In Louisville, Colo., staff at Good Samaritan Hospital looks out on raging wildfires. (Credit: Good Samaritan Hospital)

As Marshall Fire Rips Through Colorado’s Boulder County, Chabad Reaches Out

by Mendel Super – chabad.org

The fast-spreading Marshall fire near Boulder, Colo., began burning out of control on Thursday, decimating entire neighborhoods, and destroying at least 500 homes. Officials estimated Friday that up to 1,000 homes may have been lost, after hurricane-force winds swept through the area, spurring on the flames to engulf 6,200 acres overnight. There are no reports of fatalities, in what Colorado Gov. Jared Polis called a “New Year’s miracle.”

“In the blink of an eye,” the governor said at a Friday press conference, “many families having minutes, minutes to get whatever they could, their pets, their kids into the car and leave.”

“I was out doing errands when we got the evacuation notice,” Dr. Rich Kroll, a resident of Louisville—the hardest-hit area, together with Superior—tells Chabad.org. “There was no time to return home, we drove straight to Boulder. I couldn’t even retrieve my tallit and tefillin.” Kroll hasn’t been allowed to return to the area, but says he’s “confident we lost our house” based on aerial images he’s seen. He says many homes were lost near his, including a neighbor who had just completed a renovation. “It just went up in flames. The concept that G‑d runs everything—it was abstract until this happened.”

Kroll’s rabbi, Rabbi Yisroel Wilhelm, co-director of the Rohr Chabad Center at University of Colorado in Boulder, has reached out to him and other community members, offering help and support. Most of those evacuated have accommodation, says Rabbi Benjy Brackman, co-director of Chabad of NW Metro Denver, in Westminster, just three miles away from the fires. Brackman spent much of Thursday at an evacuation center, speaking with and supporting the evacuees. “We’ve offered our Chabad center for accommodation,” Brackman says, “and we’re calling people, offering to help. That means the most to them right now, that human connection and concern we show.”

Brackman says it’s been a traumatic experience for residents of the affected areas. “The police were banging on their doors, yelling to leave. They had no warning.”

With many people quarantining with Covid, the wildfires and evacuation orders couldn’t have come at a worse time. Chanie Scheiner, co-director of Chabad of Boulder fears it will be a “destabilizing experience” for some. “It’s so important now just to talk to them, let them know someone cares.”

Scheiner was on her way to Superior on Thursday to deliver a hot meal to a community member there who was isolating, when she was forced to turn around. The road was closed, with a tractor-trailer overturned on the highway. Her friend in Superior hadn’t yet heard about the fires when Scheiner told her she wouldn’t be able to come. “Half-an-hour later she was evacuated.”

It’s not only the fires that are destroying property, though. The ferocious winds are something locals have never experienced before. At Wilhelm’s Chabad center, an outdoor structure they’d built for Covid-friendly gatherings was blown apart. “All our events over the past year took place there,” Wilhelm says.

“We have a supportive and connected Jewish community,” Brackman says, “and together we will put the pieces back together.”

This article has been reprinted with permission from chabad.org