Intermountain Jewish News

Banner
Sunday,
May 19th
    Yom Rishon, 10 Sivan 5773
Home IJN Special Sections Kosher Living Chabad’s peak experience

Chabad’s peak experience

E-mail Print PDF
Article Index
Chabad’s peak experience
Page 2 of 2
All Pages

The Mendelsohn familyONE would think that a full-time, professional posting to a place like Jackson, Wyoming would be a difficult thing for just about anybody to pull off.

The place is so notoriously gorgeous, with the spectacular Tetons towering over the town, with Yellowstone National Park just a few miles away, with fresh air and open skies and a laid-back Western lifestyle — all of it so picturesque and cool that even Coloradoans are envious.

For Rabbi Zalman Mendelsohn, however, getting sent to work and live full-time in Jackson was no problem at all.

Hence his stewardship of an increasingly popular Jackson-based entity called the Chabad Jewish Center of Wyoming — not to mention his limitless gratitude.

“We absolutely love it,” he says, including in his first-person plural his wife Raizy and young daughters Chayale, Chanie and Rochel.

(The rabbi pauses for a moment to insert a moment of characteristic humor: “We made sure to include, in each of their names, a ‘ch’ so that way, whenever we meet people over here, they can never pronounce the names.”)

Then back to Jackson, and Wyoming in general.

“We can’t get enough of it,” the energetic and youthful rabbi says. “We hate leaving here whenever we have to for family celebrations and simchas. Whenever we leave it’s always with a sad heart. This is home for us.”

So much so that they have virtually adopted the community in Jackson which, in turn, seems to have adopted them.

“My family is the extended Jewish community and beyond,” Rabbi Mendelsohn says. “We’re very actively involved with all kinds of organizations locally. We ski, we hike, we participate in all kinds of local events. We’re very much at home.”

SO how, the rabbi is asked, did he manage to wrangle such a job in such a paradise?

He quickly refutes the notion that his appointment to Jackson was a result of good connections in Crown Heights, the Brooklyn neighborhood where the Chabad Lubavitch movement has its world headquarters.

“When we moved here five years ago there was very little interest in anybody coming to Wyoming,” Rabbi Mendelsohn says.

“Chabad has been visiting Wyoming for the last 65 years. Traditionally the way Chabad worked here is to send out young rabbinical students to visit places that have been underserved Jewishly, and to provide resources during the summertime.”

Rabbi Mendelsohn performed that duty himself for three summers, “visiting all over the state,” he says, “and none of the rabbis who had visited here before I did felt that it was a place that would be able to open up a Chabad center.

“They just didn’t find enough Jewish people, but during my three years I found quite a few and felt that it was a viable option. I presented Chabad headquarters with a proposal that included mention of local Jewish people that were interested in supporting a full-time presence of Chabad here and that’s what made it happen.”

His Jackson appointment was his first full-time assignment as a Chabad shaliach, or emissary. It came at the end of an arduous training period in which he “lived in about 15 different countries and visited many others over the last 15 years as part of my training.”

Born and raised in Miami Beach, Rabbi Mendelsohn was the son of parents who grew up largely secular, “as maybe once or twice-a-year Jews,” who gradually began to incorporate Jewish observance into their lives.

A first-generation Chabadnik himself, the rabbi’s early training took place in exotic locations, to put it mildly.

He lived and worked in Beijing, China for several months, for a year in Singapore and for several months in Thailand and Nepal.

“It was all part of my training to become a rabbi,” he says, “and Chabad has very hands on training. This was prior to moving to Jackson so during that time I had a lot of training as part of my ordination. In each of those places I worked with the Chabad rabbi in that community.”

To some degree, he had a hand in choosing these distant, and in Jewish terms at least, quite isolated places.

“I had an interest in seeing different parts of the world as a rabbi,” he explains, adding that he has long harbored an interest in Sephardic Jewry and the Jewish communities of Asia, including Chinese Jewry.

His interest in “Jewish demographics and the different lifestyles of Jews from all over the world” eventually led him not only to Asia but to Wyoming.

