Friday, / January 24, 2025
Home / news

Chabad on Pepsi Island

By , BUDAPEST, HUNGARY

An estimated 100,000 young men and women participate yearly in a giant pop music festival, known as “Pepsi Island.” Held on an otherwise deserted island near Budapest, this Hungarian version of the American Woodstock festival attracts youths from across Europe and internationally, making it the largest concert festival in Central Europe.

For five years now, Chabad of Hungary has operated a Jewish booth at the festival. Manned 24 hours a day by Chabad rabbis and yeshiva students, the booth—a spacious tent—is visited by thousands each day, including dignitaries such as the Prime Minister of Hungary and the Mayor of Budapest who regularly make appearances at the concerts.

Throughout the week, Chabad offers informal classes and lectures on Judaism, an “Ask the Rabbi” booth which draws hundreds of Jewish visitors who wait their turn in long lines, and a Shabbat schedule that includes candle lighting, lively services, and a spirited Havdallah ceremony complete with joyous singing and dancing.

“People approach the booth out of a general curiosity about Judaism,” says Rabbi Boruch Oberlander, director of Chabad activities in Hungary. “This is a place where they feel far more comfortable approaching the subject of religion than they would anywhere else.”

In many cases, students strike up relationships with the Chabad Rabbis that continue even after the concert. Rabbi Oberlander tells of a young man who approached him at the Chabad booth telling him that he had found out four years ago that his grandmother was Jewish. “Though it affected him deeply, he had no idea what to do with that information,” says Rabbi Oberlander. The Rabbi spoke with the young man during the festival and followed up with him later. “He is now well on his way to becoming a part of the Jewish community,” says Rabbi Oberlander.

Comment

Be the first to write a comment.

Add

Related Articles
Community Heals Together as Moldova Mikva Dedicated
Moldova Mikva Dedicated in Memory of Teen
Chabad Centers Offer Refuge Amid Raging Wildfires
On either side of them, houses burned. While the fires tearing through the Los Angeles area have left several dead, and entire communities in ruins,…
Trois-Rivières Historic Jewish Community Welcomes Chabad Center
Sometime during the height of the COVID pandemic, Rabbi Aaron Spiro posted an ad on Facebook — something that read along the lines of: “Are…
Art as Avodah: A Visual Conversation with Tobi Kahn
Tobi Kahn’s art lives in two worlds. His paintings of expansive oceanic horizons, akin to the color field works of Mark Rothko, hang in the…
Newsletter
Donate
Find Your Local Chabad Center
Magazine