S***HOLE DOES NOT QUITE DEFINE THIS PARTICULAR JEWISH COMMUNITY!
Amidst a growing conversation about child sexual abuse prevention in the Jewish community, allegations of rape met with community inaction forces reflection.
For three young boys from Baltimore, Camp Shoresh, an Orthodox day camp tucked into the gently rolling hills of Frederick County in western Maryland, must have seemed a child’s paradise.
It
 had a twisty water slide, a spacious game room packed with pool, 
ping-pong and foosball tables, a zip line, a climbing wall reaching into
 the sky and a creek winding through the grounds, perfect for nature 
hikes.
But in the summer of 2015, dark clouds pierced paradise.
Soon after Zev, then 7, Boaz, then 8, and 
Adam, then 7 (not their real names), started spending their days at the 
camp in late June and early July, each boy’s parents began to notice 
disturbing changes in their children’s behavior.
Zev, a sensitive, intellectual child, began 
waking up in the middle of the night screaming. Later that summer he 
complained of headaches and stomach aches, and he began wetting his bed.
Boaz, an active, “always laughing” kid, began 
acting out — shouting and becoming violent with his siblings, displaying
 “explosive” episodes of anger, his parents said. During a family drive,
 Boaz took off his seat belt, fell to the floor of the moving car and 
started screaming and crying.
Adam’s mother sensed something was wrong when 
the usually energetic and curious child started complaining of horrible 
stomach aches and developed a tick. He smeared feces on the walls, and 
he started to believe that “monsters lived in bathrooms.”
The connective tissue tying the boys’ similar 
stories together is Rabbi Steven (Shmuel) Krawatsky, who in the summer 
of 2015 served as the head of the lower boys’ division at Camp Shoresh.

Campers
 at Camp Shoresh, where Rabbi Shmuel Krawatsky
was the head of the lower boys division in the summer of 2015
was the head of the lower boys division in the summer of 2015
Rabbi Krawatsky, 40, has worked in Jewish 
education for more than two decades and is considered to be a highly 
respected, charismatic leader who creates close personal relationships 
with his students.
Before moving to Baltimore in 2003, he worked as a Judaic studies teacher at HAFTR, a large Jewish day school in the Five Towns area and as the youth director at the White Shul in Far Rockaway.
Married and the father of four, he lives in Baltimore and teaches middle school Judaic studies at Beth Tfiloh, the local Modern Orthodox day school, and runs youth programming at Suburban Orthodox Toras Chaim, a large Orthodox synagogue in Baltimore. He began working at Camp Shoresh, an outreach, or kiruv, camp, in the early 2000s.
Before moving to Baltimore in 2003, he worked as a Judaic studies teacher at HAFTR, a large Jewish day school in the Five Towns area and as the youth director at the White Shul in Far Rockaway.
Married and the father of four, he lives in Baltimore and teaches middle school Judaic studies at Beth Tfiloh, the local Modern Orthodox day school, and runs youth programming at Suburban Orthodox Toras Chaim, a large Orthodox synagogue in Baltimore. He began working at Camp Shoresh, an outreach, or kiruv, camp, in the early 2000s.
The boys’ parents describe behavior that 
experts in the field of child sexual abuse label as “grooming.” Rabbi K,
 as he is known around Baltimore, took a special interest in each child,
 giving them gifts (a signed basketball in Boaz’s case, davening prizes 
in Adam’s). Two of the three sets of parents recalled receiving phone 
calls from Rabbi K early in the camp season offering to give their sons 
private, one-on-one “social skills” lessons to improve their behavior. 
In the phone conversation, he praised each boy, calling them “special.”
Adam’s mother recalled Rabbi Krawatsky telling
 her over the phone that he had taken her son into the camp locker room 
to reprimand him for “inappropriate” behavior. He had gone with him 
alone into the locker room in order “not to embarrass him,” she recalls 
him explaining.
Toward the end of camp that summer, the boys’ 
stories of alleged sexual abuse at the hands of Rabbi Krawatsky began to
 spill out, first to their parents and then to staff at Child Protective
 Services (CPS) in Frederick County, Md. Two of the alleged victims 
underwent forensic interviews.
