By Menachem Posner – Chabad.org
Rebbetzin Devorah Groner, wife of Rabbi Yitzchok Dovid Groner obm, who devoted nearly 60 years to Australian Jewry, passed away on Sunday, Sivan 13, 5778 in Melbourne, Australia.
She was 92.
She was born in Smolensk, Russia, in the spring of 1926 to Rabbi Chaim Tzvi and Breina Konikov, devoted Chabad Chassidim. Having served as a community rabbi and determined not to work on Shabbat, Rabbi Chaim Tzvi found piecework employment making clothing from home, one of the few professions in Soviet Russia that allowed workers to set their own hours. Also blessed with mechanical skills, he soon found himself fixing the sewing machines and equipment of many other Chassidic workers engaged in similar trades.
His success aroused some jealousy, and he soon found himself the target of unwanted attention from the Soviet authorities. In 1929, armed with affidavits and tickets from relatives in the United States, the Konikov family immigrated to the United Stattes, settling in New Jersey. Devorah was 4 years old at the time. She would later recall how difficult it was to acclimate to an American kindergarten, where only English was spoken. Years later, when groups of Russian children came to Australia and enrolled in the schools her husband led, she reached out, and was able to relate to them personally and help ease their transition by empathizing with their immigrant experience.
In 1933, her father was appointed rabbi of the Tzemach Tzedek synagogue in the Williamsburg section of Brooklyn, N.Y. In addition to his official rabbinical duties, Rabbi Konikov was deeply involved in many aspects of Jewish education. He would gather children on Shabbat afternoon for treats, Torah thoughts and stories. He taught them basic Judaism after their public-school days. He even released records in which he spoke and sang in Yiddish. These projects were often family affairs, where Devorah and her brothers would contribute to the efforts in any way they could.
Devorah inherited her father’s knack for teaching. In 1942, she began teaching the first class in the nascent Beth Rivkah school in Brooklyn, which was being founded by the Sixth Chabad-Lubavitch Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn of righteous memory, and headed by his son-in-law and subsequent successor, the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory.
At some point, Devorah heard from her after-school charges (she taught during and after the school day in several institutions) that Catholic children in their public schools received an hour of religious training during the public-school day. Discussing it with her father, they consulted with the Rebbe, who strongly encouraged them to teach the Jewish children Judaism. These early efforts quickly grew into the Released Time Program, directed by Chabad-Lubavitch’s National Comittee for Furtherance of Jewish Education, which was closely overseen and spurred on by the Rebbe. Thousands of Jewish children receive weekly doses of Jewish education and inspiration until this day from the program.
As an older teen, she was sent by the Sixth Rebbe to teach in the Chabad-Lubavitch schools that were being founded across the East Coast. In an era when phone calls were prohibitive, this entailed significant hardship, often living alone far from family and friends.
In 1946, she married Rabbi Yitzchok Dovid Groner, a promising young scholar and communal leader, who had been sent to lead the school in Providence, R.I., where she had been teaching. In 1947, the newly married rabbi was sent by the Rebbe on a spiritual tour of Australia and New Zealand to assess the religious needs of the Jewish communities that were growing rapidly through an influx of European immigrants after the Holocaust. The trip to Melbourne took 55 hours.
“The task of inspiring people is a necessity, and this—awakening people—is ikar ha’ikrim [the main part],” wrote the Rebbe.
The trip to Melbourne was his first connection to a community that would end up adoring the Groners’ fearless and unabashed dedication to Jewish activism, and their boundless love for every Jew.
Following the trip, the Groners and their growing family moved to Buffalo to run the Chabad school there. While in Buffalo, she was instrumental in building a women’s mikvah—a project she spearheaded and raised significant funds for.
In 1954, the rabbi visited Australia a second time—this time as an emissary of the Seventh Rebbe—and the local community asked that he come back permanently. In 1958, the Groners moved to Australia for what was initially meant to be for three to five years. Mrs. Groner waited behind, and then took her children by boat to join her husband.
They threw themselves into their work of bolstering the existing Jewish framework and building new institutions.
They ended up remaining for the rest of their lives devoted to their mission as emissaries of the Rebbe. Their home was an open one, and there were regular classes for men and women there both on Shabbat and on weekdays.
Under their stewardship, the cluster of schools they led grew to educate tens of thousands of Jewish children over the decades, and Judaism flourished in Australia.
At the time of her husband’s passing in 2008, Isi Leibler, a former president of Australian Jewry, said: “History will record that Rabbi Yitzchok Groner was beyond a doubt the greatest Australian Jewish leader of the past century.”
While her husband built organizations and schools, she built people and families.
Even as their community grew, she remained involved in the lives hundreds of individuals, patiently listening and supporting with gentle advice and guidance. That same patience allowed her to teach many people who discovered Judaism late in life how to read Hebrew, supporting, encouraging and taking pride in their accomplishments.
Her Chassidic devotion and fervor never waned. She was scrupulous in her mitzvah observance, faithfully praying three times a day, and was particular that someone (often a doting grandchild) be present to say “Amen” after she said each of the morning blessings.
