On Sunny St. Lucia, Chabad Couple Builds a Jewish Community

by Mordechai Lightstone – chabad.org

When Yaniv and Marcia Gliksman, and their children moved a few years ago to St. Lucia—an idyllic island nation nestled among the Windward Islands at the eastern edge of the Caribbean Sea—they found warm waters, inviting beaches and tropical forests. While the towering Pitons—St. Lucia’s iconic twin volcanic spires—offered scenic vistas, a Jewish community was considerably harder to find.

“We baked bread at home for Shabbat and did not have meat for [the first] several months,” said Yaniv Gliksman, a general manager for Diamonds International. More challenging was the couple’s desire to “maintain the Jewish identity of our three kids.”

While other islands in the Caribbean, such as Barbados and Jamaica, have Jewish communities that date back hundreds of years to Sephardic Jews fleeing Spain and Portugal during the Spanish Inquisition, St. Lucia never had a dedicated synagogue building or an active Jewish community. Save for visits from rabbinical students in the Merkos Summer Visitation program, there was never ongoing Jewish guidance or activities. Until now.

Rabbi Avromy and Sternie Super recently moved to the island to open Chabad of St. Lucia. The Supers, who first visited in December 2017, have begun to assemble an eclectic Jewish community of locals, snowbirds and tourists. Their posting was formally announced at the International Conference of Chabad-Lubavitch Women Emissaries in New York.

“Historically, there was never a Jewish community here,” says Avromy Super. “So there’s this real sense that we’re building something new.”

The island nation has attracted foreign business and investment, especially in banking, but for the most part, its economy is based on tourism and the local banana industry.

Tens of Thousands of Jewish Vacationers Pass Through

He estimates that about 200 Jewish residents live on the island at least part of the year, with tens of thousands of Jewish vacationers passing through St. Lucia annually.

With its capital of Castries, the island covers a land area of more than 200 square miles and has a population of about 180,000 and growing.

On an island where all roads eventually lead to the sea, the Supers have found people interested in joining Chabad’s activities simply by walking the sun-drenched streets.

“Every day, we meet new Jews that tell us despite coming to St. Lucia every year for years, even decades, they thought they were the only Jews here,” says Sternie Super. “We’re introducing these people to their neighbors, building a community from the ground up.”

The Supers have tapped into the island vibe in crafting their programming. In addition to Torah classes and Shabbat meals, they host weekly barbecues that have been attended by 30 or so people. Sternie even uses her shopping at the local market with friends she’s made in the community as an opportunity to bond and teach.

“People come here for a few weeks or months, and all they do is go to the beach; the range of experiences on the island can be very limited,” she says. “Chabad offers something fresh and exciting. It’s so outside of what they expected to see and do in St. Lucia.”

The Supers also run a small Hebrew school attended by the Gliksmans’ 10-year-old triplets—Avigail, Michael and Matan—that meets every Wednesday after school.

“We love the fact that my kids can have Jewish class during the year and Jewish activities in general,” says Gliksman. “It is very important for us to have a sense of community, and the Supers are doing that.”

Chabad of St. Lucia is under the auspices of Rabbi Mendel Zarchi of Chabad of Puerto Rico, the point person for Judaism in the Caribbean, and made possible in part through the generosity of the Gad brothers, the owners of Diamonds International.