Linda Sweizer of Hot Springs had been praying for someone to help her teach her grandchildren what it means to be Jewish.
Then she read in her newspaper that two rabbis were in Arkansas as part of a New York based program that sends rabbis on summer trips to areas where Jews are isolated. So she called them.
Sweizer and her family are among Jews across the state who had a visit from rabbis Menachem “Mendy” Margolin and Yosef “Yossi” Kopfstein as they spent two and a half weeks crisscrossing Arkansas as part of the Jewish Community Enrichment Program, informally called the Traveling Rabbis.
So, these two rabbis travel Arkansas … and bring blessings
Linda Sweizer of Hot Springs had been praying for someone to help her teach her grandchildren what it means to be Jewish.
Then she read in her newspaper that two rabbis were in Arkansas as part of a New York based program that sends rabbis on summer trips to areas where Jews are isolated. So she called them.
Sweizer and her family are among Jews across the state who had a visit from rabbis Menachem “Mendy” Margolin and Yosef “Yossi” Kopfstein as they spent two and a half weeks crisscrossing Arkansas as part of the Jewish Community Enrichment Program, informally called the Traveling Rabbis.