will see it." 

Ratzon had built a reputation for spiritual redemption (which is what goel means in Hebrew) by way of a center in Tel Aviv that combined teachings on the Kabbalah with healing. In 2000, he told a reporter that he had had a vision of a "soul" appearing to him and telling him that the secrets of the Torah would be revealed to him, allowing him to no longer work hard in his life. He became known as a healer for young women, some of whom fell in love with him. One of his "wives" said she was smitten after he cured her of a mysterious disease that had left her bald at age 10. Some of the women in the household severed all contact with their own families, insisting no one forced them to stay. On the TV documentary, some accompanied Ratzon to a Tel Aviv mall to trawl for more "wives."

Still, Ratzon, 59, ruled his clan like a kingdom — or a police state. According to a book of domestic bylaws that he laid out for his huge household, the women faced fines from $50 to $500 for such infractions as sitting idle when there was housework to be done or talking to repairmen. To an extent, the situation was state-subsidized: some women claimed state benefits as stay-at-home, single parents. Others, however, worked outside, earning money for the family kitty. But not everyone was happy. Days before his arrest, Ratzon reportedly took one of his "wives" to the hospital because she was suffering from an overdose of antidepressants.
Because there was no evidence of a crime, just a weird lifestyle, no charges have been brought against Ratzon. "The welfare department [had] been in touch with some of the women and children for the past couple of years," Sharon Melamed, a social worker in the Tel Aviv Municipality Welfare Department tells TIME. "There was never a reason to suspect any criminal behavior. The children were clean and well dressed. They showed up to school regularly. There were no signs in their behavior that could indicate neglect or anything like sexual exploitation."

But there was much suspicion that many of the women in the alleged harem, still in their 20s, had been troubled teenagers who originally went to Ratzon for therapy. In June of 2009, a 24-year-old woman, the daughter of one of Ratzon's "wives," filed a complaint against him with the Tel Aviv police. The mother, who was arrested along with Ratzon, is suspected of introducing her biological daughter, then 14, to the healer for purposes of sex; she is now facing charges of encouraging and failing to report underage sex. Using Clause 375a of a new Israeli law against human-trafficking that makes it a crime to hold a person "in conditions of slavery," police then tapped Ratzon's phones and began surveillance. Parallel to the police investigation, parents of some of the young women hired private detectives to launch an undercover inquiry. 

If formally charged, Ratzon faces a maximum 16-year prison term for each of the slavery and rape charges. Through his lawyer, Ratzon denied the allegations. After so many years of inaction, the police seem confident they can prove his guilt. "We have managed to gather a great deal of evidence relating to the offenses of holding people under conditions of enslavement and rape," deputy commander Shlomi Michael, head of the Tel Aviv police's Central Unit, told reporters.

— With reporting by Yonit Farago / Tel Aviv

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In Israel, the Messiah with more than 30 Wives'
By Vered Luvitch 
YNET - February 14, 2020 

Guru who lived with 32 women, dozens of children charged with sex offenses, enslavement, deception. Indictment says he fully controlled his wives' lives, created 'status of an omnipotent with healing, destruction and cursing capabilities'  

Polygamist Goel Ratzon was charged Sunday with dozens of sex offenses, including rape, sodomy, and indecent assault. His victims were said to include minors. He was also accused of fraud and treating his wives like slaves.

Ratzon, who had lived with 32 women and dozens of children, was arrested last month in a wide-scale police operation. His son, Yigal Ratzon, arrived at the court Sunday and continued to insist that his father was innocent. 

The indictment is divided into nine chapters, and includes dozens of clauses describing a large number of incidents.  

The State asked the court to place a gag order on the investigation, saying that it includes "intimate, sensitive and shameful details, which have the power of humiliating any person." One of the reasons for the request, the State Prosecutor's Office explained, was the "fragile mental state of the women", who are defined as "victims of a difficult trauma of many years of slavery."

According to the indictment, Ratzon created "a status of an omnipotent with healing, destruction and cursing capabilities", through which he possesses full control of his wives' lives, desires, thoughts and performance. 

 Last week, the Tel Aviv District Police said that most of Ratzon's wives had incriminated him when they were questioned and would testify against him in the trial. The police believe they have a well-established case against the man, claiming that most of his wives have "become sober". 

According to the State Prosecutor's Office, Ratzon had many diverse ways to influence his wives, causing them to depend on him completely. He allegedly instilled a distorted reality, leading them to believe that their entire being, essence and physical and mental life derive their existence from him.

The indictment describes the "family" setting Ratzon built around him: "The defendant captured the women in a human group structure with the nature of a pseudo-family revolving around the ritual of his image, turning the birth of his children into a supreme goal the wives must aspire to, all with the aim of glorifying him while serving him and providing all his needs."

The State went on to say that Ratzon abused his wives by scorning them, while ridiculing their personality and independence and trampling over their self-image and self-value.

