
Legal Warning Issued to Channel 12 Reporter After Viral Video of Yeshiva Bochurim Sparks Public Backlash
The widely circulated video showing two yeshiva bochurim being mocked has now led to actual legal action, with a formal warning letter sent to a Channel 12 journalist demanding an apology and threatening a lawsuit if the matter is not addressed.
The Emes L’Yaakov Yisroel organization, through attorney Natan Rosenblatt, sent a sharply worded letter to Channel 12 reporter Inbar Tuizer following the publication of footage in which two young yeshiva bochurim appear at her door and are subjected to ridicule and invasive questioning.
The incident, which drew strong public criticism, began when the bochurim arrived to request charity assistance for a hachnasas kallah. According to the organization, what began as a routine act of tzedakah turned into a humiliating episode filmed and shared publicly. The group is now demanding a public apology and warning of legal consequences over what it describes as harm to the minors.
The letter claims Tuizer used her media platform to turn a charitable act into a subject of mockery and harassment. The attorneys strongly object to what they say was an attempt to portray the bochurim as draft dodgers, arguing that while Tuizer benefits from public resources funded by taxpayers, the chareidi community fills societal gaps through systems of mutual aid and chesed.
Rosenblatt also included personal criticism of Tuizer’s military service, writing: “Before you dare to use terms such as ‘sharing the burden,’ it would be appropriate for you to engage in some personal reflection. Your military service, like that of your political patron Yair Lapid, consisted of writing for a military publication for 32 months. This amounts to paid draft evasion in every sense.”
The letter contrasts Tuizer’s behavior with what it describes as the inclusive approach of chareidi charitable organizations, emphasizing that such groups assist anyone in need regardless of religious background. “See the profound difference: can you imagine two secular individuals coming to a charitable organization (most of which are chareidi) asking for help, and being turned away because they do not observe Shabbos? Never! Chareidi charitable organizations – Yad Sarah, Ezra L’Marpeh, hospital meal services – assist every Jew regardless of sector or level of observance. They would never do what you and your colleagues are doing: persecuting and rejecting those who think differently from you. While the students acted out of love for a fellow Jew, you acted out of baseless hatred,” the letter states.
The attorneys further argue that the incident constitutes public humiliation—halbanas panim—of two minors in pursuit of online attention. The letter accuses Tuizer of targeting a law-abiding chareidi public while remaining silent in the face of more aggressive groups. It adds, “History has shown that cultures of lost identity such as the one you represent are ‘a passing cloud destined to disappear,’ in contrast to Torah scholars who have endured for 3,000 years.”
The letter concludes with a firm demand that Tuizer issue a public apology and correct what the organization calls a serious injustice, including the publication of the minors’ images without blurring. It calls on her to retract her use of the term “draft evasion” in reference to Torah students and to immediately stop any actions that infringe on their privacy. The warning ends with a clear threat: “If you do not act immediately to correct the injustice, we will take all legal measures available, including claims for damages and legal proceedings, without any further warning.”
{Matzav.com}