Like her father, she loved to sing, tell stories about her beloved and revered Rebbes, and share anecdotes from her storied and significant life. But most of all, she loved to laugh. She saw the best in everyone and everything.
In her early days in Melbourne, she struggled to light the fire in her home one chilly winter morning. In true Chassidic fashion, she saw it as a lesson in human service to G‑d. After she shared her insight with the Rebbe, she received a letter back encouraging her to publish her insights. The result was an article in the N’shei Chabad Newsletter (Purim 1983) in which she compares the Rebbes to matches, the shluchim to twigs and their communities to logs, all of which burn with a holy fire.
Her husband passed away on 4 Tammuz, 2008.
She is survived by her children, Rabbi Sholom Ber Groner, South Africa; Mrs. Miriam Telsner, Melbourne, Australia; Mrs. Shterna Zirkind, Brooklyn, N.Y.; Rabbi Yossi Groner, Melbourne; Mrs. Chaya Haller, South Africa; Rabbi Chaim Tzvi Groner, Melbourne; Mrs. Rivkah Yurkowicz, Melbourne; Rabbi Mendy Groner, Melbourne, and many grandchildren and great-grandchildren.
She is also survived by her brother Rabbi Velvel Konikov NJ/Crown Heights.
She was predeceased by her brother Rabbi Moshe Yitzchok Konikov of Springfield, MA.
The levaya took place in Melbourne.
Rabbi Velvel Konikov is sitting shiva at 730 Montgomery St, Brooklyn 11213
10am-9pm.
Baruch Dayan Ha’emes – Devorah bas Chaim Tzvi Hirsch.
Hamokom yinachem eschem besoch sheor aveilei tzion vrushalayim may we hear only besuros tovos. Wishing you arichas yomim vshonim tovos MOSHIACH NOW
Vhakizu vraninu shochnei ofor vhe besochom
Hamokom yinachem eschem besoch sheor aveilei tzion vrushalayim may we hear only besuros tovos. Wishing you arichas yomim vshonim tovos MOSHIACH NOW
Vhakizu vraninu shochnei ofor vhe besochom
Baruch Dayan Emes
A life fully lived
Her kindness extended to all she met and even didn’t meet
A role model for her family and the community
We will all meet again in the coming light of he days of Moshiach
esther
Words cannot express how great this fine woman was
I spent 2 hours with her just talking about everything
3 weeks or so ago She remembered the
Names if my children what they were doing etc
She was so non judgemental open and understanding
Her memory was phenomenal
Above all her expansive love for every
Individual
I will miss her dearly Her beautiful smile
Her grin her chutzpah and adventurous spirit
BDE…. I have never met Rebbitzen Groner but her daughter Rebbitzen Chaya Haller(South Africa) has a heart of gold, cares about every Jew and her home is always open. It tells a lot about Rebbitzen Groner installing in her daughter these beautiful qualities that mean so much to us, our families and our people. I’m sure the rest of the Groner families are blessed with the same qualities .May Rebbitzen Groner’s neshoma have a smooth aliya. May her neshoma shine thru her families.
MHM NOW!
Wishing much comfort to the entire Groner -Konikov Family.
A true soldier of the Rebbe. Rebbetzin Groner’s chesed and goodness radiated outwards from her golden neshomah to everyone around her.
The jewel of our Kehillah has been disappeared from our midst.
Looking forward to seeing her hartzige smile again soon witg the true and complete Geulah b’korov mamash.
We miss you dearest Rebbetzin.
Everyone loved her. She was like everyone’s Bubbie.
A sad day for us all
A comfort to the whole Groner family
Hamokom Y’nachem eschem bsoch sh’ar avelei tziyon virushalayim
MMS
How incredibly blessed our community in Melbourne has been to have had the zechus to have had you as our devoted Rebbetzin for decades! A golden heart and a radiant smile, always remembering others, genuinely caring about others, asking after our family members…We love you and we will cherish you always.
May Hashem send the entire family and all of the community much nechamah.
She always had a big smile, a big dugma Chaya
So very sorry to read this sad news: your mother A”H was an exceptional lady and she raised an exceptional daughter in you. Her presence was felt worldwide.
Hamokom yenachem eschem b’soych sha’ar aveiley Zion v”Yerushalayim.
Hindy Lewis, Israel
Shterna, my heart and prayers go out to you. At least you had the zchus of being with your dear mother over the past weeks. May Hashem comfort you and the family. MZ
I remember going there for meals and Sederim. She was so kind , friendly and approachable. She was frum and gave of herself fully. Behind every great man is a great women
She was a living example of
גוטסקייט שיינקייט און פיינקייט
Yaakov & Toby Lieder
She was an amazing person with a heart of gold. Her door was always open to anyone and everyone. A real aishes chayil and a pillar of the community!
Matriarch of the Chabad community in Melbourne.
A wonderful Rebbetzin.
May she be a gutte better for her family and community.
Moshiach NOW
Bsd Such a Special Lady Totally committed to her Husband and her Shlichus
.Have found memories Ohel.Chana eating at their Shabbos Table.
Chana Schanowitz