Has The ‘Tough Love’ Rebbe Gone Too Far?
Rav Aharon Bina has headed a popular Jerusalem yeshiva for diaspora students for many years. But charges of emotional abuse continue to dog him.
For those in the Modern Orthodox community who send their sons to yeshivas in Israel for a year or two of post-high school study, it’s long been an open secret that Rav Aharon Bina, rosh hayeshiva of Netiv Aryeh in the Old City of Jerusalem, has a unique — many say bizarre — pedagogical style.
Supporters call it “tough love”; critics call it abuse.
Credited with transforming many troubled American students who had been branded hopeless by other educators, and taking motivated young men to a higher level of learning, the 63-year-old rabbi is praised by several leading American rabbis as having been a wonderful educator for more than three decades. And his yeshiva, supported by prominent philanthropists, including businessman Ira Rennert, is a major — and approved — feeder school to Yeshiva University.
But a significant minority of former students, employees and colleagues maintain that Rav Bina is controlling, manipulative and emotionally coercive in ways that would never be accepted in other schools. In what has become known throughout Israeli yeshivot as “Bina Stories,” he is said to regularly yell at, humiliate and insult students in public; threaten to expel them for seemingly no reason (and make good on that promise with a few every fall, sometimes without first notifying the parents); press psychologists he hires to share private information about the students he has sent them; and tell those in disfavor that they are cursed.
The situation is so well known that a several years ago a disgruntled former student created a blog and invited others to share their experiences — and many did. It was called IHateRavBina, later changed to the Bina Abuse Blog, which has posts from more than two dozen former students and parents over a span of three decades sharing their personal stories of disturbing encounters with Rav Bina.
The blog re-emerged recently, and includes a long post from Joel (Yoel) Moskowitz, 47, of Long Island’s Five Towns, who recounted several disturbing episodes from more than 30 years ago, when he was a student of Rav Bina at HaKotel, a Jerusalem yeshiva Rav Bina headed before heading Netiv Aryeh.
Having lost his mother to cancer and seen his father remarry shortly thereafter, Moskowitz said he was shocked when Rav Bina, in class one day, suddenly declared that if a man remarries after his wife dies, it shows he never loved his first wife. Later, seeing that Moskowitz was distraught, Rav Bina said to him, “If you took it personal, then you’re a bigger idiot than I thought you were,” the former student recalls.
“I want to be quoted by name [on the website] and I chose to speak out,” Moscowitz says, “because I hear that this abusive and damaging behavior by Rav Bina is still going on and [I know] that victims tend to blame themselves.”
He adds that his experience helped turn him away from Jewish observance for a time. And he finds it “inconceivable” that the rabbi’s actions are known and tolerated by Jewish lay leaders and yeshiva high schools in the U.S., “reminiscent of all the other instances of the head-in-the-sand attitude in the Orthodox community toward abuse, albeit emotional and not physical.”
Even the rabbi’s most ardent supporters acknowledge that he sometimes speaks and acts as if out of control, and some have described him as “crazy,” “wacko” and “doing things no rebbe should ever do.” But in the next breath they defend him as a warm, remarkably caring man who has had a very positive impact on the overwhelming majority of the thousands of students he has taught.
Sandy Eisenstadt, a New York businessman who has been an avid supporter of Rav Bina for the last 25 years since his two sons studied with him, likens Rav Bina to a drill sergeant.
“If you’re thin-skinned, he’s not for you,” he said, comparing the Rav Bina experience to becoming a Navy Seal or U.S. Marine. “You know what you’re in for. Otherwise don’t go. You have to ask yourself why more students are coming to his yeshiva than any other. And most love and adore him, and have become wonderful Jews.”
But some are wondering why, indeed, Netiv Aryeh is so popular, with an estimated 110 first-year and 60 second-year American students. Is it because of, or in spite of, Rav Bina’s personality? And why do families, deeply concerned about the emotional, educational and spiritual well-being of their children, continue to send their sons to study with Rav Bina when his controversial reputation is so well known?
A Slap Or A Shove
The level of concern about the rabbi’s behavior escalated in 2009 after Andrew (not his real name), a student at Netiv Aryeh and graduate of the Frisch School in Paramus, N.J., says that Rav Bina slapped him in the face four or five times during a meeting in the rabbi’s office. Andrew’s parents lodged complaints and were told the rabbi would apologize for his behavior. But the rabbi claims, through intermediaries — he declined to be interviewed for this story — that it was a harmless shove or poke to the shoulder.
What led to the encounter was the fact that although Netiv students are not allowed to leave the premises at night, Andrew had gone out to a bar with friends on Ben Yehuda Street, the pedestrian mall and popular hangout for American students in Jerusalem, and was spotted by a madrich, or counselor, from his yeshiva.
The next morning he was told he was expelled.
Andrew later explained that at Netiv, expulsion meant a student could remain in the dorm and eat in the cafeteria, but could not attend classes. To be readmitted, one had to meet with Rav Bina and “you had to beg him to let you back,” he told The Jewish Week, which often happened, but the result was that “you were going to be watched more closely.”
Andrew decided he would meet with Rav Bina, apologize and hope to be taken back. “I had made great friends, was learning a lot and did not want to leave,” he explained.
When he arrived at the rabbi’s office, he recalled that about nine other students were there for the same reason, on “parole” and seeking readmission.
He said they waited for many hours until, at 2:30 a.m., Rav Chanan, one of Rav Bina’s sons and his top assistant, emerged from the main office to say that Rav Bina needed to sleep. The young men came back in the morning and waited for “five, six hours at a time” to be called in, according to Andrew, with brief breaks to eat.
This went on for “two or three days,” he said.
“Occasionally Rav Bina would walk out of his office and yell at us, telling us that we weren’t good people and that we were nothings.” Andrew said he tried to go back to his morning seder [class] once but the rabbi in charge told him to leave.
Eventually the boys on parole were called in to Rav Bina’s office, one at a time, and during his meeting, Andrew said he apologized for his behavior and said he had made a mistake, but the rabbi said he was being dishonest. “You’re a good actor and a liar,” he says Rav Bina told him.
