Saturday, / June 13, 2026
Home / news

A Jewish School for Dresden’s Jewish Children

By , DRESDEN, GERMANY

In a historic moment laden with poignancy that only survivors and children of survivors can know, the twenty preschoolers called out, “Shema Yisrael Hashem Elokeinu Hashem Echad.” For the parents and grandparents of these children who were beginning their first day of school—Jewish school—it marked a turning point in the city’s Jewish history.

A first since the near-annihilation of Dresden Jewry almost sixty years ago, the preschool which opened last week, was founded by local Chabad representatives Rabbi Schneur and Chanie Havlin, under the auspices of Ohr Avner-Chabad schools, making early Jewish education accessible to Dresden’s Jewish children.

The new development was especially significant, observes school director Mrs. Chanie Havlin, in a city whose Jewish life has been so ravaged, first by Nazism and then by communist oppression, as to make Jewish identity
seem a burdensome liability. Given its background, Dresden hardly seemed fertile ground for a Jewish revival when the young Chabad couple arrived here a year and a half ago. But if children are the key to the future, and a solid Jewish education key to a thriving Jewish future, Chabad’s new preschool should make deep inroads to the level Jewish awareness and involvement among the city’s 5,000 Jews.

Situated in an upper-scale neighborhood in the city center, the preschool, geared to children aged two to five, provides door-to-door transportation and nutritious lunches. Most importantly, it offers an attractive curriculum that incorporates Jewish subtopics in the broader range of a quality early childhood education.

But, says Rabbi Havlin, this is only the beginning. “The opening of the new preschool is the first step in the establishment of a comprehensive Jewish educational infrastructure so that a Jewish education becomes a desirable choice for the Jews of Dresden.”

Comment

Be the first to write a comment.

Add

Related Articles
A Chabad House for Colombia’s Caribbean Island of San Andrés
The tiny island of San Andrés, Colombia, sits closer to Nicaragua than to its own mainland. What it lacks in size, it makes up for…
Legacy Continues with Chabad in Resistencia, Argentina
Rabbi Nochum Freedman grew up in Bahía Blanca, Argentina — where his father traded comfort for calling and built a Jewish home in this smaller,…
Lehigh Valley Chabad Opens New Center, Celebrates 25 Years
In January 2001, Rabbi Yaacov and Devora Halperin set up a folding table in the sunroom of their Lehigh Valley home, and a handful of…
A Surf Town and a Mega Seder: Chabad Opens in Montañita
“I’m probably the longest-standing Jew in Montañita,” says Ishai Eshed, who arrived in the Ecuadorian surf town as a backpacker in 2004. “I instantly fell…
Newsletter
Donate
Find Your Local Chabad Center
Magazine