Colombia says 17 minors rescued from Jewish sect accused of abuse

Local women help family members and some of the children who were rescued from the Jewish Lev Tahor sect and taken to a shelter while they are being held by police after attempting to leave the facility in Guatemala City on December 23, 2024. (AFP)
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Updated 23 November 2025
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Colombia says 17 minors rescued from Jewish sect accused of abuse

  • In December 2024, Guatemalan authorities rescued 160 minors from a farm occupied by Lev Tahor, alleging they were being abused

BOGOTA: Colombian authorities said Sunday they had rescued 17 minors from members of Lev Tahor, an ultra-Orthodox Jewish sect under investigation for alleged child sex abuse.
Lev Tahor, which practices a form of Judaism in which women wear black tunics covering them from head to toe, has been the subject of investigations for the mistreatment of minors in several countries.
“We have rescued 17 boys, girls and teens,” the country’s immigration service said on X, with pictures of some of the children, their faces blurred or shielded from view.
“International alerts have been issued over crimes against minors associated with this community.”
The Lev Tahor sect was formed in the 1980s, and some members settled in Guatemala in 2013. Authorities estimate that the community is made up of roughly 50 families from Guatemala, the United States, Canada and other countries.
Lev Tahor also has run into problems with officials in Mexico and Canada.
In December 2024, Guatemalan authorities rescued 160 minors from a farm occupied by Lev Tahor, alleging they were being abused.
At the time, public prosecutor Dimas Jimenez told a press conference that the raid was carried out due to suspicions of “forced pregnancy, mistreatment of minors and rape.”