By Herb Keinon, Jerusalem Post
As a Chabad emissary in Shanghai, Rabbi Abraham Greenberg has abundant experience putting tefilin on other people.
But even Greenberg was surprised when Avner Netanyahu, Prime Minister Binyamin Netanyahu‘s youngest son, approached him during his fathers tour of the Shanghai Jewish Refugees Museum and asked if he had a pair of tefillin.
The younger Netanyahu, a 12th grader in Jerusalem, approached the rabbi, said he did not yet have time in the morning to pray, and asked if he had tefillin handy. Greenberg did.
So as his father and mother were touring the museum which tells the tale of some 18,000 Jewish Jewish refugees from Europe who found shelter in the city during the Holocaust, as a Chinese woman was playing a languid tune on a violin in an atrium inside the complex, and as the press and invited guests were milling around, Avner went into the small Ohel Moshe synagogue that makes up part of the museum complex and put on tefillin.
The word “synagogue” in this context is a bit of a misnomer. The structure, built in 1927 by Iraqi Jews who predated the influx of refugees from Europe, once did serve the Jews in Shanghai as a central place of worship, but has since been restored not as a living, breathing synagogue, but rather as a museum.
There is a bima , an ark, and even a purple ark cover — donated by Israel’s consulate general in the city — inscribed with the words “Tribute to the Hongkou People who provided refuge to Jews in time of need.”
But there is no Torah inside the ark. The Chinese government, apparently, is not interested in turning the site — located in the city’s Hongkou district — into an active synagogue, but rather wants to preserve it as a historic site and keep it as a museum.
(There are, however, three Chabad houses in the city which do serve as synagogues. One of those Chabad houses provided the Netanyahu entourage with kosher food during the prime minister’s two night stay in Shanghai, a city not blessed with an abundance of kosher eateries.).
Since Ohel Moshe does not function on a regular basis as a synagogue, Avner did not find a prayer book there. Instead, he pulled out his cellular phone and called up a prayer book on his phone.
As cameras clicked, the younger Netanyahu prayed, covering his eyes during recitation of the “Shema,” and taking three steps back and then forward for the “amida,” seemingly oblivious to those watching him
Among those looking on was a Chinese official, intrigued by what the young Netanyahu was doing. After Avner finished, the man approached him and politely asked what he had just wrapped around his arm. Avner, who regularly wears a knitted kippa, briefly explained in English the morning ritual, and ended by saying, “It reminds us daily of who we stand before.”
Bibi and family represent all that is great with our people and Jewish homeland.
DN
What a beautiful kiddush Hashem. 🙂
THE YESHIVA IN MONTREAL WAS STARTED BY NINE BOCHURIM SENT BY THE FRIERDIKE REBBE, AND THEY WERE SAVED THRU SUGIHARAS VISAS IN SHANGCHAI BORUCH HASHEM
this is who we are
so there are chabadniks……….they are busy doing what needs doing! B”H,… this will hasten Moshiach’s arrival.
Dugma Chaya for millions of kida!!! Way to go Avner!!!!!
…to mention that Chabad of Beijing played a very big role in this trip as well!! GO FREUNDLICHS!!
And there’s not a single picture?
Very nice to see this attitude in Bibis son. Not ashamed of our Yiddishkeit, proud and strong. Following the Rebbes message. Keep it up, brother.
G-d bless him!