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Gala Parade Escorts Two Torah Scrolls To New Home at F.R.E.E.

Sunday, October 24, 2004 Two Torah scrolls, kept hidden through the years of communist rule in Russia, were restored to be used at their new home,. A gala procession escorted the precious Torah scrolls through the Russian community of Brighton Beach to the Hebrew Alliance F.R.E.E. Synagogue at 2915 Brighton 6 Street. 

Click here to see a photo gallery of the event

Sunday, October 24, 2004 Two Torah scrolls, kept hidden through the years of communist rule in Russia, were restored to be used at their new home,. A gala procession escorted the precious Torah scrolls through the Russian community of Brighton Beach to the Hebrew Alliance F.R.E.E. (Friends of Refugees of Eastern Europe) Synagogue at 2915 Brighton 6 Street. F.R.E.E. is America’s largest religious organization devoted to aiding Russian Jews.

The parade began at Coney Island and Brighton Beach Avenues. Borough President Marty Markowitz, presented F.R.E.E with a Proclamation, proclaiming Sunday October 24, 2004, “Friends of Refugees of Eastern Europe, Torah Ceremony Day in Brooklyn, USA”.

“Brooklyn is privileged to have people like Rabbi Okunov, and house organizations such as Lubavitch and F.R.E.E. Friends of Refugees of Eastern Europe”, Markowitz said.

Curtis Sliwa and his Guardian Angels attended the parade, as did Councilman, Mikhail Nelson, (of the Brighton Beach area). “The city needs more of such events,” he said, adding that he always looks forward to the opportunity to “dance with the Torahs in the streets.”

Other prominent members of Brooklyn’s Jewish community, among them Rabbi David Hollander, had the privilege of carrying the Torah under an ornate bridal canopy. Rabbi Hollander, an activist for Jewish causes, recalled the mission to Russia he undertook years ago at the request of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson.

This Historic event was indeed a major Kiddush Hashem, an event sanctifying G-d and the Jewish people, “Its effect reached way beyond the Brighton Beach community of Brooklyn, as it was broadcasted and reported in more then 100 news agencies worldwide” reflects Rabbi Yosef Y. Okunov, FREE’s Program Director and the events initiator.

For thousands of Russian Jews in Brighton Beach, “the open demonstration of love for the Torah is a triumph over the tyranny of religious persecution suffered under communism,” said Rabbi Hirsh Okunov, FREE’s Vice President.

The Torahs were carried under a canopy, to torches, song, Russian dances, banners and live music. The international award-winning FREE’s Russian Boys Choir, “M Generation”, performed to a large crowd of participants and spectators.

The smaller of the two Torah scrolls, about 150 years old, was donated by the Dovidov family in honor of their father, Abraham Dovidov, the sexton of a synagogue in Riga. When the Nazis invaded, he fled to Russia with the Torah scroll, taking it out only for prayer services on the Shabbat and then hiding it.

After the war, he returned to Latvia which remained under Soviet domination. He continued his practice of taking out the Torah scroll only for Shabbat services, and hiding it during the week. When he passed away, his children brought the Torah with them to the United States.

The Schuster family donated the larger scroll, which traveled a similar dangerous path through post-Holocaust Europe before arriving here.
According to Rabbi Okunov, more than $10,000 was raised to repair the scrolls. Every letter on the handwritten parchment has to be perfect in order to be used in the synagogue.

When the parade arrived at the Hebrew Alliance – F.R.E.E. Synagogue, the five Torah scrolls already in the ark were carried out to greet the new arrivals. During the Jewish holidays this year, nearly two thousand worshipers heard the Torah read from these scrolls, —testimony to the revival of Jewish life among many disaffected Russian Jews whom F.R.E.E. has helped return to their traditions.

Rabbi Mayer Okunov, Chairman of FREE, describes the cyclical relationship of Russian and American Judaism. Before the Communist revolution, he said, “Russia was a big center of Judaism, while in America it was not so strong. Then the Communist party destroyed everything,” leaving American Jews to keep the traditions alive and send books and emissaries to the Soviet Union. “Now with the Torah coming here from the FSU, it’s like back to the old times,” he said.

F.R.E.E. – Friends of Refugees of Eastern Europe was founded in 1969 at the directive of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, as the Chabad Lubavitch Russian Immigrant Program, led by a group of young “partisans” and fellow Soviet refugees.

Since then, F.R.E.E.’s unique approach has found a path to the hearts and souls of tens of thousands of Russian-speaking Jewish families, by providing free bar mitzvahs, summer camps, kosher food, Jewish education and circumcisions on boys and men who were forbidden to have them in the former USSR.

F.R.E.E.’s outstanding success has become the worldwide model for aid organizations serving Russian Jewish families around the globe.

Curtis Sliwa speaks at the HaChnosas Sifrei Torah Ceremony
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The story was also reported by the following news agencies:
Anchorage Daily NewsThe Bostone GlobeIndianapolis StarThe Mercury NewsFort Mill TimesStar TribuneOregon LiveFind LawTri-City HeraldFresno BeeIsland PacketHerald SunBeaufort GazetteSeattle Post-Intelligencer,
The Bakersfield Californian
The Herald Rock HillNorth County TimesBurlington County TimesThe Scaramento BeeTimes UnionTennesseanAmerican-RepublicanThe Bauffualo NewsStaten Island AdvanceHouston Chronicle,
Union-Trubune.

 Click here to read the Proclamation issued by Brooklyn Borough President Marty Markowitz, proclaiming Sunday October 24, 2004 “Friends of Refugees of Eastern Europe, Torah Ceremony Day in Brooklyn, USA”.

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