A Decade of Jewish Unity

  |   By  |  0 Comments

Celebrating 10 Years of Chabad in Thailand” was held last Monday at the Brooklyn Marriot Hotel, drawing over three hundred friends and supporters of Chabad activities in Thailand.

Chabad activities in Thailand, explains Rabbi Yosef Chaim Kantor of Bangkok, is a three-track program: “In an average year,” he estimates, “Chabad will work with several hundred Jews living in Bangkok and Chiang Mai, about one thousand Jewish business people who travel in and out, and twenty to thirty thousand Israeli backpackers.”

The numbers are staggering, and, not surprisingly, Kantor admits that the fundraising for Chabad’s activities- which include open Shabbat meals, services and holiday programs for thousands- is a heavy task that somewhat outsizes the small local community in Bangkok. “Unlike other communities, the bulk of people who benefit from our programs are unable to support them,” he notes.

Fundraising within the local community is not enough to cover Chabad’s expenses, so for the last ten years, Chabad has relied heavily on traveling businesspeople from America and Israel for most of their budget.

In celebration of their 10th anniversary, Chabad of Thailand decided to “bring the celebration to the home turf of the people who make it possible,” says Kantor.

“A Decade of Jewish Unity- Celebrating 10 Years of Chabad in Thailand” was held this Monday at the Brooklyn Marriot Hotel, drawing over three hundred friends and supporters for a reunion and an overwhelming display of mutual appreciation for the work Chabad does, and the people who support it.

William Nussen, a businessman from New York who travels to Thailand once every two or three months to oversee operations at a factory he owns in Bangkok, received the “Builders Award”, for his steadfast support since Chabad’s earliest days in Thailand. Expressing his amazement at Chabad’s impact on the community, particularly on young Israelis passing through, Nussen said, “You see people who would otherwise never step into a synagogue, all of a sudden connecting to Judaism in Thailand. There are incredible things going on there.”

According to Rabbi Kantor, who, along with his family and the families of Thailand’s four other Chabad representatives, flew in to New York for the occasion, Chabad didn’t start out as outreach for travelers. “We were brought out to lead the local community,” he says. “But as the need came up to branch out into other fields, we expanded our activities.”

With such a transient community, Kantor explains, success would only be possible with the financial help of visiting American and Israeli businessmen and family and friends back in the States.

Today, says Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky, Vice Chairman of Merkos L’Inyonei Chinuch and chairman of the dinner, “Chabad of Thailand personifies the proverbial “Abraham’s open house” and has succeeded in bridging the gap between Jews of diversified backgrounds.”

For thousands of backpackers, businessmen and local Jews who benefit each year from Chabad of Thailand and their supporters abroad, Monday night’s dinner reflected “a fantastic partnership,” Kantor says, one that will continue to enrich and inspire thousands in the years ahead

A Jewish Youth Library Grows . . . And Grows

  |   By  |  0 Comments

OTTAWA, CANADA–Three years ago Marjorie Feldman was invited by Devora Caytak to speak at the Jewish Women’s Institute, a project of the Jewish Youth Library of Ottawa. “I had never been to the library before, and I had never met the Caytaks,” says Marjorie, but as soon as she did, she “fell in love with both.”

The library, says Feldman, has “generated a real love of Jewish learning, books, and music, attracting Jews from every affiliation and those without any affiliation at all.” On Sunday night Marjorie joined two hundred people in Canada’s capital city to celebrate twenty years of the Jewish Youth Library in Ottawa.

Founded by Devora and Yosef Caytak, in 1983, the library was born in the Caytak family basement with a collection of Jewish children’s books, and has evolved into a multi-faceted educational and outreach center, with more than 8,000 volumes and hundreds of videos and tapes, as well as a whole range of programs catering to Ottawa’s Jewish community.

When Sarah Swedler, an Ottawa resident, lost her daughter some six years ago, the sense of despair was overwhelming. With her two-year-old, orphaned grandson in tow, she turned to the Jewish Youth Library for support. It was here that Josh became deeply connected to his Jewish roots, while the Caytaks anchored Sarah emotionally. In addition to providing Josh with a strong Jewish background and identity, the Caytaks, says Sarah, “helped me regain a faith I had lost.”

Reflecting Chabad’s wide impact on the local community, Sunday’s affair drew supporters grateful for the Caytaks’ contributions to Jewish life in Ottawa. According to Marty Davis, director of UJA affairs in the city, “Chabad’s influence in Ottawa is tremendous, reaching Jews on the periphery, as well as members of the community.”

The expansion of activities at the Jewish Youth Library was augmented back in 1989, when the library was moved into a home its very own after the Lubavitcher Rebbe’s call to purchase, renovate, and beautify Jewish homes and institutions.

Programs soon included the Tiny Treasures Preschool, now the Jewish Preschool for the Arts, a summer Jewish Women’s Institute, and the girl’s division of Ottawa’s Camp Gan Israel. A Friday morning Noah’s Ark Shabbat drop-in, Sunday story time, and a series of adult classes and workshops, in addition to Shabbat meals and holiday events, were soon incorporated into the growing gamut of activities sponsored by the Jewish Youth Library. Canadians are very low-key,” says Mrs. Caytak, and the “library has proven to be the perfect vehicle to inspire an interest in Judaism.”

An anniversary celebration, the dinner also honored the memory of Gaby Sassoon, who died last year. Sassoon was a staunch supporter and longtime member of the library’s committee.

Organized by a planning committee of 17, the dinner began on Sunday afternoon with cocktails and a live Klezmer band. Greetings were delivered by Chaim Divon, the Israeli ambassador to Canada, and a close friend of Sassoon’s. Guest speaker at the event was Judy Feld Carr, renowned for her efforts in saving Syrian Jewry, and a friend of Sassoon’s, who recounted her rescue operation experiences, and spoke of Sassoon, himself a Syrian Jew. Cantor Daniel Benlolo sang Sassoon’s favorite Sephardic tunes, and guests enjoyed a short video presentation on the Library’s camp activities.

“The Jewish Youth Library is a great magnet for people from across the Jewish spectrum,” says Davis. As a library, the center appeals to a contingent of people who would probably shy away from a synagogue-based Chabad House. The setting is warm, and personable, and according to Davis the library provides a “spiritual environment that involves a real cross-section of the community, and has become a rallying point for local Jews to come together.”

Reported by S. Olidort

Jewish Visibility Rises in the European Union Headquarters

  |   By  |  0 Comments

Three years ago, when Rabbi Moshe Garelik was appointed by a committee of senior European Rabbis to set up the Rabbinical Centre of Europe in an office in the heart of Brussels’ European Community, he contacted local Chabad emissaries to find out about any Jews working in the complex.

All together, he was told, there were eleven Jewish EU workers involved with the Jewish community in Brussels. “There are upwards of 25,000 people employed in the EU complex,” he recalls thinking. “There had to be more than eleven Jews!” So as Garelik and his staff set up the RCE, an organization devoted to assisting European Rabbis and uniting them to an active Jewish voice at the European Union as the continent slowly de-nationalizes and the EU moves to center stage, they kept an eye out for the Jews working around them in the European Community.

As it turned out, there were many more than eleven Jews working in the area, but, says Mrs. Daniela Bankier, a government worker with the budget department of the European Commission, “being openly Jewish in a place like the EU is not easy,” and most of them were keeping that quiet. “Jewish identity in Europe still wears the scars of the Holocaust,” she observes, “and with anti-Semitism on the rise here, Jews holding government positions in Europe are a far less solid and assertive group than their American counterparts.”

Government workers in the EU arrive in Brussels from all over the continent, Bankier says- she herself is from Vienna—and the Jews among them are no exception. “Joining an established Jewish community like the one in Brussels is difficult,” she says. “Particularly for diplomats and workers who travel constantly or live here for short stints, there was really no place for them to celebrate Jewishly.”

But in recent months, Bankier, her husband and their two young children have joined a developing community of close to 200 Jewish functionaries and officials of the EU and their families brought together by a recently established offshoot of the RCE, the European Jewish Community Centre. Housed, for the time being, in the offices of the RCE, the EJCC is a place “for Jewish employees of the EU to feel at home,” says Rabbi Levi Matusof, director of activities at the center. Offering classes on Judaism and holiday programs, with plans for expanded activities including a Jewish library, Shabbat meals and services and children’s programming in the coming months, the EJCC is “tailored specifically to the needs of EU workers, combining traditional Judaism with a strong European flavor,” says Matusof.

Formally opened during Chanukah of 2002 with an inaugural “EuroChanukah” event that combined a traditional Chanukah party with an exhibit of antique European menorahs, hosted by the President of the European Parliament, Pat Cox, the EJCC has since become “a platform for us to meet and reconnect Jewishly in a setting often far removed from Judaism,” Daniela Bankier says.

“Ninety percent of the Jews working in the EU were not actively involved in any formal Jewish community events before the EJCC,” says Rabbi Garelik, who serves as the center’s executive director. From those first eleven names, the EJCC now has an email list of close to 300, with approximately 180 people joining classes and programs on a regular basis, and “it’s impossible to know how many more there are,” he says. “Part of the center’s work is bringing them out to join a celebration of Judaism here.”