He alleges that Rav Bina rose from his chair, walked behind him, grabbed his shirt and asked, “What are we going to do about this? What are we going to do?” Then, Andrew claims, the rabbi lifted his hand and slapped him “across the face four or five times.
“I was shocked, I couldn’t speak,” he says.
The Rav Bina version, culled from intermediaries, is that he was concerned about the young man’s drinking and was just trying to shake him up, out of concern.
Whatever transpired, whether Andrew was slapped in the face or, as Rav Bina claims, shoved in the shoulder, the young man notified his parents back home that he was on probation and would only be accepted back if he agreed to three conditions: no more Ben Yehuda visits; he would have to sit in the beit midrash [study hall] and learn all night on Thursday nights, as is a regular if not prevalent practice at many yeshivas; and he had to be willing to see a therapist at his own cost if Rav Bina thought it was appropriate.
Andrew’s mother was uncomfortable with the situation and called John Krug, The Frisch School guidance counselor who is also director of alumni affairs for Netiv Aryeh and unofficial spokesman for Rav Bina. He sought to reassure her that Rav Bina was “a very good person but just has a different way of doing things,” as she recalls.
Krug has said that Rav Bina is often misunderstood, noting that people who are “passionate about what they do are going to arouse emotions in other people. In today’s world, with its [emphasis on] political correctness, sensitivity has taken a place on the front burner.”
Andrew’s mom said Krug told her he would see to it that Rav Bina would apologize, which did not happen.
She also met with Ilana Scheiner, the executive director and American representative of Netiv, who began the conversation by praising Rav Bina and his positive impact on his students.
“Then I told her what happened” to her son, the mother said. “’He may have gone too far,’ she told me. ‘In general he’s very effective.’”
Andrew said that after word got back to the yeshiva that his mother was questioning Rav Bina’s behavior, he was treated with suspicion, and felt increasingly ill at ease.
He ended up transferring to another Israeli yeshiva, and looks back on the Netiv experience as contributing to the fact that he is no longer observant.
Now a sophomore in college, Andrew said he was disillusioned by what he encountered. “We learned in yeshiva that if you embarrass someone it is like killing him, and yet Rav Bina likes to publicly humiliate people.
“I’m off the derech [religious path] now,” he said. “I thought, ‘This is how you treat people as a rabbi in the Old City of Jerusalem?’ This is not for me.”
YU Connection
The complaints Andrew’s mother made became known at Yeshiva University, since Netiv Aryeh is one of 24 men’s yeshivot and 20 women’s seminaries in Israel that are part of YU’s S. Daniel Abraham Israel Program. Each year about 600 high school graduates begin their YU education with a year of study in Israel, for which they receive college credits, before continuing their undergraduate studies at YU, here in New York.
Scott Goldberg is director of YU’s Institute for University-School Partnership and part of a team of educators and psychologists that visits the Israeli yeshivot periodically “to review their educational programs to satisfy our need for confidence” in the academics and the quality of the yeshiva program, he said.
In 2010, Goldberg was part of a team that visited Netiv Aryeh and, “having been made aware of complaints” about Rav Bina’s behavior, met with the rabbi and other administrators, as well as educators and students who were there at the time.
“We asked pointed, tough questions,” he wrote in an e-mail to The Jewish Week after declining to be interviewed in person, “and received what we judged to be straight answers. We learned that changes had been made and that specific programs and procedures had been put in place to not only monitor the situation but to ensure the safety of all the students.”
Goldberg did not respond to The Jewish Week’s request for details about the nature of the review or the changes that were put in place.
Andrew and his mother say they were never questioned about his encounter or how the yeshiva dealt with the complaint.
Goldberg said that since the 2010 meeting with Rav Bina, neither he nor YU staff members in Israel have heard of any new grievances. He added that were they to learn of “a credible new complaint, we would certainly look into it immediately and respond appropriately.”
Similarly, Rav Bina’s supporters acknowledge that he has acted inappropriately on occasion over the years, primarily in terms of berating students publicly, but they insist he is a changed man and that they know of no recent accounts of the rabbi acting in a belligerent manner.
But the complaints persist and are not difficult to come across.
Peter (not his real name), a 19-year-old currently studying in Israel, attended Netiv Aryeh this past fall but transferred after finding the environment too authoritative.
He maintains that Rav Bina can be extremely controlling and manipulative of his students. Peter recalls a friend of his being chastised by the rabbi after the student decided to play football on the night of his father’s yahrtzeit.
“Why do you hate your father?” Rav Bina berated the student, according to Peter, and later told the young man he had to see one of the school therapists at his own cost.
Several psychologists called on by Rav Bina to meet with students have refused to do so because they say the rabbi insists on finding out what was discussed between client and therapist, a professional taboo.
Peter also notes that Rav Bina would make fun of and bully certain students in public. He regularly “disregards a person’s feelings and just does what he wants, whether its correct or not.”
Ben (who gave permission for only his first name to be used), left Netiv Aryeh halfway through his year there, in 2006, feeling “very depressed.” He says he was bullied and publicly humiliated by Rav Bina, who referred to him as shaygetz (a derogatory word for gentile) because he had been caught reading a book on evolution. Ben said his social isolation reached the point where his classmates would not count him in a minyan.
Aaron (not his real name), a recent alum of Netiv Aryeh and current student at YU, said he was uncomfortable with how Rav Bina spoke to students, making seemingly instant judgments about their character based on appearance. Picking on certain students, he often would refer to them as “gay,” or say they had a “goy face,” or were fat or would come down with AIDS or that God hates them.
“Rav Bina would regularly tell people they are addicted to drugs, mistreat their parents and are going to beat their wives,” Aaron said. One student caught drinking early in the year was from then on referred to by the rabbi as “Alan the Alcoholic.”
“Rav Bina would single out specific kids in class and say things like, ‘You look at porn and you will for the rest of your life. You told me that; I know what you do. Get out, pack your bags.”
