Rabbi Gavriel Noach Holtzberg | |
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Personal details | |
Born | 1979 Israel |
Died | 26 November 2008 (aged 29) Mumbai, India |
Nationality | American and Israeli |
Residence | Mumbai, India |
Parents | Nachman and Freida Holtzberg |
Spouse | Rivka Rosenberg |
Children | Menachem Mendel (2003-2006) Dov Ber (2004-2008) Moshe Tzvi (b. November 2006) |
Occupation | Rabbi of Mumbai Chabad House |
Gavriel Noach Holtzberg (Hebrew: גבריאל נח הולצברג, born 1979, died 26 November 2008[1]) was an Orthodox rabbi and the Chabad emissary to Mumbai, India, where he and his wife Rivka ran the Mumbai Chabad House. He was also a religious leader and community builder for the local Jewish Indian community,[2][3][4] and led the Friday-night Shabbat services at the Knesset Eliyahoo synagogue.[5] Holtzberg and his wife were murdered by Pakistani Islamic terrorists in the November 2008 attacks in Mumbai.
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Holtzberg was born in Israel to Nachman and Freida Holtzberg. He and his family moved to the Crown Heights neighborhood in Brooklyn, New York, when he was nine years old. He had eight siblings. During his years in elementary school, he memorised the entire Second Order (Hebrew: Seder) of the Mishnah, Moed, verbatim and was a two-time champion in a competition of memorizing the Mishnah.[6] During his high school years, Holtzberg was known for his knowledge of the Talmud. He traveled to Jerusalem for an international Talmudic competition, where he came in second.[7]
He studied at yeshivas in New York and Argentina, and as a rabbinical student served communities in Thailand and China under the Summer Rabbinical Visitation Program run by Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, the educational arm of Chabad-Lubavitch.[6]
Holtzberg had long desired to become a Chabad emissary. He spent time as a student in the Chabad house in Bangkok, and helped open a Chabad house in south Thailand.[8]
His future rebbetzin, Rivka Holtzberg née Rosenberg (Hebrew: (רבקה הולצברג (רוזנברג, born 1980, died 2008) was born in Israel to Rabbi Shimon and Yehudit Rosenberg, and was raised in Afula. She studied at a Bais Rivka seminary in Kfar Chabad, Israel. Her uncle was Rabbi Yitzchak Dovid Grossman, Chief Rabbi of Migdal Ha'Emek, Israel.
The Holtzbergs married in 2002.[9] Their firstborn son, Menachem Mendel, was born a year later, afflicted with Tay-Sachs disease. He died of this disease at the age of 3.[1] Their second son, DovBer, was born with the same ailment and was institutionalized in a pediatric long-term care facility in Israel under the care of his grandparents. He died at the age of 4 in December 2008, one month after his parents' murder.[10] Their third son, Moshe, was born healthy and lived with them in Mumbai. They lived together on the fifth floor of the Chabad House.[11] It was revealed by her father during her funeral that Rivka was five months pregnant with her fourth child at the time she was slain.[12]
After Gavriel and Rivka Holtzberg married, they subsequently moved to Mumbai to serve as Chabad emissaries and open the first Chabad House in Mumbai.[13] Under His leadership, he acquired the Nariman House. He ran the synagogue in addition to him and his wife being directors of the Chabad house, it was also the Mumabi Chabad headquarters. He installed a kosher kitchen and a mikvah at the Chabad house, and taught Torah, offered drug prevention services, and ran a hostel there.[14][15] They led Shabbat meals every week at the Chabad house with between 50-60 people and 30-40 people per night during the week[16], where they hosted Jews from all walks of life from notable figures such as Sir Martin Gilbert[17] and Rabbi Joseph Telushkin,[18] to humanitarian workers, business people and Israeli backpackers visiting India.
In an article published in 2006, the Rabbi said he understood the nature of the Israeli traveler's needs saying they "need relief" from the army, from work, from real life.[13] He said, "they come here to do everything the army didn’t allow them to do. Their shoes had to be polished and tied – here they wear sandals. They had to cut their hair – here they grow their hair long."[13]
Between 4,500 and 5,000 Jews live in Mumbai (see Indian Jews). Rabbi Holtzberg was a religious leader for that community, leading Friday night services at the Knesset Eliyahoo synagogue, also performing marriages for them, acting as the shochet (the kosher slaughtering of animals) and supplying the community with kosher meat, answering halakhic principles for them, such as what is to be done in the rites and customs of Judaism,[2][6][19] as well as being a trained Mohel (performing the circumcision or "bris" of Jewish babies).[6] In addition to helping to gather donations and do fund-raising for one of their synagogues, T'feret Israel, and helping them build an additional mikvah for that synagogue[2], he and his wife also taught Jewish studies and Torah to local Jews and tourists, and provided their mikveh to be used by local Jews[16], and made challah available to them.
