Nechemya смотреть последние обновления за сегодня на .
The Orthodox Jewish student who was just 12 when an unlicensed counselor started forcing sex on her cried—and laughedafter Nechemya Weberman's conviction Monday afternoon. "I can finally have a real smile on my face," the victim, who's now 18 and a newlywed, told her husband. Weberman, a 54-year old father of ten, faces up to 117 years in prison, when he's sentenced next month. The jury arrived at a quick verdict, believing the victim's story that the abuse continued for three years in the counselor's home office, which had three locks on the door. 25-year-old Boorey D, who married the victim just two months ago in a traditional, Jewish wedding, told PIX 11 his wife was not allowed to testify about everything that happened to her. Capture"She felt like a sex slave to him, because he showed her porn and said, 'Do this to me,'" Boorey D told PIX 11. Weberman was convicted on 59 counts, including a top charge of criminal course of sexual conduct against a minor. The girl's mother told PIX 11 last week that Weberman used a lighter to pour liquid on the girl's body, in a bizarre sex ritual, but the jury was not permitted to hear about this. The teen's husband elaborated to PIX 11: "The lighter would start dripping gas on top of her stomach, and it would burn. She was crying out in pain, and he said 'put peanut butter on it, it's going to go away.'" The victim was in sixth grade at the Bais Ruchel Satmar school in Williamsburg in 2007, when she got into trouble for asking questions about God and the thick tights Satmar Hasidic girls are required to wear. That's when the school principal told the family she would need to get counseling. The family selected Nechemya Weberman, who was a prominent figure in the Satmar community. The parents paid Weberman $150 an hour to counsel their daughter, but the girl testified the sexual abuse started immediately, from the first session. When she protested the way Weberman was touching her, he told her there was nothing wrong, she testified. Pretty soon, the sessions included oral sex two or three times a week. Once, when the girl tried to stop counseling, she testified Weberman showed up at her bedroom at home and started abusing her there, undressing her and trying to have intercourse with her. The girl said she had stayed in bed for three days, not eating, and suffering from depression. "I wanted to die," she testified. The victim's husband said he was forced out of business in Williamsburg this past July, after the girl's family refused to accept a half million dollar bribe to drop the case. The teen said on the stand she went forward with the case, because she didn't want other girls to go through what she went through. But her husband notes she also wants Weberman to know what it's like to be helpless. "Now he can feel what a victim feels like, when a 350 pound guy steps onto him in jail and holds him down to the floor and he can't move, can't do anything," Boorey D said. Boorey D praised his wife for her courage. "She used her voice to save other victims. She hopes this gave them a push to go forward."
NEW YORK A respected religious counselor in New York City's ultra-orthodox Jewish community was sentenced Tuesday to 103 years in prison for molesting a girl who came to him with questions about her faith. Nechemya Weberman was convicted in December of 59 counts, including sustained sexual abuse of a child, endangering the welfare of a child and sexual abuse. The trial put a spotlight on the ultra-orthodox community in Brooklyn and its strict rules that govern clothing, social customs and interaction with the outside world. Both Weberman, 54, and the girl belonged to the Satmar Hasidic sect. The girl and her family have been harassed and ostracized, reflecting long-held beliefs that any conflict must be dealt with from within. During the trial, men were arrested on charges they tried to bribe the girl and her now-husband to drop the case. Others were accused of snapping photos of her on the witness stand and posting them online. The accuser, now 18, testified that Weberman abused her repeatedly behind his locked office door from the time she was 12 until she was 15. Her school had ordered her to see Weberman because she had been asking questions about her religion and was dressing immodestly in violation of the sect's customs, and she needed to be helped back on the right path. Weberman wasn't a licensed counselor but spent decades working with couples and families in his community. There was no physical evidence of abuse. The defense argued that the girl was angry that Weberman had told her parents she had a boyfriend at age 15, forbidden in her community. Attorney Stacey Richman said the case boiled down to a simple "he said, she said," and the girl was a petulant, calculating liar. "The only evidence in this case of sexual abuse is the word of (the girl)," Richman told jurors. "She's making things up in front of you as they occur." But the jury took just hours in December to convict Weberman on all counts. Brooklyn is home to the largest community of ultra-orthodox Jews outside Israel, more than 250,000, and the Satmar sect is one faction clustered mostly in the Williamsburg neighborhood. The group has its own ambulances, volunteer police and rabbinical courts, and they are discouraged from going to secular authorities. Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes said he hoped the case would persuade other victims to come forward. Hynes has been accused of overlooking crimes in the community because he was too cozy with powerful rabbis, a charge he vehemently denies. The Associated Press typically doesn't identify people who say they are the victims of sexual assault.
