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Headed to a National Park? Chabad Has You Covered

With the summer tourism season in full swing, millions of people are taking advantage of America’s vast natural beauty by visiting its dozens of national parks. For Jewish visitors seeking kosher food, a minyan, or Shabbat dinner, looking up the nearby Chabad has become part of the planning. Chabad centers near these parks are often the only Jewish resource for miles around, and while they exist primarily to serve the local Jewish community, they are glad to accommodate visitors as well.

Here are the top-10 most visited U.S. national parks, and the Chabad centers that serve their visitors.

Great Smoky Mountains National Park:

More than 13 million people visit this park, situated in the Appalachian Mountains. The park straddles the Tennessee-North Carolina border, and Chabad centers in both states cater to visitors. 

Chabad House: Chabad of Knoxville 

Rabbi Yossi and Miriam Esther Wilhelm

Chabad House: Chabad Lubavitch of Western North Carolina

Rabbi Shaya and Chana Susskind

Grand Canyon National Park:  

Chabad House: Chabad of Flagstaff, Arizona

Rabbi Dovie and Chaya Shapiro

During the late summer “bein hazmanim” period, when schools and yeshivas are out and many areas see an influx of observant Jewish travelers, Chabad’s offerings switch into high gear, with daily breakfast, lunch and dinner buffets and takeout, minyanim, and catering for large groups. Last Sunday, Chabad hosted some 260 Jewish teenage campers visiting from California for a barbecue after they’d visited the Grand Canyon.

Zion National Park: 

Rabbi Mendy and Chaya Cohen

Jewish visitors gather for a minyan at Chabad of Southern Utah

Yellowstone National Park:

This vast park of some 2.2 million acres spans multiple states, and is served by several of the Chabad houses that dot the American West. Three of the entrances to the park are located in Montana, and visitors also enter the park from Wyoming and Idaho.

Rabbi Chaim and Chavie Bruk

“Shabbat in Bozeman was amazing; it was a really nice experience to be able to sit with my family and meet Jews from all over the world at all levels of Judaism, spending the Shabbat together, feeling the beauty of Shabbat around the beauty of the natural world,” said Chesky Newman, an attorney from the Five Towns on Long Island, New York, who visited Bozeman to experience the natural beauty of the parks. “We wouldn’t have gone if there wasn’t a Chabad house.”

Rabbi Zalman and Raizy Mendelsohn

Havdalah in Bozeman, Montana
Visitors join Shacharit at Chabad of Bozeman, Montana

Rocky Mountain National Park:

Chabad centers in nearby Boulder, Colorado often field phone calls from visitors to the park. 

Rabbi Yisroel and Leah Wilhelm

The Rohr Chabad Center at University of Colorado, primarily a Chabad on Campus, also serves visitors, offering Shabbat meals and a mikvah, among other resources.

Rabbi Pesach and Chanie Scheiner 

The Boulder County Center for Judaism offers kosher takeout delivery as well as other resources for travelers.

Yosemite National Park: 

Rabbi Levy and Chanie Zirkind 

Chabad of the Central Valley serves visitors to many of California’s nine national parks, including Yosemite, Sequoia, and Kings Canyon. They offer a plethora of resources for visitors, including on-site guest rooms, kosher catering, and a takeout menu.

Acadia National Park: 

Rabbi Chaim and Esther Wilansky

Chabad of Bangor welcomes tourists on the way to Acadia. The rabbi regularly visits the park himself, bringing kosher food and putting on tefillin with visitors, and serving the Jewish needs of local business owners. During the busy summer season, Chabad also hosts regular minyanim.

Grand Teton National Park: 

Rabbi Zalman and Raizy Mendelsohn

Located just 12 miles from the park in Jackson, Wyoming, Chabad offers inspiring services with views of the Tetons, Shabbat hospitality and kosher takeout. Each Shabbat, Rabbi Zalman and Raizy Mendelsohn host anywhere from 20 to well over 100 guests visiting Wyoming’s seven national parks and many other local attractions.

Sounding the Shofar near Grand Teton National Park

Joshua Tree National Park:

The Chabad centers that dot the Coachella Valley in Southern California welcome many visitors to Joshua Tree. Here are a number of them:

Rabbi Shimon and Chaya Posner

A Recent weekly BBQ at Chabad of Rancho Mirage

Rabbi Yonasan and Sussie Denenbeim

Chabad offers kosher takeout from January to April—during the peak winter tourist season—as well as minyanim and Shabbat meals. 

Rabbi Moshe and Chaya Mushka Katz

Olympic National Park:

Rabbi Yosef and Rivka Schtroks

The day before Passover this year, as Rabbi Yosef Schtroks was setting Seder tables, there was a knock on the door. An Israeli family visiting Olympic National Park—their first respite after months of war and fear—realized that Passover was the next day, and they were without all of their Seder supplies. Of course, they got a chance to put on tefillin, and walked out laden with matzah, maror, and everything else they’d need for an uplifting Seder. 

Even when it’s not Passover, the Chabad center gets calls all the time from tourists inquiring about kosher, Shabbat, and a minyan, and—like Chabad centers across the country and beyond—they are always happy to accommodate.

Israeli Visitors pause for a mitzvah in Olympia

Glacier National Park:

Rabbi Shneur and Chana Wolf

Chabad of the Flathead Valley in Kalispell, Montana welcomes visitors with Shabbat meals, services, and information about kosher food options locally and lodging near the Chabad House. The Wolfs also visit the park, meeting with Jewish tourists and providing Jewish resources and uplifting moments of connection.

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