It has to be one of the great New York Post front page headlines: NYPD JEW.
I just love it. And it’s true. The NYPD recruited the first Hasidic cop. And he’s from Brooklyn. And he’s a Talmudic scholar. Here’s an excerpt from the Post’s front page story.
Joel Witriol, a 24-year-old Talmud scholar from Brooklyn, starts his training at the department’s Police Academy today. "I realized there were so many things you could do [as a cop] – everything from community service to fighting narcotics," Witriol said, coming off the heels of a stint with the department’s auxiliary police force. "There are a hundred things, and every day is different."
Witriol has a degree from United Talmudical Seminary in Monroe, where he studied "religious stuff, mostly."
He’s also held part-time jobs doing everything from driving a delivery truck to working for a furniture company.
But the Brooklyn native wanted something more – and believes he found it five years ago when, while volunteering for an ambulance company, he heard about the police auxiliary. "I decided to go and check it out," Witriol said. "I went for training and passed."
Growing up in Williamsburg, Witriol admitted that he had the same cops-and-robbers ideas about policing as many youngsters. "I thought it was only about arresting people," he said
Compelling as this story is to those of us in Brooklyn, it turns out not to be true. Newspapers are reporting this morning that he didn’t have enough academic credits to gain acceptance into the academy. Apparently, sixteen years of yeshiva wasn’t enough.