Become a Member
Nathan Jeffay

By

Nathan Jeffay,

Nathan Jeffay

Opinion

'Pay for me and I'll pray for you'

This charity’s use of deprived children is a form of spiritual pimping

October 14, 2010 10:33
3 min read

'Children are pure-hearted; they haven't sinned; their prayers are unlike yours or mine", declares the Orthodox author Tziporah Heller in a video for an extremely troubling Jewish fundraising campaign.

Here is the deal: go on to the website of the Israeli charity, Yad Ezra V'Shulamit, input the name of a person in need of divine assistance, make a donation by credit card, and the impoverished children for whom it provides hot meals will intercede with God from the Western Wall on your behalf.

"Yad Ezra V'Shulamit can change things for you," promises Rebbetzen Heller. "Could you imagine what merit having children pray for you at the Kotel will have on your life?" Yad Ezra V'Shulamit is a great charity which provides meals and educational help for poor children, food packages for poor families, and operates soup kitchens. But the end does not always justify the means and this particular fundraiser, originally a High Holyday campaign but still open for business online, is truly outrageous. Entrusted with children who need to be cared for, this organisation, it seems to me, is nothing less than spiritually pimping their young charges.

This rent-a-soul arrangement exploits both sides. It unashamedly targets people with problems. As a marketing agency email that popped into hundreds of in-boxes just after Rosh Hashanah put it: "Please forward this to anyone in need of a prayer - for marriage, children, prosperity, work, health, etc." It plays on the fears and hopes of the vulnerable and promises the undeliverable. How can this Orthodox-run charity make the pledge that it "can change things for you", when Judaism teaches that we cannot know with any certainty what effect praying, giving charity, or performing any other mitzvah will have on our well-being?