The defense and prosecutors offered their closing arguments Thursday in the sex abuse trial of prominent Brooklyn ultra Orthodox leader Nechemya Weberman. Weberman, 54, smiled as he left the courthouse with his wife on Thursday, seeming upbeat. But it could be his last night as a free man, CBS 2′s Sean Hennessey reported. The jury will soon decide if Weberman used his Brooklyn home office as the place where he sexually abused a young girl he was counseling. But with no physical or forensic evidence, the panel must decide whether to believe the rabbinical counselor or a teen girl who testified that she was abused for three years. "From the time she was 12, he began sexually abusing her," prosecutors said during closing arguments. They also alleged Weberman "wanted his sexual needs satisfied and he made her comply." Prosecutor Linda Weinman read large portions of the now-married teen's testimony back to jurors, underscoring how the case relies largely on what the teen said. Supporters of the counselor find it curious why the accuser was silent for so long, CBS 2′s Hennessey reported. "Three years and no one should know? Why shouldn't she tell it to anyone? A father, a friend, someone," Zad Krausz told Hennessey. Prosecutors said she was a scared girl with no options, telling the jury that "she had absolutely nobody she could turn to. And he knew that." Weberman's defense argued that the 17-year-old's case is "all about revenge." During testimony, the defense argued that the accuser was upset because she believed Weberman told her father about her boyfriend, something forbidden in the insular Satmar community. The teen's father had the boy arrested but he was later released. "When she felt she had been betrayed, she went wild," the defense argued during closing statements. "She made things up in front of you. She testified to things she never told police or the prosecution." The accuser's family has stood by her, attending every day of the trial to ensure justice is done, Hennessey reported. "I come from a community where women have no justice. Women are not believed and I'm hoping the united states of america will show me that there is justice," the accuser's aunt Giddy Goldman told Hennessey. On Friday morning, the jury will be given instructions on the sexual abuse charges and then will begin deliberations.
A respected religious counselor in New York City's ultra-orthodox Jewish community was sentenced Tuesday to 103 years in prison for molesting a girl who came to him with questions about her faith. Nechemya Weberman was convicted in December of 59 counts, including sustained sexual abuse of a child, endangering the welfare of a child and sexual abuse. The trial put a spotlight on the ultra-orthodox community in Brooklyn and its strict rules that govern clothing, social customs and interaction with the outside world. Both Weberman, 54, and the girl belonged to the Satmar Hasidic sect. The girl and her family have been harassed and ostracized, reflecting long-held beliefs that any conflict must be dealt with from within. During the trial, men were arrested on charges they tried to bribe the girl and her now-husband to drop the case. Others were accused of snapping photos of her on the witness stand and posting them online. The accuser, now 18, testified that Weberman abused her repeatedly behind his locked office door from the time she was 12 until she was 15. Her school had ordered her to see Weberman because she had been asking questions about her religion and was dressing immodestly in violation of the sect's customs, and she needed to be helped back on the right path. Weberman wasn't a licensed counselor but spent decades working with couples and families in his community. There was no physical evidence of abuse. The defense argued that the girl was angry that Weberman had told her parents she had a boyfriend at age 15, forbidden in her community. Attorney Stacey Richman said the case boiled down to a simple "he said, she said," and the girl was a petulant, calculating liar. "The only evidence in this case of sexual abuse is the word of (the girl)," Richman told jurors. "She's making things up in front of you as they occur." But the jury took just hours in December to convict Weberman on all counts. Brooklyn is home to the largest community of ultra-orthodox Jews outside Israel, more than 250,000, and the Satmar sect is one faction clustered mostly in the Williamsburg neighborhood. The group has its own ambulances, volunteer police and rabbinical courts, and they are discouraged from going to secular authorities. Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes said he hoped the case would persuade other victims to come forward. Hynes has been accused of overlooking crimes in the community because he was too cozy with powerful rabbis, a charge he vehemently denies. The Associated Press typically doesn't identify people who say they are the victims of sexual assault.