Such students were told by the rabbi they were being sent to cherem (a form of censure or excommunication) and had to transfer to a yeshiva in the south of the country, in the isolated community of Mitzpeh Ramon, often without their parents being notified.
That control apparently applies to yeshiva staff as well. One former Netiv Aryeh rebbe described the environment of the yeshiva as one of “constant emotional abuse” during the four years he was there. He said he was one of a number of teachers forced by Rav Bina to go to one of the school therapists, and that the sessions were not kept confidential.
Deeply Admired
Supporters of Rav Bina, including rabbis, lay leaders and illustrious former students of his, offer up a very different portrait of the man they deeply admire, while acknowledging his excesses.
Rabbi Haskel Lookstein of Congregation Kehilath Jeshurun on the Upper East Side, says that “whoever Rav Bina is, and whatever his way of teaching and reacting may be, it is well known in the community that he is, on the whole, a person who deeply loves his students and cares very much about their development.
“He may be guilty at times of what I would consider ‘tough love’ and talks freely, perhaps going overboard and embarrassing people, but all of the situations I am aware of are where he cares deeply about the students and wants to keep them on the straight path.”
Rabbi Lookstein, whose son was a student of Rav Bina two decades ago, said he can think of no other Israeli rebbe who is flown in to the U.S. to officiate at as many weddings of former students as Rav Bina, an indication of the devotion and affection his students and their families have for him.
“I know from personal knowledge that he teaches students to be baalei chesed [kind people], to give of themselves to the community and to individuals,” Rabbi Lookstein said. “That’s the Rav Bina I know, and if sometimes his speech is too quick and too strong, he’s a human being who can make mistakes. And that is the essence of the man.”
Asked about the critical statements some former students of Rav Bina have made, Rabbi Lookstein said, “I’m not familiar with blogs,” adding, “When I talked to him recently, he said he was spoken to by a professional from another institution and that he has tried very hard to avoid this kind of speech.”
Rabbi Heshie Billet of the Young Israel of Woodmere has known and been close to Rav Bina for more than 40 years.
“I have attended several Netiv Aryeh alumni Shabbatonim,” he told The Jewish Week, “and am impressed by the huge turnout of alumni — single and married, recent alumni and alumni from decades ago — who come for an inspiring tefillah [prayer service] and for the opportunity to say Shabbat Shalom to Rav Bina.”
Sandy Eisenstadt, the local businessman who described Rav Bina as a kind of rebbe-drill sergeant, said he is “totally devoted to teaching his students” to be upstanding Jewish young men. “He is not politically correct, his style is not traditional, he acts in provocative ways. But it works with most students, who love and adore him and who become wonderful Jews.”
Would the rabbi’s behavior be tolerated at an American school or yeshiva?
“Probably not,” Eisenstadt said, adding, “Maybe not anywhere else.” But he said that students and parents know what they are signing up for, and that the overwhelming majority of them are very pleased by the results.
Eisenstadt solicited 11 lengthy testimonials from grateful parents and recent and older students of Rav Bina, including rabbis, each describing their teacher as deeply considerate, personally concerned with them as individuals, and not at all like the “scary” personage they had heard about before coming to his yeshiva.
Ari Berkowitz, who spent the last two years at Netiv Aryeh and is currently living in Israel, awaiting the start of his service in the Israeli army, wrote: “In my years at Netiv Aryeh, Rav Bina has time and again dispelled my initial fears and proven what an incredible human being he is and how much love and care he has not only for Judaism but for each and every one of his students as well.”
Unlike most people, Berkowitz noted, Rav Bina “often does not make a good first impression; however, the more one gets to know him, you realize how kind and caring he is.”
The other writers also noted that what they had heard about Rav Bina in advance of meeting him made them cautious, but that he proved to be warm, insightful, compassionate and devoted to each of his students.
‘Red Flags’
Could the same rabbi be so kind and attentive to some students and controlling of others?
One American rabbi, who asked to remain nameless here, said the negative stories he has heard over the years are “very troubling” to him and that he is certain at least some of them are true. But he said Rav Bina “has helped so many” students and “puts more care into each kid than anybody” that he himself continues to recommend the yeshiva, except for “emotionally fragile” young men.
Dr. Michelle Friedman, a Manhattan psychiatrist and psychoanalyst who directs the pastoral counseling program at Yeshivat Chovevei Torah, says she has heard a number of disturbing stories about Rav Bina over the years.
She has written professionally about what she calls “the power and peril of rabbinic charisma,” and speaks of the need for a rabbi’s self-awareness about his or her control over congregants or students, as well as the importance of establishing boundaries.
She questions why parents who are “so concerned about the quality of the food and laundry service” at Israeli yeshivas where they send their children are not more involved in choosing the right psychological environment.
“You’re sending your child thousands of miles away for a year in late adolescence for an intense, isolated experience,” she said, and yet she finds “an unquestioning reverence for what goes on there. It just amazes me.”
In regards to reports about Rav Bina, she asked: “Why are we so accepting? Are we so fearful of critiquing authority? Do parents think, ‘he’s doing a great job, and if we criticize it we’ll be on the outside,’ so they just say nothing?”
Friedman says the hazing analogy, comparing Rav Bina’s technique to an army drill sergeant, doesn’t hold up.
“The assumption is that hazing is somehow necessary for the end product,” she said. “But what about the fallout and destruction wrought by the hazing? What about the impact on the other students who witness it and remain passive? Maybe they figure, ‘he’s a great rabbi, I better not say anything.’”
A number of the students interviewed here said they had heard about Rav Bina’s unusual behavior but were advised, as one said, “if you keep away from him you can have a positive experience” in the yeshiva.
Another said his parents were taken with the Old City setting, the assurance that the students would be safe, with strict curfews, and the reassurance that so many other American students were attending.
The mother of “Andrew,” the boy who alleges Rav Bina slapped him, said that on meeting Rav Bina in the U.S. when he was recruiting, “he came across as eccentric but very grandfatherly.