On Nov. 26, 2008, terrorists invaded the Chabad House and took the Holtzbergs hostage. Moshe's Indian nanny and a cook at the house, Sandra Samuel, escaped with the two-year-old boy. As the siege began, Sandra locked the doors and hid in a room. She heard Rivka screaming, "Sandra, Sandra, help, Sandra," The gunmen reportedly went door-to-door, searching for targets so Samuel unlocked her door, but they did not find her. She then ran upstairs to find the Holtzbergs shot and lying on the ground with their son crying over them, so she picked him up and ran to the exit.[20]
Two days after the siege of the house began, Indian security forces seized the house and found the Holtzbergs and six others dead. It was concluded that the Rabbi's wife had been killed many hours before,[21] and several of the bodies were covered in tallit, including Rivka Holtzberg, leading witnesses to speculate that the rabbi managed to cover the bodies before he was killed.[22]
Several high ranking American politicians released statements on the Mumbai attacks, specifically referencing Gavriel and Rivka Holtzberg by name, including US President-elect Barack Obama, Senator Hillary Clinton, Mayor Michael Bloomberg of New York City, and Governor David Paterson of New York.
In December 2008, Australian prime minister Kevin Rudd told more than 1,000 people at a memorial service at the Yeshiva Center in New South Wales that Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his wife, Rivkah, had “devoted their lives to acts of goodness and kindness and compassion for others ... but they lost their lives in a senseless act of hatred. In the face of this terror we must not bow to fear. We must respond by spreading our own message of tolerance and respect for people of other backgrounds and other beliefs.” Federal Opposition leader Malcolm Turnbull and U.S. Consul-General Judith Fergin also spoke at the memorial service. A representative from the Indian Consulate was also present.[23]
In a speech to Federal Parliament, Michael Danby, a Jewish member of the ruling Labor Party, said it was important to remember the names of the innocent victims of Mumbai attacks, stating that “I raise my voice in this national parliament and praise the memory of those innocent kedoshim who were killed in the Chabad House in Mumbai only because they were Jews.”.[23]
Thousands of people attended the funeral of Holtzberg,his parents and wife, with eulogies delivered in the town of Kfar Chabad followed by a procession to Jerusalem's ancient Mount of Olives cemetery, where the couples were buried.[24] Among those who attended were the two Chief Rabbis of Israel, President Shimon Peres, former Prime Minister and Defense Minister Ehud Barak, former Prime Minister and Likud leader Binyamin Netanyahu, several Shas ministers and MKs, government ministers, Knesset members, Chabad emissaries from around the world, the American and Indian ambassadors to Israel, and Rabbi Abraham Shemtov, head of Agudas Hassidei Chabad International, the movement's umbrella organization.[25][26]
Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky vice chairman of Chabad's educational arm, Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, from New York, eulogized the couple at the funeral, saying "I vow that we will avenge the deaths of Gabi and Rivki. But not with AK-47s, not with grenades and tanks. We will take revenge in a different way. We will add light. We will add good deeds. We will make sure that there is not one Jewish man who does not put on tefillin. We will make sure that there is not one Jewish woman who does not light candles," speaking of one of the aims of the Chabad movement.[26] Kotlarsky also said that the Chabad House would be rebuilt, and that it would be named after the Holtzbergs.[26] Kotlarsky also aimed his message at the couple's son Moshe saying "You don’t have a mother who will hug you. You are the child of all of Israel."[27] In Toronto, Ontario, Canada, a memorial service was held for the Gavriel and his wife at a Chabad synagogue, where almost 1,500 people attended.[28]
Moshe, an orphan after the attack, and his nanny Sandra Samuel, subsequently moved to Israel where Moshe's grandparents live. The Israeli Government under Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni awarded Samuel a special visa offering immigration status. Samuel has stated she will continue to care for Moshe for as long as necessary.[29] Israel is considering honouring her as a Righteous Gentile, the highest Israeli award that may be presented to non-Jews, allowing her to remain in Israel for an extended period of time
A video of Moshe crying at the funeral service for his parents and crying "Imma, Imma," which means "Mommy, Mommy" in Hebrew was widely published.[30][31]
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