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The Fall of the House of Rubashkin

As the nation's largest kosher empire implodes, Brooklyn's ultra-Orthodox Jews begin to break ranks

Men in long black coats and women wearing stiff wigs crowd the benches of the courtroom at the Federal Building in Philadelphia. The room is packed, so the men remaining outside wait to take turns with the ones indoors.

Photos like this, of Agriprocessors CEO Sholom Rubashkin, are reverberating in Crown Heights.
AP Photo/Iowa City Gazette, Jonathan D. Woods
Photos like this, of Agriprocessors CEO Sholom Rubashkin, are reverberating in Crown Heights.
Conditions—for animals and people—at Agriprocessors have even loyal supporters of the Rubashkins wondering.
Newscom/ Mark Hirsch/ Rapport
Conditions—for animals and people—at Agriprocessors have even loyal supporters of the Rubashkins wondering.

Early on the morning of Monday, November 3, dozens of people had taken a charter bus from Crown Heights, the center of New York's Lubavitch Jewish community. Even more had carpooled. They had come for the sentencing of Moshe Rubashkin, chairman of the Crown Heights Jewish Community Council (a powerful nonprofit) and former owner of Montex Textiles in Allentown, Pennsylvania.

When a still-unidentified arsonist started a blaze at the Montex plant in 2005, it burned down with 300 drums of hazardous chemical waste inside. Rubashkin subsequently pleaded guilty to illegally storing the waste, which had been transported from a textile factory his family owned in New Jersey. But the city says he refused to pay the $450,000 in cleanup until the EPA forced him to do so. Allentown's city solicitor, Martin Danks, says the Rubashkins still owe millions of dollars in unpaid taxes.

Inside the courtroom, Rubashkin, an excitable 51-year-old man—his defense lawyer had claimed he was suffering from attention deficit disorder—listens in silence as a prosecutor blames him for endangering the people of Allentown with his carelessness. But when it comes time for him to speak, Rubashkin launches into a stream-of-consciousness oration—not about Montex or Allentown, but about the history of the Jewish community in Crown Heights, and about Menachem Mendel Schneerson, who is known as "the rebbe" to Lubavitch Jews, a revered rabbi who died in 1994.

His audience of supporters, meanwhile, is on edge. Beyond their concerns about the sentencing, they've heard rumors that Agriprocessors, the Rubashkin family's notorious kosher-meat-processing plant in Postville, Iowa, is on the verge of bankruptcy. (Bankruptcy papers were filed the following afternoon.) In May, Agriprocessors became a national news story when the federal government made it the subject of what was then the biggest immigration sweep in history, taking 389 undocumented workers into custody. The workers had been paid some of the lowest wages in the nation, and were allegedly forced to work up to 17-hour days with 10-minute lunch breaks in a freezing-cold, dirty hallway. Workers as young as 16 were said to have been operating meat grinders and power shears, often without any safety training.

Before the raid, the Rubashkins had been running a multimillion-dollar kosher empire that sent beef and poultry of the highest religious standard to places as far-flung as Anchorage, Memphis, and Jerusalem, under the brand "Aaron's Best" (named after Moshe's father, the family patriarch). The Agriprocessors plant employed about 700 people and was estimated to supply more than 60 percent of the country's kosher meat, reporting annual earnings of $300 million. Since the raid, however, the empire was imploding: The federal and state investigation resulted in three indictments for Moshe's brother, Sholom; the lack of workers after the raid had the Rubashkin family resorting to recruiting new employees in the former American Pacific territory of Palau; and with Agriprocessors offline, the price of kosher meat was rising.

The Rubashkins' slaughterhouse has been in trouble before: In 2004, Agriprocessors weathered an animal-cruelty scandal—videos secretly taped at the plant showed cattle stumbling around with their throats cut and their windpipes pulled out, trying in vain to bellow. The videos proved highly offensive to Jews: "Kosher" is supposed to ensure a more humane process of slaughter. The scandal led to a workers'-rights investigation and a boycott of Rubashkin meat by conservative Jews.