Rabbi Krawatsky declined to speak directly 
with The Jewish Week. His attorney said the rabbi continues to proclaim 
his complete innocence and denies that any misconduct took place.

Rabbi
 Shmuel Krawatsky is fondly called “Rabbi K” by many in the Baltimore 
Orthodox community. Via rabbishmuelkrawatsky.blogspot.com
The Jewish Week reviewed the transcript of one
 of the forensic interviews, which provides abundant and disturbing 
detail of what took place, according to one of the young boys.
According to the transcript, the rabbi, who 
was naked and alone in the pool changing room with two alleged victims, 
touched the young boys “inappropriately” before asking them to touch his
 “private parts” in exchange for $100. The report also states that the 
rabbi threatened the young boys not to tell their parents what had 
happened and hit one boy in the stomach because “he was mad because we 
didn’t do what he said; touch his private parts.” (The parents of the 
young boy recalled finding bruises on their son’s stomach in July.) 
Similar incidents took place three times over the course of the summer, 
according to the report.
The first alleged victim interviewed by CPS 
later revealed to a private therapist that Rabbi Krawatsky had anally 
raped him, according to the boy’s parents. (The therapist, a mandated 
reporter, reported the rape to the Frederick County Child Advocacy 
center on Nov. 9, 2017, according to an email exchange between the boy’s
 parents and the therapist.)
Another disclosed to his parents and to CPS 
that he had been anally and orally raped by Rabbi Krawatsky. (The 
alleged victim disclosed details of the abuse to CPS in early 2017. A 
time lapse between sexual abuse and a victim’s disclosure of the abuse 
is expected, child trauma experts say.)
Frederick County CPS declined to release a 
transcript of the forensic interview, according to the victims’ parents.
 CPS did not respond to requests for comment.
The third child initially did not disclose 
abuse when he was interviewed by a CPS caseworker and the Frederick 
County Police on Dec. 22, 2015.
“I simply cannot stay silent when I know that this man is still working with children.”
However, according to his father, he later 
disclosed to a private therapist that Rabbi Krawatsky had propositioned 
him to touch his penis in the pool locker room two times over the course
 of the summer. The child said Rabbi Krawatsky was naked and verbally 
abusive towards him, threatening to “punish” him if he did not comply 
with his proposition, according to the young boy’s father. (These 
details are corroborated in the CPS transcript of the first alleged 
victim’s forensic interview.)
In the first two cases, CPS case workers, 
trained extensively to detect child sexual abuse and trauma, concluded 
that Rabbi Krawatsky was “indicated” for child sexual abuse. (In the 
third case, CPS ruled that sexual abuse was “unsubstantiated.”) These 
CPS terms are critical to understanding the case.
According to Sandra Barnes, assistant attorney
 general at Maryland Attorney General’s Office and the point person on 
cases that involve CPS, an “indication” from Child Protective Services 
means there was a “preponderance of evidence” that sexual abuse took 
place.
“To issue an indication, CPS must be convinced
 that it is more likely sexual abuse occurred than that it did not 
occur,” she said. “Where there is all that smoke, there must be fire.”
“I’m fighting for my son’s childhood. You only get one. I want my son to have his.”
Rabbi Krawatsky appealed both determinations, a
 move that is not unusual, according to Barnes. In both instances, the 
cases were settled prior to an appellate ruling. In the end, CPS, in 
what amounts to a plea bargain, downgraded its determination from 
“indicated” to “unsubstantiated,” which means that there is not a 
preponderance of evidence that abuse took place.
Much of the Baltimore Orthodox community 
continues to vocally support and defend the rabbi, citing him as a warm 
and caring leader.
Rabbi Krawatsky stopped working at the camp 
after the summer of 2015, according to a letter sent out by the camp 
director to the “friends and families” of Camp Shoresh in February 2016 
addressing the “allegation … about improper conduct.”

Joel
 Avrunin, father of one of the alleged victims: “I’m fighting for my 
son’s childhood. You only get one. I want my son to have his.”
