Failed Messiah

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Defunct American Jewish blog focused on ultra-Orthodox community scandals


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Failed Messiah was an influential American Jewish blog that operated from 2004 until early 2016. It was known for its muckraking coverage of scandals, corruption, cover-ups, and controversies within the ultra-Orthodox (Haredi) Jewish community, particularly in the United States and Israel.[1][2]

The blog was written almost single-handedly by its founder and primary author, Shmarya Rosenberg (also known as Scott Rosenberg), a former member of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement who became a sharp critic of aspects of Haredi and Hasidic life.[3] It gained a reputation as one of the few English-language sources providing detailed, often critical reporting on topics such as sexual abuse cover-ups, financial misconduct, rabbinic authority, and internal community power struggles that mainstream Jewish media sometimes avoided.

History

Failed Messiah launched in 2004 as a personal blog on the Typepad platform (original URL: failedmessiah.typepad.com). Rosenberg used it to expose what he described as hypocrisy, corruption, and failures within ultra-Orthodox institutions, often drawing on insider sources, leaked documents, and public records.[3]

The blog quickly became controversial. Supporters praised it for holding powerful community figures accountable; critics accused it of being sensationalist, anti-Haredi, or motivated by personal grudges. It frequently broke stories on child sexual abuse in yeshivas, fraudulent charities, rabbinic misconduct, and political machinations within Hasidic groups.[4]

In February 2016, after nearly 12 years of continuous operation, Rosenberg announced he was stepping down as publisher and sole writer. He sold the blog to an anonymous group called Diversified Holdings. In his farewell post, he expressed a desire to focus on anti-poverty work and other projects. The blog effectively ceased its original form shortly thereafter, though the domain and archives were briefly maintained under new ownership amid speculation that the buyers intended to silence or soften its critical tone.[2][1][5]

The site is now defunct in its original independent form, with content primarily accessible only through internet archives such as the Wayback Machine.

Impact and legacy

Failed Messiah was one of the earliest and most prominent examples of citizen journalism within the Jewish world, particularly in exposing issues inside insular Haredi communities. It influenced mainstream coverage of topics like sexual abuse in Orthodox institutions and prompted internal discussions about transparency and accountability.[3]

Its shutdown in 2016 was widely noted in Jewish media as the end of an era for independent, critical blogging in the Orthodox space. Some observers expressed concern that the sale could lead to the blog’s voice being muted.[2]

Archives

Original content from Failed Messiah is preserved in the Internet Archive’s Wayback Machine (search for failedmessiah.typepad.com). No active official mirror or continuation of the blog exists as of March 2026.

January 2016

December 2015

September 2015

See also

Shmarya Rosenberg Haredi Judaism

External links


Resources

Notes

  1. 1.0 1.1 Times of Israel, FailedMessiah blogger signs off after 12 years of haredi muckraking The Times of Israel, 4 February 2016.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 Forward, FailedMessiah Blogger Quits Muckracking Anti-Hasidic Site Forward, 3 February 2016.
  3. 3.0 3.1 3.2 Columbia Journalism Review, FailedMessiah.com Columbia Journalism Review, 26 May 2011.
  4. JTA, FailedMessiah blog signs off after 12-year run JTA, 3 February 2016.
  5. Jewish Arizona, Failed Messiah founder sells blog – but did he sell out? Jewish Arizona, 9 February 2016.