
Massive Shabbat Dinners Get Even Bigger on University Campuses
Jewish students at the State University of New York at New Paltz prepare challah bread in advance of the local Chabad House’s Shabbat 118 event.
Avery Rosin, 19, came with friends to a Sabbath dinner at the University of Pennsylvania and left with new ones.
Rosin, a member of the student leadership at the campus Chabad House, said that several people came up to him at the 90-person Chanukah event wanting to know how to get more involved. And although the dinner was far short of the campus’ largest – every year, the Lubavitch House at Penn’s Jewish Heritage Programs coordinates 80 dinners at locations across campus as part of its Shabbat 2000 event – Rosin noted that it encapsulated the power of an inspiring Friday night meal to make students feel at home.
“It was enjoyable and welcoming,” he explained. “And I think a lot of people got that. Every seat was taken; they even had to pull up some chairs.”
All across North America, attendees and organizers of similar events – from Binghamton University in New York, where in 1994, the local Chabad House came up with the concept of massive Shabbat dinners as rallying points of Jewish pride, to locations on the West Coast – report the same thing. Larger groups, they say, needn’t sacrifice the intimate feelings generated by smaller dinners. They instead have advantages of their own.
“Having a little bit larger event makes it feel like you could go and not stay as long, try it and hang out with the people who are involved,” offered Rosin.
Each year, roughly 20 campuses served by Chabad Houses host such events. At Penn, sophomore Lauren Gibli, 19, said she appreciated the opportunity to connect with peers. She brought seven friends to last month’s dinner.
“The message of this dinner, at least for me, was letting each participant realize the extent of the network they have on campus,” she said. “It was really a dinner where we built relationships across students who didn’t know each other before.”
Dinners around holiday times often draw big crowds, said the Chabad House’s associate director, Nechama Haskelevich. She and her husband, Rabbi Levi Haskelevich, typically hold such dinners in a larger space on campus; they also host a graduate student dinner during the second semester that brings in crowds of between 300 and 350 people.
Big meals create a certain buzz, she said. “We get to meet more people, new people. We also try our best to speak to and have a meaningful conversation with everyone.”
from albania
go jewpaltz!!
In awe!
Shlucha Brocha Lent in Nottingham, UK, prepares, cooks & serves upwards of 50 meals to students every Friday night in their small home. Everything is gourmet, every week it’s a new menu, & it’s all cooked on a tiny 30″ stove. Shliach Mendy Lent gets the crowd rocking with lively discussion & Divrei Torah. You should see the programs they run!
These campus Shluchim do so much for so many with so little. It costs them a fortune & these students don’t have money. I admire them all.
From Russia
Moshe Plotkin of New Paltz is the most rockin Rabbi in Chabad