The parents of each child are still searching for answers. More
 than two years after the events of the summer of 2015, the boys are 
still struggling to deal with the effects of what allegedly took place, 
according to their parents. The three boys (two of whom are cousins) 
continue to disclose details about what they went through that summer, 
under the care of therapists trained in trauma-focused cognitive 
behavioral therapy.
“I simply cannot stay silent when I know that 
this man is still working with children,” said the mother of one of the 
alleged victims, who requested to remain anonymous to protect her son’s 
privacy. Though her preference would be to “bury my head in the sand and
 just move forward,” she feels compelled to speak out “to prevent future
 victims.”
“This nearly broke us,” said Joel Avrunin, 
Zev’s father, who met with me in mid-November. “I’m fighting for my 
son’s childhood. You only get one. I want my son to have his.”
An Anomalous Investigation
An investigation by The Jewish Week into the 
allegations against Rabbi Krawatsky paints a disturbing picture of how 
the Camp Shoresh case played out — from the perspectives of law 
enforcement, organizational “best practices” to guard against abuse, and
 the Orthodox community’s reaction.
The story comes as the Jewish community is in the midst of what many say is a long-overdue conversation about how to prevent child sexual abuse. A number of major philanthropists recently signed on to a pledge
 saying they would no longer fund schools and camps that do not put into
 place best practices to combat such abuse. Nonprofits have sprung up
 in an effort to guide Jewish institutions toward setting up policies to
 protect children. And the case comes as the Conservative movement is 
dealing with newly published allegations (and in some cases 
confirmation, as this newspaper reported) of sexual abuse carried out years ago by leaders in its youth arm, United Synagogue Youth.
“The more victims there are, the less likely it is that the accused is innocent.”
“It is extremely rare to have a false 
allegation of child sexual abuse,” said Victor Vieth, founder and senior
 director of the Gundersen National Child Protection Training Center and
 a nationally recognized expert in child sexual abuse prevention. “The 
more victims there are, the less likely it is that the accused is 
innocent.” A false allegation is akin to being “struck by lightning,” he
 said.
The likelihood that three separate allegations
 are false is “equivalent to the same person being struck by lightning 
three times. It is improbable enough to stagger the imagination.”
In the case of the Shoresh allegations, the 
police opened a criminal investigation in late August 2015, two days 
after the alleged sexual abuse had been reported to the Frederick County
 Sheriff’s Office, and a day after Zev went to the Child Advocacy Center
 for his forensic interview. The charges: sex offense in the third 
degree and sexual abuse of a minor.

Camp
 Shoresh in Frederick County in western Maryland.
Three boys who attended the camp in the summer of 2015 said they were sexually abused
by Rabbi Krawatsky.
Three boys who attended the camp in the summer of 2015 said they were sexually abused
by Rabbi Krawatsky.
But, experts assert, it may have been a flawed probe from the start.
According to the police report, obtained by 
The Jewish Week, the investigating detective, Michael P. Davies, brought
 Zev, his father and the CPS caseworker back to the scene of the alleged
 abuse — the pool changing room at camp. When they arrived at the camp, 
Davies met up with the camp’s director, Rabbi David Finkelstein. 
Together, Davies and Rabbi Finkelstein questioned Zev about the alleged 
incident.
Rabbi Finkelstein declined to comment for this story.
The likelihood that three separate allegations are false is “equivalent to the same person being struck by lightning three times. It is improbable enough to stagger the imagination.”
Zev’s father, Mr. Avrunin, recalled that the 
police detective, who was armed at the time, asked him to remain outside
 the changing room while his son was questioned. The move struck him as 
strange. Nonetheless, he complied. (A spokesperson for the Sheriff’s 
Office said that requesting a parent not to be present while a child 
victim is questioned is “standard procedure.”)
The investigative detective told The Jewish 
Week he was unable to provide comment for confidentiality reasons. He 
directed The Jewish Week to Maj. Tim Clarke, operations commander and 
spokesman at the Frederick County Sheriff’s Office. According to Clarke,
 taking a child victim back to the scene of the alleged crime is 
“normally not done.” However, in this case, the investigator felt it 
necessary because “the child may have been unclear of the location where
 the incident occurred.”