But only a few Rubashkins have been accused of wrongdoing, and even they still have their friends.

Rabbi Eliezer Yarmush, director of social services at the Crown Heights Jewish Community Council, is sitting on a card table outside the courtroom. Despite the nearly daily news reports about Agriprocessors and the crumbling Rubashkin empire, Yarmush says that he hasn't followed the news and isn't interested in controversy: "Absolutely nothing unethical happened at that factory," Yarmush declares with certitude, adding that he's not concerned that Moshe Rubashkin's sentencing will harm his standing with the publicly funded nonprofit. Also standing by Moshe Rubashkin is Crown Heights Democratic Congressman Eric Adams, who took a day off from work to testify as a character witness at the Philadelphia sentencing.

But another man, who didn't want to give his name for fear that his words might upset the Rubashkins, admits that the constant bad news is having an effect on the Lubavitchers: "We are going through a terrible, terrible time," he says.

Inside, Rochelle Ginsburg, 22, has squeezed onto a bench that the Crown Heights visitors have designated the women's section. "It's about time that we stood up and did something for this family that has done so much for us," she whispers. "You know how Jews are. Like the Holocaust, people just think: 'Oh, it will pass.' "

She fiddles with her pink handheld, opening it to a Facebook page titled "Stand up for the Rubashkins."

Beside her, women clutch prayer books, vigorously mouthing Hebrew phrases. One woman, a widow with six children who says that Moshe Rubashkin had paid for her visit to Israel, asks whether the judge seems confused. She hopes so, she says, because that's what she prayed for.

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  • Nbbasun 10/12/2011 10:06:00 AM

    The author Elizabeth Dwoskin is unreliable and clearly is putting ribashkin in a bad light - her reporting is inaccurate at best. No one should rely on anything Elizabeth Dwoskin writes

  • Sarah 06/17/2010 11:17:00 PM

    you must read this fascinating article by Debbie Maimon "Rubashkin Acquittal: Behind the Smoke and Mirrors" www.yated.com/content.asp?categoryid=7&contentid=129

  • Vox Veritatis 01/29/2009 10:50:00 AM

    Cries of anti-semitism are getting quite tiresome. These men broke the law, and in a big way, it's as simple as that. Funny thing is, I happened to be in Iowa at the time and I distincly remember the initial raid/bust, because I thought "how odd", and I am certain that there was a huge illegal crystal meth operation also discovered at Agriprocessors...interesting how that seems to be getting shoved down the memory hole...

  • Osa 01/27/2009 11:02:00 PM

    The real story utold to you people outside Iowa is not the animal and employee abuse but the drug operation that was being run from this business. However, when the Jews are involved in anything this scandalous, the worst of the worst is always buried. These folks were selling drugs to the community and that is why they were not particularly liked over here. I will post a link to an article (when the story first broke)later.

  • And what about...? 01/27/2009 10:57:00 PM

    And what about the crystal meth lab that was found in the meat plant? Why no mention about that?

  • P. Fisher 01/13/2009 8:54:00 PM

    No one in the comments seems to get it. Nore does the author. The jewish community is not the victim here. The workers at the Postville plant are the real victims. Today they are left out in the cold, literally with out food or income. Most of them still waiting to be paid the wages they had earned working at the slaughter house. If the conditions were so fine as maney Back East believe, then why was all the kosher meat being processed by Mexicans instead of those peoples of the Jewish community? My advise to the author is to come here to Iowa and spend some time living with the article and to the rest of you-pull your heads out of the sand and come here and learn what persecution is all about. I have some Mexican immigrants here that would like to chat with you.

  • Janet 12/24/2008 5:24:00 PM

    yours truly, "private soup kitchen" is an oxymoron. If a soup kitchen is only open to one group, it is not truly a "soup kitchen" which would be open to all in need.

  • yours truly 12/07/2008 8:10:00 AM

    It seems to be that you are no different then the NY Times. All you are interested in is sensationalisim. It seems that you are poking fun at Mrs Rubashkins "Private soup kitchen". If one of oyur own would do such a wonderful deed, you would hold them up as a shining example for people to follow, but here in this article you are showing her in a deragatory fashion. Why? Because you dont want to show that side of the story. You are trying to make something ugly, when there is so much beauty. Putrid writing!

