Authors: Mark Borovitz, Alan Eisenstock, Alan Eisenstock
ISBN-13: 9780060563806, ISBN-10: 006056380X
Format: Paperback
Publisher: HarperCollins Publishers
Date Published: November 2005
Edition: Reprint
Rabbi Mark Borovitz is the spiritual leader of Congregation Beit T'Shuvah in Los Angeles.
Mark Borovitz was a mobster, gangster, con man, gambler, thief, and a drunk. He's seen it all. In this inspiring memoir, he takes you on a journey from the streets to discovering his soul in a prison cell.
When Mark was fourteen, his father died and his world came crashing down. He stole, gambled, and drank, beginning a twenty-year life of crime, all the while trying to be the good son, the good brother, the good boy, but his life only spun more out of control until the mob put a hit out on him.
After his release from prison, the drinking and thieving continued until, at the edge of oblivion, he experienced a moment of true divine intervention, a startling revelation that saved his life.
Mark Borovitz proved that you can change your life profoundly. He is now the rabbi at Beit T'Shuvah in Los Angeles, the House of Return, a rehabilitation facility for addicts of all kinds.
The Holy Thief is the remarkable memoir of an amazing man. It is a true-life gangster story, a passionate love story, and a case of study in redemption. Regardless of your faith, you will find his story tragic, funny, uplifting, and inspirational.
Borovitz started with petty thievery-baseball cards, candy, marbles-at age eight. By 14, shortly after the death of his father, he became a middleman, and at 25, he beat two middle-aged men at their own scam. Through most of this he maintained a second life as a nice Jewish boy who went to shul, said kaddish every day for a year for his father, looked out for his sister and turned over much of his ill-gotten gains to his mother to support the family. The scams got bigger, the trail got hotter and eventually he was caught. It took two stints in jail for him to learn that crime doesn't pay, but Borovitz attacked his reformation with the same zeal he once applied to intricate cons. His decision to become a rabbi at age 50 seems nothing less than natural. Borovitz is a storyteller at heart, so it's easy to see how he conned so many for so much. Just as natural is his commitment, with his wife, to Beit T'Shuvah, House of Return, a place for souls lost to addiction and themselves. Heart-wrenching but hilarious, raw but refreshing, this everyman tale reminds us that even nice Jewish boys can go bad, but they can also be redeemed. (Sept.) Copyright 2004 Reed Business Information.
Introduction | xi | |
My Prayer | xiii | |
1. | The End | 1 |
2. | Home | 9 |
3. | The Beginning | 34 |
4. | Checks, No Balances | 60 |
5. | Hollywood Hustle | 75 |
6. | The First Time | 104 |
7. | The Last Time | 121 |
8. | Return | 156 |
9. | God Hustle | 168 |
10. | Rabbi Mark | 196 |
11. | Prophet | 214 |
Afterword | 223 | |
Acknowledgments | 224 |