Sandra Barnes of the state attorney general’s 
office said bringing a victim back to the scene of an alleged crime just
 days after it was suspected to have taken place is “very unusual” and a
 tactic she has “never seen before.”

Camp Shoresh director, Rabbi Dave Finkelstein with campers.
The police investigation also does not include
 any video footage, photographs, sworn statements or witness 
testimonies, all methods of corroboration criminal investigators 
generally try to include, said Clarke. In this case, Davies must not 
have thought them “necessary,” said Clarke. Investigative tactics are 
left up to the police detective’s “discretion.”
The police report also indicates that Rabbi 
Finkelstein, the camp director, was involved in the criminal probe of 
his employee, Rabbi Krawatsky — an unusual circumstance, according to 
legal experts, given his apparent conflict of interest. The report 
states that Rabbi Finkelstein “asked several other counselors about 
changing habits at the pools changing rooms(s)” and that these 
counselors said that, unlike other counselors, Rabbi Krawatsky used a 
private pool utility room to change.
“This case has ‘all the earmarks typical of an investigation constructed to protect the perpetrator.'”
Maj. Clarke, who reviewed the case prior to an
 interview with The Jewish Week, said he was not aware that Finkelstein 
had been involved in the investigation; however, under normal 
circumstances, any information used by police is received via direct 
interviews or in-person statements.
According to Marci Hamilton, CEO and academic 
director of CHILD USA, a think tank dedicated to preventing child abuse,
 this case has “all the earmarks typical of an investigation constructed
 to protect the perpetrator.” (Hamilton, a distinguished legal scholar 
at the University of Pennsylvania, did not have access to the police 
report but was informed of the facts of the case.)
Further, a significant part of the criminal 
investigation — referenced by community leaders and Rabbi Krawatsky’s 
lawyer as evidence of his innocence — was a polygraph examination. On 
Sept. 11, 2015, Rabbi Krawatsky submitted to a polygraph examination at 
the Frederick County Sheriff’s Office, according to the police report. 
After the exam was completed, the officer who conducted the test advised
 Davies that “deception was NOT detected.”
Rabbi Krawatsky’s attorney cited the polygraph
 as evidence of his client’s innocence. “He [Krawatsky] immediately 
offered to take a polygraph test which he passed without question,” 
Rolle wrote to The Jewish Week in an email.
(The polygraph report was not included in the 
police report. The Frederick County Sheriff’s Office denied the victim’s
 father access to the polygraph report, according to a letter from the 
Frederick County Sheriff’s office. The letter did not cite a reason for 
the denial.)
Experts say the polygraph exam is unreliable,
 and polygraphs are not admissible as evidence in court.
The manual of the National Center for Prosecution of Child Abuse, an arm of the National District Attorneys’ Association, writes about the polygraph: “These investigative tools should never be the controlling factor in a decision about whether to proceed with a case.”
The manual of the National Center for Prosecution of Child Abuse, an arm of the National District Attorneys’ Association, writes about the polygraph: “These investigative tools should never be the controlling factor in a decision about whether to proceed with a case.”

Camp Shoresh is an Orthodox kiruv, or outreach, day camp 
On Dec. 8, 2015, Lindell Angel, assistant 
state’s attorney in Frederick County and the chief of the sex crimes and
 child abuse unit, decided not to pursue criminal charges against Rabbi 
Krawatsky “at this time.” After reviewing the case with Det. Davies on 
Dec. 2, the police report states Angel declined to prosecute due to “the
 lack of evidence and witnesses.”
In an email, Angel told The Jewish Week “it 
was apparent that the allegations of the complaint could not be 
corroborated, and furthermore were contradicted by other witnesses 
reported to be present as well as the physicality of the alleged scene 
of the reported event.”
The police report includes no witness 
testimony contradicting the alleged victims’ accounts. When asked for 
comment on why this seemingly pivotal testimony is absent, Maj. Clarke 
said, “I have no additional comments to add.”
