Sunday, / April 28, 2024
Home / news / Photos

Over cups of coffee and between bites, the camaraderie flows. A few of the regulars at the Jewish Men's Club of Sussex County have yet to show up, but the room is already humming with chitchat punctuated by laughter.

Jeffrey DeChacon, originally from Santiago de Cuba, cracks jokes like the one about why Jews cannot stay in jail – because they eat lox. It's clear the guys enjoy each other's company.

"We are there for each other," said club president Dr. Joseph Haddad. Their buddy system is precisely what most Americans miss out on.

In his 2000 bestseller Bowling Alone, Harvard's Prof. Robert D. Putnam charted the disintegration of social groups. Over the last 25 years, club attendance in the U.S. has dropped by 58%. Bridge clubs, knitting circles, alumni associations are folding. Prof. Putnam decried its detrimental effect on society. As Yogi Berra put it, "If you don't go to somebody's funeral, they won't come to yours."

As Rabbi Shmuel and Toby Lewis got to know Jewish families as the Chabad representatives to Sussex County, they noticed that the area was missing something.
"People in the community do not have roots from generations of living here. People come from all over the place," said Rabbi Lewis.

"They were getting to know us, but not each other that well." The Lewises began urging the group that assembled at Chabad of Sussex's twice-monthly Shabbat services to enrich their lives by sharing more than formal prayer services.

Nine months ago, Dr. Haddad, a dentist, answered the call and held some of the first meetings in his home. Sinking a shots at the Haddads' pool table rounded out the proceedings. Now up to 20 members, with the majority showing up to each monthly meeting, the Men's Club moved to the Chabad house on Woodport Road. The club "reminds us that we are all important pieces of the puzzle. We are not here to be by ourselves, but to develop a community," said Dr. Haddad.

After a meeting a few months back, when one of the members suffered a massive heart attack, the club put their ideas about community into practice. The club email chain was used to mobilize a network of caring. Members arranged hospital visits, brought over dinners, and checked in on the member's family. A closer-knit Men's Club was born through the experience.

"Knowing that someone who might not have been with you anymore, someone you prayed for, is now sitting with you and laughing at the men's club had an effect on all of us," said DeChacon.

Formal Jewish affiliation or observance is not a requirement to join. Rabbi Lewis is a member, not an organizer. But a side effect of the chumminess has enhanced the atmosphere in the synagogue.

When Toby Lewis gave birth to a baby girl, men's club members made sure a minyan would be present during the week so the naming ceremony could be performed. Another time, when the Lewises had to be out of town for a family wedding, the men's club stepped up to ensure the Shabbat minyan would continue. Members learned the ins and outs of synagogue protocol, studied the cantillation for the week's Torah reading and even taught the morning class in Chasidic philosophy.

"People have become much closer," said Rabbi Lewis. "We have truly become a community."

Comment

Be the first to write a comment.

Add

More Galleries
3,000 Teens Converge on Times Square In A Show of Jewish Pride
More than 3,000 Jewish teenagers representing the largest network of Jewish teens met up in New York City at the annual CTeen International Shabbaton on…
At the Farmer’s Market
Been to the Farmer’s Market lately?   The freshly-baked hand-braided breads—courtesy of your local Chabad center—are selling out fast.  From Setauket, N.Y. to Petaluma, California, from…
Zambia’s Chabad Rabbi Meets Presidents of Zambia, Israel
Zambia’s brand-new Chabad rabbi Mendy Hertzel recently met with the president of Zambia, Hakainde Hichilema, at a dinner hosted in President Hichilema’s honor by Israel’s…
700th Chapter for Cteen in Estonia!
During the Havdalah Ceremony in Times Square, CTeen announced the launch of its 700th chapter, founded in Estonia under the directorship of Rabbi Michi and…
81st Annual Commemoration of Babi Yar Massacre in Kyiv
Today, on the 81st commemoration of the Babi Yar massacre, Chabad emissary and Kyiv Chief Rabbi Yonatan Markowitz lit candles and led the annual memorial…
97-Year-Old World War II Vet Gets Surprise Medal Ceremony at Chabad of San Antonio
Ninety-seven-year-old Gerald Teldon was in Chabad of San Antonio for his great grandson’s bar mitzvah when Lieutenant Colonel Andrew Stein surprised the World War II…
Rabbi Shalom Stambler Awarded for Work With Warsaw’s Jewish Community
Poland’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Zbigniew Rau, awarded Chabad of Warsaw’s Rabbi Shalom Stambler an honorary badge, recognizing his 17 years of work advancing the…
Kosher Cuisine comes to Rwanda
Rabbi Chaim and Nechama Dina Bar Sela opened the first kosher restaurant in Kigali, Rwanda, bringing kosher Israeli cuisine to central African locals and travelers…
Newsletter
Donate
Find Your Local Chabad Center
Magazine