Privacy 0:"' Mkt.).*, • • Ww. .14 eN. N. •- fr And Ptiblie T Interest • The investigation of President Clinton shows that political leaders can expect public scrutiny of their most private conduct. Do the same rules apply to community and religious leaders? Halachic law forbids scandal-mongering. But what if the rumors are true? I is simple, said Rabbi Aaron Bergman of Beth Abraham Hillel Moses; the Jewish community is bound by its ethical laws and its leaders are role models who cannot be moral in one sphere of life while behaving immorally in another sphere. "There's no such thing as being a good person in public and a rot- ten person in private," Bergman said. "You are who you are and should try to be consistent." But that simple proposition gets a lot more complicated for leaders when the question is whether the public — those being led — have a right to scrutinize their leaders' private lives, the question that has swirled for a year around President Clinton. Many leaders were divid- ed as to just how a community can balance the need for assuring that 1/29 1999 8 Detroit Jewish News its role models are in fact upstanding become known to the public, then with the harm that can be caused by obviously such individuals should not be serving in a Jewish community exposing scandals or engaging in lashon ha-ra. Literally the "evil position. Leaders of cultural Jewish organiza- tongue," lashon ha-ra is the Hebrew tions shied away from imposing moral term for gossip or slander. expectations, fear- Most leaders said ing being "holier they felt immoral JULIE WIENER Staff Writer than thou" or cast- leaders should qui- ing judgment. etly be removed TOM CHALKEY Illustrator Bob Aronson, from office, executive vice president of the Jewish although others stressed the impor- Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, tance of teshuvah, or repentance, and noted that in the writing of medieval noted that slander — while not only sage Rambam (also known as dangerous — is a serious breach of Maimonides) spreading rumors is Jewish law. "punished by death," and said that to "You can't be a social leader and be confront someone based on a rumor a person who is wanting in areas of "is a mistake." morality and ethics," added Rabbi While sexual harassment of co- Elimeilech Silberberg of Bais Chabad workers is forbidden at the Federation, of West Bloomfield. But he said he employees are not held accountable for opposes "witch hunts" and that the private behavior, he noted. "If some- burden of proof should fall on the one passed on information regarding a accuser, adding that "when the facts