Thursday, / November 28, 2024
Home / news / Photos

One hundred Brazilian and fifteen Argentine young adults ditched beachside vacation plans and skipped Carnaval carousing for weeks of study in the frosty environs of New Jersey’s Rabbinical College of America (RCA) and New York’s Machon Chana Women’s Institute.

The group, a mix of lawyers, university students, and budding entrepreneurs, ages 19 to 30, flew northward to Chabad’s centers of higher learning for an experience as rare as finding a tanned New Yorker in December: serious Jewish study tailored for adults with limited Jewish educational backgrounds. “The South American student exchange program has revealed the expanse of the Rebbe’s vision and the potential of the College to achieve a mission of notable international dimension and consequence,” said Arnold H. Chait, a prominent New Jersey attorney and RCA Trustee. “We welcome with unbounded enthusiasm and excitement, our visitors from and future emissaries to South America.”

“They came because they wanted a real learning experience,” said RCA Dean Rabbi Moshe Herson, “But South Americans are very fun-loving people, so we’ve planned a very rewarding few weeks here.” Trips to Washington, D.C., Niagara Falls and Manhattan are intermingled with the study sessions throughout the six-week study-vacation. At RCA, the South Americans are staying in newly refurbished dorms and have school chef Dovid Solomon cooking abundant meals for them. Arrangements with the local JCC were made to give the guys gym and pool access in the afternoons, and due to the unseasonably warm weather there have also been a few soccer games played on RCA’s 82-acre grounds.

Andre Jerusalmy, a law school student from S. Paulo, Brazil, enjoyed seeing America’s historical monuments and the big city lights of New York, but he is more invigorated by the yeshiva atmosphere and studying Torah. “I want to stay a bit more here in the yeshiva to study more and more Talmud and improve my legal English that I will use in my professional life. If I don’t stay longer, I will go back to Brazil and be a better Jew, for sure.”

The exchange student project was a cooperative effort of  the administration and faculty of the RCA, Chabad of Brazil’s representative Rabbi Dovid Weitman, Chabad of Argentina’s Rabbi Shlomo Levy.  Last March, Argentine students were offered a free trip to the U.S. yeshiva as an incentive to stay committed to their routine of studying twice a week at Beit Chabad Palermo – University Student Center. “They were preparing for this trip through study,” said Rabbi Shlomo Levy of Beit Chabad Palermo. 

Chabad representatives across Brazil handpicked their country’s group. Limited slots for the deeply subsidized trip obligated the rabbis to pick “the best of the best, the most serious about their spiritual growth,” said Rabbi Mendy Weitman of Chabad S. Paulo, Brazil. One student was selected from the only known Jewish family living in the northeastern city of Natal. Several Brazilians who signed on for the six-week trip are planning to extend their stay through April.

At Rabbinical College of America, lecturers fluent in Portuguese and Spanish were rounded up to teach students who did not speak English. Those who did were integrated in the existing classes, who were starting a new subject. Tri-lingual workshops on Jewish scribal arts and the creation of ritual objects, like Tefillin, were conducted throughout the stay. RCA’s smattering of Brazilian and Argentine rabbinical students have included visitors from their homelands in their study sessions and spend their downtime making the newcomers feel comfortable.  

Unbeknownst to the South Americans, they have a lot in common with the RCA Dean. Born and raised in Rio de Janeiro, Brazil, Rabbi Herson, then known by his first name, Mauricio, made a similar journey to study in a Lubavitch yeshiva in New York at age fifteen. He stayed, received his ordination, but never forgot classic Carnaval tunes, which he sang to the Brazilians. Warm chuckles resounded.

Since its establishment in 1956, RCA counts hundreds of students from 24 states and 18 foreign countries. Overlapping the South American’s stay was a group of 30 American college students on campus for the annual ten-day “Yeshiva Winter Program,” where ABC’s of Judaism are lecture topics. According to Director of Admissions Boruch Hecht, on Friday, when yeshiva, college and South American students joined for Shabbat dinner, toasts and stories were shared in three languages and “everyone felt at home.”  

Comment

Be the first to write a comment.

Add

More Galleries
Olathe, Kansas—the state’s fourth-largest city—will welcome its first Jewish center
Olathe, Kansas—the state’s fourth-largest city—will welcome its first Jewish center, as Rabbi Mendel and Sheina Wenger have moved to Olathe, where they are founding a…
Sukkah on aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln
As the aircraft carrier USS Abraham Lincoln continues its mission in the Arabian Sea defending Israel and deterring Iranian aggression, it will have a symbol…
Keren Mamosh Impact Report
In a special initiative marking the 30th yahrtzeit of the Rebbe, Keren Mamosh, under the auspices of Machne Israel awarded 100 special grants to Chabad-Lubavitch…
Chabad Rabbi sworn in as first Jewish Rabbi chaplain in the Oregon Army National Guard
Tigard, Oregon Chabad Rabbi Menachem Orenstein was sworn in as a chaplain in the Oregon Army National Guard — the first Jewish rabbi chaplain in…
Campus Chabad Rebbetzins Gather in Israel to Inspire and Be Inspired
More than 150 Chabad-Lubavitch rebbetzins serving college campuses around the world met in Israel for a five-day convention. Usually held in the U.S., the convention…
3,000 Teens Converge on Times Square In A Show of Jewish Pride
More than 3,000 Jewish teenagers representing the largest network of Jewish teens met up in New York City at the annual CTeen International Shabbaton on…
At the Farmer’s Market
Been to the Farmer’s Market lately?   The freshly-baked hand-braided breads—courtesy of your local Chabad center—are selling out fast.  From Setauket, N.Y. to Petaluma, California, from…
Newsletter
Donate
Find Your Local Chabad Center
Magazine