Hungarys Jewish establishment is under fire Facebook Twitter Email SMS WhatsApp Share By Ruth Ellen Gruber | January 20, 2012 budapest | A whistle-blowing rabbi and a reform-minded lay leader are at the forefront of new efforts to shake up Hungary’s entrenched Jewish establishment. Late last year, Rabbi Zoltan Radnoti reportedly alerted authorities to complaints of embezzlement and tax fraud in the operation of Budapest’s main Jewish cemetery on Kozma Street. This led to a police investigation and an unprecedented raid on Dec. 1 on both the cemetery and the Jewish community offices that house the burial society, as well as a public airing of the scandal in the mainstream media. “Many people in the Jewish community administration attacked me for airing internal affairs to the outside,” said Radnoti, 40. But, he added, “You have to fight for the truth no matter what. I think this could become the beginning of the cleaning up of Jewish communal affairs.” Joining Radnoti is Andras Heisler, a former president of the Federation of Jewish Communities in Hungary, or Mazsihisz, the official umbrella of the Neolog community, a moderate reformist movement to which the vast majority of affiliated Hungarian Jews belong. The Jewish community in Budapest, home to 90 percent of the country’s Jews, is the largest member of Mazsihisz. Gusztav Zoltai (left), the director of the Federation of Hungarian Jewish Communities, and Peter Feldmajer, its president, are under fire for their leadership of the 20-year-old agency. photo/jta/szabolcs panyi Mazsihisz officially represents the interests of Hungarian Jewry to the government and is responsible for the annual distribution of millions of dollars of government grants and Holocaust compensation funds to Jewish organizations. Critics have long called for a reform of its financial and administrative operations, accusing it of being undemocratic, monopolistic and opaque. Managing director Gusztav Zoltai, 76, has been in office for two decades and has come under particularly sharp criticism for his leadership style and firm grip on power. “Zoltai manages to hold on to power by switching people in key positions who are somehow dependent on him,” said Janos Gado, an editor at the Jewish magazine Szombat. Gado and others say that many, if not most, of those who elect communal leaders are financially dependent on Zoltai and the other office-holders they are electing. Zoltai, who along with current Mazsihisz President Peter Feldmajer declined to be interviewed, was elected managing director in 1991, when the organization was first established to replace the communist-era Jewish body. A child survivor of the Holocaust who lost most of his family in World War II, he had worked previously as the stage manager of a theater. Last spring, in a case reported in the Hungarian media, Radnoti and Heisler charged that the election of Jewish community officials had been manipulated to prevent changes in the top leadership. “Zoltai must go; if he leaves there is a chance,” Heisler said. Mazsihisz has come under particular criticism for a lack of financial transparency — criticism the cemetery scandal seemed to bear out. Radnoti claims the investigation and police raid were sparked by material he furnished that documents transactions without receipts, sales of nonexistent gravesites and other abuses. “It’s the tip of an iceberg,” said Gabor Miklosi, an investigative journalist who saw Radnoti’s documentation and broke the story on the popular Index.hu website. After the allegations surfaced, Mazsihisz issued a statement saying that in its own internal investigation, the Budapest Jewish community had uncovered one case of abuse several months earlier that had involved a false receipt. The director of the cemetery was fired after repaying the money, the federation said. Sociologist Andras Kovacs, who co-authored a report last year that called for “urgent” reform of Mazsihisz, said the manner in which communal funds are distributed is “a totally dark area.” The report, issued in September by the London-based Institute for Jewish Policy Research, called for structural changes to ensure greater transparency and equitable distribution. “There are a lot of rumors and gossip,” said Kovacs. “Some former officials of the community suggested several times to launch an independent audit, but it never happened. It is always suggested that to raise questions about this could aid anti-Semites by putting the community in a bad light.” In recent months, the government has been conducting negotiations that could lead to the withdrawal of some funding from Mazsihisz. Mazsihisz is the only Jewish organization currentlyly receiving government subsidies and collective compensation for unclaimed Jewish assets seized by the communists. Several other Jewish groups are now pressing to obtain direct government funding rather than be obliged to obtain funding doled out by Mazsihisz, which says it will fight any such reallocation. Ruth Ellen Gruber Ruth Ellen Gruber is a writer for JTA. Also On J. Bay Area Emanu-El breaks ground on $91 million remodel of iconic building From the Archives Years after devastating 1906 quake, Emanu-El rose again Letters Sad farewell to Meira Academy; Don't rename Stow Lake U.S. Meet the defense in the Pittsburgh synagogue massacre trial Subscribe to our Newsletter Enter Email Sign Up