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P has just explained that Kiryat Matalon, her upscale neighborhood at the western entrance of Petach Tikvah, no longer has enough kids to justify its own elementary school. The members of that group snatch up all the available rentals. If you go out at 3am, you see thousands of men headed there, from my neighborhood, Tel Aviv, and other cities. Many are celebrities—singers, models. This conversation is starting to ring a bell. A year or two ago I saw a response by Rav Aviner to a question about learning kabbalah.
He warned the writer about a group claiming to teach kabbalah that is really a cult. From the outside it seems to resemble Orthodox Judaism. The page I linked to mentions Shabbat, kashrut, niddah, modest dress for women, and kippot for men. On Sukkot and Pesach they hold huge festivals with large numbers of overseas visitors. Nana10 has an interview with other former members of Bnei Baruch. The article appears to no longer be available. Men are allowed to visit with their families only fifteen minutes a day.
When a husband mentioned that his wife objected, his comrades told him to divorce her and get a new wife. The woman in the park added more details, which I have no way of verifying. The newspaper article from mentions an emphasis on skirts for women. The men volunteer or study at the center during the evenings, and again from AM. The women and children attend meals on Shabbat but eat separately.
Once P noticed some of the women eating on Yom Kippur. P claims that the kabbalah center houses scrolls that look like a sefer Torah but contain a different text.
You have a sickness. The kids attend a separate school in a different city, but enroll in local preschools and afterschool activities. Jewish sources recommend donating at least ten percent of income to charity, but no one expects the shul to get all of it. Blogger Hezi Amiel writes that the kabbalah center has a sophisticated web presence and high ranking in search engines, making it difficult for potential members to find information critical of the group.