“We talked to many boys who went there, and they told us, ‘just follow the rules” and steer clear of Rav Bina.
“How we didn’t get it, I just don’t know,” she said ruefully. “We should have seen the red flags.”
How parents make choices is critical for Michelle Friedman. “Maybe the rabbi has a good heart. But if he were, for example, driving a car recklessly, wouldn’t we say something? In this case his words and actions can be dangerous and are antithetical to his Torah. Why don’t people challenge that?”
Yedidya Gorsetman is a senior at Yeshiva University where he is a features editor of The Commentator, the official student newspaper.
Gary Rosenblatt is editor and publisher of The Jewish Week. Ben Sales, former editor of New Voices, contributed to this report.
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Comments
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All the stories are true. On both sides. He can be the nicest person and the meanest person in the same day. At the end of the day- he shouldn't be teaching young people.
Excellent reporting. I hope readers take the time to look at the blog to see the disturbing first-hand stories of the abuse.
What is important to note is that the issue is not whether Rav Bina has helped students. He has, many. But if he helps many, and 'only' abuses and scars about 10% of the students who enter his yeshiva, is that a percentage the Jewish community is ready to accept? I hope not.
THANK YOU for this article!!!! It's about time someone pointed out the emperor's new clothes. Rav Bina is CRAZY!! He should not be doing what he does. I know. I was there too, 20 years ago.....
And I think the fact that so many guys go through this and end up thinking that he's 'amazing' or whatever impacts their entire Jewish lives. They become abusive too. And confused. And unable to really tell right from wrong.
I think if we look around at the Orthodox world, which is so confused and so focused on all the wrong things, where there is no real compassion for others, just everyone trying to 'keep up with the katzes', it's like the entire community is scared. the entire community acts like a kid in rav bina's office. scared and confused. this article explains so much about modern orthodoxy today, about all the communal dysfunction....
As an extraordinarily compassionate, wise and generous leader, Rav Bina inspires the well deserved devotion and loyalty of hundreds of former students, their families and his staff. Like most real leaders, he also has the usual disgruntled types who seek public forums to voice their frustrations. Having observed Rav Bina for many years, and knowing how much true chessed he also does behind the scenes , I would say that any article about him should spotlight his incredible accomplishments, the lives he has figuratively and literally saved and not the whining of a small minority.
I had R Bina as a teacher 2 decades ago and I found him to be most abusive and revolting person that I have ever met. He constantly verbally abused several boys in class and embarrassed them over and over again. He had terrible mood swings and would shout and swear often. I am religious today DESPITE that man!
What a horrific smear article against one of the greatest Jewish educators of our generation! The jewish week and gary rosenblatt should be utterly ashamed for doing this! I am proud to be a devoted student of Rav Bina, shlita and if you were to attempt to write a positive article about all the amazing things Rav Bina has done in his life, it would never fit in your pathetic little rag of a tabloid!
I promise you that the devoted students of Rav Bina (and there are literally thousands!) will not let this pass!
As a rabbi working with college students I have heard and been deeply disturbed by many similar stories over the years. I have no doubt they are true, as I have heard them from a variety of different sources with the same themes recurring. I have also seen the negative impact this man has had on many students emotional and religious well being. I don't understand why a concerned parent would send their child to his yeshiva when there are so many other options that also encourage Torah learning and growth without the negatives.
It is especially disappointing to see how people - including rabbis - seem to think the Torah's grave prohibitions against onaat devarim, malbin pnei chaveiro berabim, rechilut, etc. are excusable if the person doing them is a rabbi who has redeeming qualities or good goals. Would they also excuse a rabbi who occasionally ate meat and milk or lit fires on shabbos, in full view of all his yeshiva students, because he "gets results most of the time"?
This article is basically a piece of Lashon Hara
After going to Netiv Aryeh i feel his way of teaching is the most important and works incredibly well with the kids there!
He is one of the most caring men and loves all of his students.
I was personally struggling and he made it so easy for me to get back in to it and made me feel comfortable again
The writers of this article should be utterly ashamed of themselves for writing this, there is absolutely no need.
This is why i dislike the media you find a story which will be controversial and put it in anyway not thinking about the side it could possibly damage
this article should be DELETED !!!!!
Wow, seems like the majority of his former students were absolutely traumatized by this character.
I became frum through chabad, can't imagine if my first encounter with a Rabbi was an abusive one...I find it hard to imagine that anyone can defend this behavior, though, isn't that common of abuse victims?
this article is a disgrace and should never have been published you clearly did not care about he person you are trying to harm
as a student of his i found him the most loving caring person and did all he could to make me feel comfortable in his yeshiva
you should be ashamed of yourselves
To the people who call themselves religious and in the next sentence make derogatory comments about fellow Jews, how can you even think of calling yourself religious?!
I look forward to the article about the other yeshiva and their paedophilic rosh yeshiva - a "rabbi" who was actually barred from carrying out his duties as a leader of one of the biggest institutions in Israel!
This article is a chilul hashem, whatever you view...
This is a shameful article.
I have Rav Bina Shlit'a to thank for the fact that I still take time out to learn and for the fact that I am constantly looking to grow. Despite this slander, Yeshivat Netiv Aryeh will continue to have the highest amount of students every year, will continue to have the most second year students for a Yeshiva of its kind, and will continue to not only guide students to have the best student to staff ratio (3/1 last time I checked), to ensure that Netiv Aryeh students have the highest level of care.
Netiv Aryeh is packed with visiting Alumni every January, who view visiting Netiv and learning for a few weeks as coming home for a few weeks.
that is a ridiculous generalisation to make !!!