  • Martin Sandberg 12/06/2008 2:26:00 AM

    As someone of Orthodox Jewish ancestry, with very strong ties to the Jewish community and certainly no fan of the Village Voice, I applaud the tone and matter in which this article was written as being eminently fair and objective. The fact of the matter is, despite what some of the comments have to say, due to the intense, high profile nature of this case as far as this article is concerned, in my humble opinion, no one can accuse the Village Voice of singling out Jews for malevolent, nefarious purposes. The fact is, this article is not about Jews, Jewish influence, kosher slaughter, or anything Jewish. It's about crime, its about immorality, it's about someone, groups of people, who brazenly flout the law, who flagrantly inhumanely exploit everything and anything that serves their interests, about someone or groups of people motivated not by interests in their community, religious beliefs, practices but by pure,unmitigated greed and doing whatever it takes, violating every rule, principle, social, civil, religious, in achieving that goal.

  • Avraham Greenhut 12/05/2008 9:21:00 PM

    I applaud this necessary and disturbing article and I thank the author for their attention to the subject matter,however: The classic definition of antisemitism is singling out a Jew for actions that have been conducted by non-Jews as well.With that being said I hope that the village voice will expose the Non- Kosher meat distributors for the same inhumane processes they practice. Anything less is irresponsible journalism and proof positive that Jews are being singled out for crimes others commit as well. Thats reprehensible in and of itself. The author may be an antisemitic Jew themselves only they know whats in their hearts. As a Baal Teshuva (returnee to orthodox Judaism) and a humanist who loves animals.I have wrestled with sticking to a vegetarian diet for various periods of time. I applaud this article. We Jews should uphold the highest standards of Kashrut and have a zero tolerance policy toward animal cruelty. The idea of my cat suffering is unbearable to me . Rabbi Avraham Yitzahck HaKohen Kook wrote extensively on vegetarianism himself. He was a vegetarian aside from the times that he would eat a small amount on Shabbat.

  • Penina Roth 12/05/2008 8:07:00 PM

    This article contains two blatant errors: 1)The Crown Heights riots were in 1991, not 1992 (that's the year of the LA riots) 2)Eric Adams is a STATE SENATOR, not a congressman

  • patricia 12/05/2008 9:35:00 AM

    And as a ps., it is always the corrupt ones that make the news.

  • patricia 12/05/2008 9:33:00 AM

    As always, corruption. The Jewish Hassid community is notorious for canvassing prostitutes, drugs, everything they snub from the "goyum". They do it too. Pu-lease. I'm not at all surprised by this news. They aren't pristine, they just act like it.

  • Elias 12/03/2008 11:27:00 AM

    Every human being has an obligation to treat other human beings with respect. This family is not doing that, whatever laws they claim to respect or disdain.

  • N. Oyb 12/03/2008 6:40:00 AM

    While I am not challenging the general gist of the article, it does show a lack of understanding as regards kosher standards. Followers of differing orthodox sects or divisions will always prefer kosher standards and supervision by their own. Therefore, Chabad rabbis will always show a strong preference for Lubavitch produced kosher meat, which in this case is Agriprocessors. Implying that the local Lubavitch rabbi was acting crooked in prefering Rubashkin meat to OU meat reflects ignorance of Orthodox Jewish culture on the author's part.

  • 12/03/2008 5:00:00 AM

    FIGHTING FOR THE AMERICAN TAXPAYER. When I freely subscribed to Judicial Watch, I found out that citizens and legal residents had a strong legal advocate and that we are not alone fighting corruption in Washington. Tom Fitton, president of this group has an mission of using the court system in fighting pro-illegal immigration groups, the corrupt politicians and special interest lobby who pander to the invaders. Go to their website www.judicialwatch.org/ and learn more about the ongoing investigation into unlawful 'Sanctuary city and state' laws, criminal aliens and the growing costs to American taxpayers.

 

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