Sunday, March 08, 2009
To Observe the Sabbath or Not: At Trial, Questions of Religious Devotion
Religion has been a quiet presence in a Queens courtroom during the five-week murder trial of Mazoltuv Borukhova and Mikhail Mallayev, but only rarely has their Jewish faith been the subject of contention. Until last week.
On Thursday, Dr. Borukhova was forced to admit that she had violated the Sabbath to inquire about buying a spy camera camouflaged inside a button. But the real trouble started shortly afterward, when the defendants’ insistence on observing the Jewish day of rest conflicted with another inviolate period of repose — namely, the judge’s vacation.
The Talmudic details of the dispute will be explained shortly. But to understand its power — why, for instance, it produced the first public disagreement between two defendants who have so far resisted any temptation to blame each other for the killing of Dr. Borukhova’s husband in October 2007 — it is necessary to grasp how religious and ethnic identity have pervaded the case.
The allegations — that Dr. Borukhova hired Mr. Mallayev, her cousin by marriage, to kill her husband, Daniel Malakov, during a bitter custody dispute over their daughter — have scandalized the small community of Bukharian Jews. All three families belong to the ethnic group, which immigrated, almost in its entirety, to the United States from Uzbekistan and other Central Asian countries after the collapse of the Soviet Union.
Bukharian Jews preserved their religion for nearly 3,000 years under the Persian Empire, Muslim khanates and Communist rule. They have settled mainly in the Forest Hills section of Queens, clustered around synagogues that are traditional if not ultra-Orthodox — and now find themselves riven by the family feud.
Both Dr. Borukhova and Mr. Mallayev told the police that they would never be involved in anything illegal because of their religious beliefs.
Dr. Borukhova’s relatives sit every day in the second row of State Supreme Court, murmuring prayers from books printed in Russian and Hebrew. Dr. Malakov’s relatives occasionally hiss at them across the aisle.
Covering their hair in accordance with religious rules for married women, Dr. Borukhova’s sisters wear bouffant wigs that became an issue when prosecutors claimed that an eyewitness saw one sister at the murder scene.
Their mother, who, depending on which side is to be believed, either threatened Dr. Malakov that he would soon “go to God” or merely said the almighty would punish him, opts for a fuzzy cloche hat.
http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/08/nyregion/08notebook.html?em
Comments:
never liked bucharians,even the regular russians hate them,and look down on them. well at least they are sort of religious,better than the regular russians. come to think of it,i dont like either one of them. and to think,that i used to go to protests in the 70's to show support for their release from the ussr,for "persecution" anf catch this one"RELIGIOUS" persecution. Hah,what a joke they pulled.and how many people fell for it,including myself.
Agree with previous post. Judge each person individually not as a group. Unfortunately, this individual is delusional and maybe mentally sick.
dear anonymous. please dont make your narrowmindness comments if you dont know what the heck you are talking about. you sound like a bleeding heart liberal. I talk from experience not just wishfull thinking. I have worked with russians,including bucharians for well over 20 years. I have also had them as my employees for over 15 years. So when i make this statement I know very well what I am talking about. Until then please keep your comments to yourself.And dont put your foot in your mouth. Spaceba.
So will the racist among us stick to his guns if/when he needs help and refuse such help from a Russian/Bukharian doctor/Hatzolah person if/when his life is in danger ch"v?
First poster, you're mamash a soneh Yisroel, and G-d will judge you for your hateful words. I'm a frum Ashkenazi Jew, and while there are few of us, we're growing in number, and those demonstrations you attended in 1970s did play their part. Also, how can you stereotype the entire Bukharian community of tens of thousands of Jews in NYC alone? Yes, the Ashkenazi Russian community and the Bukharian community are different, but it gives you no write to use this forum for your hateful rhetoric.
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