A respected religious counselor in New York City's ultra-orthodox Jewish community was sentenced Tuesday to 103 years in prison for molesting a girl who came to him with questions about her faith. Nechemya Weberman was convicted in December of 59 counts, including sustained sexual abuse of a child, endangering the welfare of a child and sexual abuse. The trial put a spotlight on the ultra-orthodox community in Brooklyn and its strict rules that govern clothing, social customs and interaction with the outside world. Both Weberman, 54, and the girl belonged to the Satmar Hasidic sect. The girl and her family have been harassed and ostracized, reflecting long-held beliefs that any conflict must be dealt with from within. During the trial, men were arrested on charges they tried to bribe the girl and her now-husband to drop the case. Others were accused of snapping photos of her on the witness stand and posting them online. The accuser, now 18, testified that Weberman abused her repeatedly behind his locked office door from the time she was 12 until she was 15. Her school had ordered her to see Weberman because she had been asking questions about her religion and was dressing immodestly in violation of the sect's customs, and she needed to be helped back on the right path. Weberman wasn't a licensed counselor but spent decades working with couples and families in his community. There was no physical evidence of abuse. The defense argued that the girl was angry that Weberman had told her parents she had a boyfriend at age 15, forbidden in her community. Attorney Stacey Richman said the case boiled down to a simple "he said, she said," and the girl was a petulant, calculating liar. "The only evidence in this case of sexual abuse is the word of (the girl)," Richman told jurors. "She's making things up in front of you as they occur." But the jury took just hours in December to convict Weberman on all counts. Brooklyn is home to the largest community of ultra-orthodox Jews outside Israel, more than 250,000, and the Satmar sect is one faction clustered mostly in the Williamsburg neighborhood. The group has its own ambulances, volunteer police and rabbinical courts, and they are discouraged from going to secular authorities. Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes said he hoped the case would persuade other victims to come forward. Hynes has been accused of overlooking crimes in the community because he was too cozy with powerful rabbis, a charge he vehemently denies. The Associated Press typically doesn't identify people who say they are the victims of sexual assault.
An unlicensed counselor in Brooklyn's ultra-Orthodox Jewish community was sentenced to 103 years in prison Tuesday for the sexual abuse of a girl who came to him with questions about her faith. Nechemya Weberman was convicted in December of 59 counts, including sustained sexual abuse of a child, endangering the welfare of a child and sexual abuse. Weberman said "no thank you" when asked if he wished to speak. He and his wife had no visible reaction to the sentence. The top charge carried a sentence of 25 years; he got consecutive terms for some of the other charges. "I clearly remember how I would look in the mirror. I saw a girl who didn't want to live in her own skin, a girl whose innocence was shattered, a girl who couldn't sleep at night because of the gruesome invasion that had been done to her body," the accuser told the court during the sentencing. She said, "although I suffered as a young girl, I came out a strong woman," 1010 WINS' Juliet Papa reported. The accuser called Weberman a "monstrous predator" and also addressed her abuser directly at one point, asking him how he was "able to torture for all those years, violating people like they were toys." The teen also said during the sentencing that sexual abuse is worse than murder because murder is final. Outside the courtroom, a pack of Weberman's supporters lashed out, convinced of his innocence. "Nechemya Weberman is innocent of these charges," said defense attorney George Farkas. "We believe that an innocent man was convicted and that an innocent man has been sentenced." "We believe that the jury got a highly sanitized version of what happened," Farkas added. The trial put a spotlight on the ultra-Orthodox Satmar community in Brooklyn and its strict rules that govern clothing, social customs and interaction with the outside world. Both Weberman, 54, and the girl belonged to the Satmar Hasidic sect. The girl and her family have been harassed