He kept them away from any external social connection, including their families, damaging their judgment and free will and enslaving them to provide his economic and sexual needs, the indictment said.

'Don't worry, you'll get used to it'

Many of the indictment clauses refer to the sex offenses allegedly committed by Ratzon. One describes a 19-year-old girl who was raped by Ratzon from the age of 15 to 17 on a nearly daily basis. He is also accused of indecent assault of another girl, by caressing her sexual organs and kissing her while pushing his tongue into her mouth.

He is also accused of raping and sexually harassing a girl whose mother died when she was a baby. According to the indictment, he distanced the girl from her family and promised to marry her. He convinced her that he had supernatural powers and ignored her request to stop kissing and caressing her.

Several days later, he took a shower with the girl and raped her. When she complained that it hurt, he responded, "Don't worry, you'll get used to it." In another incident, he performed oral sex on the girl and raped her again.

"The defendant knew that the young girl was subject to his magical influence, which he nurtured and implanted in a way preventing her from granting her free agreement," the indictment stated. "Shortly after these acts were committed, the young woman's father managed to locate her and remove her forcibly."

Police: Most women will testify

After nearly a month in detainment, Goel Ratzon spoke out for the first time during a hearing in Tel Aviv Magistrates' Court, claiming he was innocent.

"They can say things about me, (but) they're not true. They are putting the squeeze on me during investigation," he said.

Regarding the book of rules he allegedly wrote for the women and their children living with him, Ratzon said, "There was no book. That is an invention of the media."

Ratzon also addressed concerns that his wives would try to hurt themselves when he was arrested: "I didn't expect anything. Nothing was supposed to happen when they arrested me."  


He also denied committing sexual offenses. "This is what the police claims, not me," he said.

But the testimonies collected by the police paint a different picture. The investigators discovered that Ratzon, thanks to his special "charm", managed to get hold of intelligent women and turn them into slaves with no personal desire. The women told the investigators they would drive him to different places, buy him things, take loans for him and pay for his trips abroad – all in order to please him.

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Israeli ‘harem’ leader Goel Ratzon charged with rape and incest
UK Times - February 15, 2010

An man dubbed Israel’s Josef Fritzl was indicted yesterday on charges including enslavement, rape and incest over a cult-like harem in which he fathered dozens of children with 32 women.

The indictment against Goel Ratzon, 60, says that he positioned himself as a “godlike” figure to the women, whom he enticed into a worship of him that included following a “rulebook” that dictated their lives.

He sired at least 49 children with his “wives”, who tattooed themselves with his face and name, and is also accused of raping underage girls.

Ratzon created an “image of an omnipotent one who was blessed with supernatural powers and the ability to heal, destroy and cast curses”, police said. “Through this total control the defendant led the women to completely scrap their character and devote their existence to satisfy his needs, including his financial and sexual needs.”

In a documentary produced by Israeli television last year, Mr Ratzon’s wives were filmed feeding him and stroking his grey beard and wispy hair.

Police said that his wives have now “sobered” and are coming forward with evidence against him. Almost all of the women incriminated him when questioned, they said, and will testify during the trial.

Mr Ratzon maintained his innocence when speaking outside his hearing at the Tel Aviv Magistrates’ Court yesterday.

“They can say things about me that are not true. They are pressuring me during investigation,” he said. He added that the “book of rules” published by the media and catalogued by police was “an invention”.

His wives and other women he is accused of molesting have depicted Mr Ratzon as an expert manipulator. In each case he is said to have lured women away from their social networks, including friends and family. He ridiculed and insulted them, yet.

Mr Ratzon convinced them that their entire existence — including mental and physical wellbeing — derived from himself. The “supreme goal” of the wives was to bear him children “glorifying him while serving him,” police said.

Mr Ratzon is accused of raping underage girls while convincing them that he would one day marry them. One woman said that she was raped by Mr Ratzon on a “near daily” basis between the ages of 15 to 17.

In another case he convinced an underage girl that he had supernatural powers and distanced her from her family. He then took a shower with the girl and raped her. When she complained of pain, he told her, “Don’t worry, you’ll get used to it.”

Mr Ratzon “knew that the young girl was subject to his charismatic influence. He nurtured and cultivated her in such a way that it prohibited her from granting her free agreement,” police said. They added that the girl’s father managed to locate her and forcibly remove her from Mr Ratzon.

Women living with Mr Ratzon were asked to turn over all their wages and were forbidden from making telephone calls or talking to other men. If they broke the rules they would pay a fine or be physically punished.

The women wore conservative orthodox dresses covering their entire bodies and bore tattoos of their captor’s face and name. All his offspring had names with a variation on his, Goel, which means “redeemer” in Hebrew.

