Results 1 to 3 of 3

Thread Information

Users Browsing this Thread

There are currently 1 users browsing this thread. (0 members and 1 guests)

  1. #1
    Senior Member zeezil's Avatar
    Join Date
    May 2007
    Location
    NC
    Posts
    16,593

    A Brooklyn-in-Iowa success story turns sour

    A Brooklyn-in-Iowa success story turns sour
    Immigration case shadows kosher meat plant known for diversity
    By DAVID B. CARUSO Associated Press
    Aug. 8, 2008, 6:11PM
    3Comments


    Hundreds march during an immigration rally in Postville, Iowa, in July, protesting conditions at the Agriprocessors plant that was raided by U.S. immigration agents in May.

    Share Print Email Del.icio.usDiggTechnoratiYahoo! BuzzNEW YORK — Two decades ago, the Rubashkin family of Brooklyn opened up a kosher slaughterhouse amid the cornfields of Iowa — not exactly a center of Jewish culture.

    The bearded, fedora-wearing strangers from Brooklyn quickly transformed Postville into its own small-town melting pot. Immigrants from Guatemala and Mexico began arriving in great numbers to work at the slaughterhouse. Soon, the town was home to churches and temples, and the shelves of the grocery stores were stocked with tortillas and bagels.

    Lately, though, the Rubashkins' grand cultural experiment seems to have lost any chance at a feel-good ending.

    The family's Iowa business, Agriprocessors, the nation's biggest supplier of kosher meat, was raided by U.S. immigration agents in May. Nearly 400 workers, mostly Guatemalans, were swept up and jailed and are likely to be deported as illegal immigrants.

    Labor organizers and workers have also accused the company of exploiting its employees, tolerating abusive behavior by managers and illegally hiring teenagers. State officials said last week that they had uncovered "egregious" violations involving 57 children, ages 14 to 17, who worked at the Postville plant. The company denied knowingly hiring any minors and said that the government's allegations are "inflammatory."

    And a few Jewish groups have questioned whether the plant, given its problems, should keep its kosher certification.

    It all adds up to a mess for a family that has never sought attention, and now feels it is being attacked unfairly, especially by the media.

    "The press? Terrible!" said the family's patriarch, Aaron Rubashkin, 80. He said allegations that the company knowingly hired illegal immigrants and children and tolerated abusive conditions were all lies.


    Imprisoned in Siberia
    The family's history is well documented.

    Aaron Rubashkin and his wife, Rivka, fled the Soviet Union after World War II and settled in Brooklyn, a world center of Hasidic Judaism. Rivka's uncles, the family has said, had been imprisoned in Siberia because of their religious beliefs.

    In the 1950s, Aaron founded a kosher meat market in the city's Borough Park section. The family prospered.

    Then, in 1987, the Rubashkins made an incredible leap: Looking for a way to bolster an unreliable supply of kosher beef, the family bought an abandoned nonkosher meatpacking plant in tiny Postville, Iowa.

    Two of Aaron's sons moved to Postville to oversee the plant, and a steady stream of Hasidic families followed. Soon, Postville, then a town of around 1,500 people, found itself drawing immigrant laborers, too.

    Suddenly, the town was infused with rabbis and other Jews, Guatemalans and Mexicans, expatriates from former Soviet republics — and a host of new ethnic tensions.

    The town became a regular stop for out-of-town reporters looking for a story about America's diversity. A documentary crew visited. National Geographic did a pictorial. Journalism professor Stephen Bloom wrote a book, Postville: A Clash of Cultures in Heartland America.

    Amid it all, the company was a huge success, with popular brands such as Aaron's Best and Rubashkin's. By 2006, Agriprocessors had a second factory in Oklahoma, run in partnership with the Oglala Sioux Tribe, and annual revenue of $250 million.


    PETA's video
    In 2004, however, the animal rights group PETA recorded a gruesome video of the company's operation that showed cattle staggering about in apparent pain after their throats had been slit and their tracheas partly removed. Agriprocessors, while defending its techniques as a religious ritual, changed some practices.

    One of Aaron's sons, the influential Brooklyn rabbi Moshe Rubashkin, pleaded guilty to bank fraud in 2002 after writing $325,000 in bad checks related to a family textile business. He received 15 months in prison.

    A son-in-law, Menachim Balkany, a political fundraiser who hobnobbed with mayors and congressmen, was charged in 2003 with misusing a $700,000 federal grant. The prosecution was dropped when he agreed to make restitution.

    Agriprocessors also found itself battling a lawsuit filed by a bankruptcy trustee overseeing the remnants of a New York health and beauty supply company whose owner had pleaded guilty to a multimillion-dollar bank fraud.

    The trustee said the company, Allou Distributors, had a host of suspicious transactions on its books, including $2.9 million in unexplained payments to Agriprocessors. The lawsuit demanded Agriprocessors return the payments, which it claimed were part of the scheme to hide Allou's assets.

    Agriprocessors insisted it did nothing wrong and had been supplying Allou with surplus meat, but it agreed last summer to pay $1.4 million to settle the case.


    Woes proliferate
    More trouble may lie on the horizon.

    Moshe Rubashkin pleaded guilty this year to storing hazardous waste without a permit at a defunct, family-owned textile plant in Allentown, Pa. His son pleaded guilty to lying to federal agents. They have yet to be sentenced.

    Supporters say the Rubashkins are no scofflaws, just unsophisticated businessmen who made some mistakes.

    "These are simple people. They are a family of butchers," said Dovid Eliezrie, a California rabbi who has been assisting the family with the media.

    Scott Frotman, a spokesman for the Food and Commercial Workers union, had a different take, calling the company's treatment of its immigrant work force "morally reprehensible."

    "They blame the media. They blame us. They refuse to accept responsibility for anything that is going on in that plant," he said.

    State and federal investigators are looking into various alleged violations at the company, such as not paying workers, improperly using hazardous chemicals and not having alarms that could be heard by employees. The Rubashkins have not been charged.

    "We are God-fearing people and we believe in the American system and we believe it will ultimately turn out OK," said Getzel Rubashkin, 24, a grandson of the family's patriarch and an employee at Agriprocessors.

    He also said the family hasn't given up on Postville, which he has called home since age 10.

    "There are people who would like to see us leave, but on the whole we have very warm relations," he said.

    http://www.chron.com/disp/story.mpl/bus ... 32830.html
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

  2. #2
    Senior Member tencz57's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jan 2008
    Location
    FL
    Posts
    2,425
    "These are simple people. They are a family of butchers," said Dovid Eliezrie, a California rabbi who has been assisting the family with the media.
    Yeah Right . And i suppose Don Vito Corleone was only a nice man looking out for his friends .
    I got my boots on so let the BS roll .

    Supporters say the Rubashkins are no scofflaws, just unsophisticated businessmen who made some mistakes.
    See above posted comment
    Nam vet 1967/1970 Skull & Bones can KMA .Bless our Brothers that gave their all ..It also gives me the right to Vote for Chuck Baldwin 2008 POTUS . NOW or never*
    *

  3. #3
    Senior Member fedupinwaukegan's Avatar
    Join Date
    Jun 2006
    Location
    Waukegan, IL
    Posts
    6,134
    http://www.alipac.us/ftopic-126389-0.html

    Duplicate reported. Post at the above link for this article.
    Join our efforts to Secure America's Borders and End Illegal Immigration by Joining ALIPAC's E-Mail Alerts network (CLICK HERE)

Posting Permissions

  • You may not post new threads
  • You may not post replies
  • You may not post attachments
  • You may not edit your posts
  •