Newsletter
Newsletter Support JNS

Mexican cops raid Lev Tahor compound, remove children

Two members of the sect were arrested on suspicion of human trafficking and severe sexual offenses.

Lev Tahor members walk in London, July 8, 2022. Source: Twitter.
Lev Tahor members walk in London, July 8, 2022. Source: Twitter.

Mexican police raided the jungle compound of Jewish extremist sect Lev Tahor (“Pure Heart”) and removed minors from the site, the BBC reported on Wednesday.

Two adult members of the group, described by former members as a cult, are under arrest on suspicion of human trafficking and severe sexual offenses, including rape.

Some 80 Mexican law enforcement officials took part in the raid. Twenty-six persons were detained at the compound in Tapachula, in the far southeast state of Chiapas, including citizens of Israel, the United States, Canada and Guatemala. Some will be deported.

A three-year-old boy rescued from the compound arrived in Israel in recent days, where he was reunited with his father, who had previously escaped the sect.

Lev Tahor “is known for extremist practices and imposing a strict regime on members,” the BBC report said, adding, “It advocates child marriage, inflicts harsh punishments for even minor transgressions and requires women and girls as young as three years old to completely cover up with robes.”

Dubbed “the Jewish Taliban” due to a dress code similar to that imposed by the Islamist group ruling Afghanistan, the sect has been the subject of regular media coverage in Israel as well as attempts by former members to draw attention to the suffering of children in the group.

Lev Tahor was founded by anti-Zionist rabbi Shlomo Helbrans in Jerusalem in 1988.

“We will not surrender to a cruel enemy and its collaborators, Hezbollah, Hamas and the Houthis,” Israel’s consul general in New York said.
“This should not be welcome in the Democratic party,” the New Jersey senator said.
“The outrage only exposes how the press and those poisoned by anti-Israel propaganda will twist anything to blame the Jews,” Lizzy Savetsky told JNS.
Israel said that it “firmly rejects” the charges, which it said targeted the Jewish state “camouflaged as measures against violence.”
Pro-Israel groups sponsored 14 congressional trips to the Jewish state, accounting for more than a quarter of the $1.62 million spent on such travel through April.
The New Haven Police Department told JNS that Paul Smith is accused of targeting three Jews, shoving a fourth person who tried to intervene, throwing a rolled-up newspaper at them and of having “pointed at the yarmulke one of the victims was wearing and slapped it off his head, causing it to fall on the ground.”