WHEN asked whether Jackson is Wyoming’s version of Aspen, Colorado’s ultra-scenic, high-end, often celebrity-laden vacation destination, Rabbi Mendelsohn is quick to quash the notion.

“It’s very different,” he insists. “There are about 500 Jewish people who live here full-time. It’s different from Aspen in the sense that the people here are very much salt of the earth — lots of cowboys. A lot of the people who live here are fairly well off but often very modest.”

Those 500 full-timers, however, aren’t the whole story in Jackson.

“The community is growing,” Rabbi Mendelsohn says.

“There are several hundred Jewish people who have bought homes here. They don’t live here full-time, but they visit every year. Then there are about 40,000 Jewish people who visit here every year.

“So nine months out of the year we’re just a little community, then for about two months during the summer and a month during the winter we’re very active with visitors. We’re at the gate of Teton National Park and Yellowstone National Park so there are a lot of visitors.”

The visitors and vacation homeowners aren’t often celebrities — yet another distinction between Jackson and Aspen. “For the most part,” the rabbi says, “it’s businesspeople or entrepreneurs or CPAs.”

And most of them are not very religious.

“There is only one other couple up here in Jackson that is Orthodox besides us,” Rabbi Mendelsohn says. “The local community is made up mostly of Jewish people who don’t really have strong Jewish identity in the sense of traditional Jewish observance.”

They are, in other words, the perfect target audience for Chabad’s outreach efforts.

“We operate most of our activities, including Shabbat services, in hotels. Every weekend for dinner we can have anywhere between five and 50 people joining us.

“We have a variety of classes, holidays, educational events, celebrations, children’s programs. We have a Jackson Hole Jewish Music Festival which we just finished. We have a distinguished lecture series. The list goes on and on and on.”

He is “very pleased” with the turnout, the rabbi says, noting that Chabad is sometimes able to attract as many as 100 people to its events.

“It’s up and down,” he says of attendance, “depending on the time of year.”

Summertime, with its mix of full-time and part-time residents and vacationers, is definitely the up season, and for a very simple reason.

“No one wants to leave Jackson,” the rabbi says. “It’s the most beautiful place in the world.”



Last Updated ( Thursday, 07 March 2013 12:51 )  

Get the IJN's free newsletter!

JTA News

The Newly Ordained – Yeshivat Maharat

Adam Soclof Meet the first three graduates of Yeshivat Maharat. ... [Link]

Nick Saban’s Alabama legacy: 3 BCS titles, a whole bunch of Jews

Ami Eden Tom Van Riper makes the case in Forbes that Nick Saban is worth the mega-millions he is paid to coach football at the University of Alabama. And that’s before you talk about the explosion of Jew... [Link]

Futurist: Let’s talk Turkey about Israel

Ami Eden Gary Rosenblatt interviews David Passig, a professor at Bar-Ilan University, about his look-into-the-future book “2048.” Buckle up! ... [Link]

The Newly Ordained – Yeshivat Chovevei Torah

Adam Soclof Meet the 2013 graduates of Yeshivat Chovevei Torah. ... [Link]

Day 19 of Jewish American Heritage Month: Get to know a sports hero

Adam Soclof That scene in “Airplane” was an exaggeration: the list of famous Jewish sports legends would fill much more than a pamphlet. ... [Link]

CIA head John Brennan makes unannounced Israel visit

Marcy Oster U.S. Central Intelligence Agency Director John Brennan made an unannounced visit to Israel to discuss the situation in Syria. ... [Link]

Netanyahu reassures on Israel’s readiness for Syrian threat

Marcy Oster Israel is ready for “any scenario” in Syria, Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu said, amid reports that Syria will hit Tel Aviv if Israel launches another raid on Syrian soil. ... [Link]

‘Death to Jews’ tattoo costs Hungarian martial artist Prague gig

Cnaan Liphshiz A Hungarian martial arts fighter was disinvited from an event in Prague because of his Nazi tattoos, including one reading “death to the Jews.” ... [Link]

Shabbat Times


Intermountain Jewish News • 1177 Grant Street • Denver, CO 80203 • 303 861 2234 • FAX 303 832 6942
email@ijn.com • larry@ijn.com • bernie@ijn.com • lori@ijn.com