By Yonit Tanenbaum for Chabad.org

Tragedy struck the Jewish community of Baltimore when a freak traffic accident claimed the life of a 53-year-old resident heading to a doctor’s appointment after visiting his mother.

Avrohom Goldstein, a beloved figure in the local Chabad-Lubavitch yeshiva where he volunteered and studied with the students, passed away the morning of June 8 when his vehicle hit a guardrail and flipped over.

Baltimore Community Mourns Passing of Beloved Kosher Supervisor

By Yonit Tanenbaum for Chabad.org

Tragedy struck the Jewish community of Baltimore when a freak traffic accident claimed the life of a 53-year-old resident heading to a doctor’s appointment after visiting his mother.

Avrohom Goldstein, a beloved figure in the local Chabad-Lubavitch yeshiva where he volunteered and studied with the students, passed away the morning of June 8 when his vehicle hit a guardrail and flipped over.

“He was on the exit ramp from Route 70 to get onto Route 695,” said Rabbi Shmuel Kaplan, a friend for more than two decades and director of Lubavitch of Maryland. “He must have lost control of the car.

“So many rabbis and yeshiva students attended the funeral,” said Goldstein’s mother, Frances R. Goldstein, 74. “He was loved by so many.”

Ever since he started going to services and programs at Chabad of Park Heights in 1984, Goldstein served as a committed member of the local Lubavitch and wider Jewish community. After the yeshiva opened four years ago, the kosher supervisor dedicated much of his time to studying amidst its books and students.

“He was always very helpful and spent all of his free time there,” said Kaplan. “We considered him an adjunct student.”

Every Sukkot, he took his lulav and etrog to a senior apartment building, going from floor to floor to make sure the Jewish residents had the opportunity to make a blessing on the Four Species.

Even his arthritis, which made walking a daily challenge, didn’t stop Goldstein from chaperoning yeshiva students when needed or running to do a favor for a fellow in need.

Emunah Friedman, a close friend of the family who was visiting Goldstein’s mother in Silverspring at the same time, was likely one of the last people to have spoken to the man before his passing.

“We said good morning, had a short conversation, and said that we would speak again later in the day,” she recalled.

Article continued at Chabad.org at Ready to Help

2 Comments

  • Rabbi Shmuel Simenowitz

    I sat next to him in shul. He was a real Baalshemske yid. He will be sorely missed