Last Tuesday, the EJCC, in conjunction with the RCE, hosted “EuroPurim” for some 150 functionaries and diplomats of the EU, including several ambassadors, cabinet representatives, and a delegation from the president of the EU, Romano Prodi. The event honored Prime Minister Victor Yanukovych of Ukraine in appreciation of his support of Jewish activities in the country. A former governor of the Donbass region, Yanukovych has been a long-time source of assistance to various Jewish communities and Rabbis in the Ukraine, particularly Rabbi Pinchus Vishedsky, Chief Rabbi of the Donbass region and Rabbi Shmuel Kaminetsky, Chief Rabbi of Dnepropetrovsk, says Matusof.

True to its function as ‘a meeting place’, EuroPurim at the EJCC offered participants the opportunity to mingle over cocktails following Megilla reading. “The social aspect of the EJCC is very important,” Bankier says, “It gives us an opportunity to form ties with each other and create community.”

Though EuroPurim was mostly an adults event, Matusof says the EJCC works on reaching all ages. Daniela Bankier’s two children are eagerly anticipating the EJCC’s upcoming Matza Bakery (“an anomaly for Europe,” she says), and Garelik and his wife, Chana, bridge the age gap by bringing families together each week for Shabbat dinners in their home. “Giving Jewish families who are foreign to the city a chance to meet each other and become acquainted with Jewish tradition means a lot,” says Chana, herself a French native. “We want to give this Jewish community a place they can really call their own.”

Reported by R. Wineberg

Dancing With The Torah On 42nd Street

  |   By  |  0 Comments

Against the backdrop of pro-troop and anti-war demonstrations, two hundred people took to the streets of Midtown Manhattan on Sunday, in song, dance and celebration.

Parading up 42nd Street, the entourage drew inquisitive stares, as it escorted a Torah scroll under a canopy, to Bryant Park and back home to Congregation Bnai Abraham Mordechai at Chabad Lubavitch of Midtown Manhattan.

It was an auspicious event for a congregation that, seven years into its opening, remained without a scroll of its own. Donated by congregant Mel Cooper in honor of his late mother and brother, the new Torah scroll, “marks the culmination of Chabad’s exponential growth here over the years,” says community member Phyllis Blackman.

At eleven o’clock on a crisp, sunny morning, family and friends, from Queens, Long Island, and just about everywhere in between, joined in festivities that began with a lavish breakfast spread at the Chabad center, where Mr. Cooper, his nephew, and Chabad-Lubavitch representative to midtown, Rabbi Yehoshua Metzger, addressed the crowd.

Acknowledging the apparent paradox of rejoicing during war, Metzger discussed the traditional Jewish belief in spiritual strength over physical might, and the need to act on such faith. American troops were remembered in prayer, and blessings for their safety and the safety of the people of Israel were recited.

Participants shared in the completion of the scroll, filling in the last several lines of the Torah, an act that, according to Mona Schussheim, made the event a more “personal and meaningful experience, bringing all to a new plane of enjoyment in the unification of the Jewish world.” And amidst the humdrum of midtown’s Sunday shopping sprees and entertainment mania, congregants began marching to enthusiastic chants of “Mazal Tov!” down 5th avenue and up 42nd street, accompanied by the Neshama band, live in concert.

The seven traditional dances with the Torah followed, and back at the Chabad center a festive meal kept the celebration going well into the late hours of the afternoon. In a spirit of unity sorely needed in these times of turmoil, dozens of college students and middle-aged couples, young families and elderly folks, celebrated one of Judaism’s most sacred traditions. “It’s a happy place, with a homey feeling that makes everyone feel part of a little family, only it’s not so little,” says Blackman.

Reported by S. Olidort

Purim In the Alps

  |   By  |  0 Comments

Nestled in the geographic heartland of Switzerland, surrounded by the panorama of the Swiss Alps, Lucerne, dubbed “a pearl in the world’s most beautiful oyster” is just an hour’s drive from Zurich. Once home to a thriving Jewish community, Lucerne saw its Jewish population shrink with the passage of time, as observant people moved away from a city that seemed hardly conducive to their lifestyle, leaving the unaffiliated with even less of a connection to tradition and observances.

But in a gesture of renewed interest in Jewish activity and affiliation, more than 150 people, a sizable sum for this tiny community, joined Rabbi Chaim and Rivky Drukman, new Chabad representatives to Lucerne and central Switzerland, for a Purim celebration Monday night. The event took place in a hall in the city’s train station, and featured “A taste of Purim with the flavor of Israel,” the latest Chabad trend in Purim parties. Children arrived in costumes, and the rabbi read the Megillah to a simultaneous slideshow. The couple also addressed the audience, speaking in English and German (Lucerne is located in the German part of Switzerland).

The Drukmans were hired by the chief Chabad emissary to Switzerland, Rabbi Mendel Rosenfeld, at the initiative of members of the local community who requested a Chabad center in Lucerne. “People are very warm and welcoming,” says Rivky. “They are all helping us look for accommodations, all eager to get us comfortably settled here in Lucerne.”

In addition to holiday functions the couple expects to focus on weekly adult education classes and children’s programs. And as the summer season draws near, which means thousands of tourists passing through, the Drukmans are looking forward to reaching a large Jewish contingent of tourists, in this magical city.

You Have A Home In Midtown Manhattan

  |   By  |  0 Comments

What to do when you land a job an hour away from home, in Midtown Manhattan, on Purim day?

Michal Silverman, a freelance writer from Monsey, found herself in just such a predicament on Tuesday, wondering how she’d manage to observe Purim, in the heart of Manhattan. Fortunately for her, Silverman wasn’t the first to have encountered this dilemma, and in its seventh year, Chabad of Midtown has created the perfect antidote to a celebration-free Purim. The key? Round-the-clock Megillah readings, every hour, on the hour, at its home, and what Chabad Rabbi Shea Metzger calls “every Jew’s home in Midtown Manhattan,” on 5th avenue and 42nd street.

In the course of an 11-hour day, from 8 a.m. through 6 p.m., hundreds of people walk through the door of 509 Fifth Avenue, to partake of the Purim celebration. They come from every walk of life and every level of affiliation and observance. They are business people and employees, tourists and local residents, in costume and in work attire, their only common denominator–being Jewish. Many are regulars here and there are not a few familiar faces, says Metzger, but there are also many first timers.

Helen Eliassian who works in the area, has frequented the center several times before and was happy to be able to participate at the Megillah reading. Eliassian lives on the Upper West Side, where she attends lectures and functions at Chabad of the West Side. “Having another Jewish home base so close to work is very comforting,” she says. The round-the-clock readings were very convenient, and in keeping with Chabad’s mission of accommodating everyone, Eliassian points out.

It’s one of Chabad of Midtown’s biggest annual events, says Metzger, who runs a center that owes it uniqueness to the location, and its very diverse community. A major tourist center, and home to a large business district, Midtown has a substantial residential community, notes Metzger, but it’s a transient community. Many singles rent apartments here, and move out suddenly. Young couples generally take to the suburbs as family life makes it increasingly hard to live in the tight space of Manhattan. And international businesspeople keep apartments here, but their comings and goings are completely unpredictable. So in addition to Shabbat and evening functions, Chabad places special focus on catering to people working in the area. And most of Chabad’s publicity here comes from advertisements, and word of mouth so “you never know who’s going to walk through those doors next,” says Metzger.

JCC In Yekaterinburg to Feed One Thousand Daily

  |   By  |  0 Comments

Lying at the crossroads between Europe and Asia, Yekaterinburg, Russia’s third largest city and capital of the Sverdlovsk, Oblast region, sits on the western edge of Siberia. An industrial city famous for steel-making, Yekaterinburg was once off-limits to Jews, and today only 15,000—a tiny fraction of the city’s two million residents—are Jewish.

When Chabad-Lubavitch sent Rabbi Zelig and Chana Ashkenazi to settle in Yekaterinburg six years ago, they found not a single synagogue in place. Most local Jews trace their roots to Poland and other war-ravaged countries in Europe that they and their grandparents fled during the Holocaust, explains Rabbi Ashkenazi. “That’s where they left their homes, families, and very often, Judaism itself.”

But last week there was cause for celebration among members of the Jewish community as the frame of a 4,000×200 meter, four-story Jewish Community Center reached completion. A project of the local Jewish community, funded by a major grant from the Rohr Family Foundation, the Federation of Jewish Communities of Russia, and a growing group of local Jewish community donors, the milestone marks the rapid growth of Jewish involvement and awareness here in so short a time span. Coming at an auspicious time, as residents prepare to celebrate the city’s bicentennial, the completion of this phase of the center was a historical moment for Jewish life in the region, and a joyous occasion for Yekaterinburg’s Jews, says Yaccov Mendelowitz, president of the local Jewish community.

