Students from around the U.S. enjoy a Mishnah class from Rabbi Mendel Mochkin.

Yeshivah Brings New Energy to Arkansas Community

Little Rock, Ark., seems like an unlikely place for a yeshivah junior-high school. Yet, September saw an influx of adolescent boys from across the country converge on the southern city with a Jewish population of roughly 2,000 souls.

The sons of Chabad emissary families, most of whom had been students at local Jewish day schools or the Nigri International Shluchim Online School and were ready to take their Judaic studies to the next step.

“It really changes the entire community for the better. It’s a pleasure to see the boys learning and praying at the Chabad house,” says Marvin Schwartz, a retired journalist and university instructor who came to Arkansas from Brooklyn, N.Y., in 1971. “When you go to a class or attend minyan, and you see the boys there, it gives you a sense of satisfaction.”

“This is more than just school,” says Rabbi Pinchus Ciment, who co-founded Lubavitch of Arkansas with his wife Esther Hadassah Ciment in 1992. “From the moment the boys wake up until bedtime, we have educational and recreational activities to enrich their bodies and souls.”

In addition to their studies, the boys have a full schedule of sports, extra-curricular courses and hands-on learning. Some recent activities have included public speaking, wine making, and even a special shofar factory workshop. One special feature is the weekly over-the-phone Torah study sessions the boys have with their fathers.

The program is designed to be a two-year transition for boys from smaller communities, allowing them to gently adjust to the academic rigor of the yeshivah-high schools they will attend from 9th grade and on.

Schwartz also notes that the daily minyan (prayer quorum of ten males over 13 years of age) has been boosted by the presence of the boys, some of whom are already 13.

The inaugural cohort of ten 7th and 8th graders hails from Northern California, Ohio, the Florida panhandle, Texas, Indiana, and of course, Arkansas (Little Rock as well as Rogers).

“Our son, Motteleh, was probably ready to go out of town a few years ago, but we chose to push it off a bit,” says Rabbi Mendel Schusterman, director of adult education at Lubavitch of Indiana in Indianapolis.

“Our default choice would have been to have him board with a family in a city with a large Chabad school, but we were not excited about that option. A child from a small community can easily get lost in a bigger group where everyone else has been together since kindergarten.”

Small classes and individualized attention

When Schusterman and his wife, Fraidel, heard about the mechinah (preparatory school) opening up in Little Rock, they jumped at the opportunity. “We were excited about the small class size and the individual attention the boys would be receiving,” says Schusterman who also notes that the school works with the boys on an individual level, since each one comes from a different school (or lack thereof) and is therefore at a different academic stage.

The day-to-day operation is run by Rabbi BenTzion and Rochie Pape, who house the students in their home. The Papes’ work is a continuation of their roles as directors of the Hebrew studies program of the Chabad-run Hebrew Academy of Arkansas.

Much of the Judaic instruction is offered by Rabbi Mendel Mochkin. A child of Chabad emissaries to Rochester, N.Y., Mochkin was a natural fit, as he could relate to the boys’ experience growing up in communities similar to his own. His wife, South-African-born Sara, serves as third-grade Judaic studies teacher at the Hebrew Academy.

“I always nursed a dream of seeing Little Rock being a makom Torah, a place of Torah learning, reflects Ciment, “and now we have the opportunity to make it a reality.”

A tight-knit group, the Mechinah is more of a family than a school.
A tight-knit group, the Mechinah is more of a family than a school.
Mechinah students contribute to the reliability of the daily minyan (prayer quorum) at Chabad of Arkansas.
Mechinah students contribute to the reliability of the daily minyan (prayer quorum) at Chabad of Arkansas.
The Mechinah students enjoy getting out and about in Arkansas.
The Mechinah students enjoy getting out and about in Arkansas.
Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson enjoys a conversation with Mechinah students at the state’s annual outdoor menorah lighting celebration.
Arkansas Governor Asa Hutchinson enjoys a conversation with Mechinah students at the state’s annual outdoor menorah lighting celebration.
Mechinah offers the students a full extracurricular program.
Mechinah offers the students a full extracurricular program.
Rabbi Mendel and Shterna Sara Mochkin came to Little Rock to teach at the Mechinah and Arkansas Hebrew Academy.
Rabbi Mendel and Shterna Sara Mochkin came to Little Rock to teach at the Mechinah and Arkansas Hebrew Academy.

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