“There is a common and grave misunderstanding out there that failure to prosecute exonerates the perpetrator. It does not.”
The threshold to prosecute a case — confidence
 that a crime can be proved “beyond a reasonable doubt” — is much higher
 than CPS’ threshold to “indicate” someone for sexual abuse, experts 
explain.
“Our threshold is not ‘beyond a reasonable doubt,’” said Barnes. Still, “To indicate, we have to be convinced abuse happened.”
Hamilton points out that the decision not to 
prosecute a case does not suggest the alleged abuser’s innocence. “There
 is a common and grave misunderstanding out there that failure to 
prosecute exonerates the perpetrator. It does not. It just means more 
evidence is needed,” she said. When the accused is a religious figure 
and beloved community member, gaining enough evidence to prosecute 
becomes increasingly difficult, she continued.
Hamilton pointed out, though, that “New 
victims can come forward at any point.” (In 2017, Maryland extended the 
statute of limitations for victims of child sexual abuse to age 38.)
Communal Silence & Cognitive Dissonance
The Orthodox community’s reaction to the 
allegations against Rabbi Krawatsky, which reaches from local leaders in
 Baltimore to the national umbrella group the Orthodox Union, is an 
example of what one abuse prevention expert called “cognitive 
dissonance.”
According to Shira M. Berkovits,
 an expert in abuse prevention, the inclination among community members 
to defend the accused is typical, even expected. (It was a pattern that 
was common in the sexual abuse case of National Council of Synagogue 
Youth Rabbi Baruch Lanner, a story first reported by The Jewish Week in 
2000.)
“When a respected religious leader is accused of a morally repugnant crime, the impulse not to believe goes to the core.”
“When a respected religious leader is accused 
of a morally repugnant crime, the impulse not to believe goes to the 
core,” said Berkovits, who holds a doctorate in psychology as well as a 
law degree.
[Berkovits writes more about the psychological factors that contribute to sexual abuse here.]
Indeed, the Baltimore community has rallied around the popular Rabbi Krawatsky.
Complicating the picture is the rabbi’s 
successful appeals of the Child Protective Services rulings that there 
was a preponderance of evidence to suggest that he had sexually abused 
two of the Baltimore boys; the term “unsubstantiated” may have left the 
impression that Rabbi Krawatsky was cleared when in fact it meant that 
there was not a preponderance of evidence of abuse.
During the appeal of the first case, which 
took place during early 2016, Rabbi Krawatsky was placed on leave by the
 Beth Tfiloh day school, his primary employer.
Speaking to The Jewish Week, Zipora Schorr, 
Beth Tfiloh’s director of education, said she was unaware that the rabbi
 had been indicated for sexual abuse in September 2015 or in March 2017.

Beth Tfiloh school where Rabbi Krawatsky is still employed.
In a subsequent email exchange, Schorr 
acknowledged that she “was informed of the indication via email on 
September 25, 2015 from Frederick County Child Protective Services 
unit.” She said Rabbi Krawatsky was immediately suspended and 
accompanied out of the building.
Schorr maintains she did not know about Rabbi Krawatsky’s second indication or his subsequent appeal.
According to experts, a successful appeal does
 not exonerate the accused. The case was closed on Feb. 10, 2016, after 
the parties settled the matter prior to any appellate review. The lawyer
 representing CPS and Rabbi Krawatsky’s attorney, Chris Rolle, reached a
 settlement to downgrade Rabbi Krawatsky’s “indication” to an 
“unsubstantiated” status.
Rabbi Krawatsky was immediately reinstated at Beth Tfiloh after the first appeal, with no further investigation by the school.
(Drew Fidler, the Baltimore Child Abuse Center
 representative Beth Tfiloh hired in June of 2017 to audit the school’s 
child sexual abuse prevention policies, affirmed that an 
“unsubstantiated” ruling does not indicate innocence.)
It is not unusual for CPS legal personnel to 
settle with an alleged abuser’s attorney, legal experts say.
