This past Monday, Yeshiva
University’s President, Richard Joel, issued a highly misleading
statement regarding the completion of the investigation into accusations
of sexual and physical abuse by faculty of Yeshiva University’s High
School for Boys.
Yeshiva
University had engaged the law firm Sullivan and Cromwell to conduct an
investigation into the University’s conduct after The Forward published
a report detailing sexual and physical abuse by former staff members,
including the long-time principal, Rabbi George Finkelstein.
On January 6, 2013, at the outset of the investigation, in a statement on its website, Yeshiva University announced:
The Board of Trustees is fully aware that it will be judged on the manner in which it conducts this critical and sensitive matter and, in that connection, will, as always, seek to meet, if not exceed, the best possible practices employed by institutions that have confronted similar circumstances. We expect the findings of the investigation will be communicated to the public following completion of the investigation.
Fast-forward to the present time. This is the statement issued by Sullivan and Cromwell in its published report on August 26:
While it was the intention of the Board of Trustees to have made public a report which would have set forth the specific details of the extensive interviews conducted and documents reviewed by the Investigative Team, as a result of the Pending Litigation, the Investigative Team has been directed by the Special Committee to describe its findings with respect to sexual and physical abuse in summary fashion.
In other words, the Special Committee of the
Board of Trustees overruled the prior decision of the full Board that
the investigative report containing “the specific details” of the
investigation should be made public and instead “directed” the outside
lawyers to withhold the facts from the public.
What about the commitment to “seek to meet, if
not exceed, the best possible practices employed by institutions that
have confronted similar circumstances?”
Yeshiva University is an institution whose
motto is, Torah and Madda. They should hold themselves to the highest
standard of ethical behavior. However, if we compare them to the way
Penn State handled their own accusations we see a large gap.
In the face of certain litigation, Penn State
chose to release the full report detailing the sexual abuse that
occurred on its campus. Penn State has paid millions of dollars as a
result, but they are on their way to regaining their reputation. In
contrast, in a similar circumstance, Yeshiva University chose to release
a report of which only 320 words concern the veracity of the actual
accusations.
But it gets worse. Those 320 words contain the following sentences:
The Investigative Team has concluded that multiple incidents of varying types of sexual and physical abuse took place at YUHSB during the relevant time period. This conduct was carried out by a number of individuals in positions of authority at the High Schools at various times throughout the period covered by the Investigation, including, in certain instances, after members of the administration had been made aware of such conduct.
Because of the direction of the Special
Committee we have no way of knowing who these members of the
administration are? Who are these administrators who acted so
egregiously as to allow a sexual predator to continue to abuse students?
Are any of these administrators (and senior faculty members who should
have known better) still working for Yeshiva?
If we are to follow the Board of Trustee’s
words and judge them on this matter then we judge them to be in
dereliction of their duty and to have done lasting damage to the legacy
and the reputation of Yeshiva. They have placed short-term financial
strength over integrity and a responsibility to the victims of sexual
abuse.
As an alumnus of the school I sent a letter
(signed by twenty other alumni) on January 3, 2013 to the chairman of
Yeshiva’s Board, Dr. Henry Kressel, asking for a transparent
investigation that would be released to the public according to the
standards under which Louis Freeh investigated Penn State. We received
no response from Dr. Kressel. This is consistent with another finding of
the 320 words published by Sullivan and Cromwell:
Based on what the Investigative Team learned from its interviews with victims, this lack of an appropriate response by the University caused victims to believe that their complaints fell on deaf ears or were simply not believed by the University’s administration.
No wonder at least seventy people refused to
speak with the investigators from Sullivan and Cromwell. Many probably
felt that their interviews would be buried and not released to the
public. And sadly, they were right.
To summarize: Yeshiva was accused of not
taking complaints from their students about sexual abuse seriously. They
were also accused of covering up acts of sexual abuse.
In response to this it hired Sullivan and
Cromwell to conduct an independent investigation — only to then bury the
full report and not release the names of the administrators who
egregiously allowed the abuse to happen.
Richard Joel described the issuance of the 320 word report in the following public statement:
Sullivan & Cromwell LLP released its report marking the completion of the firm’s eight-month investigation into allegations of past abuse at Yeshiva University High School for Boys.
This is a highly misleading statement. Yeshiva
University did not really release the report. It instead chose
– contrary to the previous directions of the Board – not to
release the report. Instead of publicly disclosing the detailed findings
(as had been promised), the Special Committee chose to place the
university’s financial position in front of the needs of the victims and
the public’s right to be aware of the full extent of the problem.
They are committing the same sins of their past.
Richard Joel should overrule the Special Committee and release the full report at once.
If he doesn’t do that then the Board of
Trustees should remember that what is at stake is not only the
reputation of Yeshiva University, but the very reputation of the Torah
itself.
Or, as Marci Hamilton, a law professor at
Yeshiva University, put it in The Forward on January 10: “No institution
can study this issue with any credibility and fail to report to the
public what they’ve found.” She added, “This is the leading Orthodox
university in the country, if not the world, and what’s needed is for
this institution to set an example for dealing with these kinds of
issues.”
Shmuel Herzfeld is rabbi of Ohev Sholom--The National
Synagogue in Washington DC.
http://blogs.timesofisrael.com/yeshiva-u-release-the-full-report-now/