Rabbi Ashkenazi, who now serves as Chief Rabbi of Yekaterinburg and the entire region, and is on the board of the local committee for religious affairs has worked vigorously with his wife, conducting a wide range of programs and activities, including humanitarian aid, holiday events, and weekly classes for the local community in rented facilities. In only six years, programs have expanded to include an Or Avner school, the only Jewish day school in Yekaterinburg, housed in a building of its own with 250 students currently enrolled, and plans for a neighboring playgroup and nursery school are underway. Shabbat services draw an average of one hundred people weekly, and attendance at holiday events has swelled, prompting the community to rent the largest available facility in town, with seating for three thousand. Even so, there weren’t enough seats at this year’s Purim concert.

The success of these events, notes Chana Ashkenazi, is not limited to the holiday seasons, but is representative of what is happening here on a day-to-day, individual level, in the lives of thousands of Jews. A poignant example of this was the recent ritual circumcision of an eight-day old boy– a first in the city’s recent history.

The new JCC is being built on the grounds of a synagogue that was destroyed in the 60s. The property was returned to the Jewish community last year, by Governor Eduard Rossel, in an outstanding gesture of restitution to the Jewish community. Speaking at a recent function the Governor discussed his anticipation of the new building, and recalled seeing Jews attending services on the same lot of land, decades ago.

In addition to the city’s first permanent synagogue, the center will include two ritual baths—a welcome addition to a city three hours away, by plane, from the nearest mikvah, especially as Jewish women increasingly commit to the laws of family purity. “The new building will encourage more and more families to increase their level of observance as it becomes easier to do so,” says the rabbi. The center will also host a whole range of recreational activities, including rooms designated for music classes, as well as sports facilities.

Although Yekaterinburg is of the more advanced cities in Russia, poverty is still prevalent in the area. A significant number of the city’s Jews are professionals, but meager government salaries make it hard even for them to make ends meet. A large kitchen and dining area will serve up kosher meals for over one thousand people daily. And people in need of medical services will find them free of charge at the center, where several rooms were designed for medical purposes.

Rabbi Ashkenazi expects the building will be completed by the end of the year. “With the new center in place we further expand our activities, and include every member of the community in a Jewish environment that is full of excitement and meaningful Jewish activity,” says Mrs. Ashkenazi.

Chabad Celebrates “Purim Jerusalem” Worldwide

  |   By  |  0 Comments

As Chabad centers across the globe ready themselves for the joyous holiday of Purim, which begins tonight at sundown, a new concept in celebrating the holiday is preparing to “take Purim to a whole new place”, says Leah Shemtov, director of programming at Chabad of Stamford, Connecticut. She means it literally. Chabad of Stamford, like a growing number of Chabad centers, celebrated Purim in recent years with a grand party themed around a unique destination. Previous Purims have been celebrated in Stamford with a Chinese Purim Party, Purim in the Shtetl, a Persian Purim and various other creative ways of spending the holiday. This year, for Stamford and dozens of Chabad centers in the US, Canada, Europe and South America, the obvious holiday destination was Israel.

“It’s on our minds,” says Diane Sloyer, co-chair, with her husband Eliot, of Chabad of Stamford’s “Purim Jerusalem” event, scheduled for tonight at the Stamford JCC. “A Purim party focused on the Holy Land is the perfect way to combine a holiday celebration with a tangible way to express support for Israel during this difficult time.”

“Purim Jerusalem” will feature Israeli singer Yoel Sharabi, a re-created Israeli “Shuk” with a spread of Israeli food, and opportunities to support families of terror victims in Israel by sending them letters, pledging to “do a Mitzvah for Israel” and financially supporting Jewish communities in Hebron and elsewhere desperately in need of funds, says Leah Shemtov.

“Aside for a great time, we want to give participants something very practical they can do to help the situation in Israel,” she says. Records of good deeds undertaken in merit of the Holy Land will be written on paper bricks that will then be posted on a mural designed to resemble the Western Wall at Chabad of Stamford’s headquarters. “We’re hoping this will snowball into something much bigger,” says Rabbi Yisroel Deren, executive director of Chabad of Stamford.

In Montevideo, Uruguay, Chabad shluchim Rabbi Eliezer and Rochel Shemtov took enthusiastically to the same idea. Montevideo’s “Purim Israel” will feature various activity stations themed on aspects of Israeli culture, a live web-cam hookup with an Israeli family struck by terror, where participants at the party can offer holiday wishes in real-time, Israeli food and music, pony rides for the kids (“The original plan was camel rides,” Mrs. Rochie Shemtov admits, “but there aren’t any in the country”), and the standard Purim spirit found in thousands of Chabad Purim celebrations across the world.

In White Rock, British Columbia, a suburban community minutes from the U.S. border, close to 100 people are expected at a Purim celebration with the same theme, says Mrs. Simi Schtroks, co-director, with her husband Rabbi Falik Schtroks, of the Center for Judaism. “Simulating an Israeli Purim experience highlights the situation in Israel and expresses our solidarity with our brothers and sisters there,” she says. A full Israeli experience at White Rock’s “Purim Jerusalem” will include Israeli videos, an opportunity to write notes which will be hand delivered to the Western Wall, orange juice making at the “Jaffa” station, sand art at the “Negev” station, and a variety of activities for the entire family.

Hamantashen In Kuwait

  |   By  |  0 Comments

Jewish troops posted in Kuwait will have something to smile about this Purim. An ocean away, in the Golden State of California, hundreds of Jewish schoolchildren have prepared food packages and letters for them, in honor of this joyous festival.

Representing Chabad’s thirty schools across the West Coast, in their salute to the U.S. armed forces, children from Mission Viejo, Huntington Beach, LA and Cypress, wrapped the packages and wrote letters to the soldiers stationed in the Middle East, wishing them a Happy Purim and a safe return home.

According to Lt. Colonel, Rabbi Mitch Ackerson, “many of the Jewish men and women serving in the military are convinced that the Jewish community in the United States is unaware of the Jewish population in the military.” A veteran of the Gulf War, Ackerson will be reading the Megillah for Jewish soldiers this Purim. “The support and recognition by Chabad of the West Coast, is extremely heartening and meaningful for our soldiers,” he says.

Rabbi Zalman Marcus, director of Chabad of Mission Viejo, where seventy-five Hebrew-school students participated in the project, says the project went a long way in making children aware of the dedication of U.S. soldiers in protecting their security and liberty. “Parents appreciated the message of sharing and Ahavat Yisrael behind this project,” he observes. Students at Hebrew Academy of Huntington Beach sent emails to their fellow Jews in Kuwait, and fourth grade girls at Bais Chaya Mushka school of Los Angeles prepared the gift packages, all of which were sent to the Baltimore U.S. military base, from where they were airlifted to Kuwait.

“The children learn from the teachings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, to share light, love and strength with our brothers and sisters serving in the military. These men and women stand shoulder-to-shoulder with fellow countrymen of all faiths in defense of the beautiful freedom our United State of America affords us all,” says Rabbi Baruch Shlomo Cunin, director of Chabad of the West Coast.

A 30th B-day for Chabad of the Lone Star State

  |   By  |  0 Comments

Chabad Lubavitch of Texas celebrated 30 years in the state at a gala anniversary founders’ dinner on March 9. Held at Houston’s Doubletree Post Oak Hotel, the dinner offered community members the opportunity to reflect “on the success of the past and develop commitments for the future,” says Rabbi Chaim Lazaroff.

Today, Chabad of Texas comprises a network of 11 institutions in eight cities statewide, but in 1972, when Rabbi Shimon and Chiena Lazaroff – Rabbi Chaim Lazaroff’s parents – came to Houston, there were very few traditional Jews in Texas.

“In our first year here, my husband and two young yeshivah boys from New York took a trip to various small towns and cities in Texas to get acquainted with the territory,” Mrs. Lazaroff recalls. “They went through cities like Cadwell, where there was a large Jewish cemetery that spoke volumes about a rich past – but not a single living Jew for miles.”

A large influx of Jewish immigrants from Eastern Europe in the early 1900’s, arriving through Galveston, Texas, the South’s equivalent of Ellis Island, had all but disappeared by the time the Lazaroffs arrived. “Traditional Jewish life enjoyed a brief period here and then most people assimilated or moved East,” Lazaroff says. When the couple arrived in Houston with their four children, most people they met didn’t think they would last there either. “It was almost out of the question for a Chasidic Jew to live in Houston in the 70’s,” says Rabbi Shimon Lazaroff, “People who saw us assumed we were visiting.”

That was then. Today, of an estimated 50,000 Jews living in the greater Houston area, over 300 families are affiliated with an Orthodox synagogue, and traditional Jewish life in Houston, while still not as prevalent as in larger cities, is a far cry from what it was back then.

“I think the most amazing thing to see is literally the number of people walking to synagogue on a Shabbat afternoon,” says Baila Cotlar, a resident of Houston who got involved with Chabad of Texas shortly after its establishment in 1972. “We never had that here; this is a new and very exciting development for the city.”

The key to the change, Rabbi Shimon Lazaroff explains, has been education.

Faithful to their instructions, the Lazaroffs repaired the city’s one mikvah immediately on their arrival in Houston, and in September of 1977, Torah Day School was founded with seven students, in a trailer on the Chabad lot at 10900 Fondren Road in Houston.