“With limited financial and legal resources, CPS caseworkers will often choose to settle with the alleged abuser’s attorney, a preferable outcome to the indication being ruled out and the record destroyed,” said Barnes.
“With limited financial and legal resources, CPS caseworkers will often choose to settle with the alleged abuser’s attorney, a preferable outcome to the indication being ruled out and the record destroyed,” said Barnes.
“A high-priced attorney can browbeat CPS to downgrade that ‘indicated’ to ‘unsubstantiated.’ That’s not rare.”
Converting a ruling from “indicated” to 
“unsubstantiated” preserves a paper trail on the alleged abuser. (In 
Maryland, anyone with an “indicated” or “unsubstantiated” finding of 
child abuse is entered into a central confidential state database, 
according to the Maryland Department of Human Resources.)
Victor Veith, the child sex abuse expert, 
agreed: “A high-priced attorney can browbeat CPS to downgrade that 
‘indicated’ to ‘unsubstantiated,’” he said. “That’s not rare.”
(In Maryland, the third potential outcome of a
 CPS investigation is “ruled out,” meaning that based on the available 
information, child maltreatment did not occur. This determination was 
not reached in the cases involving Rabbi Krawatsky.)
Schorr, meanwhile, continues to affirm her belief in Krawatsky’s “complete innocence,” though she declined to explain why.
As an example of Rabbi Krawatsky’s popularity,
 last November, when Chaim Levin, an activist and advocate for child 
abuse victims, posted a warning about the rabbi on his Facebook wall, 
indignant responses poured in. Most of them attested to Rabbi 
Krawatsky’s exceptional character and fastidious care of the children 
under his watch. (Levin previously worked for The Jewish Week as an 
editorial intern.)
To date, the Nov. 10 post has received nearly 70 comments, almost exclusively defending the rabbi.
“I can prove to you that Rabbi K is innocent. 
Stop hurting HIS children by bringing up a case that was thoroughly 
investigated and thrown out. It is honorable to protect kids. It is 
awful to slander an innocent person,” one mother wrote.
One commenter posted about his “multiple 1 on 1
 lunch and learns with the accused as a middle schooler” and recalls 
going over to the rabbi’s house “for sleepovers as an elementary school 
student” as evidence of his trustworthiness.
The thread also contains vicious verbal attacks against Levin (who said he received multiple threats) and the victims’ families.
The OU’s Knowledge — And Apparent Inaction
In September of 2016, more than a year after 
the allegations against Rabbi Krawatsky surfaced, the Orthodox Union’s 
Yachad, a national organization that works to include individuals with 
disabilities in Jewish life, struck up a collaboration with Suburban 
Orthodox synagogue in Baltimore to create a Teen Inclusion Minyan, a 
prayer service catering to children and teens with disabilities.
Rabbi Krawatsky, the synagogue youth director, was appointed to lead the Yachad program in addition to his job at Beth Tfiloh.
Days after the new Yachad minyan began to 
advertise, several different individuals approached the Orthodox Union 
with concerns about Rabbi Krawatsky’s appointment. David Ohsie, a 
concerned father of eight living in the Baltimore Orthodox community, 
communicated his concerns to Deborah Rockoff, Yachad’s director of 
national programs, via email and phone for nearly two months.
(Rockoff, who did not respond to requests for 
comment, assured Ohsie that the OU was going to remove Rabbi Krawatsky 
from his position of leadership, according to Ohsie. Rabbi Krawatsky was
 not removed from the special needs minyan.)
Upon receiving complaints, Jeffrey Lichtman, 
international director of Yachad, conducted a “preliminary 
investigation” into the rabbi, according to Lichtman. (The Yachad 
employee tasked with investigating the matter had no training in cases 
of child sexual abuse, Lichtman said.)

“Rabbi K” in the classroom. Much of the Baltimore community has rallied behind him. Via rabbishmuelkrawatsky.blogspot.com
The OU reached out to two independent groups 
for further information: the Gundersen National Child Protection 
Training Center and GRACE, an organization that has in the past helped 
Christian organizations respond to abuse. Both organizations confirmed 
to The Jewish Week that Lichtman reached out regarding the matter of 
Rabbi Krawatsky in November 2016. Both strongly recommended that the OU 
engage a third party to conduct an independent investigation into what 
Boz Tchividjian, founder of GRACE, described as the “very serious 
allegation in Baltimore County.”
