Praying in prison
02/07/2013 22:38
Alternative detention track for inmates includes hours of daily religious study.
Torah lesson at Rishonim Prison. Photo: Courtesy Prison Service
It’s mid-morning in one of the largest prisons in Israel, and a couple of dozen
Orthodox Jews in prison jumpsuits are rocking back and forth, diligently
studying the Torah in almost complete silence.
Across the hallway, a
small prison synagogue is filled to bursting with inmates of all ages playing
darbuka drums, clapping and singing songs of praise. The scene could be set at
any local synagogue in Israel, with one major difference.
“These men are
not here because they were out eating a popsicle in the street; these men did
bad things,” says Rabbi Shlomi Cohen, deputy chief rabbi of the Prisons
Service.
This particular block of Rimonim Prison in the Sharon district
is the “torani” (observant/ pertaining to Torah) branch – an alternative
detention track for inmates that blends hours of daily religious study with the
normal requirements of life behind bars.
The Rimonim Prison’s torani
branch houses 108 prisoners, split into three separate levels; beginner, for the
newly-religious who have turned to a life of piety behind bars; intermediate,
for inmates who have a background in religious studies; and advanced, meant for
haredi prisoners who have spent years studying in yeshiva and kollel on the
outside.
The torani block of Rimonim is one of six branches spread across
Israel, which house some 450 inmates. Three of these are solely for more
Orthodox inmates, while the others provide classes at all levels. Outside of the
torani branches, there are Jewish learning classes run at prisons across Israel,
where more than 1,000 prisoners – about 10 percent of the Israeli prison
population – receive regular Jewish religious instruction.
The torani
detention program is a famous one in Israel, largely due to its popularity with
disgraced politicians, such as former labor and welfare minister Shlomo Benizri,
who spent two-and-a-half years of a corruption bid in Ma’asiyahu Prison’s torani
ward, where he was imprisoned with former president Moshe Katsav, who is today
serving a seven-year sentence for a battery of sex crimes.
The program
has gained fame not only for its reported success in rehabilitating criminals
but also for the widely held belief that it’s an easily exploited system for
crooks and con men looking to work the system to enjoy an easier
incarceration.
It’s an international stereotype: holy men who found God
behind prison walls – or at least put on a pose of piety to fool judges, parole
boards and spouses waiting on the other side. Israel is no exception, and the
stereotype follows a familiar script: an Israeli thug who appears in court for a
hearing with a faint beard on his face and a freshly bought kippa on his skull,
with the rule of thumb often being the larger the kippa, the more serious the
crime.
“There are those prisoners who come here thinking that it’s going
to be the Plaza Hotel, that they just have to put on a kippa and that’s it. But
we can usually root out those who are trying to do that, because there’s such a
strong framework they have to adhere to day in and day out,” says Rabbi Gabriel
Ezra, the head rabbi of Rimonim Prison.
A young man with a thin build and
side-locks falling to the collar of his Prisons Service uniform, he scoots across
the torani block, speaking of the program with the enthusiasm of a politician –
or, for that matter, a jailhouse preacher. He pops inside the advanced-level
study hall where he praises the “high level of study that wouldn’t be out of
place in the best yeshivas in Jerusalem” before one student lifts his head from
his prayer book and jokes that Ezra is such a politician he should leave and
join the Knesset.
Outside the beginners’ study hall, Ezra points out the
program’s schedule, which shows the hour-by-hour daily study load that begins
with the morning prayer service at 6:15 a.m. and ends at 9 p.m., after seven
hours of classes in the afternoon taught by the prisoners.
Ezra says the
classes provide a rigorous framework for men who have often lived lives of chaos
and disarray and haven’t learned clear and defined boundaries for human
behavior.
Rabbi Cohen, who joined the Prisons Service 26 years ago after
leaving the navy as an officer, echoes the sentiment, saying that in Torah
study, “the idea is for them to ask, “What did I learn about this to make me a
better person?” He says that they try to base most of these lessons on the
teachings found in Leviticus on mitzvot between man and his fellow
man.
“The central message we try to get across is that the world is not a
jungle and you have to behave in the way that God has commanded you to act,” he
says.
Inmate Hanan Ashtamker is a 42-year-old man of intimidating size
with an almost cherubic face and giant hands. Ashtamker has spent the last
three-and-a-half years at the Rimonim torani block as part of a six year
sentence for an act of domestic violence against his ex-wife, upon which he
would not elaborate.
Ashtamker has a history of violence within the
prison system as well, but he says he has found ways to apply the study of Torah
to his own rehabilitation. “What I learned in Torah study is that dealing with
violence is the same as dealing with other issues – you just change the names
and apply the lessons.”
Ashtamker has an eight-year-old daughter with
whom he’s not in touch and, in his words, Torah study supplies a framework and a
sense of purpose that he didn’t have before. He says he has taken the lessons
from class and “applied them to relationships and the mistakes I made with my
wife. I know I wouldn’t have done these things if I’d had this framework
back then.”
This framework is well known to Dr. Uri Timor, a lecturer at
the Ashkelon Academic College and at Bar-Ilan University, who has written
repeatedly about the subject of prisoner rehabilitation, including a 1998 study
that found remarkably low levels of recidivism for prisoners who had gone
through religious programs behind bars and continued their studies after
release.
Timor says while the program is a success in the general sense
that it providing a quiet environment of prisoners who have a framework to keep
them busy and away from violence and drugs, it also helps to rehabilitate
them.
Of the 517 prisoners he examined for his study, only 50 returned to
prison – a far lower number than the 43.5% recidivism rate among the general
inmate population, according to Prisons Service statistics. Timor says he
believes the same principles would bode well if such programs were implemented
for the 48% of inmates who are not Jewish, but that such suggestions were
dismissed by prison officials who fear such programs would become incubators for
Muslim extremism.
“‘What are you crazy? You want us to have a branch of
Hamas in the prison service?’ That was the basic response I got,” Timor
says.
According to Timor, the framework the program provides is something
that these men lack in their general life and a key to their success. “When you
talk to prisoners, the word they say more than anything else is “balagan” (a
mess); they say everything in their life was a mess, chaos. In the religious
studies they give up their autonomy and they receive a sense of order in their
lives.”
Still, the key is for inmates to keep the study going after they
leave prison – otherwise it’s likely to all be for naught.
“When they get
out and they just go back to their same neighborhood and their same friends, the
odds are against them. What matters is that they stay in this framework when
they get out of prison. Then they have much better chances.”