The school, which moved into the newly completed Chabad center in November of that year, “grew painstakingly”, Mrs. Lazaroff notes. “It was a long process,” she says. A program for two-year-olds—the only one in the city—proved to be a big draw that attracted young families who stayed on with the school afterwards. And the school grew from there.

But the real draw is in the quality of education offered at TDS, says Miriam Fishman, whose six children have all attended “tiny tots through eighth grade” in the school, later moving on to high schools across the country, where they credit their elementary education as a crucial factor in their success.

“There’s a real effort made to mold character,” she says. “So aside for a rigorous education in Judaic and secular studies, you have that aspect of learning to be a better person and a better Jew that really sets this school apart.”

In the early eighties, as the school grew from seven students to seventy to 150, a community was forming around it. “People were moving to be closer to the school, and the shul at the Chabad center, and a very warm, close knit community was being formed,” Rabbi Shimon Lazaroff recalls.

At the same time, Jewish life was expanding in other parts of the state. An initial meeting with Rabbi Lazaroff and a group of Jewish students at University of Texas in Austin in 1972 set off a virtual explosion of Jewish activity on campus. Rabbi Moshe Traxler, today the director of Chabad Outreach in Houston, was one of the first students involved with Chabad. He recalls being struck by the idea of a Rabbi reaching out to the Jewish community, an approach unique to Chabad, especially in those days. “I had been acquainted with pulpit Rabbis my whole life,” he says. “This idea of a grassroots—“people Rabbi” really impressed me. I could sense a lot was going to happen.”

Traxler says he has seen the community’s growth from the initial stages, and the change is remarkable. “There are literally thousands of people like myself whose lives have been profoundly enriched by their encounters with Chabad across the state over the past thirty years,” he observes. He credits Chabad centers in Houston, Austin, Dallas, Plano, Fort-Worth, San Antonio, and El Paso, centers established from Chabad’s Houston headquarters over the years, with effecting tremendous changes in the Jewish landscape in Texas.

Perhaps the strongest indicators of Jewish growth and progress in Houston are the young couples who have moved to the city in recent years to join the growing Jewish community. Many of them, like Daniel Cotlar and his wife Eta, and Daniel Fishman and his wife Rivka, are alumni of Torah Day School, where they now send their children.

“Welcoming these young families back to our community reminds us how far we have come in thirty years,” says Mrs. Lazaroff, “and encourages us to continue building for their future.”

Rabbi Israel Meir Lau, Chief Rabbi of Israel and a Holocaust survivor and noted speaker, were guests of honor at the dinner. Fred Zeidman, president of the National Holocaust Museum and Texas chairman of Israel Bonds, chaired the event together with Jerry Kane, son of honorees Sam and Aranka Kane, of Corpus Christi. As well, Stuart and Carol Nelkin, Benjamin Danziger, Melech and Chana Weiss, and Ronald and Ethel Gruen were honored for their support and dedication of Chabad-Lubavitch of Texas.

Reported by R. Wineberg

The Jewish Children’s Museum Nears Completion

  |   By  |  0 Comments

For several years now, the constant activity of crawler dozers, backhoes and tractor loaders made an already busy thoroughfare in Crown Heights more restrictive to pedestrian traffic and parking needs. The relentless cacophony of heavy construction equipment at work became the constant background noise in the lives of residents, office workers and businesses in the immediate area. But things are looking different now at the intersection of Kingston and Eastern Parkway, as a significant structure rises up on its southeast corner, directly opposite the world headquarters of the Chabad-Lubavitch Movement.

The Jewish Children’s Museum is in its final stages of construction. Situated on Brooklyn’s famous museum row, just blocks away from the Brooklyn Museum of Art, the Brooklyn Children’s Museum, the Brooklyn Botanical Gardens, and the central branch of the Brooklyn Public Library at Grand Army Plaza, the seven-story, 55,000 square foot structure is already turning heads, catching the attention of thousands who drive daily interboro along Eastern Parkway.

A project of Tzivos Hashem, Chabad’s worldwide Jewish children’s outreach organization founded by the Lubavitcher Rebbe, the museum will appeal to a diverse audience, Jewish and gentile, religious and secular, says its executive director, Rabbi Yerachmiel Benjaminson.According to Sheldon Silver, speaker of the New State Assembly,”when this museum is completed any child, any child will be able to walk through its doors.”

Designed by Gwathmey, Siegel & Associates, an architectural firm whose previous works have included the Guggenheim Museum and the Disney Convention Center, the Jewish Children’s Museum will merge traditional values and modern technology in a high-tech infrastructure designed to suit its mission of learning and wonder. The firm’s inspiration for undertaking the project, says partner Robert Siegel, was multi-faceted. The site’s location in Crown Heights, “with its history of conflict and coexistence between the Orthodox and Black communities (made) the idea of creating a museum, which would facilitate a better understanding of Jewish history and customs. . . .inspirational,” he says. And the building’s dual roles as museum and local community center gave the designers further challenge, adding a greater dimension to the project.

The 25-million dollar museum will be dedicated to the memory of Ari Halberstam, a Lubavitch student and local resident who was gunned down in an act of terror on the Brooklyn Bridge in 1996. The project has garnered major government support and funding at the local and state levels, through his mother, Mrs. Devorah Halberstam.

Children’s museums are “audience centered,” as opposed to the typical collection-based museums, and focus on involving children so that they are not merely observers, but active participants in the museum-going process. The Jewish Children’s Museum, notes its exhibition writer and consultant, Paul Rosenthal—whose expertise has been retained as well for the expansion of the Museum of Jewish Heritage in Battery Park City—has taken this a step further in its attempt to convey concepts as broad as the Messianic era, and as subtle as faith, in a manner that is fun and interactive.

That puts the museum on the far end of a lively, activity-based center, and has given Rosenthal a freer reign on how he proposes to convey the subject matter. It also poses a greater challenge for the writer, who worked together with Gershon Eichorn, the museum’s director of design and exhibitions, to come up with exhibits that satisfy the educational objectives of the museum while fully engaging children with even the shortest attention span. “There are no cases in this museum, and no ‘please don’t touch’ signs,” says Eichorn. “Here children of all ages will be able to explore Judaism through exciting, hands-on activities.”

Subject matter like the entire span of Jewish history, dating back to creation, is difficult for children to relate to, notes Rabbi Leibel Newman, administrator at Yeshivas Toras Chayim of the South Shore, who was on the board of educators consulted for the planning of The Jewish Children’s Museum. “But when children are given the opportunity to literally walk through time, they are able to grasp the concept of sequence, of cause and effect, so that stories they have learned from the book suddenly come to life, and become real.”

In addition to two floors worth of permanent Jewish heritage and history exhibitions, the museum will feature temporary, seasonal exhibitions. A full-sized state-of-the-art game show theater on the lower level will give children the opportunity to put their knowledge of Judaism to the test. Videoconferencing will keep the museum connected to the internet so that children internationally will be able to participate in the various museum functions.

With maximum capacity at 2,000, the museum expects to host hundreds of schoolchildren on a typical weekday and hundreds more with their families during weekends and vacations, with yearly visitations at close to 300,000.
A synagogue, kosher cafeteria, a gift shop, library, computer rooms, and a “kosher” movie theater with seating for one hundred, make the museum especially attractive to community members, says director of administration, Rabbi Sholom Ber Baumgarten. After-hours, the museum expects to draw hundreds of local children for arts and crafts projects, music lessons, computer activities, and a host of other after-school programs—a much-needed benefit for the local community.

“There’s a real sense of joy to the museum,” says Rosenthal. Exploring the story of the Jewish people across time, space, and subcultures, the museum scratches beneath the surface of superficial differences. “It’s very much a living museum about a thriving community of people and how it continues to evolve.”

Resolution Favoring Israel Passed Unanimously

  |   By  |  0 Comments

On Friday, March 7, Florida’s House of Representatives unanimously passed a resolution declaring the state’s solidarity with Israel and support of its fight against terrorism.

Rabbi Schneur Zalman Oirechman, director of Chabad of Tallahassee and the capitol district, was invited by House Speaker Johnnie Byrd to recite the invocation at the event, where he met with Byrd to discuss the resolution.

Sponsored by Republican Representative Adam Hasner, of Delray Beach, the resolution calls on Florida and Israel to maintain healthy relations with each other and offers support through economic trade, cultural exchange programs, and promotion of tourism in both states. “The resolution sends an important message of our support for Israel as the only democratic nation in the Middle East, and America’s staunchest ally in the region,” says Hasner.
While it is true that Israel has garnered major support in the sunshine state because of its large Jewish population, numbering upwards of 600,00, Hasner emphasizes the fact that Florida’s population is still very diverse, making the unanimous passing of this resolution so remarkable. Interestingly this is the first resolution to pass Florida’s House of Representatives in 2003.

Florida, notes Rabbi Oirechman, has been hard hit in the aftermath of September 11th, as tourism plummeted in a state whose economy is largely dependent on it, so Floridians are sympathetic to Israel’s own plight, ever since the rise of the second intifadah in September 2000.