and ostracized, reflecting long-held beliefs that any conflict must be dealt with from within. During the trial, men were arrested on charges they tried to bribe the girl and her now-husband to drop the case. Others were accused of snapping photos of her on the witness stand and posting them online. "I can't talk much for my wife, but I can say what I went through. Seeing her in pain gave me a lot of pain," the victim's husband, Hershy Deutsch, said. But Deutsch said the trial and the guilty verdict send a strong message to victims of abuse. "Their voices will be heard and justice will be served," he said after sentencing. Many donated thousands of dollars to Weberman's defense fund and never believed he molested the young girl. "He would never do such a thing, not near such a thing and it hurts me very much," Williamsburg resident Yuchezarun Roth said. But others praised the teen for going against her family and some say, her faith, by reporting Weberman to police. "I can't understate just how we've come to regard her as a woman of courage to come forward at a very, very difficult time," said Brooklyn District Attorney Charles Hynes. The accuser, now 18, testified that Weberman abused her repeatedly behind his locked office door from the time she was 12 until she was 15. Her school had ordered her to see Weberman because she had been asking questions about her religion and was dressing immodestly in violation of the sect's customs, and she needed to be helped back on the right path. Weberman wasn't a licensed counselor but spent decades working with couples and families in his community. There was no physical evidence of abuse. The defense argued that the girl was angry that Weberman had told her parents she had a boyfriend at age 15, forbidden in her community. Attorney Stacey Richman said the case boiled down to a simple "he said, she said," and the girl was a petulant, calculating liar. "The only evidence in this case of sexual abuse is the word of (the girl)," Richman told jurors. "She's making things up in front of you as they occur." But the jury took just hours in December to convict Weberman on all counts. Hynes said he hoped the case would persuade other victims to come forward. After handing down the sentence, the judge said the punishment should send a message to the insular Satmar community that sexual abuse of children will not be tolerated, WCBS 880′s Irene Cornell reported. Weberman's lawyers have said they plan to appeal.
The counselor accused of sexually abusing a teenager for three years in Brooklyn's Orthodox Jewish community testified Wednesday and said it never happened. On the day his accuser turned 18 years old, Nechemya Weberman walked into court and told the jury he never sexually abused anyone inside his Brooklyn home office where he counseled people. "Have you ever inappropriately touched (her)?" his lawyer asked. "Never, ever," was Weberman's answer. Weberman's accuser belongs to the same Satmar, ultra-Orthodox sect as he does. Her parents felt her defiance was out of control and took her to be counseled by Weberman. The well-known Weberman is accused of sexually abusing the then-12-year-old from 2007 to 2010 during counseling sessions. In court, he remembered what she said during their first meeting. "She literally asked me, 'Why should I trust you? Why should I talk to you?' She said I looked like a 'Chassidish (expletive).'" Over time, Weberman said he gained her trust. "She started to open up, tell me things," Weberman testified. But after a few years of successful counseling came the breaking point — the arrest of a boyfriend she wasn't supposed to have because of her strict religion. The crux of the defense team's case is that the alleged victim's accusation is all driven by revenge. Weberman strongly denied every having inappropriate relations with the young woman. The 54-year-old father of 10 said he began counseling members of the Satmar community several years earlier. Defense Attorney: "Did she say you were responsible for (her boyfriend's) arrest?" Weberman: "Yes." Defense Attorney: "Did she say she knew you told all her secrets to her father?" Weberman: "Yes." Defense Attorney: "Did she tell you 'we are going to get you?'" Weberman: "Yes." Weberman testified he was arrested not long after that and didn't see his accuser again until last week, when she told the jury he had sexually abused her for three years. Weberman has been charged with 88 counts of sexual abuse against a minor. Closing arguments in the case will be Thursday.
