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India-Pakistan
Slain Rabbi's Parents Light Mumbai Menorah
2008-12-26
The parents of a rabbi and his wife killed in last month's terror attacks in Mumbai lit a 16-foot public menorah Thursday outside the building where their children lived in the Indian city.

Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg, and his wife, Rivka, were among scores killed last month in a rampage by suspected Islamic militants. The couple ran a center in Mumbai for the Orthodox Chabad Lubavitch movement. The slain Holtzbergs, who moved to Mumbai in 2003, used to light a menorah every year outside the Jewish center also known as Nariman House. Thursday is the fifth night of Hanukkah.

Rabbi Nachman Holtzberg and his wife, Frida, were accompanied by Rivka's parents, Yehudit and Shimon Rosenberg, and several friends and relatives at the lighting ceremony. The relatives went inside the building, badly damaged by the attackers and the Indian rescue operations that followed, and also visited the room where Gavriel Holtzberg and his wife were killed.

The Holtzbergs and Rosenbergs are also expected to light a menorah at the Gateway of India, a ceremonial archway on Mumbai's seafront, a short distance from the Chabad center.

The Holtzberg's 2-year-old son, Moshe, survived the attack on the building that killed his parents and four others - all Jewish foreigners.

Acting director Rabbi Dov Goldberg has vowed to restore the building and continue their work in Mumbai.

At least 164 people and nine gunmen were killed in the Nov. 26-29 attacks that targeted 10 sites in Mumbai, including two five-star hotels and the Jewish center.
Posted by:john frum

#7  When it comes to covering India, Rantburgs India affiliate, John Frum, is Americas best news outlet.

Hit the Tipjar!
Posted by: Mike N.   2008-12-26 19:22  

#6  john frum---I really appreciate your coverage and the images you have posted with respect to the Mumbai tragedy. I wish that the MSM would do the same.
Posted by: Alaska Paul   2008-12-26 17:47  

#5  That sounds like the Lubavicher Chabadniks. Orthodox mystics, but eager to share the joys of Judaism with all comers, not judging the level of religious commitment... or even whether or not they are Jewish. That's their standard public Hanukkah menorah, by the way; they put up one just like it on Cincinnati's Fountain Square, across from the Christmas tree.

Thank you, john.

((More than you want to know about Ma'oz Tzur in Wikipedia and an instrumental rendition of the melody here.
Posted by: trailing wife    2008-12-26 14:01  

#4  



Posted by: john frum   2008-12-26 10:19  

#3  
Posted by: john frum   2008-12-26 10:16  

#2  Jews celebrate victory of good over evil at Gateway

MUMBAI: "Is it safe to be here, all of us together?'' asked a Jewish woman before seating herself on a chair facing the Gateway of India. A retired colonel reassured her.

Fighting back fears of congregating at a public place, a sizeable number of Jews-both Indians and foreigners-came forward to attend a prayer meeting organised by Chabad House on the occasion of Hanukkah, the Jewish festival that celebrates the victory of good over evil.

While Moshe, the orphaned child of Rabbi Gavriel-who was claimed by the terror attack at Nariman House-was conspicuous by his absence, his grandparents-Shimon and Yehudit Rosenberg-were among those present.

Several rabbis, members of the international Chabad Houses, descended from their cars to distribute black skull caps to the male Jewish members in the audience, which they also helped them wear. A round of potato latkes, a traditional jewish sweet, ensured hospitality for the guests, among whom was Ved Prakash, general manager of the company looking after the reconstruction of Chabad House.

In the symbolic backdrop of the Gateway, a giant menorah, a nine-branched candle stand (almost 20-ft tall) was set up and-as a man seated on a crane poured oil-Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky (from the Chabad headquarters in New York), took the podium.

In a speech rendered with ascending emotion that he addressed to the president and "peace-loving members of this country", Kotlarsky said, "We have assembled to light the menorah on the fifth day of the Hanukkah to celebrate the victory of the weak over the strong.''

Recalling the attacks that claimed the lives of the rabbi and his wife, who had moved to Mumbai to spread "goodness and kindness'', Kotlarsky said, "We mourn today the loss of these beacons of light.''

On the eve of the fifth day of Hanukkah, when majority of the menorah is lit up, Kotlarsky iterated, "We are committed to continuing the legacy of Rabbi Gavriel, and to fight terrorism not with AK-47s but by illuminating the darkness.''

He recalled seeing Moshe the previous night in Israel and said it as a pleasure watching him light the menorah. "We are not only committed to coming back but are also not leaving Mumbai,'' he announced, pumping his fist in the air and inviting Moshe's grandfather to light the menorah as a metaphor for overcoming the darkness.

When a crane lifted the elderly rabbi holding a candle, members of the audience stood in anticipation and clapped incessantly. As he lit the five wicks, Rosenberg recited Lighting the lights and Rock of ages-two Hanukkah prayers-while others joined in the chorus.

The rabbis then recited the evening sermon, swaying back and forth, holding the holy book as members of the audience, including Moshe's grandmother, held each other in a circle, and performed the traditional song-and-dance Hanukkah prayer.

Thanks to the vigorous smoke-spitting flames of the menorah, the Gateway shone in a new hue. The flames were extinguished after the prayer.

It was at this point that Rabbi Altel Kubchik of Pune's Chabad House, who had known Rabbi Gavriel to be an "iron man", lit up his cigarette. "We are going to build more Chabad Houses in India. "That is our answer,'' he said.
Posted by: john frum   2008-12-26 10:12  

#1  
Posted by: john frum   2008-12-26 10:09  

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