Pubdate: Sun, Sept 5 1999 Source: Observer, The (UK) Copyright: Guardian Media Group plc. 1999 Contact: http://www.guardian.co.uk/ DRUGS CRAZE SHOCKS HASIDIC FAMILIES Friday night at a cramped bar in Greenwich Village: a punk band called Sick are grinding into high-voltage, cacophonous action. The pills are popping in the lavatories. But Sick and their sweat-drenched fans are not the regular East Village extra-terrestrials, and the parents of this lot would be especially mortified to know that this is how they are spending Shabbat eve. They are Orthodox Jews, from the doctrinaire - usually straight-living and invariably private - Hasidic community. But the Orthodox community is riven by menacing, new and strange tribulations. It has been buffeted by a series of scandals involving drugs and wild youth. 'This is,' says Rabbi Joel Dinnerstein - one of the few community leaders even to acknowledge the scale of the hidden crisis - 'a problem that the Jewish community has never had to deal with before, and they're shaking in their boots.' In a trial due to open in Brooklyn this month, Hasidic teenagers have emerged as the carefully-selected couriers in a massive drug-smuggling operation. The importers chose well, for Hasidic youths - with their side locks, yarmulkas, prayer scrolls and long coats - rarely receive more than a respectful but curious nod as they pass through customs at JFK airport. The arrests follow the conviction in July of two rabbis - one of them Bernard Grunfeld, a prominent figure in Brooklyn's Bobover Hasidic community - for their role in laundering millions of dollars for Colombian cocaine dealers. In a bizarre twist, the judge put another defendant, Abraham Reiss, under house arrest when it emerged that his brother was serving a prison sentence for the same offence, and that to have both their sons in jail would be 'a double hardship' for their parents. Meanwhile, The Observer has learned that at a series of closed meetings, parents and leaders of the Hasidic community have implored the authorities in Brooklyn to help them clamp down on a hard drug craze spreading fast among their teenagers. The effects of these revelations are far-reaching - detonating bewildered panic and shame. Psychologist Benzion Twerski, an expert on addiction, says that 'there are segments of the community that literally do not believe it is happening. But, he says, 'I am opening wounds that need to be opened.' Parents, he says, are delaying treatment or standing by as their children get hooked on ecstasy, amphetamines and other drugs, simply because they refuse to accept what is happening, or have no idea what to do. The director of one project for addicts, Maxine Yuttal, says: 'The treatment is often thought to be as bad as the disease.' In defiance of such fears, Rabbi Dinnerstein runs a club called the Ohr Ki Tov Growth and Transformation Centre in Brooklyn, which combines a 12-step addiction recovery programme with intense study of the Torah scriptures. Among those attending is 'Jonah', a computer programming student who had developed cocaine and amphetamine habits so severe that, he admits, 'I'd lost all sense of time and place like, even my own identity. I'd forgotten that I had any role to play in life. The drugs were dominating everything.' He had fled home to live in a derelict building in Queens 'sooner than have my parents or the Rabbi find out'. One of the workers at Ohr Ki Tov, known simply as 'David', himself went into drug rehab 14 years ago - now he is 44 and a stockbroker. But, he says, he was utterly ostracised in the Crown Heights neighbourhood where he lived once word leaked about his habit. 'I don't think there was one single person in my neighbourhood who called me,' he recalls. Earlier this year, Mask was formed (Mothers Allied Saving Kids), offering support meetings and mediating between Orthodox families with youngsters on drugs and the health authorities. The group's founder wants to be known only as 'Ruth'. 'People just did not know what to do,' she says, 'but now we do not and cannot sweep it under the carpet any more.' After one Mask meeting recently, the office of District Attorney Charles Hynes was besieged by parents asking for the police in Brooklyn to end a customary practice of handing Hasidic youths found with drugs over to their parents for disciplining by the family and religious authorities. The policy is similar to that practised until recently in Pennsylvania among the tight-knit Amish communities - but abandoned as drug use expanded. Many Hasidic parents now want the children to be arrested and tried, since the damage done to the name of the community is thought to be outweighed by the advantages of mandatory rehab. In an upcoming trial in Brooklyn, seven people - from New York, Miami, Amsterdam and Israel - are charged with importing more than a million tabs of pure MDMA (Ecstasy) into the US, and laundering millions of dollars in profits. Court papers filed at Eastern District Court of New York reveal how the six Jewish men and one woman allegedly trawled around the Hasidic community of Williamsburg in search of young men who would bring in their drugs for resale at vastly marked-up prices - and would not get caught. They are said to have found their quarry among Hasidic youths already familiar with the drug scene, who were offered $1,500 and a free trip to Europe in return for bringing back 'contraband'. The indictments say that some were offered a further $200 if they could recruit a new courier, and that each courier could bring in up to 45,000 tablets during their illicit careers. In the Village, Sick have finished their set, and a group of four boys - - one wearing ringlets, the others in skull caps - are sitting like zombies on a step beside a fenced-in basketball court at the end of Bleecker Street, blending in by bombing out on a mix of cheap wine in a brown paper bag and (they say) 'pot and whizz'. 'It's a whole lot of fussing,' says one of them - Benjamin - in a reedy Brooklyn drawl, rolling his eyes. 'There ain't no addiction problem.' 'We are people living in the same society as any other people,' says his friend who declines to give a name. 'Why shouldn't it fuck us over more than anyone else?' It seems a fair argument - and that is the nightmare of his community. - --- MAP posted-by: manemez j lovitto