Police line (illustration)
Police line (illustration)iStock

Authorities in Guatemala raided the compound of a fringe haredi sect living there, separating children from their parents, amid allegations of physical and mental abuse.

Israel’s Justice Ministry said Tuesday that the Central American country had obeyed its request to crack down on the Lev Tahor group, according to haredi news website Kikar Hashabbat.

The Guatemalan government suspected Lev Tahor of performing child marriages and abusing members, including children.

The Justice Ministry said it was in touch with Guatemalan authorities to ensure the safety of Israeli citizens, including minors, who are members of the group, according to Kikar Hashabbat. The report did not specify how many people are members or in what city the compound in question was located.

In June, a court in Guatemala indicted the ex-mayor of a small town for “participating in the expulsion of a religious community” after some 230 members of Lev Tahor were forced out in 2014. The expulsion followed religious disputes with its Mayan residents, who are Roman Catholic.

The mayor of San Juan La Laguna, Antonio Adolfo Perez y Perez, was charged with abuse of authority and discrimination and sentenced to house arrest, the local newspaper Prensa Libre reported. He had lost his political immunity on Jan. 14 after losing his re-election bid.

By August 2014, most Lev Tahor members had settled in Guatemala, leaving behind their previous place of residence in Canada after local authorities there alleged mistreatment of children. Others left for Israel and the United States.

Lev Tahor vigorously denied all the allegations by the Canadian authorities and said they are victims of a religious smear.

The group shuns technology and its female members wear black robes from head to toe, leaving only their faces exposed. It was founded by an Israeli, Shlomo Helbrans, in the 1980s and rejects the State of Israel.

Guatemala is home to some 1,200 Jews in a population of 15 million.