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Tuesday, September 27, 2011

My 2 cents on Lubovitch sect wars

Though the casual anti-Semitism in this NY Post article about Lubovitch infighting (after the jump) is a bit too much to bear, I'm pleased to see Krinsky is taking a stand against the messianics who have conquered Lubovitch headquarters. I don't echo Pope Alderstan and say that the messianics must be expelled from Judaism, or even from Lubovitch, but it doesn't seem unreasonable to ask them to vacate a building they don't own, especially if they are using that building as platform for beliefs the building owner finds reprehensible. 

Its also good to see that the secular courts have been asked to settle this dispute. Its an open secret that Jewish courts are corrupt.. Generally, you only insist on having your case heard by one of them if you already have the judges in the bag. The growing acceptance of this unpleasant fact advances the cause of justice, and also the cause of ending the disgrace and reforming the Beth Dins.

Article after the jump


Bah, chumbug.

A powerful rabbi is acting like the Grinch who stole Yom Kippur -- slapping the congregation of Lubavitch World Headquarters with an eviction notice right before the high holy days.

Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, leader of the Chabad Lubavitch movement, served the Brooklyn congregation’s board of governors with a notice giving them 10 days to clear out of 770 Eastern Parkway on Friday, hours before the Sabbath and less than a week before Rosh Hashanah, which begins tomorrow night.

“For them to initiate a secular court action on the eve of the new year, to have the people vacate the premises, you’re talking about thousands of people coming from all over the world, to have them vacate the premise several days before the day of atonement is beyond comprehension,” said Crown Heights business owner and longtime congregant Yaakov Spritzer, 63.
Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky

Krinsky, essentially the de facto owner of the massive synagogue at 770 Eastern Parkway, has been feuding with its board of governors for years.

The board, called the Gabboim, believe Krinsky’s late mentor, Grand Rebbe Menachem Schneerson, is the Messiah, and it has blocked Krinsky from putting up a plaque in Schneerson’s memory because they don’t consider him dead.

They’ve also blocked Krinsky -- who was Scheerson’s aide until his death in 1994 and named the sole executor of his will -- from speaking at the synagogue.

Krinsky has countered by trying to boot the board in an apparent bid to seize more control for himself and the other rabbi Schneerson left in a position of power, Avraham Shemtov.

An earlier attempt to toss the board from the building was dismissed on technical grounds by a state appeals court this past March.

Eli Cohen, 56, the executive director of the Jewish Community Council, said Krinsky should have taken his case to a Jewish tribunal known as the Beth Din.

“The secular court is not the place to litigate issues of religion,” Cohen said.

Edward Rudofsky, the lawyer for the congregation and the Gabboim, said, “I am actively consulting with the clients at this point to decide how they want to proceed and respond.”

Krinsky’s lawyer and spokesman declined comment on the disputE


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