With her voice quivering and her slender body shaking, an Orthodox Jewish teen repeatedly violated and sexually tormented by her community counselor in Williamsburg, starting when she was just 12, bravely asked a judge to bring this "monstrous perpetrator" to justice. Judge John Ingram did not fail her, sentencing 54 year old Nechemya Webermana father of 10 to 103 years in state prison, noting of the beautiful, blonde victim "Her youth was taken away from her." The victim, now 18, stood just six feet from her convicted molester, as she emotionally recounted three years of being forced to perform sexually deviant acts in the counselor's home office, which had 3 locks on the door. The girl was ordered into therapy in 6th grade, when she dared to question the strict dress code of the Satmar Hasidic community in Williamsburg. Her parents paid Weberman $150 a session, and the girl testified instead of counseling her, he forced her to perform oral sex the first time she sought treatment. The molestation escalated to include Weberman's attempts at intercourse, the girl had testified. She often attended counseling three days a week. In a packed courtroom, the teen emotionally told the judge about the toll the abuse took on her: "I think back to the years of my ordeal," she said. "I saw a girl who didn't want to live in her own skin, a girl who couldn't sleep at night....when images of the gruesome invasion of her body kept playing in her head....performing sickening acts for his sick sense of pleasure." The girl had testified that Weberman had forced her to watch porn in his office and then copy what she'd seen on screen during their sessions. The victim was not permitted to testify about one, specific form of sexual torture she attributed to Weberman and his porn fetish: his use of a lighter to drip burning fluid on her stomach, which left her with scars. But she referenced that activity on Tuesday during sentencing. The teen said "I feel the outcome of abuse is far worse than murder," shortly after she had cried, as she demanded to know why Weberman won't admit his crimes. "How were you able to deny the abuse all these years?" the teen asked. The girl noted other abused teens were afraid to come forward, adding "You treated us like toys that were yours to abuse." "Unfortunately, the others would not come forward," she said. "But we were all one voice and they were with me in spirit." Assistant District Attorney, Kevin O'Donnell, pointed out to the court the severe repercussions suffered by the girl's family, when they went to police instead of rabbinical authorities: "She was treated like a piece of dirt, while the defendant was treated like a god." Judge John Ingram said of the beautiful, blonde victim: "Her youth was taken away from her." Weberman received dozens of letters of support from his family and community members hoping the judge would be lenient. But the prosecutor observed, "Doing good deeds and being a child molester are not mutually exclusive." Weberman's defense attorney, George Farkaswho plans to appeal the convictiontold the court: "Nechemya Weberman is innocent of the crimes charged." When Weberman, who unsuccessfully took the stand in his own defense, was given a chance to address the judge, he said just three words: "No, thank you." Judge Ingram noted how witnesses had been intimidated in this case and said, "This cannot be tolerated in a free society." He urged victims of abuse to report the crimes "to stop the sex predators." When Ingram sentenced Weberman to 103 years in prisonout of a possible 117 years he facedthe teen girl wept from a front row seat in the courtroom, her new husband by her side. The teen married several months before the trial began. Her husband, Boorey D — who once owned a cafe in Williamsburg — told PIX11 News he was put out of business by Weberman's Orthodox supporters, who took away his Kosher certification. When PIX 11 asked Boorey how nervous his young wife was, before making her victim impact statement, he said: "Trust me, we didn't sleep nights for this statement! She's brave. I respect her for everything she's done." Nechemya Weberman was taken away in handcuffs, back to his prison cell. The teen girl who faced him down in court will be resuming college classesand working hard to put the ordeal behind her. The girl's family, meantime, has fled their home in Williamsburg, fearing community retaliation — because of the lengthy sentence Weberman received.
Composed & Sung by: Nechemya Rosenberg Video Production: Studio on dot For Bookings Call 347-263-3614 Email: NechemyaMusic🤍gmail.com Instagram: 🤍 Twitter: 🤍 Telegram: 🤍 א מענטש אויף דער וועלט איז ווי אין א שטורעמישע וואסער.. "ס'טוט זיך קולות פון "מים רבים אדירים, משברי ים.. מ'דארף אבער געדענקן אז אויב איינער וויל זיין ערליך, ער וויל זיין וואויל איז - אדיר במרום ה',.. איז דער אייבישטער שטערקער פון די גאנצע וואסער וואס א מענטש גייט אריבער.. מקולות מים רבים אדירים משברי ים אדיר במרום ה' מיין ברודער געדענק אין א קלעם אז אדיר במרום ה'.. פון די וואסערן פון ס"מ איז אדיר במרום ה'.. ווען א דאקטער מאכט אפ וואס און ווען איז אדיר במרום ה'.. נאר א תהלים'ל נעם ווייל אדיר במרום ה'..