Psychologists and welfare officials who have spoken to Mr Ratzon’s wives have said that they are concerned for their mental well being. Becoming aware of the “brainwashing” they were under has been traumatic, police said.

But some of the women have begun meeting with their families again, while many of the women who had tattooed Mr Ratzon’s name and likeness on their bodies have now asked that they be removed.

However, police said that some of the women have remained loyal to Mr Ratzon and refused to condemn his treatment of them.

Mr Ratzon’s case has met with outrage amonhg the Israeli public, who question why he was not arrested sooner. Police have said that they were aware of Mr Ratzon for years but could not gather enough evidence for his arrest until women came forward and filed complaints with welfare authorities.

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Sunday, February 14, 2010

Case of Jorge Torres Orellana

According to reliable sources Jorge Torres Orellana davens (prays) at the Chabad in the Dominican Republic.  He is also listed as WANTED on Interpol's web page


Interpol


Wanted
TORRES ORELLANA, Jorge


Legal Status
Present family name: TORRES ORELLANA
Forename: JORGE
Sex: MALE
Date of birth: 15 October 1977 (32 years old)
Place of birth: HUIZUCAR, LA LIBERTAD, El Salvador
Language spoken: Spanish Castilian
Nationality: El Salvador


Physical description
Height: 1.68 meter <-> 66 inches
Weight: 69 kg <-> 152 pounds
Colour of eyes: DARK
Colour of hair: BLACK


Offences
Categories of Offences: CRIMES AGAINST CHILDREN, PEOPLE SMUGGLING, TRAFFICKING & ILLEGAL IMMIGRATION
Arrest Warrant Issued by: JUZGADO DE PAZ SAN JUAN OPICO, LA LIBERTAD / El Salvador


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Spanish to English translation using google
Salvadoran smuggler connection investigated in case of Haitian children El Mundo - 02/12/2010 

Here is warrant for trafficking in persons for sexual exploitation
Enrique Garcia Diario El Mundo
Jorge Torres Orellana or Puello, who appeared in media Dominican lawyer international and ten Americans who were captured when they tried to smuggle Haitian children, could be a Salvadoran pursued here for the crime of Trafficking for Exploitation Trafficking and Sexual confirmed yesterday the Deputy Director of Police Investigation National Civil Howard Cotto.


The alert was given by the U.S. daily The New York Times, which revealed that Jorge Torres Puello could be Orellana, 43, originally from Huizucar, The Freedom, against whom there is in El Salvador, an arrest warrant.
Cotto Torres Orellana said, could be the same person in Haiti is being passed off as the lawyer Jorge Anibal Torres Puello, a national Dominican, and who has shown as part of the public defender Americans in Haiti. In El Salvador, Jorge Torres and Jorge Anibal Orellana Torres Puello, has no record of having exercised the profession, said Assistant Director of Research and Dominican media nor recorded as lawyer.


In the U.S., the media are following up the case and have requested the assistance of the Salvadoran National Civil Police, to see if they This is the same subject. Cotto, explained that through the photographs appear in their single identity document, DUI in his passport, and another published by The New York Times, appear to be the same person. But what substantiate, through the comparison of fingerprints, he said.


"We shall verify, because you probably have a dual nationality, legally speaking, or it may have falsified identity, either here or in Dominican Republic, "he said.


The Assistant Director of Research, noted that there is a court order Orellana Torres arrest after they found evidence against him, by the raid on a house in the residential Forests of Lourdes, The Freedom, in May last year. In that place was captured his wife Ana Josefa Galvarina Orellana Ramírez, a member of a structure dedicated to the exploitation child sexual Central America and the Caribbean. The modeling contract. Today, women are imprisoned in Prison for Women, Ilopango.


They also found evidence of its Torres Orellana, belonged to Sephardic Jewish Community, said police spokesman.
The accused fled the country between May and June last year, possibly a blind spot. Currently it is unknown where he is based, said Cotto.



The supposed attorney says he never was here Enrique Garcia Diario El Mundo

The assumption Dominican lawyer, Jorge Torres Puello, told The New York Times a telephone interview that he had not participated in any illegal activity in El Salvador and had never been there. He defined it as a case of mistaken identity. "I have nothing to do with El Salvador," he said, noting that his name was so common in Latin America, as John Smith in America.


"There is a Colombian drug trafficker who was arrested with 25 identities and one of with my name on them, "he said without elaborate more.


"Bring the evidence," he said when pressed about the allegations child trafficking in the brief interview, according to The New York Times, concluded when he said he was entering an elevator. Later, became upset and said that he had not broken any law.


The U.S. and Dominican media diary reveals several contradictions in their statements. In one, Puello says he was born in New York, other sometimes says he has no passport, which is licensed from other law in Florida and Dominican, but no record in any of the two places.


The Americans tried in Haiti and was fired as a lawyer after requested $ 12 billion to their relatives to take them to the Dominican.