Vanguard News Network
Pieville
VNN Media
VNN Digital Library
VNN Broadcasts

Old September 21st, 2009 #1
Robert Bandanza
Banned
 
Join Date: Mar 2006
Location: JUDEAware, originally MassaJEWsetts
Posts: 8,901
jewsign Even behind bars, Jewish life flourishes in the US

STORMVILLE, New York (JTA) - On a breezy summer afternoon at the maximum-security prison that dominates the landscape here, inmates gather around a stocky bearded man as he prepares to blow a shofar.

Philip Drelich sounds one long blast and then the crowd disperses, off to their daily routine.

Just like many of their coreligionists on the outside, the Jews at this prison, the Green Haven Correctional Facility in upstate New York, were mindful of the daily shofar-blowing ritual during the month of Elul ahead of the High Holy Days.

It's one of many Jewish observances performed by inmates who have ended up here for crimes ranging from the possession of illegal firearms and drugs to rape and murder.

Despite the unique circumstances - long prison sentences, convictions for heinous crimes - Jewish practice is not cast aside at the door of American prisons. Some inmates even use their time to embrace a religion they long had neglected.

"I certainly became more aware of religion here in jail," says Lewis Scharff, a convicted murderer at Green Haven who spoke to JTA at the prison synagogue, just opposite the Catholic chapel. "We have two people who found tshuva [repentance] during their time here," he said.

Walking down the long, bleak corridors of Green Haven, which are kept immaculate by an army of inmates constantly mopping the floors, a number of convicts wearing kippot and tzitzit are visible. Every morning and on Shabbat, about 12 regulars show up for prayer services at the prison synagogue; more than double that number are expected for the High Holy Days. On Pessah, inmates lead the Seders.

On Succot, says Drelich, who is at Green Haven serving a life sentence for murder, the prison will have two succot: "One for those in solitary confinement, and the other in the general quarters."

"A Yid is a Yid, a Jew is a Jew," says Rabbi Zvi Boyarsky, who visits Green Haven frequently to minister to inmates. "The soul remains pure."

Maximum-security prisons in the United States have relatively few Jewish inmates, according to the Aleph Institute, a Chabad-affiliated organization that reaches out to Jews behind bars. Most Jews in the prison system end up at lower-security facilities for crimes such as fraud or tax evasion.

But Green Haven has enough Jewish inmates that it is the only prison in New York state with a hot kosher kitchen, where food is prepared on site rather than being brought in pre-cooked from the outside. Of the 1,984 inmates there, 150 are listed as Jewish. About 70 are on the kosher meal plan.

Boyarsky says he doesn't think of the crimes committed by the inmates to whom he offers help.

"We're not helping them get out of prison, we're helping them spiritually - to bring them to a state of mind which had they had exposure to, maybe they wouldn't have done what they did," he says.

Despite the rigid nature of prison life, authorities say they go out of their way to allow Jewish worship and practice. Jewish inmates at Green Haven have a synagogue and a rabbi who works part-time five days a week. And as at all prisons in New York state, the inmates are permitted to keep tefillin in their cells.

"I had a prison guard who asked me, 'Do we really want to let them have these leather straps? They might harm themselves with them, or someone else,'" recalls Mark Leonard, director of Ministerial Family and Volunteer Services for New York State. "But it's important for them to have the phylacteries, and in my seven years on the job I've never heard of any problems."

It is not known exactly how many of America's 2.3 million inmates are Jewish. The Aleph Institute says it helps 4,000 inmates and their families, and that at least another 1,000 Jews are in prisons. But data provided by New York prison authorities suggest there are many more. In New York alone, officials say about 3,800 inmates have identified themselves on official forms as Jewish.

In recent years, the identifiably Jewish prison population of New York state has risen dramatically - to 6 percent of the prison population today from 1% a decade ago. Rather than indicating a hike in crimes committed by Jews, state officials say it's a result of a dramatic increase in the number of convicts choosing to identify religiously - usually for the benefits they entail.

"By declaring yourself part of a religious group - any religious group - you become entitled to rights, like being able to grow your hair or a beard," Leonard says. Other benefits include the right to congregate, wear religious garments and have access to reading material, to name a few.

"Also," he says, "there is this notion that the kosher food is better."

The hub of Jewish life at Green Haven is the kosher kitchen, which dishes out three meals a day. The kosher supervisor, Rony Berkoviz, an Israeli-born inmate jailed for a sex offense, proudly displays the separate dairy, meat and parve sets of dishes and cutlery and explains how the kitchen works.

Berkoviz laughs when asked if the kosher food is better than the standard fare.

"About 90% of the time it is exactly the same food," he says. "It might just be a little more cooked, that's all. But some people think it's better."

Jewish inmates say that although relations between Jewish and non-Jewish convicts at the prison are good, the Jews tend to stick to their own kind in the highly stratified society.

None of the Jewish inmates interviewed at Green Haven say they have encountered anti-Semitism, and state prison authorities say hate groups are not tolerated.

However, the Aleph Institute said that some Jewish inmates in other states have reported being harassed by anti-Semitic groups like the Aryan Brotherhood.

"Being religious here is good, and we're not harassed by anyone," says Demian Barovick, who is in Green Haven for drug possession and assists Berkoviz in the kosher kitchen. "I have an excellent job where I get to hang out with fellow Jews."

"If you respect everyone, then you get no problems," Berkoviz adds.

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satelli...cle%2FShowFull

Many Jewish inmates at Green Haven are old and frail. Some use walking canes and require routine medical checkups. At times it takes some mental effort to recall that they are rapists and murderers.

Drelich, who has been at Green Haven for 29 years and is the most veteran Jewish inmate there, says observing Judaism in the prison is no different than anywhere else, with one notable exception. He points to the notice board near the entrance to the prison's synagogue.

"The only difference is that instead of putting 'Have a healthy, peaceful new year,' we put, 'Have a healthy, free and peaceful new year.'"

http://www.jpost.com/servlet/Satelli...cle%2FShowFull
 
Old September 22nd, 2009 #2
Don
Junior Member
 
Join Date: Apr 2009
Posts: 8
Default Good Life

>The hub of Jewish life at Green Haven is the kosher kitchen, which >dishes out three meals a day. The kosher supervisor, Rony >Berkoviz, an Israeli-born inmate jailed for a sex offense, proudly >displays the separate dairy, meat and parve sets of dishes and >cutlery and explains how the kitchen works.

Three meals a day to a sentenced sexual predator? Such a life!

I eat two small meals a day and try to make ends meet for my family and myself.

And this incarcerated jew is living the good life? I would be more than happy to expedite this man's departure and save the tax payers some money.
 
Reply

Share


Thread
Display Modes


All times are GMT -5. The time now is 08:01 PM.
Page generated in 0.28876 seconds.