(The OU has a fund set aside to help member synagogues investigate abuse claims.)
The Gundersen and GRACE organizations said the
 OU expressed interest in retaining their expert personnel to conduct an
 investigation into the matter. Both organizations said Lichtman 
requested proposals for conducting an investigative assessment. Both 
independently took the time to prepare these proposals for the OU, but 
said they did not hear back from Lichtman
.
.
Lichtman said he did not follow through with 
these experts because “he [Rabbi Krawatsky] was not an employee so we 
did not conduct further investigation.”
Results of the OU’s internal investigation prompted the OU to “immediately disassociate from this person [Rabbi Krawatsky] and not be involved with him in any way, shape or form.”
Meanwhile, the results of the OU’s internal 
investigation, which unearthed sexual abuse allegations made against the
 rabbi, prompted Lichtman to “immediately disassociate from this person 
[Rabbi Krawatsky] and not be involved with him in any way, shape or 
form,” he told The Jewish Week. Lichtman said he advised his fellow OU 
staff members not to partner with Rabbi Krawatsky on any OU-sponsored 
programs.
In December 2016, nearly two months after 
initial concerns about the rabbi leading the Yachad minyan were brought 
to the OU’s attention, Yachad dropped its name from the special teen 
service.
But the special needs minyan, under the leadership of Rabbi Krawatsky, continued, according to the synagogue’s weekly bulletins. (A phone call to the synagogue last month confirmed that Rabbi Krawatsky is still the youth director and still coordinates programming for special needs children.)
But the special needs minyan, under the leadership of Rabbi Krawatsky, continued, according to the synagogue’s weekly bulletins. (A phone call to the synagogue last month confirmed that Rabbi Krawatsky is still the youth director and still coordinates programming for special needs children.)
Lichtman said that, at the time, he “informed 
our [Yachad] participants who would potentially be involved in the 
program” that the OU had decided not to work with Rabbi Krawatsky.
The OU took no further steps to inform the 
Baltimore Orthodox community of its concerns about Rabbi Krawatsky. 
Lichtman said: “The OU has no mechanism to communicate with the 
community aside from telling the rabbi” of the congregation.
Lichtman said he personally informed Rabbi 
Shmuel Silber, rabbi of the synagogue hosting the Yachad minyan, about 
his concerns regarding Rabbi Krawatsky. In a phone interview with The 
Jewish Week, Lichtman said he “informed” Rabbi Silber over the phone 
that conducting an independent investigation is the recommended best 
practice.
Rabbi Silber did not respond to several 
requests for comment. However, Baltimore community members say that 
Rabbi Silber remains vocally supportive of Rabbi Krawatsky and convinced
 of his innocence.
[In August 2016, The Rabbinical Council of America released a proclamation acknowledging
 that sexual abuse “destroys lives” and recognizing how the community 
has failed in the past to adequately help victims and “hold perpetrators
 accountable.” Rabbi Silber, a former executive committee member of the 
RCA, is a signatory on the proclamation.]
Lichtman said he also informed Beth Tfiloh of 
the OU’s decision to remove Rabbi Krawatsky from all their programming. 
Beth Tfiloh’s Zipora Schorr emailed The Jewish Week that the school 
“never received any notification by the OU of its decision to sever all 
ties with Rabbi Krawatsky.”
Lichtman said he believes the OU followed best
 practices in responding in this case. He said: “We did everything we 
needed to do to protect our people.”
“We did everything we needed to do to protect our people.”
During the summer of 2016, NCSY Camp Sports, 
an all-boys sleepaway camp sponsored by the Orthodox Union, hosted Rabbi
 Krawatsky as their special Shabbat guest. He slept on-site and 
conducted learning workshops with campers.
According to NCSY’s Conduct, Policy and 
Behavioral Standards manual, volunteer hires who interact with teens are
 hired only after various background checks and an interview.
