From the DW:
“New 'Jewish campus' opens in Berlin”
(Outside view of the 'Pears Jewish Campus' in Berlin
Wilmersdorf, fronted by a colorful mural. The seven-floor building, colored a
striking blue)
"This is a clear contribution toward a positive future.
This is where we set an example," Rabbi Yehuda Teichtal told DW, standing
among construction equipment and workers putting the finishing touches on his
largest project, the Pears Jewish Campus in the western Berlin district of
Wilmersdorf, set to open on June 25. "We want to secure a long-term,
positive, vibrant future for Jewish life in Germany," he said. Rabbi
Teichtal, who leads the Chabad community in Berlin, said the construction costs
added up to around €40 million ($43.95 million). It was paid for by a
combination of public funds from the German federal government and the state of
Berlin, funding from large businesses and many individual donors. Recently,
when money to complete the project was running out, Teichtal launched an online
fundraiser which brought in another €1.5 million within 36 hours.
Day care, cinema, school, sports hall The seven-floor bean-shaped building,
colored a striking blue, could be seen taking shape from the street for months.
The campus, as Teichtal describes it, is based on three pillars: education,
culture and sport. He lists a multitude of planned offerings to be hosted by
the facility: a day care for 200 children, a school for 350 students, a complete
sports hall, a cinema, a library, a music hall, a studio and a cafe.
The kosher cafe and the "many encounters" expected
to take place there are especially important to the rabbi. He hopes the center
will be visited by Berlin students from all religions, as well as curious
tourists from Germany and abroad. He also wants to reach other groups with
initiatives including vocational training — for example, courses run by the
federal police or other institutions preparing employees for leadership roles. "Here
is it not only about experiencing something of the past, but also to be able to
raise questions people have in the present: What are Jews? How do they live?
Which holidays do they celebrate?" Teichtal said.
With this project, the Chabad-Lubavitch Jewish movement is
strengthening its presence in the German capital. According to Teichtal, who
since 2012 has also been one of the rabbis of the Jewish Community of Berlin,
the Chabad-Lubavitch movement is more than simply an Orthodox group in Judaism.
"We are Orthodox and open," he said. The movement, initiated and
strongly influenced by rabbinic individuals and rabbinical dynasties, has its
origins in late 18th-century pious Eastern European Judaism. The name Lubavitch
comes from a small village near Russia's western border. Since the 1940s, the
movement has been based in the United States, in the New York borough of
Brooklyn. The 51-year-old rabbi, who moved to Berlin from New York with his
wife 25 years ago, advocates positive coexistence across religious divides. For
him, the blue of the new building represents the sky and the future.
'Visible indication of Jewish life in the middle of Berlin' Teichtal's initial ideas for the
center date back to 2013. "Back then it was a dream; now it is becoming
reality," he said when announcing the project in 2018. For him, the center
is about integration. Teichtal said he hopes people from across Germany, beyond
those of Jewish faith and culture, engage with the center's offerings. The
building's intentional openness is shown in many of its details. It is
separated from other properties not by a high-security wall, but by a barrier
made of bulletproof glass. The wall facing the street, also necessary for
security reasons, was painted with a colorful mural of Jewish life by a Berlin
graffiti artist. Completing the center is the realization of a dream for
Teichtal. Since construction began, he has invited many high-ranking federal
politicians for a tour. The groundbreaking ceremony in 2018 was attended by
then-Foreign Minister Heiko Maas; at the roofing ceremony in 2020, then-Finance
Minister (now German Chancellor) Olaf Scholz spoke of a "visible
indication of Jewish life in the middle of Berlin." And that is where it
belongs, "in the middle of our society," Scholz said.
In Berlin and the rest of Germany, the resurgence of Jewish
life goes hand-in-hand with the remembrance of Jewish life before the Shoah,
the mass murder of 6 million Jews during the Nazi era. Dozens of Teichtal's
relatives were murdered in German concentration and extermination camps. Today,
the Chabad movement is one element among the many Jewish traditions in the
German capital, be they Orthodox, liberal, reform or secular. In the area
surrounding the synagogue of the Chabad movement, Jewish individuals and
families are again part of the streetscape, as in other parts of Berlin. As the
new facility opens, Teichtal is thinking and planning ahead. His community has
long outgrown its 250-seat synagogue, which was established in a former
industrial building at the other end of the property in 2007. The model for
extending this building and constructing a new synagogue — to seat almost 600
people — is already in his office.
^ This is another show that Jewish life in Germany is alive
despite all the Anti-Semitism (past and present.) ^
https://www.dw.com/en/new-jewish-campus-opens-in-berlin/a-66005427
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.