The publication of a ruthlessly defamatory article based on the vague recollections of "several disturbing episodes from more than 30 years ago" and the hearsay reports of a couple of disgruntled students is irresponsible and appalling. Rav Bina is a world renowned Rosh Yeshiva and a beloved Rebbe to thousands of students who have studied with him over the years. Rather than impugn Rav Bina's reputation, I urge you to examine the lifestyle and conduct of the young people who come to Israel for a year of post high school "study". There you will discover a "significant minority of students" who waste the year away with a blackberry in one hand and daddy's credit card in the other. You are right, there are deep and disturbing problems with the Israel study programs and it starts with the students who grew up in the states suffering from an "affliction of affluence" and the culture shock they experience when they arrive in Israel and
encounter a world that does not cater to their inflated sense of entitlement. Kol HaKavod to Rav Bina and to the many other devoted educators who deflate those students' expectations and by doing so elevate their souls to new heights of maturity and growth.
Having known Rav Bina for many many years - if he was that bad and that absuve how is it that the registration to Netiv continues to grow year after year - and don't give the bull about charisma because he's the least charismatic person i know.
Rav Bina is a powerhouse of chessed, he has saved countless lives and works relentlessy behind the scenes helping anyoe who comes through his doors.
I would love to see an article that will show the amazing good that he does day in and day out to help those in need.
So let's say all the comments are true -- that the man both terrorizes children and commits saintly acts of chesed. Are those two issues reconcilable? Do we say a person can hurt and abuse just because he helps others?
And I have another question -- if a person is not himself subject to abuse but knows that others around him might be, doesn't he have an obligation to protect people from suffering? Do we say, well, I am okay so everything must be okay too? Even if I personally have not been humiliated, what happens if I dwell on that and don't bother to care about others who are being hurt?
These are the kinds of questions that the Orthodox community needs to ask itself.
1. I see you've picked up some of Rav Bina's characteristics.
2. He could have students in the millions, but wasting even one student's year is inexcusable. It is literally the opposite of why people come to Israel. In addition, even the people in this article who praise him (and I'm including people who have praised him outside of this article to me) never deny that these stories happen. They only re-explain what may have happened, make excuses, or admit to it and then say he's the nicest, most caring rabbi they've ever met. I just don't understand how these two function together.
Ben Packer, your fellow cult members will not let what pass? This isn't Iran or North Korea, we have a concept of Freedom of Speech and Freedom of the Press, which I'm sure you cherished and honored, whether or not you agreed with the sentiment, before being turned into someone who would rather be unfree than see his hero talked about in a realistic way. This article could have been a whole lot more negative. It tried really hard to find some positive, but the truth is for a person unwilling to release their rational thinking abilities and instead worship his ego, not you apparently, he is a real danger. Yes, it is actually dangerous to have your mind seized Ben. I've been there, and was so mentally abused that I left with only a backpack in the middle of the night. How dare you ignore the hundreds of people who have shared their stories of abuse and call them crazy when there's only one accused who isn't hiding the abuse from anyone. The only reason be flourishes is because he was successful on people like you.
Every single thing that is written in this article is 100% true. I know this because in my relatively short three month stint in Yehivat Hakotel over ten years ago now I personally experienced every single one of them…and more. I was called every name (the name that stuck and that I was called publicly by Rav Bina was “cancer” and or “poison”), banned from attending classes, abused physically by Rav Bina’s faithful sidekick, sent to therapy, told I was violent and much much more.
The truth is I was not a saint by any means but essentially I was an 18 year old kid, away from home for the first time and the way I was treated was nothing I could ever have imagined. At least I had a good level of confidence and was able to stick up for myself. The times that Rav Bina would abuse the boys, the shy and awkward ones, who couldn’t defend themselves, and were publicly humiliated in very damaging ways were the incidences that I found the most troubling. And they were incredibly frequent.
I agree that Rav Bina does amazing things for a lot of boys – I know many boys that have been the recipient of his kindness and have benefited greatly from it. But to all you supporters out there – does the good that he does for some boys justify that harm that he levies on others? There is no way that as a Jew and as a human being anyone can respond yes to this question.
Rav Bina is an interesting character. It is extremely hard to be responsible for 100 teenagers who for the first time are free from their parents. It can make anyone crazy. I dont know how he runs his school but the results are astounding. I can't imagine that any growth can take place under such emotional duress. I have watching many of his students over the years and I'm always impressed by the change in them over the year. If he looses control once in a while, I don't think we can judge him based on it. Who hasn't lost control in their life. As an educator one must be more vigilant, but to call this an expose is wrong.
Rav Bina is a true tzadik and does a tremendous a mount of chesed that most people don't know about. He should be zoche to continue leading Netiv Aryeh for many many more years!
“How we didn’t get it, I just don’t know,” she said ruefully. “We should have seen the red flags.”
Ebm9di think what you should've seen was that your son is liable to sneak out at night and get plastered.... maybe that's the problem. Rav Bina was trying to straighten him out and instead of dealing with a potential problem, you are blaming Rav Bina? Focus on your son!
Why hasn't the modern orthodox community learned to recognize abusive rebbeim? Wasn't the NCSY scandal of 15 years ago enough of a lesson?
Rav Bina is a typical " charismatic bully" who impresses the strong at the expense of the weak. He may be a tamid chochom and a great magid shiur, but none of these attributes are sufficient to allow his supporters to condone his occasionally perverted and sadistic behavior.
Shame on Rabbi Billet and Rabbi Lookstein for " looking the other way". Their experience with him is biased because Rav Bina puts his best foot forward when dealing with students whose parents are Rabbis or prominent Bal Habatim.
Also, it is no surprise that Netiv Aryeh's chief financial supporter is a major Jewish philanthropist whose fortune was made on abusive business practices.
As someone who generally did steer clear of Rav Bina as a student, after years of reflection, I am confident that his pedagogical approach is correct. If anything, it should be embraced since it has proven results challenging the entitlement attitudes of many young Jews coming to Israel (and the American "there are no losers" attitude). I believe the reason he invokes so much positive and negative emotion in people is precisely because he is risky with students. No yeshiva will ever have a 100% success rate in keeping modern orthodox students religious in perpetuity, but Rav Bina successfully imbues strong character traits in his students which says more about *his* character than anything else.
