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Orthodox Rabbi's Clinic
Treats Mentally Ill

New York (JTA) — Psycho-
therapists and mental health
social workers have long been
viewed with skepticism and
hostility by the Orthodox
community, but a
Williamsburg Brooklyn Or-
thodox rabbi has created an
outreach program to provide
professional counseling to
disturbed Jews who might be
hostile to such help.
Rabbi Chaim Stauber,
holding a pulpit and himself
a Chasidic leader, envisioned
a mental health clinic to
which Torah-abiding Jews
could come for help with crip-
pling mental problems and
with physically and mentally
disabled children and adults.
But he knew that his pro-
spective beneficiaries attach-
ed a stigma to their retarded
children, believing a child
thus handicapped might be
proof that the parents had
somehow sinned.
For Torah-abiding Jews,
there was a related problem
with professional counseling.
Many mental health profes-
sionals considered Orthodoxy
the source of emotional pro-
blems. They counseled ter-
mination of Orthodox beliefs
and practices as the "logical"
cure. Stauber called such
analysis a case of "giving a
parched person salt water to
quench thirst."
With the support of com-
munity rebbes, Stauber lined
up qualified professionals and
the funding for facilities and
staff.
In 1983, Stauber opened
Pesach Tikvah, or Door of
Hope in Williamsburg.
Stauber told the Jewish
Thlegraphic Agency that "the
initial programs of Pesach
Tikvah were viewed by the
Orthodox and Chasidic •corn-
munities with skepticism. lb-
day, Pesach Tikvah has
widespread approval" from
those Jews.
"Now, they wonder how our
communities could have ex-
isted without such an agen-
cy."
Stauber, who is the agency's
executive director, said that
Pesach Tikvah "is the only
major clinic anywhere for Or-
thodox and Hasidic Jews,
men, women and children,
with mental illness and retar-
dation."
He said that currently,
there are more than 200 ac-
tive cases in the clinic,
"which translates into more
than 600 visits each month."
There is a continuing treat-
ment program, also known as
the Pesach Tikvah day hospi-

tal, currently serving about
40 men and women with se-
vere emotional or retardation
programs, or both. The 40 are
among the 200 active cases in
the clinic.
Another facility is a
sheltered workshop. Some 50
individuals are in continuous
care as they get vocational
training. Another program is
community residences. There
is one for 14 mentally retard-
ed women and one for 24
mentally ill men. The 14
women are retardates, 18 and
older chronologically, but in
ability to function, they are
moderately to severely retard-
ed. Some go to the Brooklyn
School for Special Children,
getting whatever education
they can absorb.
Another program is family
therapy, available in the
clinic. "We have saved at least
two dozen marriages from
breaking up," said Stauber.
What keeps the 48-year-old
executive director plugging
away at his responsibilities?
The satisfaction he gets.
"Once a Jew comes to Pesach
Tikvah, we want this door to
be truly open. We try to help
Torah Jews with all of their
needs at one agency, rather
than having to go from de-
partment to department in a
bewildering variety of state
and city agencies."

No Extradition
For Dutchman

Amsterdam (JTA) — A
Dutchman accused of war-
time crimes cannot be ex-
tradited from Argentina
because he already was
sentenced in his native
Holland after World War II.
Jan Olij, 68, who was
sentenced to 20 years' im-
prisonment for his crimes by
a Dutch special tribunal, will
not be extradited to the
Netherlands, an Argentine
court has decided.
Und:z Argentine law, a per-
son sentenced in absentia is
not subject to extradition
from Argentina, according to
information Argentine of-
ficials told Rabbi Morton
Rosenthal, director of Latin
American affairs for the Anti-
Defamation League of B'nai
B'rith.
Both the ADL and Nazi-
hunter Simon Wiesenthal
spent considerable effort try-
ing to persuade the Dutch to
request Olij's extradition and
to convince the Argentine
authorities to comply with
that request.