As Chabad Rabbi to the capitol district, this is not Oirechman’s first trip to the House of Representatives, but it was an especially significant trip as it marked an important milestone in American-Israeli relations, setting an example for other states.

Hungary To Keep EU Poll Booths Open Longer Because of Sabbath

  |   By  |  0 Comments

(AP) – Parliament decided late Monday to keep voting stations open two hours longer than originally planned so Jewish citizens honoring the Sabbath could vote at an April referendum on Hungary’s European Union membership.

Polling stations will now open at 5 a.m. and close at 9 p.m. on Saturday, April 12.

An earlier suggestion by the federation, which would have extended voting time by only one hour, was amended after an orthodox Jewish group said it still did not give enough time for observant Jews to vote.

Rabbi Baruch Oberlander of the Lubavitch Community, which asked for the extension, said the decision was a victory for democracy. “There may not be hundreds of thousands of religious Jews in Hungary who would have been deprived of their voting rights if this hadn’t changed,” Oberlander said. “But democracy is about taking into account the wishes of individuals, too, and I am very happy with this decision.”

There are an estimated 80,000-100,000 Jews in Hungary, only a small fraction of whom actively practice their religion.

Hungary is set to join the EU in May 2004.

Chabad House To Give Dinner Proceeds to Victims of Terror

  |   By  |  0 Comments

By Susan Tawil
From the Detroit Jewish News

WEST BLOOMFIELD, MI–As a demonstration of its steadfast support, the Sara Tugman Bais Chabad Torah Center will donate 20 percent of the proceeds of its annual dinner to victims of terror in Israel and to members of the Israel Defense Forces.

“We feel it is important, especially now, to express our solidarity with Israel,” said Elimelech Silberberg, rabbi of the West Bloomfield synagogue.

Slated for Sunday, March 9, at the Ramada Inn in Southfield, the dinner will feature a program heavy with support for Israel. Guest speakers will be Daniel Pipes, the national columnist and director of the Middle East Forum, and Morton Klein, national president of the Zionist Organization of America.

The Torah Center also will honor congregants Dr. Lawrence and Natalie Lipnik of West Bloomfield and Dr. Jerome and Mindy Kaufman of Bloomfield Hills.

The Lipniks, who will receive the Eitz Chaim (Tree of Life) Award, actually met at a Bais Chabad-sponsored Shabbaton. They are both active members of the synagogue.

Natalie Lipnik, an interior designer, headed the synagogue’s design committee. She created the sanctuary’s ner tamid (eternal light) and designed the stained glass windows and parochet (Holy Ark curtain). She also runs Bais Chabad’s biennial Judaica Art Fair, which raises tens of thousands of dollars to help not only the synagogue, but also the Israeli artists whose works are sold.

Dr. Lipnik, an internist, learns regularly with Rabbi Silberberg and coached the Bais Chabad baseball team. He also coaches Yeshivat Akiva’s basketball team, where Elie, the youngest of the Lipnik’s four children, attends school.

The Kaufmans will receive the Community Service Award at the dinner. Dr. Kaufman says his family was “adopted” by Bais Chabad. “It’s like a big family there. We share simchahs [joyous occasions] and are there for each other in bad times, too.”

A retired ophthalmologist, Dr. Kaufman is national secretary of the Zionist Organization of America and is active in many pro-Israel organizations including the One Israel Fund, the Yesha Heartland Campaign and the Committee on Accuracy in Middle East Reporting. His letters and opinion pieces appear frequently in the Jewish News and other newspapers.

Mindy Kaufman is what her husband calls “a social agency dream girl.” She is on the board of the Jewish Community Center of Metropolitan Detroit, Jewish Family Service, Jewish Federation of Metropolitan Detroit, Children of Chernobyl and others. She is an Emmy Award-winning television producer, and created two nationally syndicated children’s series.

The Kaufmans have four children and eight grandchildren and live in Bloomfield Hills. They have been involved in Bais Chabad for the past two years.

“I love the Orthodoxy,” he says. “I feel like I’m going back to my roots.”

The Sara Tugman Bais Chabad Torah Center is a full-service synagogue, offering not only prayer services and social programming, but also a full array of classes, Shabbatonim and the largest Torah tape library in Michigan, which is part of their community Judaica library.

The Torah Center also sponsors weekly classes at the Bais Chabad at the University of Michigan, and runs the Torah Super Phone, (248) 557-8545, which offers talks on the weekly Torah portion and Jewish law.

Rabbi Silberberg also runs mitmazel.com an online matchmaking service. A Bais Chabad trip to Israel in December brought presents for children and $18,000 in donations for various social programs there.

“We hope the dinner will be successful in raising money for Israel,” the rabbi says. “We hope other organizations will follow suit.”

http://www.detroitjewishnews.com

Ilan’s Subtle Call To Celebrities and Movie Producers . . .

  |   By  |  0 Comments

While the Columbia Accident Investigation Board prepares for its first public hearing, Ilan Ramon continues to be rememberd as a “rare Jewish light.”

The astronaut’s unique contribution to Jewish pride and Jewish unity, particularly at a time when Israel is experiencing profound suffering and alienation, was underscored at a memorial tribute Tuesday evening, marking thirty days since the Shuttle Columbia’s tragic end. “Ilan Ramon was not the first Jewish astronaut,” said Rabbi Shlomo Gestetner, Director of Chabad’s Mayanot Institute for Jewish Studies which organized the event. “But he was the first astronaut who made it his goal to promote Jewish identity and was seen by the entire world as a role model for Jews.”

Six hundred people were drawn to the Inbal Jerusalem Hotel where a distinguished line-up included Natan Sharansky, Israel’s Minister for Diaspora Affairs, Professor Joachim Joseph, owner of the Torah scroll that went to space with Ramon, and Thomas Rose, publisher of the Jerusalem Post.

The event began with an affecting cantorial rendition of Kel Maleh Rachamim—a prayer for the departed, by Sherwin Pomerantz, cantor of Israel’s Hanassi Synagogue, and was followed with a recital of Psalms for the security of Israel, its people and soldiers, by Rabbi Kasriel Shemtov of the Mayanot Institute. James Oppenheim, CEO of IQ Workshop which helped organize the evening, introduced the multi-media event featuring video clips of Ramon’s last days aboard the shuttle, when he looked upon Israel’s tiny outline from outer space.

Joachim Joseph, the Tel Aviv University professor who developed the Middle-East dust experiments performed aboard the Columbia shuttle, talked publicly for the first time of his personal connection to the Torah scroll which so captivated Ramon. A child inmate in Bergen-Belsen, Joseph described how his teacher, Rabbi Dasberg, who did not survive the Holocaust, arranged for his “Bar-Mitzvah” in the barracks. “We covered up the windows with blankets . . . I said the brachot and read the haftorah . . . They smuggled my mother in from the women’s camp and she stayed out in the cold, looking through the window,” trying to hear her son reading from the Torah.

It was this image, and the miniature Torah’s survival through the worst of times for the Jewish people, that compelled Ramon to ask Joseph if he would allow him to take the scroll to space with him. “Ramon wanted the Torah scroll to show the world how the Jewish people could rise from the deepest valley of death to the highest limits of achievement,” said Joseph.

Scharansky and Rose each made similar observations of Ramon’s Jewish pride, and its impact on Jewish unity. “Here was a Jew who reached the heights of success as a fighter pilot and as a scientist—he ‘made it,’” said Sharansky, “And yet he chose to publicly display his Judaism.” Rabbi Gestetner reiterated Ramon’s request to keep kosher aboard the Shuttle, and make Kiddush to honor the Shabbat while in outer space. “He did not pass an opportunity to express his love for Israel and the Jewish people,” said Gestetner. “This is Ilan’s subtle call to celebrities, movie producers, philanthropists, CEOs and each and every one of us in this room. It is a call for tangible acts of Jewishness to raise Jewish consciousness and awareness.”

The event, sponsored by Myra H. Kraft of Boston, ended with the song, “Shalom Lach Eretz Nehederet,” Shalom To You, Beautiful Land,” which Ramon had played as a wake-up call for his fellow astronauts on the last day aboard the shuttle.

“I still swell with pride at the very thought of him and what he accomplished for the Jewish people and Israel’s image during his space mission,” said one person who attended the tribute. “Ilan’s life and death has affected me more deeply and more constantly than any other incident.”

Clearly, Col. Ilan Ramon will live on in Jewish memory as an astronaut on a spiritual mission for the Jewish people.

On the Rebound: Jewish Life in the Bronx

  |   By  |  0 Comments

All that remains of the once thriving Jewish community in the Bronx section of New York City, is the relatively small, but vibrant neighborhood of Riverdale, home to some 40,000 Jews. And with its variety of shuls and Jewish day schools, the need for a Chabad presence here seems almost superfluous.

