
Devastated Christchurch Population Urged to Relocate After Aftershocks
Like the rest of Christchurch’s scarred population, Jewish community members in New Zealand’s second-largest city are being forced by a seemingless endless stream of aftershocks to head as far away as possible from the epicenter of yesterday’s 6.3-magnitude earthquake.
With the historic city center, home to the headquarters of Chabad-Lubavitch of New Zealand, in shambles and at least 65 people killed, citizens were either finding shelter in tent cities established on the outskirts of town, or with kindhearted countrymen on the North Island or in Wellington and Auckland.
Food is scarce; running water is in short supply; electricity is all but nonexistent.
“The entire community is in shock,” reported Tzippy Friedman, who was in the Christchurch Chabad House with her husband, Chabad-Lubavitch of New Zealand co-director Rabbi Shmuel Friedman, when the shaking started.
“It has been a traumatic experience for everyone,” she added before hanging up as an aftershock induced people to scream all around her, “and it’s still going on.”
According to Friedman, whose own home was severely damaged by the temblor, downtown Christchurch resembled a warzone. As the walls of the Chabad House came crashing down around them, she and her husband, and other personnel and guests fled into the street. Outside, they found a scene of complete and utter devastation.
While at first, they set up an emergency rally and information point at Latimer Square just 600 meters away, an aftershock in the middle of the night reduced brick buildings to piles of rubble.
“Everything looked like pancakes; the houses were torn apart,” she said. “The chaos in the streets was intense.”
Chabad-Lubavitch of New Zealand director Rabbi Mendel Goldstein was in Melbourne, Australia, with his family when the quake struck. He and the Friedmans spent most of Tuesday locating a few hundred known Jewish families and assuring their safety. On Wednesday local time, they arranged housing far from the city for those who needed it.
“We contacted everybody we know, and everyone is okay,” said Friedman.
Unconfirmed reports indicated that at least one Israeli tourist was crushed by falling debris, and the Friedmans were cooperating with the Israeli Embassy to counsel expatriates in the area. They urged all visitors to contact family members back home with updates on their safety.
Article continued at Chabad.org – A statement on the Chabad House’s …
City Planner
Build a city close to the fault line (NZ has thousans of tremors a year); place it on a huge reservoir of underground water topped by sand; Then give it a religous name.
Bubbe the Builder
They need to re-build using monolithic dome home technology. It costs about the same as a regular building, but they’re much cheaper to heat and cool. Plus, they resist mold and are virtually fire-, storm-, and earthquake proof. Additionally, they look like a kippah! :D What more could you ask for?
Please help!
please visit http://www.chabadnz.org/ and click “donate”. The chabad house was destroyed, and they need all the help they can get, (and to help others too!)
moshiachistim!?
this place is run by moshiachistim! Why are we supporting it?
this only happened because they want to ruin crown heights with broin and machloikes and they don’t accept reality with the rebbeh.
they are even causing the whole world to shake by saying yechi!
earthquakes happen because of yechi. stop making earthquakes.