On Nov. 29, 2016, Brig. Gen. Nechemya Sokal, chief of staff of the Israel Defense Forces' Technology Branch, spoke to United States Military Academy cadets and faculty about subterranean warfare and emerging technologies, including unmanned systems and 3-D printing. The event was organized by the Modern War Institute at West Point.
A 17-year-old girl who was raised in Williamsburg's Satmar Hasidic community testified in criminal court Tuesday that an older man who was supposed to counsel her instead sexually violated her, starting when she was just 12 years old. The thin, blonde-haired witness pointed the finger at 54 year old Nechemya Weberman, director of a group called Vaad Hatznius, translated from Yiddish to mean "the modesty squad." It turns out Weberman was never even licensed to work as a child counselor. The teen said she started getting in trouble in school in 6th grade, because she questioned the strict codes imposed by leaders of the Satmar Hasidic Orthodox sect in Williamsburg. A family friend, Rabbi Yakov Horowitz, told PIX 11 outside court, ""She wasn't being rebellious....just an inquisitive, out-of-the-box thinker." The accuser's school, the United Talmudical Academy, suggested she get counseling. The girl testified that from the first session, Weberman made sexual overtures, beginning with requests for oral sex. She said the abuse escalated, with Weberman touching her breasts and vagina. At one point in the testimony, the teenager struggled to relay an alleged incident that she said happened in the spring of 2009, when she was 14. The girl said she hadn't left her room in days, because she was despondent. Her mother was away on vacation, and her father told her by intercom system that he was going out. Soon, the teen testified, Weberman appeared in her bedroom. "I was very depressed and wearing pajamas," the girl recalled on the stand. "He started undressing me and asked why I didn't want to see him anymore." The girl then graphically explained her recall of what happened next. "He put his penis on my vagina and it went in a little bit. " Did you say stop?, the prosecutor asked. "No, I didn't have the strength. I wasn't eating for three days. I wanted to die." The girl testified in February 2011 she finally told a female counselor affiliated with another organization about the abuse, and this woman brought her to the police to report Weberman. The counselor was arrested the same day. The victim said the abuse lasted for three years, from the time she was 12 until she was 15. She then met a boyfriend, whom she recently married several months ago. A number of the teen's friends from an alternative religious school turned up in court to offer support. One told PIX 11 she was 14, when she was abused by a 24 year old man. "I didn't report it," the 18 year old, known as C.B., told P IX 11. Would you report it now, we asked. "Honestly, no," the young woman said. "I wish I had the strength she did." Another friend of the accuser, 18-year-old Debra, said she was just 14 years old when her grandfather, who's 50 years older than her, started sexually abusing her. Did you ask why he was doing this, PIX 11 asked. "His excuse was 'I love you,'" Debra replied. A 32-year-old man named Joey Diangello told PIX 11 Weberman once worked for his family. Diangello was interviewed by PIX 11 in 2009, for a special report on sexual abuse in the ultra-Orthodox Jewish communities, and revealed to us he was raped in a mikvah bath in Williamsburg, by an unknown man, when he was just 7 years old. He remains haunted by the sexual assault and said he always felt uncomfortable around Weberman as a child, starting when he was 10. "I sat down on his lap, which was very inappropriate that I was sitting on his lap, and I felt an erection," Diangello said. "Being a survivor of rape, I knew what that was, and it scared the hell out of me." Weberman's defense attorney, George Farkas, told PIX 11, "This case will not be tried outside the courtroom. We are going to bring everything out." During cross-examination Tuesday afternoon, the defense team got the accuser to admit she developed an intense hatred for her religion—and certain members of her community. The defense will try to prove there was a motive for her allegations against Weberman. The case initially gained notoriety, after large sectors of the Williamsburg community joined together for a fundraiser... to get cash for Weberman's criminal defense costs.