But on Saturday night 300 guests gathered at the Westchester Renaissance Hotel, to celebrate ten years of Chabad in Riverdale. “Riverdale is a rich and diversified Jewish community with the finest shuls and rabbis anywhere,” said the event’s chairman, Mr. Peter Kolevzon. “Yet Rabbi Levi Shemtov and his wife Sarah have impacted all of us since they came on the scene ten years ago. Thanks to their ceaseless efforts and outreach, they have enriched not only the Jews of Riverdale, but the existing congregations as well. Their love and embrace of every Jew is contagious, and we are all better for it.”

When Rabbi Levi and Sara Shemtov set up house here back in 1993, their arrival evoked interest amongst community members. The Shemtovs weren’t here solely to bring traditional Judaism to Riverdale; there already was a contingent of Orthodox people here, and several traditional houses of worship. Their goal, says Rabbi Shemtov, was to reach out to Riverdale’s non-affiliated community, while imbuing traditional Jewish activities with an added dimension of joyousness and spirituality, for those already involved.

During their first Purim here Chabad organized a live music band–Piamenta–a welcome addition to the traditional Purim activities. Ever since, this and other such enhancements have been adopted across the neighborhood.

Chabad devoted most of its first few years here to weekly, even daily classes on a whole gamut of Jewish topics, and humanitarian aid activities like hospital and nursing home visitations. Then, six years ago the Shemtovs purchased a building and classes were moved into the new Chabad House, along with a comprehensive Jewish library and offices. And in 1999, an expanded Chabad House grew to include a shul, which now hosts close to one hundred people on a typical Shabbos.

Another big breakthrough for Chabad and the entire local community, came with the opening three years ago, of the Gan Israel Day Camp, with thirty-five children. Last summer registration reached 90 campers, and the Shemtovs are confident that the numbers will increase come next summer. But what makes the day camp so outstanding here, says Sara Shemtov, isn’t just the number of children who attend. It’s the mix of children—strictly observant children camping with secular children in an exciting Jewish atmosphere, gives camp its unique flavor and makes it appealing to so many.

The camp, notes Rabbi Shemtov, served as the perfect springboard for increasing youth programs, and Chabad’s preschool, which began last year with six children has some twenty children currently enrolled. Other programs include Mommy & Me Music, for children, and frequent Shabbatons that feature renowned Jewish lecturers and scholars, and draw as many as three hundred people over the weekend.

Chabad’s tenth anniversary dinner was planned by a committee of fifteen community members who organized a “supper in concert,” featuring the Andy Statman Trio live in concert. The program began with two simultaneous classes delivered by noted lecturers Rabbi Yossi Jacobson and Mrs. Esther Piekarski, followed by a video presentation summing up Chabad’s activities in Riverdale in the course of the last ten years.

Rabbi Shemtov introduced the dinner’s guest of honor, Marilyn Sofer, who, together with her late husband was among Chabad’s first supporters here. Mrs. Sofer expressed her gratefulness for having had the foresight to become involved with the Shemtovs, and her sense of pride at the results of the past decade.

Ezra House, a partially retired businessman, was on the planning committee for the dinner, and attributes the evening’s fantastic success to Chabad’s wide appeal, pointing to the Shemtovs’ determination, and Levi’s abundant energy. “Whatever they do, whether it’s a Lag B’omer event in the park, or a Menorah lighting in the center of town, Chabad reaches out and involves the entire community, always determined to do whatever it’ll take to make Jewish observance an enlightening and meaningful experience for all.”

Photo Credits: Jar Bar-David

Jewish Marriages Made In Denmark

  |   By  |  0 Comments

Jeppe Lilholt, a native of a small village north of Copenhagen in Denmark was always looking for something to believe in. “I think I always believed in G-d,” he says. “I just didn’t know what to do about it.” His mother, he recently learned, is Jewish. A providential encounter with newly arrived Chabad emissaries, Rabbi Yitzchok and Rochel Lowenthal shortly after his move to Copenhagen at the age of 20, brought Lilholt to synagogue for Yom Kippur services for the first time in his life. “I had never heard of Yom Kippur before that experience,” he says. But since then, Lilholt’s discovered a way to do “more than just believe in G-d. The embrace of mitzvot and Jewish tradition have given me a fulfillment that simply “believing” can never do.”

Lilholt joined a small but rapidly growing crowd of Danish Jews drawn to the warmth and activity generated by the Loewenthals in Copenhagen. Three years after that first Yom Kippur, Rochel Loewenthal called to invite him for holiday dinner on the first night of Sukkot. “You better come over tonight,” she told him. Lilholt was working the night shift at a hotel that week and only wanted to sleep. But Loewenthal insisted, so he came. Joining him at the table was another guest, Marina Bokk, a Copenhagen native who was on a spiritual journey of her own, sparked by a recent encounter with the Loewenthals. That was three years ago, and Jeppe and Marina have been inseparable since, with wedding plans now in the works.

Lilholt and Bokk, who plan on creating a “really Jewish home,” are only two of hundreds of Danish Jews turning the tide of assimilation and rediscovering a warm, vibrant Judaism very relevant to their lives, says Rabbi Yitzchok Loewenthal.

When Loewenthal and his wife moved here in 1997, few of Denmark’s 8-9000 Jews considered themselves part of the Jewish community and the rate of intermarriage was over 90%. “Since the first Jews arrived here about 300 years ago, Danish society has been unusually welcoming and accepting of them,” he says. In fact, during the holocaust, Danish citizens coordinated a daring rescue effort, smuggling hundreds of their Jewish friends to Sweden to elude capture by the Nazis. Perhaps as a result of that total acceptance, Jewish families have always integrated wholly into Danish society, and although were times when religious Jewish life thrived in Copenhagen, many signs of it were gone by the time the Loewenthals arrived.

Chaim and Chana Gray, a Chabad couple who moved to Copenhagen for three years in the mid 90’s to assume a business post there, were the force behind Chabad’s establishment in Denmark. “We came to Copenhagen and saw a community where most of the committed younger people had moved away, to Israel mainly, and the ones who were left had, at best, a tenuous connection to Yiddishkeit,” Chana recalls. “After about a year here, we decided that before we leave, Chabad had to come to Denmark.”

Only several months later, Yitzchok and Rochel Loewenthal, newly married and expecting their first child, arrived in Copenhagen to establish Chabad of Denmark. .

“Public displays of Yiddishkeit are not a part of the Danish-Jewish mentality,” Chana Gray observes. “When the Loewenthals first came and started doing things publicly, they were met with a lot of suspicion. People were not used to this.”

Rochel Loewenthal says the suspicion actually generated good publicity. “Our first Chanukah event, in a rented hall in the center of created something of an uproar in the community,” she says. “But 200 people showed up because of that, and most of them keep coming back.”

It’s a different style, but one that has proved, over six years, to work very well with the Danish Jewish community, Gray says.

“People were really looking for this kind of vibrant Yiddishkeit,” she says. “It’s phenomenal what has happened to Jewish life in Copenhagen in so short a time.”

Working together with the local rabbi and the two local synagogues, ChabaDenmark offers the community a wide array of Torah classes, family programs, Shabbat dinners, public holiday events, children’s programs, summer camps, afternoon Hebrew school and more, Loewenthal says, many all well attended by ever-growing numbers of Danish Jews.

“We’re working on building up a sense of community, particularly with the younger people,” he says. “It’s very important for young Jews to have a community to identify with where they feel they belong.”

Every community needs a home, and ChabaDenmark recently moved into theirs: a 5000 square foot building in the heart of Copenhagen, generously donated for Chabad’s use by an elderly Danish Jew, Mr. Abraham Gutterman. Forty years ago, Rabbi Lowenthal relates, Gutterman visited the Lubavitcher Rebbe and asked him why there was no Chabad presence in Denmark. Smiling, the Rebbe told him, “You give half, and Lubavitch will give half.” Nearly four decades later, Loewenthal, who had met Gutterman not long after his arrival in Copenhagen, brought up the Rebbe’s proposal with him. “You give us use of the building,” he suggested-Gutterman owned a building which had been used previously as a school for Russian Jewish children but was now empty, and in need of a total overhaul-“and we’ll take care of refurbishing it to suit our purposes.” Gutterman agreed, and with the help of Mr. George Rohr and local donors, Chabad remodeled the building to house a Judaica store, library, classrooms, study hall, kitchens, offices and restaurant.

“Most of the community’s growth was happening in our home until now,” Rochel Loewenthal says, “so space was limited.” Now settled in their new place, she sees a “stronger, vibrant, and more committed Jewish community coming together in the years ahead.”

Admiral Ya’ari Visits Chabad Shul

  |   By  |  0 Comments

Vice Admiral Yedidya Ya’ari, Commander-in-Chief of the Israeli Navy, was guest this Shabbat at the The Shul of Bal Harbour, Florida.

The Commander was called to the Torah (aliyah), which he took wearing full uniform. After the prayers Ya’ari addressed the packed synagogue, noting that this is the first time in history that an Israeli Admiral received an aliyah in full uniform. Ya’ari spoke about the difficulties faced by Israel during the past two terrible years. “What a colossal mistake, what great foolishness of our oppressors to think that they will break our spirit,” Yaa’ri said.