In my time, the students that were most bothered by Rav Bina's approach were the students who were threatened by confident, authoritative figures because they themselves were stubbornly strong-willed as well. On the other hand, there were some students who didn't remain in Yeshiva because they simply didn't fit. Students transfer from schools at all educational levels. Sometimes it's the student who decides it isn't a good match, sometimes it's mutual, and sometimes it's the school that decides.
Not to be forgotten, offended students have an agenda with their stories. Whether the stories are accurate or not should be seen through a objective but skeptical prism. I generally give Rav Bina the benefit of the doubt because I have seen stories, where I was present, manipulated in order to malign Rav Bina. The alleged victims' claims should be taken very seriously, but the detractors, as some are quoted in this article, should try to make the situation better instead of trying to destroy a successful institution.
I'm sure some of the stories above are true. Nevertheless...
For all that he makes fun and puts people down, I think there is a lesson. We come from sheltered US-Judaism communities, where people are brought up to be sheep. To grow up and be a mature Jewish adult, you need thicker skin, to be confident of your own views. Don't bow to the wills of the masses (or the rabbis imho).
The lesson is, when others attack your views or what you think is right, stand up, take it like a man. That was maybe the most important thing I learned at my time in Yeshiva, and I don't take RB's stake in it for granted.
Rav Bina is an unusual, incredible and successful educator. The need to blame anyone but ones self for ones shortcomings is nothing new to Judaism or the world, and yet I would have hoped that instead of focusing on the few people here and there who blame the Yeshiva and Rav Bina for the fact that their sons/they themselves didnt succeed their year in Israel, or many years later, that the thousands of Rav Binas students who have emerged from his Yeshiva as Mentschs, Bnei Torah, honest Baalei Batim and lay leaders in their own community could have been focused on as well. I have witnessed time and again the amazing success of Rav Bina and will continue to support him despite others attempt at vicious, evil, and self righteous lashon hara.
All I'll say is, you'll never hear any such stories about many of the great rabbis of the past generation. Can you imagine Rabbi Avraham Pam ZT"L or Rabbi Yaakov Kamenetzky ZTL ever doing such things?
"Dirchoea darkei noam" - "Its ways are pleasant." If the stories are true, then Rabbi Binah's way is not the Torah way.
I went to a different yeshiva in isreal, but used to visit friends in hakotel when r. Bina was there. He was nuts, once he wanted to throw me out of the building for speaking to my friends. And another timed when I went with a few other friends from my yeshiva to visit some guys in hakotel, we were asked where we were learning, we told him and then he yelled at us to get out and that we were on drugs and he didn't want our drugs in his yeshiva, and thretened to call the police on us....not a very impressive person
So, after reading the article, I am left with the following:
Both Rabbi Lookstein and Rabbi Billet, two well respected senior Rabbis on the Orthodox scene, speak highly of Rav Bina. Yeshiva University, which monitors its partner program seems to be satisfied with the resolution of the grievance that was raised. An overwhelming majority of the students and alumni seem to have a great affection and loyalty to Rav Bina. Registration for both the first year and second year programs at the yeshiva seem to be quite high.
He has a strict policy about students not being allowed on Ben Yehuda on Thursday nights? Terrific! Anyone who is even vaguely aware of the tremendous amounts of alcohol being consumed by 18 and 19 year old male and female American students on one-year Yeshiva programs should be on the “Rav Bina for Sherriff” committee. Too many programs (both male and female) have either no policy or do not enforce curfew policies for students who are drinking on the streets to the wee hours of the morning. Drinking is a huge problem in Jerusalem and I applaud his well stated policies and “no-tolerance” attitude toward breaking the rules! Parents and students choose his Yeshiva because they want to make the most of their year in Israel—inside the walls of the Beit Midrash—and not inside of the walls of the Jerusalem Police station.
And one more thing. His private acts of Chesed to people in very difficult situations are yet to be told.
The writer and editors of this article should be thrown out of school and the Jewish community.
Ben Schwartz, you know you're not really helping him, right?
""suddenly declared that if a man remarries after his wife dies, it shows he never loved his first wife"
Like Avraham Avinu?
Wow. An astonishing article with a rapidly growing comment base. This reminds me of all the CNN anti-Israel articles which grow just as rapidly. It's unfortunate that people jump at the opportunity to attack another person. I cannot speak for those who are for or against Rav Bina. I can speak only for myself. And as for myself, Rav Bina and YNA have been some of the best things to happen in my life. He has more than changed my life for the better.
I also take issue with the thick/thin skin idea. I happen to be extremely sensitive - "thin-skinned" if you will. Rav Bina always showed me the ultimate love and sacrifice on his part so that I can learn to be the great person I have become today. I say that not arrogantly, but with a sense of who I really am.
I have a friend and chavrusa who went to a different yeshiva in Israel. He always commented to me how amazing Rav Bina is - in his yeshiva (a very well respected one for American and Israeli students) the students leave and don't keep up any connection. Rav Bina and other YNA rebbeim visit and are flocked by alumni. Hundreds (yes, hundreds) of alumni visit the yeshiva throughouit the year. The yeshiva is a home. Rav Bina is a fatherly figure to all of us. We love him dearly and are sad to see all these people with so much hate and unresolved anger. I will pray for you.
The man has close to 3000 students. how many legitimate complaints has there been where people are willing to put their name to it. I know this sounds like an excuse, but most of his comments, are clearly jokes to get certain points across, and most students realize this. which is why he gets over 50% of 1st year students to come back a second year. its not "despite" him. the authors clearly have a beef. but it is completely overblown, he knows what he is doing. and if people don't like his style, don't go. they have plenty of other students. i was sent to "cherem", and i enjoyed my experience both there and in yeshiva. i truly feel some people just want an excuse to say- he is why i am not religious.
I am not interested in a typically Judaic, emotionally charged response to this article.
I do think that, entirely separate from my religious beliefs that the 'other side' of this story need be told for the purposes of balanced reporting; Lamentable is it that there doesn't seem to be a journalist for a 'Jewish' news provider capable of such reporting.