Short Film in competition at the 60th Semaine de la Critique Court métrage en compétition à la 60e Semaine de la Critique
An Orthodox Rabbi who served as a religious counselor was convicted Monday of sexual abuse. Nechemya Weberman was found guilty in Brooklyn court of sustained abuse of a child and endangering the welfare of a child. His accuser, now 18, told investigators Weberman repeatedly abused her for a period of three years beginning when she was 12 years old. The 54-year-old was not a licensed counselor, but worked as such within his Brooklyn community. The case drew loud protests as members of his Hasidic sect held fundraisers for his legal defense. Weberman's lawyer tried to paint the victim as angry and vengeful because he betrayed her trust.
BROOKLYN - Orthodox Jewish leader Nechemya Weberman has been convicted of sexually abusing a girl he had counseled for three years in Brooklyn. The 54-year-old was convicted of 59 counts, including sustained sex abuse of a child and endangering the welfare of a child. The accuser, who is now 18 years old, testified that Weberman abused her repeatedly from the time she was 12 until she was 15. The trial has polarized a very insular community, with many taking Weberman's side. The Kings County District Attorney's Office says the girl's family has been ostracized for speaking out. Weberman now faces decades in prison.
Elinor Nechemya, réalisatrice de / director of MA SHELO NISHBAR (IF IT AIN'T BROKE)
A Miami Beach rabbi accused of molesting an 11-year-old girl will be released on house arrest and avoid jail while he awaits his trial, both the defense and prosecutors agreed Tuesday.
Chassidic Tales with Rav Shlomo Katz: Reb Nechemya's Careful Pesachdika Mouth (46) The Shlomo Katz Project depends on support from individual donors like you in order to continue creating original Torah and Music content, and to make it available to thousands across the globe. To support The Shlomo Katz Project please visit: 🤍theshlomokatzproject.com/donate We thank you in advance for your support. Join our WhatsApp Group to stay up to date on all events: 🤍
🛎 AT Daily! ☀️ Let’s Get Nechemya Out Of The Sun!! 🏘 Eruvin 44, Talmud Support our work: donate.accidentaltalmudist.org Topics covered: Chapter 4, Mishna 1, 2 Lost in Torah study, Nechemya wandered out of his Shabbos boundary. Rav Chisda pointed it out to Rav Nachman, who answered, build a human enclosure connecting him to his boundary so he can reenter. Rav Chisda hesitated. Rava and Rav Nachman bar Yitzhak speculate, what is Rav Chisda’s dilemma? Is he wondering whether Nechemya can roam within such an enclosure now that he’s limited to to his 4 cubits? Or whether he can reenter if the new enclosure doesn’t quite reach his Shabbos boundary, falling 2 cubits short? Or whether a wall of humans may be constructed at all on Shabbos? New Mishna: one may leave his Shabbos boundary for a mitzvah purpose like saving a life, witnessing the new moon in order to testify before the Sanhedrin that the new month has begun, or to fight a battle. If he leaves his boundary, however, and then learns his service is no longer required, what should he do? Opening song: Mashiach by Zusha SUBSCRIBE to get notified For more wisdom from Sal, head to 🤍 Join our monthly email list to get notified about AT articles, podcasts, and more at 🤍
Short Film in competition at the 60th Semaine de la Critique Court métrage en compétition à la 60e Semaine de la Critique
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends עזרא ונחמיה - הרב יוסף אות Rav Yosef Ote - Sunday at 6pm
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends Rav Yosef Ote - הרב יוסף אות Sunday at 6pm
Orthodox Jewish women hissed from the back of the courtroom, as the first defense witness took the stand in the case of a 54-year old counselor charged with sexually abusing a young student in Williamsburg, starting in early 2008, when she was just 12. "May you stumble on your words, with a pox on your head," seethed one woman from the Satmar Hasidic community of Williamsburg, where the young accuser once attended school. One of the supervising principals of Bais Rachel School, BenZion Feurewerger, testified that the girlin 6th gradestarted dressing immodestly. The girl, now 17, was ultimately sent for counseling and testified last week that Nechemya Weberman turned therapy sessions in his home office into opportunities to sexually molest her, over a three year period. Rabbi Feurewerger acknowledged that the girl got good grades in school. Among her offenses: not buttoning the top button on a blouse and asking questions about the thick tights ultra-Orthodox Hasidic girls are required to wear. "She has to follow the rules: dress like everybody and behave like everybody," the principal testified. Outside court, the accuser's cousin, Miriam Schwartz, responded to the teenager being called a "whore" by an upstate Hasidic grand rebbe. "They just don't want to believe it, so it's just a way of putting down the victim," Schwartz said. The teen testified that she believed her father and Weberman acted together to have a former boyfriend arrested for statutory rape. The charges were later dropped. Some Orthodox Jewish men who support the accuser laughed in the back of the courtroom, when the principal denied there was a "modesty committee" in Williamsburg that forces women to stay in line with the strict rules of their community. The defendant, Nechemya Weberman, is expected on the witness stand at some point on Wednesday. The teen's supporters were planning a rally in Williamsburg Tuesday night, to denounce witness intimidation in this case. The teen's photo was even snapped on the witness stand and posted online. Abe Rubinstein, whose son testified against a different Orthodox man last year, told PIX 11: "We know what's going on behind the scenes in the community. Rabbis are molesting kids in the community and the kids are afraid to come out."