Speaking of the heroic efforts of all divisions of the Israel Defense Forces, Ya’ari noted that the new recruits are as determined and devoted as ever to the cause of protecting their Jewish brethren.

“When they enter the perimeters of the IDF they abandon all class differences. It is this total unity that gives us the unique strength to overcome our opponents.”

Rabbi Shalom Lipskar is the spiritual leader of The Shul, a magnificent structure which sits on Collins Avenue, and which serves as the Chabad House for the Surfside community.

Torah Cup Competition for Jewish Children of the Far East

  |   By  |  0 Comments

What would it take to unite Jewish kids living in tiny Far East communities so isolated that their closest Jewish friends could be a three-hour flight away?

Rabbi Mordechai Avtzon and his wife, Goldie, Chabad emissaries to Hong Kong for more than 17 years, and directors of LIFE- Lubavitch In the Far East, the Chabad umbrella organization for Asian Jewish communities, pondered this question for years before finally coming up with the All Asia-Pacific Torah Cup Competition, a revolutionary initiative that begins this Sunday, March 2.

“The idea is to connect Jewish kids and make them feel part of something Jewish and bigger, while teaching them about Judasim—something many of them know very little about,” says Goldie Avtzon.

Truly an international effort, preparations for the competition have “crossed the Atlantic many times over,” says Goldie, who coordinated the event, working with the writer in New York, the graphic designer in Manila, Philippines, the cartoonist in New Jersey, and back to their home base in Hong Kong, where they are directing the project with Shluchim from other Asian countries.

Using the internet as the ideal medium for today’s hi-tech savvy kids, the competition is a series of four weeks worth of a kid-friendly Jewish education. Emailed to all participants who can then read it on-line, each week’s curriculum includes attractive graphics and test-yourself study games. Participants on each team—every country forms a team—will gather weekly at their local Chabad center to take a test on the previous week’s studies. Chabad Shluchim in Bangkok, Shanghai, Beijing, Singapore, Hong Kong, and several other cities are coordinating the weekly gatherings.

“The genius of it is that you don’t need to travel anywhere—you can take the test from your computer as well—and you don’t need to have any Jewish background to succeed in the competition,” Goldie Avtzon says. At the end of four weeks, the children with the highest scores will be linked via video-conferencing for a grand competition. The winner will be awarded a Torah Cup Trophy for their team.

Some 70 children have joined the Torah Cup competition, and anticipation is high for the grand kickoff event this Sunday. In Hong Kong, participants will gather at the Chabad House to receive a username and password, Torah Cup T-shirts and detailed instructions for the competition. Smaller gatherings will be take place simultaneously at Chabad centers in other cities.

“This is the first wide-spread unified effort for Jewish kids in the Far East,” Avtzon says. “Thanks to the latest advances in technology, it will hopefully be the first of many.”

Looking Back: A Quarter Century Later

  |   By  |  0 Comments

“The house—if you could call it that, was prehistoric. Rough stone walls and floors, no heating and the most primitive plumbing,” laughs Tila Hecht, describing the hovel in the ancient city of Safed, which she and her husband called home.

Then young newlyweds brimming with idealism and ready to take on a sustained challenge, the Hechts are still at it, 25 years later. Today they live with their multi-lingual Israeli children in a pleasant home in Eilat, where Rabbi Hecht is the city’s chief rabbi, and Tila is principal of the day school. Mrs. Hecht will typically log a 12-hour day, while her husband is on call 24/7, their home open to a constant stream of community traffic.

It’s a lifestyle that leaves little time for the luxury of reflection, but last week, thirty of these 70’s pioneers, appointed by the Rebbe to pack up and “move to Israel,” took some time to reminisce. United by a bond that reaches beyond the scope of their shared rough beginnings and common achievements, the Shluchim gathered to celebrate 25 years in Israel.

1976 was only a few years after the Yom Kippur war, and the morale in Israel was still at an all time low. In a bold initiative characteristic of the Rebbe’s leadership, he appointed young, dynamic men and women bursting with possibility, to establish communities and become involved with people Israel-wide on a grass-roots level. Quoting Isaiah, the Rebbe charged the Shluchim to “Gather, one at a time, the children of Israel.”

The mission continued with another group arriving a year later, and a third and final group in ’78. Rabbi Menachem M. Gluckowsky, a native of Canada, was among this last group. “The Rebbe appointed us representatives of North American Jewry, to support Israel,” he says. Although Chabad has a long history in Israel, dating back to the first Lubavitcher Rebbe, this would be the first time that the Rebbe would send whole groups to settle permanently in Israel.

“We were so excited to have been selected by the Rebbe as Shluchim to Israel,” explains Rabbi Gluckowsky, then a rabbinical student, “that we came here not knowing what to expect, and oblivious to the hardships and the primitive living conditions that greeted us.” Having initially settled in Safed and Jerusalem, the new arrivals were soon directed to branch out to various cities across Israel, where many assumed important leadership positions as members of the Chief Rabbinate and directors and founders of Yeshivas. More impressive than their individual achievements, notes Rabbi Gluckowsky, today the chief rabbi of the city of Rechovot, is the effect of the Americans on their Israeli counterparts, “acting as a catalyst for new generations of Israeli shluchim to surface nationwide.”

The concept of a Chabad House, open round the clock for anyone to stop in for a cup of coffee, a chat with the rabbi, or a Shabbat dinner, was decidedly American, and for the most part, did not exist at the time in Israel. Today, the Chabad House is a ubiquitous fixture in every city in Israel. Speaking at the reunion was Rabbi Yossi Gerlitsky, who hosted the reunion at the local Chabad yeshiva and runs a Chabad House in central Tel Aviv. “Today, most observant people are leaving Tel Aviv, a predominantly secular city,” he noted. “But Chabad is recruiting young observant families to establish themselves here to enhance the educational and Jewish experience of life in Tel Aviv, for the city’s children and families,” he said, illustrating the impact of Chabad-Lubavitch on the character of a community.

The ties shared by these men and women are profound, and they stay in close contact, traveling the length of Israel to participate in each other’s personal milestones. Many of these Shluchim have married off some of their children by now, and a second generation, committed to the same goals is opening new Chabad Houses and enlarging on the activities and programs that began with their parents arrival in Israel.

At the reunion, Shluchim listened raptly to a recording of the Rebbe’s meeting with the group twenty-five years ago. The Rebbe’s voice, his words of guidance and encouragement confirmed his particular concern for these Shluchim, their personal well-being, and the success of their activities.

The reunion continued with round-table discussions in which Shluchim informally exchanged anecdotes and stories from personal experiences in their respective cities and towns, reviewing the turns their lives have taken since their first years together as pioneers.

There were hard times and there were good times. Through it all, the Shluchim carried a sense of mission—and privilege at having been selected by the Rebbe—living moment to moment with the Rebbe’s mandate and his blessings. This, they will tell you unanimously, is what sustained them and fortified them and continues to keep them going strong.

Children of Shluchim: A Yeshiva of Their Own

  |   By  |  0 Comments

High academic standards, a rigorous curriculum and small teacher-student ratios set Yeshivat Tzeiri Hashluchim in Safed, Israel apart from other schools of its kind, says director Rabbi Chaim Kaplan. But what truly gives the school its distinctive flavor is the student body. Arriving from four continents and speaking six languages, the forty students at Yeshivat Tzeiri Hashluchim bring with them more than a rich diversity of background. They come with the experience of growing up as children of Shluchim, making the school a truly unique Yeshiva.

Founded six years ago by Kaplan’s father, Rabbi Leibel Kaplan, director of Chabad institutions in Safed until his untimely passing in early 1999, in cooperation with Merkos L’Inyonei Chinuch, the educational division of Lubavitch, Yeshivat Tzeiri Hashluchim was inspired primarily by a desire “to help Chabad emissaries provide their children with the finest educational opportunities without incurring a huge financial burden,” says Mrs. Rivky Kaplan, co-director of the school. Since its inception, tuition for the Yeshiva has been heavily subsidized by Chabad of Safed, making it significantly lower than other comparable schools. In addition, the school’s consistently small size would ensure that the students, all living away from home from as young as 12 or 13 years old, would receive individual attention.

Housed in a section of the central Chabad yeshiva in Safed until now, Yeshiva Tzeiri Hashluchim celebrated its move last week to a spacious facility in the uppermost area of the city, overlooking Lake Kinneret. Previously known as the Gesher House youth hostel, and before that the Minnis Hotel, an exclusive hotel frequented by dignitaries and heads of state, the building suits the Yeshiva’s purposes “better than anything we could have built,” Chaim Kaplan says. Spacious classroom and living space and expansive grounds make the building an ideal setting for intense academic and personal growth, he says.

In a festive ceremony attended by rabbis and community members from across Israel and beyond, including Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, Chairman of Merkos L’Inyonei Chinuch, visiting from New York for the occasion, the Yeshiva formally inaugurated the new building last Sunday, February 16th. “Sending children far away for Yeshiva is one of the greatest acts of self sacrifice,” said Rabbi Krinsky, referring to the Shluchim who do not have Yeshivas in the communities they serve, that would provide their children with an intensive Jewish education. How important, then, emphasized Rabbi Krinsky, that the children are made “to feel at home here, at Yeshivat Tzeirei Hashluchim.”