The Jewish Week reached out to Rabbi Jon 
Green, NCSY Camp Sports’ director, to inquire who conducted the 
background check into Rabbi Krawatsky. Rabbi Green assured this reporter
 that he would “100 percent” respond to the question.
“But,” he said, “you do know Rabbi K was 
totally cleared, right?” His source: a “passing conversation” with a 
“mutual friend” who knows Rabbi Krawatsky. (Rabbi Green did not respond 
to The Jewish Week’s question about who conducted the background check.)
“The potential danger to children should be far greater than any other concern.”
Rabbi Yosef Blau, a longtime spiritual adviser
 at Yeshiva University and advocate for victims of child sexual abuse in
 the Orthodox community, said that “not having enough evidence [to 
convict someone] of child sexual abuse is a ridiculous standard” for the
 individuals the community chooses to teach its children.
“The potential danger to children should be 
far greater than any other concern,” Rabbi Blau continued. “The notion 
that if the police don’t arrest the guy you should keep him teaching is 
absurd.”
Reflecting on the case in light of the recent 
national reckoning surrounding sexual abuse and harassment, University 
of Pennsylvania’s Marci Hamilton said, “What is happening with this man 
is indefensible. This is willing ignorance, and nothing else. In the 
#MeToo era, the decision to ignore all of these very loud bells could 
lead to endangering children.” 
‘Where There’s Smoke, There’s Fire’
The three families whose boys were allegedly 
abused now plan to sue Rabbi Krawatsky and any organization that “had 
knowledge that Rabbi K was being inappropriate with children and failed 
to intervene,” said Jon Little, the attorney who will be representing 
the families.
“From these three kids, we’ve gleaned the 
names of five more kids,” all of whom were allegedly abused by Rabbi 
Krawatsky at Camp Shoresh and in his other roles, said Little. “We have 
the record from the Maryland Child Protective Services — that’s a lot in
 my world. I am pretty confident that where there’s smoke, there’s fire,
 and here there’s a raging forest fire.”
Chris Rolle, Rabbi Krawatsky’s attorney, 
stated by email that the rabbi is “heartbroken and dismayed that the 
parents of the children are continuing to press these false allegations.
 There isn’t any more that my client can say other than he is innocent.”
 (Aside from citing the fact that his client passed a polygraph exam, 
Rolle declined to provide further evidence of his client’s innocence.)
For the parents of the alleged victims, the 
last two years have been a nightmare. The father of Rabbi Krawatsky’s 
third alleged victim said the community’s inaction is what pains him 
most deeply.
“It’s not the abuser — he’s a weed, a sick person who needs treatment. The real problem is the willingness of the whole community — including its leaders — to shelter him.”
“It’s not the abuser — he’s a weed, a sick 
person who needs treatment. The real problem is the willingness of the 
whole community — including its leaders — to shelter him,” said the 
father, an Israeli physicist who lives with his wife and three children 
in a suburb of Washington, D.C.
As for the Avrunins, who have been the most 
vocal about their son’s alleged abuse, they say that over the last two 
years they have been slandered, defamed and accused by members of the 
Baltimore Orthodox community of spreading “lashon harah,” malicious 
gossip, about an innocent man. Some have claimed the family is pursuing a
 “personal vendetta” against Rabbi Krawatsky.
The situation eventually caused the family to leave their Baltimore home of nine years; they now live in another state.
“The constant disbelief was the second wound 
our family endured, and the one that leaves a deeper scar,” said Rachel 
Avrunin, speaking to The Jewish Week by phone in November.
“It is one thing to wrap our mind around the 
fact that our son was sexually abused,” she said. “It’s another to 
realize that our community — our friends and neighbors, the people who 
davened next to us in shul and had playdates at our house — chose to 
turn a blind eye, or worse, betray us.”
Read the detailed accounts from Krawatsky’s three victim’s here, and the Jewish Week editorial on the issue here.http://jewishweek.timesofisrael.com/did-baltimores-orthodox-community-turn-a-blind-eye-to-child-sexual-abuse/


