Hanukkah is a busy week for Wyoming's only rabbi
By
Kyle Mackie |
NPR
Monday, December 6, 2021
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Chabad Rabbi Zalman Mendelsohn and his wife Raizy
Kyle Mackie
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Kyle Mackie
Tonight is the last night of Hanukkah, and it's been a busy week for Chabad Rabbi Zalman Mendelsohn, the only ordained rabbi in the entire state of Wyoming.
By the fifth night Mendelsohn had already driven about 1,000 miles across the state, from Jackson to Cheyenne and back again, plus a quick stop in Denver to pick up kosher catering.
"One of the things that often happens being a traveling rabbi is that there are snowstorms and there are those dreaded blinking lights that come on and say, 'Road Closed.' And here you had planned on doing a wedding or a bar or bat mitzvah or a funeral and you're just stuck," he says.
Mendelsohn leads the Chabad Jewish Center of Wyoming based in Jackson but travels quarterly to Casper, Laramie and Cheyenne - about 300 to 430 miles. The center isn't the only Jewish community in Wyoming, population 577,000, but right now, Meldelsohn is the only full-time ordained rabbi in a state larger than the whole United Kingdom, though there's at least one more in training.
"It's been a labor of love and a journey of a lifetime," he says of his 14 years on Jackson.
Avi Kantor, a member of the Jackson congregation, says the rabbi and his wife, Raizy helped ease their move to Wyoming from a larger Jewish community in Philadelphia.
"They were very welcoming," Kantor says, "opened up their home to us, and really made it possible for us to transition here and keep up our traditions and keep up the practices that were important to us back home."
Mendelsohn says the history of Jews in Wyoming dates back to the state's early pioneers. And Jackson's Jewish community has grown by a couple hundred members during the pandemic, partially because of people leaving cities but also because many are looking for a renewed sense of meaning.
"We've just been through a pandemic where many of us lost the courage and the conviction to be able to continue on. Many of us have lost faith in humanity," Mendelsohn says, "and now the message is: Don't lose faith. You have a bright light to shine with the world around you."
And that, he says, is the most important lesson of Hanukkah this year: Even when things seem dark, you can always find your personal reserve of oil.
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On the last night of Hanukkah, Chabad Rabbi Zalman Mendelsohn wraps up a busy week. He is currently the only ordained rabbi serving in Wyoming.
Transcript
ARI SHAPIRO, HOST:
There's only one rabbi in all of Wyoming, so Hanukkah was busy for Rabbi Zalman Mendelsohn. Kyle Mackie reports.
KYLE MACKIE, BYLINE: By the fifth night of Hanukkah, Rabbi Mendelsohn had already driven about a thousand miles across Wyoming, from Jackson to Cheyenne and back again, plus a quick stop in Denver to pick up kosher catering.
ZALMAN MENDELSOHN: One of the things that often happens being a traveling rabbi is that there are snowstorms, and there are those dreaded blinking lights that come on and say road closed. And here you had planned on doing a wedding or a bar or bat mitzvah or a funeral, and you're just stuck.
MACKIE: Mendelsohn leads the Chabad Jewish Center of Wyoming based in Jackson, but travels quarterly to Casper, Laramie and Cheyenne - about 300 to 430 miles away. The center isn't the only Jewish community in Wyoming - population 577,000 - but right now, Mendelsohn is the only full-time ordained rabbi in a state larger than the whole United Kingdom, though there's at least one more in training.
MENDELSOHN: It's been a labor of love and a journey of a lifetime.
UNIDENTIFIED PEOPLE: (Singing in non-English language).
MACKIE: This week's travels went smoothly, and Mendelsohn got back to Jackson for a menorah lighting at the nearby Four Seasons hotel in Teton Village.
MENDELSOHN: Now we're going to call up the Kantor family, led by Liam, to light the second candle of the menorah tonight.
MACKIE: Avi Kantor, a member of the congregation here, says the rabbi and his wife, Raizy, helped ease their move to Wyoming from a larger Jewish community in Philadelphia.
AVI KANTOR: They were very welcoming, opened up their home to us and really made it possible for us to transition here and keep up our traditions and keep up the practices that were important to us back home.
MACKIE: Mendelsohn has lived in Jackson for 14 years and says the history of Jews in Wyoming dates back to the state's early pioneers. And Jackson's Jewish community has grown by a couple hundred members during the pandemic, partially because of people leaving cities, but also because many are looking for a renewed sense of meaning.
MENDELSOHN: We've just been through a pandemic where many of us lost the courage and the conviction to be able to continue on. Many of us have lost faith in humanity. And now, the message is don't lose faith. You have a bright light to shine with the world around you.
MACKIE: And that, he says, is the most important lesson of Hanukkah this year. Even when things seem dark, you can always find your personal reserve of oil.
For NPR News, I'm Kyle Mackie in Jackson, Wyo.
UNIDENTIFIED PEOPLE: (Singing) I have a little dreidel. I made it... Transcript provided by NPR, Copyright NPR.
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