Yeshivat Netiv Aryeh is among the highest-level Yeshivot in Israel. It is not, as this report makes out, a rehabilitation centre for Long-Island louts long overdue for an introduction to the real world of adult responsibility.
Nothing in this article is 'news;' in fact I should imagine that the parent(s) of every former Netiv Aryeh student going back 20 years was conscious of these claims when considering the suitability of the Yeshiva as a 'gap year' option for their son.
It is appropriate therefore to suggest that the level of scrutiny to which Rav Bina is 'exposed' far exceeds that of other Roshei Yeshivot it seems.
The students that leave and return to the 'real' world from that place are in the majority dedicated, passionate, aware, sensitive and focussed 'Bnei Torah' who are exposed to Judaism in a way unrivalled by other Yeshivot. The article is right to suggest that boys join the programme from a plethora of backgrounds but the boy that enters the programme on the programmes term seldom leaves unchanged. By this I in no way refer to a submission of their basic human rights, rather a trust in the fabulously capable staff at the Yeshiva, the variety of which cannot be found elsewhere. This means that, to use an example from the article, a boy who disobeys a relatively basic rule not to go to the area most affected by suicide bombs in Jerusalem over the course of the Intifada will leave the institution no choice but to 'pull the reigns.' It is true that the Ben Yehuda area of Jerusalem also contains dance clubs and bars which are not institutions synonymous with purity or holiness.
In short, it is desperately unfair to blast a man who has dedicated every facet of his life to the development of the next generation of Orthodox Jews. i am not for a second justifying abuse of any kind and can relate in parts to different aspects of the article in question. However the other 90% of a boy's relationship with R'Bina is not abusive or frightening in the least part.
This article is untrue. I would ask anyone who disagrees with me to take it up with the relevant authorities should it be necessary or failing that contact me to discuss these claims. This article has turned the proportion on its head, focussing not on the warm, caring and generous side of the Rosh HaYeshiva's character but on his mistakes and weaknesses. Mistakes and weaknesses have been demosntrated by every Jew from the Biblical character Moses to Theodore Hertzl to me. If this article is a criticism of those who make mistakes I suggest they make a similar investigation into 'The Jewish Week.'
No matter how much good someone does it does not excuse any psychologocal or physical abuse. When it comes to our children there should be zero tolerance for abuse.shame on Rabbis Lookstein and Billet. How do you condone this man? And how does one send their child thousands of miles away to a place where the goal is to avoid the rosh yeshiva? It does not matter that thousands love him or that kid was "tough" or misbehaved, this is inexcusabl
OCCUPY NETIV ARYEH!!!
This article is a reflection of a generation that received trophies for losing...it highlights everything that is wrong with this country!
ok so if the style of the yeshiva changes you will be left with bochrim lying on ben yehuda drunk and taking drugs and some of them leave with the awful attitudes they had when they came in the place
the striking numbers in shana bet and alumni that come back are amazing
maybe people need to start looking at the boys themselves
i think its a huge problem that kids from america sometimes can see yeshiva as a way of gaining credits !!
I am a current student in Netiv Aryeh and must say that this article is a chillul Hashem for the writer. Rav Bina is one of the most caring individuals that I have ever met. He gives students the foundation to continue on with their Judaism. Rav Bina has and is currently inspiring hundreds of students daily. Whoever gave a negative testimony about Rav Bina is a person who i feel bad for because God will smite you. For all those who are against Rav Bina and hear these exaggerated stories come and see the good that he's done for ALL of his talmidim.
I wasn't the most motivated student coming from a non observant family and Rav Bina personally showed me a lot of attention and care and made sure that I had the perfect warm environment that fostered growth. Rav Bina's constant talks of hakoras hatov, intellectual honesty, taking advantage of our year etc etc helped my friends and I on our path to becoming very successful and well adjusted members of society. Rav Bina's acts of chesed and pedagogical method amongst many other traits make him a strong leader and a great role model for myself and my wife and our future family as we start our lives very connected to the yeshiva
"Peter (not his real name), a 19-year-old currently studying in Israel, attended Netiv Aryeh this past fall but transferred after finding the environment too authoritative. "
Authoritarian, not authoritative.
Rav Bina is one of the most caring and compassionate educators I have ever encountered. Rav Bina:
1) Stays up countless nights talking to students about whatever is on their mind, from difficulties in Yeshiva to personal issues.
2) Is sincerely concerned about his students' well-being - physical, mental and spiritual. Any alumnus can tell you how many times students under the weather are invited to Rav Bina's house to have soup. Whenever any type of medical issue arises with one of the students (or almuni), Rav Bina lends a tremendous amount of support, both emotional and in ensuring that they receive the best medical care possible.
3) Maintains a strong personal connection with many almuni years after they have left the confines of his yeshiva. This is evident, as noted in the article, by the number of students who fly Rav Bina into the US to attend their weddings. To Rav Bina's credit, he almost always agrees to come in, even if it means having to return to Israel the next day or even the same night.
I could go on and on, but there's really no need. The truth of the matter is that everyone knows this about Rav Bina. Everyone knows how close he is to his talmidim.
To be sure, Rav Bina has detractors. But which educator doesn't? Which yeshiva is successful with every talmid? The difference with Rav Bina is that he doesn't want to fail with his talmidim. He doesn't just welcome boys to his yeshiva, collect tuition checks, and then let them get drunk on Ben Yehuda at their parents' expense. He actually works on developing their character, refinining their middos and getting them to think outside the box and grow spiritually. Whereas in other yeshivas, students can basically waste their year in Israel and come back to the US feeling great about themselves and parve about their yeshiva, Rav Bina's talmidim will know that they wasted a tremendous opportunity to grow.
May Hashem grant Rav Bina long life with good health and may he continue to educate hundreds of more talmidim.
This article is a chilul Hashem for the writer. Rav Bina is one of the most caring educators i have ever met. He has inspired and continues to inspire the lives of many Jews around the world. Anyone who wrote a negative testimony about Rav Bina i feel bad for because God will smite you. To each of these negative comments you can find two positive. Rav Bina was blessed with a unique personality and if you cant understand that personality there is no reason to bash it publically. This is pure lashon hara and im proud to say im a talmud of Rav Bina.
