The Murderer Next Door
Posted by Beit T'shuvah
December 26, 2012 | 2:42 pmBy Ben Spielberg
After two and a half years of being a member of Beit T'Shuvah, not much can faze me. My rabbi is a convicted felon. My boss is vocal about her struggle to get out of the bed every morning. Most of my friends are crackheads and heroin addicts. A staff member without tattoos would probably be considered an outlier.
If one were to listen to a meeting of Alcoholics Anonymous, they would probably be surprised to find the rooms filled with laughter. We laugh when we talk about our dark pasts; we chuckle at the idea of robbing a Toys 'R Us, we smirk at the excuses we used to use to disguise our drug use: “I'm not high, I'm just tired.”
CGA is one of the programs at Beit T'Shuvah that makes this treatment center so different from the rest. Criminality is viewed as a behavioral addiction, a lifestyle as addictive as heroin. Our alternative sentencing department has helped in the rehabilitation of these compulsive criminals, enlightening them with teachings of Judaism, kindness, and 12-step work.
Even though the taboos of robbery and drug use are broken down relatively easily here, there is still one taboo that is difficult to face: murder. There are people who have lived at Beit T'Shuvah who have served 20+ years in prison for [the assistance of] murder. One of the key ideals in Beit T’Shuvah is that everyone deserves redemption, the right to transform and administer goodness to the world.
And while some of us have not murdered people, others have murdered trust. We have murdered respect for our fellow human beings. We have murdered relationships, killed friendships, and scarred our families forever.
Even if I had started my recovery with doubts, all of them have since been squashed. Some people from beyond our community believe that there are some who can’t be helped, that they have gone too far and must never be given a second chance. I believe that if they could see the people that I work with everyday—people whom society had labeled as evil, broken, and worthless—they might think twice about writing these people off.
You can follow Ben Spielberg on Twitter @benspielblog
Source: http://www.jewishjournal.com/addicted_to_redemption/item/the_murderer_next...
The Beit T'Shuvah campus is located in West Los Angeles, just south of the Pico-Robertson area. The facility is a warm setting where approximately 110 residents interact with clinical staff in a healing atmosphere that emphasizes faith-based recovery and the values of the Jewish community. Resident rooms are double-occupancy and include attached bathrooms, with men and women's rooms located in separate buildings of the campus. An additional private floor houses Independent Living residents, who have graduated the Beit T'shuvah program. The campus also includes a sanctuary for religious services, separate lounges for men and women, a kitchen and dining room, a full recording studio, a gym with weight systems, on-site career center, several spaces for private therapy sessions, and administrative offices.
Source: http://www.beittshuvah.org/Facilities
I don't know how to take this article........
Comments
FrybreadSam (not verified)
Fri, 01/04/2013 - 15:52
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Wasn't there an earlier
Wasn't there an earlier endorsement? I guess my thought first off is that these people have paid their debt to society.
JR Harris
Fri, 01/04/2013 - 16:09
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I do find this Rehab refreshing because they are honest and
I do find this Rehab refreshing because they are honest and aren't towing the usual AA party line of everyone is just wonderful and we don't have any criminals in our group, it only happens in a few other groups. The reason I said I don't know what to think about this place is because they are being brutally honest, it's filled with criminals from jails, prisons and all around thugs.
I will say that I dislike most 12 Step members because they always lie about the people they recruit, but this ones doesn't. I will also say that this Rehab has a few very bad reviews, which I attribute to most people believing the flowery 12 Step Rehabs that lie, so they find this one sub-standard. I would like to know if this Rehab practices blame the victim like most AA members do? So far I can't find that in any articles. Why are they different?
Here is another story where the same author is not lying which is very refreshing because from my experience most AA members lie about this subject-
Ben Spielberg of Beit T'shuvah explains the conundrum between Sober and Not Sober with prescribed medication in AA - 2013 http://orange-papers.org/forum/node/3074
"Tradition 10 - Alcoholics Anonymous has no opinion on outside issues; hence the AA name ought never be drawn into public controversy." Please follow orders from the Interchurch Center if you are an AA member and don't comment.
Raymond Hessel
Wed, 01/09/2013 - 01:11
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not to be snarky
but the expression is "toe the line" not "tow the line"
JR Harris
Wed, 01/09/2013 - 05:07
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No problem, you do know that the letter "e" is right next to "w"
No problem, you do know that the letter "e" is right next to "w" on the keyboard and that a spell checker would not pick up "tow" or "toe" as being spelled incorrectly? I write thousand of words a day sometimes and while I try to proof read them all, I miss some.
"Tradition 10 - Alcoholics Anonymous has no opinion on outside issues; hence the AA name ought never be drawn into public controversy." Please follow orders from the Interchurch Center if you are an AA member and don't comment.