Yeshiva Trains Rabbis In Berlin

  |   By  |  0 Comments

“I have heard of Jews leaving Germany to study abroad, but this is the first I have heard of Jews leaving Israel and the States to further their Jewish education in Germany,” said Berlin’s Governor Klaus Woworeit, who visited the city’s Chabad center yesterday.

It’s one of many happy firsts in a capital city once a breeding ground for anti-Jewish ideology. Originally sparked by his participation at Chabad’s Menorah lighting ceremony last Chanukah, the governor’s visit marked a turning point for Chabad of Berlin, says its director, Rabbi Yehuda Teichtal, and is the first such visit to take place since Chabad came to Berlin in 1996.

Among the 100 people attending the event which was widely covered by the local and national news media, were ten rabbinical students pursuing their ordination here in Berlin. The students were to be awarded certificates marking the completion of a section of their studies.

Following a brief introductory address by Rabbi Teichtal, the president of the Jewish community, Dr. Alexander Brenner, spoke about Chabad’s remarkable impact on Berlin Jewry, inspiring new interest and enthusiasm at a time when there was little Jewish involvement. The ten rabbinical students then introduced themselves and their respective areas of fieldwork—as varied as jail and hospital visitations, children’s programs and the dissemination of Chabad’s multi-lingual weekly publications. A tour of the center gave the governor the opportunity to observe a number of Chabad’s community programs at work. Moved by their devotion and their selflessness, the governor himself presented the young men with their awards at the end of the ceremony, followed by a lavish reception.

In his own talk, the governor underscored Chabad’s unique approach to Jewish life in Germany. Jewish events here typically focus on the past through programs that commemorate the victims of the Holocaust. But, observed the governor, Chabad, remembers the past with an eye to the future, as it focuses all of its energies and activities on laying the groundwork that will make it possible for new generations of Jewish children here to grow up as involved and Torah-observant Jews.

“It is an honor to be here and watch Judaism come to life with a new generation of young people,” said the Governor, thanking Chabad for an afternoon of inspiration.

The Power of Three

  |   By  |  0 Comments

It’s amazing what can happen when Jewish organizations pull together for a common cause. Just ask Dr. Wallace Green, director of Educational services at the UJA-Federation of Bergen County and North Hudson, New Jersey.

Dr. Green recently became involved with an urgent fundraising appeal for a young woman from Buenos Aires desperately in need of funds for a complex urological and gynecological reconstructive surgical procedure to be performed this week in New York. Managing the appeal in the U.S., he says support has come from across the Jewish spectrum and across the world.

The young woman, Carolina—in her 20s today, was diagnosed with a complex urological disorder at the age of four. Her parents scraped together funds for two complicated and costly procedures that she underwent at age four and six. Now a student at Buenos Aires’ ORT school, Carolina learned little over a month ago that in order to sustain the results of her two previous surgeries, she would have to undergo yet another one. With Argentina’s economy a shambles, the news could not have come at a more difficult time. Still, her parents managed to gather $5,000 of the $25,000 needed for the surgery, selling off nearly all of their possessions, and then, in desperation, contacted Rabbi Tzvi Grunblatt, director of Chabad in Argentina, with an urgent call for help.

How to respond to such an enormous need with an already devastated economy and hundreds of requests for critical assistance pouring into Grunblatt’s office daily?
Grunblatt and Valeria Markiewicz, director of Social Programs at Chabad, decided to engage other resources toward this effort.

Rabbi Grunblatt contacted a long-time friend, Howard Cherish, President of the UJA-Federation of Bergen County and North Hudson. Prior to his current position, Cherish spent several years as director of the Argentina desk at the UJC. Frequent trips to Argentina gave him the opportunity to meet with Rabbi Grunblatt and the two formed a close friendship.

On his own, Grunblatt raised $5,000 for the procedure, and officials at the Joint Distribution Committee in Buenos Aires came through with an additional $2500. But the date for the surgery was fast approaching and the US embassy was denying Carolina a medical entry visa to the U.S. unless she could prove her ability to pay for the surgery.

Cherish and his assistant, Wallace Green, threw themselves to the task. “Individual fundraising appeals are not the norm here,” Green admits, “but this situation is very serious and a lot of people have been touched by it.”

The notion that Carolina’s surgery may be her only chance to bear children has moved to people to contribute generously to the campaign, he says. “An individual campaign touches people in a different way than a large scale appeal” and the response has been overwhelmingly generous.

Combined efforts of the Joint, Chabad of Argentina, and the UJA of Bergen County have so far brought in enough funds to guarantee the procedure and entry visas for Carolina and her parents. But the campaign–only one month old–is still very much alive in an effort to raise thousands more dollars still needed to fully cover the costs.

Grunblatt, who is coordinating the transfer of collected funds from Argentina and the U.S. to the family, and arranging for the family’s needs during their stay in the U.S., says he is hopeful the remainder of the money will be raised in time. “We have a good partnership going on here,” he says.

Wallace Green agrees. “This is a good example of community cooperation. “So often something that seems difficult to accomplish on our own can be so successful if we combine forces.”

Contributions to the Carolina Fund can be made in the US through the UJA Federation of Bergen County and North Hudson, 111 Kinderkamack Road, River Edge, NJ 07661. Credit card donations can be sent via email to wallyg@ujabergen.org.

Reported by R. Wineberg

Yiddishkeit In Vegas?

  |   By  |  0 Comments

Unfolding along the western rim of the Las Vegas Valley, Summerlin is a new, 22,500-acre master-planned community, with a quality-of-life to match its azure skies, and the majestic Spring Mountain Range and Red Rock Canyon Conservation hugging its perimeter.

“Eleven years ago I told Rabbi Harlig we’d need a Chabad center in Summerlin,” recalls Terry Knight, among the first of Summerlin’s residents. Harlig, Chabad’s first representative to Las Vegas, was doubtful about such a development so soon after his own arrival and said so. But Terry wasn’t easily dissuaded. “‘It will happen,’ I told the Rabbi.”

A native of Florida, Terry moved to Las Vegas just as Chabad was setting up base here, and was witness to the birth pangs of traditional Judaism in a city that glitters with gold. When her vision of Chabad in Summerlin was realized with the arrival of Rabbi Yisroel and Shterna Schanowitz a few years later, Terry rolled up her sleeves quickly becoming an active, devoted participant in the work of Chabad in Summerlin. And as new families settled in Summerlin, says Terry, “each became a ‘shliach,’” an emissary, helping to bring Jewish awareness to their friends and their neighbors.

Home to some 25,000 Jews, Summerlin is now the fastest growing Jewish community in Las Vegas, and by extension nationwide, and the Schanowitzs are matching that growth spurt with an expansion of their own. After eight years of services, classes, and functions in a rented storefront, the community is abuzz with excitement, anticipating the completion of a permanent community center for Jewish life. A 12,000 square foot building, the new Chabad House will include two sanctuaries, a large social hall, classrooms, a comprehensive Jewish library, and a Mikvah sponsored by the Knight family.

The idea took shape nearly two years ago, says Rabbi Schanowitz, and during their first fundraiser for the project, the community pulled together $300,000.00, which they put towards the purchase of a lot of land in a terrific location. Part of a shopping mall complex, the lot has the benefits of a commercial spot in a residential area, easily accessible to the community, without the strict zoning laws that pertain to the residential blocks, and sits on the border that divides Summerlin and its affluent neighbor, Desert Shores.

In addition to its wide array of programs including a Hebrew School that meets twice weekly, Mommy and Me sessions, adult education classes, and a monthly women’s get-together, Chabad is also addressing the needs of residents of Sun City, a nearby retirement community with a Jewish population of 4,000. The Schanowitzs have made a habit of visiting Sun City around the Jewish holidays with educational programs and lively functions that go a long way to inform and inspire. They also offer Yiddish lessons to retirees nostalgic for the “mama loshon” of yesteryear.

When Herb Jaffee left New Jersey with his wife Fran, for a retirement life in Sun City, they would fly to Los Angeles every now and then to stock up on kosher goods. But in the few years since they’ve come, the Jaffees have seen Las Vegas, and Summerlin itself, utterly transformed. Today, says Herb, “I can’t think of anything I can’t buy here.”

Inspired by the dramatic change in a city that only several years ago was very much a desert, physically and spiritually, Terry—now Feige— describes herself as someone who “lives, breathes, and works for Chabad.” Her children, she says, are perfect indication of all that Chabad has achieved in its short time here. Yirmi, her oldest, is now halfway around the globe, studying in a Chabad yeshiva down under to receive his rabbinical ordination, and another is preparing for a similar course as her two younger boys study at Chabad’s Desert Torah Academy, the only Jewish day school in Las Vegas.

It is an ironic turn of events that would lead Terry to leave Florida for Vegas to find Judaism. But in a deeply Jewish faith that informs her perspective, Terry says it is anything but coincidental.