This article is laughable. It is clearly written by people who are against Rav Bina and want to paint him in a negative light.
“If you’re thin-skinned, he’s not for you,” he said, comparing the Rav Bina experience to becoming a Navy Seal or U.S. Marine. “You know what you’re in for. Otherwise don’t go. You have to ask yourself why more students are coming to his yeshiva than any other. And most love and adore him, and have become wonderful Jews.”
He never said anything about drill Sergeant. The author decided that is what Mr. Einstadt must have meant, therefore it is ok for Rav Bina to be referred to as a drill Sergeant in the rest of the article. This is clearly the author forcing his views into the piece.
As a student of YU, I have become accustomed to writers of the Commentator writing negative articles about Rebbeim. They almost put one out every week putting down a Rosh Yeshiva of YU. It does not shcok me in the slightest that one writer has moved to Israeli Rebbeim. The constant lack of Kavod Rabbanim is only indicative of the writer's mentality. Did the author go to Netiv Aryeh? Has he ever experienced Rav Bina first-hand? Obviously not. He would rather interview a student who broke the biggest rule of the yeshiva about what his experience was like with Rav Bina. Obviously it is a negative one.
After learning by Rav Bina for 2 years, I will be the first to admit he is one of the least charismatic people I know. Anyone that says otherwise has never heard him speak. But his strength comes from his passion. He loves every person that walks through the door and he would do anything for them, be it financially or emotionally. And THAT is what makes him amazing. And THAT is why people keep going. And THAT is why people will continue to go as long as he is running the place.
I am a parent of a former Netiv Aryeh student. My son witnessed some of the techniques that are being described here as abuse, sometimes first hand. I doubt that he would call it “abuse”. He ended up with a tremendous appreciation of Rav Bina and had an overwhelmingly positive experience. He has moved on to be a caring and confident young man, strong in his observance of Judaism.
So many here have questioned how one can condone this tough approach simply because Rav Bina has been successful with so many other students and he has other positive middot (chessed, charity, etc.). One poster asked if we would condone someone who eats non-kosher or desecrates the shabbos on occasion. There is, of course, no comparison. The question to ask is "what would such a person be trying to accomplish by doing those acts?" When Rav Bina does the controversial acts described here, he is trying to help the boy, perhaps similar to if one desecrated the shabbos to drive someone to the hospital or allowed eating non-kosher to save a life. Any approach is bound to have some success and some failures. The fact that his has been so overwhelmingly successful is a testament to it.
Although the boot camp analogy is not entirely valid, nonetheless, if a parent sends his child to a boot camp, he knows what he is in for and more than likely chose the boot camp because of its effectiveness. Rav Bina might occasionally step over the line, but that is because he is treading on a very thin line and wants to accomplish so much. When he goes to far, it needs to be pointed out and corrected as it has been in the past.
The fact that the majority of the detractors have described exactly the same scenarios demonstrates that there is little that is uncontrolled in Rav Bina's approach. It is practically scripted because it has proven to work.
I am distraught and personally offended from the article written about Rav Bina shlit"a. I am currently a second year student in Netiv Aryeh, and starting army service this coming March. I am doing the army through Hesder, and coming back Shana Bet to start my Hesder, I was advised by some to go to an all Israeli yeshiva so that I go in to the army knowing more people going in, instead of having only one person go in with me. Both my parents and I, without even thinking twice knew that I rather know only one person going into the army and be at least another year with Rav Bina shlit"a. Rav Bina is an incredible person who cares about EVERY SINGLE student in Netiv and does more for all his students than any other Rebbe out there that I've encountered and been told about. You should be ashamed of yourself for letting such a disgusting article on your website. And let me tell you if someone says he is "off the derech because of Rav Bina" he's lying to you and worse, to himself. He's just a person who couldn't care less about Halachos and finally found an excuse to not keep any.
as a former student, i know firsthand what type of evil person this Bina character is. I wont even go so far to call him a Rabbi or whatever. Hes really an evil person. For a young student who was eager to take in all Israel had to offer for my year abroad, i was extremely let down that this Bina person was allowed to say / act as he did. He really ruined my once in a lifetime experience.
Sad.
One would think that with years of allegations, with similar stories from people who never met eachother, the board of the school or the man himself would step down and let others take over for the sake of the insititution. But clearly in cases like this the super ego of the leader overides all good judgement putting himself above the insititution. It is now application "season" for boy's yeshivas and who in their right would let their son apply now? So a possible suspension by YU is in the works, a yeshiva that clearly has value for some make be in jeopardy all for the sake of a man's reputation, a man who clearly has what to offer other populations that are less vulnerable than 18 y.o. boys away from their parents in a foreign country for the first time. I don't want to hear about the "soft" american teens who are entitiled, if a kid goes to the city to get high he is breaking a school rule, deal with it with consequences not name calling.
I agree with some of the other posts here that it doesn't make a difference how much chesed he does or how many boys he helped and strengthened. If even ONE boy suffers from his abuse, let alone a group each year, he is abusing his power. The fact that he forcees therapists to share information with him, is not only unethical, but ILLEGAL !!!!!
YU should close down this place, and all rabbis and lay leaders including rabbi Billet, rabbi Lookstein, as well as Ira Rennert, should be forced to pull their support, and be pressured to stand up and end the reign of this evil, disgusting, and retarded person.
It's a shame that the current society isn't as interested in reporting about beautiful things as much as disturbing things. If it were the other way around, we would have seen hundreds of articles about all the amazing attributes about Rav Bina way before this would come out.
The only thing that's necessary for me to say, and I urge others to do the same, is that I am who I am because of Rav Bina. Rav Bina turned me into a mensch, a Torah observer and lover, made me passionate about loving others, caring about my parents, set me on the course to be successful in my marriage and my career, and is in a frame on my wall right by my dining room table so that I can always have his warm face nearby for encouragement.
You fail to mention that you were employed by him
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