Attend our next event! Find more info at 🤍 More of NFMLA Twitter - 🤍NFMLA Facebook - 🤍 Instagram - 🤍NFMLA Submit your film today! - 🤍 NewFilmmakers Los Angeles (NFMLA) is an LA based 501(c)(3) nonprofit dedicated towards advancing the careers of emerging independent filmmakers and preserving Los Angeles’s legacy as a mecca for international film culture and filmmaking. NFMLA is designed to showcase innovative works by emerging filmmakers from around the world, providing the Los Angeles community of entertainment professionals and filmgoers with a constant surge of monthly screening events. NFMLA provides a forum where filmmakers can be recognized for their contributions, have open audience discussions about their projects and connect with industry professionals for insight on distribution, production, acquisition and representation.
Prime Time Parsha - Parshat Emor Featured Speakers Gavi Green & Nechemya Rosenzweig Sponsored by Gabi Baron (14-16) In memory of Sarah bas Reuven a"H Chapter Breakdown: 00:00 - Intro 00:25 - Rav Shimshon 00:55 - Gavi Green 06:42 - Nechemya Rosenzweig
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends עזרא ונחמיה - הרב יוסף אות Rav Yosef Ote - Sunday at 6pm
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends Rav Yosef Ote - הרב יוסף אות Sunday at 6pm
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends Rav Yosef Ote - הרב יוסף אות Sunday at 6pm
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends Rav Yosef Ote - הרב יוסף אות Sunday at 6pm
🕎 Like & subscribe to get daily Intresting videos from the Jewish Music World! - Subscribe to our YouTube channel: 🤍 - Or Sign up to receive our videos via: TikTok - 🤍 Instagram - 🤍 Snapchat - 🤍 - #Jewish #Music #Wedding
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends Rav Yosef Ote - הרב יוסף אות Sunday at 6pm
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends Rav Yosef Ote - הרב יוסף אות Sunday at 6pm
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends עזרא ונחמיה - הרב יוסף אות Rav Yosef Ote - Sunday at 6pm
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends Rav Yosef Ote - הרב יוסף אות Sunday at 6pm
Finallyafter much delay ..and angst.. The wedding of this beautiful couple took place in NY on July 6th THIS VERSION WILL SHOW THE INTERACTION BETWEEN THE VIRTUAL GUEST Hosted By Akiva Balter & Avigdor Hyman : MECHY, LEAH and the REST OF THE WERZBERGER clan along with the GOLDSCHMIDS produced planned and executed a Global Simcha (Grandparents from Israel...and more) Check Out Jeremy Melnicks photo collage, Live stream By Nir and Zoom pics by Bennycombined for a great Virtual experience. NECHEMIA & AVIGAIL WEDDING - A New York State of Mind - Finally July 6 2020-
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends עזרא ונחמיה - הרב יוסף אות Rav Yosef Ote - Sunday at 6pm
Ezra & Nechemya: Two Leaders Two Legends Rav Yosef Ote - הרב יוסף אות Sunday at 6pm