Mendy Maierovitz flew in from Toronto specifically to attend a New York event supporting one of the oldest social service organizations in operation in Israel.
What attracted him to Colel Chabadâs International Awards Dinner was that almost 230 years after its founding by the First Chabad Rebbe, Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, the network of food distribution centers, soup kitchens, and subsidized stores is still going strong. And in the midst of an economic slump, it just finished one of its best years ever.
âItâs just a great organization,â said Maierovitz, who joined 800 people mingling over hors dâoeuvres stations of sushi, soups, carved meat, falafel and dumplings before heading in to sit around 75 tables decorated with flowered centerpieces. âAnd they do phenomenal work.â
All told, Colel Chabad posted a 26 percent increase in distributions, announced the organizationâs director, Rabbi Shalom Duchman. In delivering the annual Shareholdersâ Report, he reviewed Colel Chabadâs various units, including its mass Bar Mitzvah ceremony for Israeli orphans, reduced-cost dental clinics, daycare centers, and this yearâs dedication of the 25,000-square foot Slager Logistics Center for food distributions.
âWe donât judge the poor, we feed the poor,â Duchman told the applauding crowd.
Over the past year, said the rabbi, Colel Chabad subsidized 420 weddings for poor families, bringing the total of such events to more than 6,000 since 1995.
For Maierovitz, who has attended the awards dinner for years, such numbers are inspiring.
âThey just want to help whoever they can,â he said.
That underlying desire was evident in Duchmanâs speech.
âWe always need to strive higher and higher,â said Duchman.
The rabbi then went on to list a host of events planned for next year, including the opening of Colel Chabadâs 20th soup kitchen, its sixth not-for-profit store, three daycare sites and four new dental clinics.
âEverything we do,â he told the donors in the New York Hilton ballroom, âis possible because of you.â
New York City Council Speaker Christine Quinn commended the organizationâs work as an example in the way it treats those it serves. She said it offered lessons on how to âbring that level of respect and dignity to our soup kitchens and food pantries.â
Newark Mayor Cory Booker delivered the keynote address.
âWe have a calling,â said Booker. âLife is not a spectator sport in which we can luxuriate in what we have.â
David and Eda Schottenstein, Sant Singh Chatwal, and Rickie Freeman-Platt were also honored at the dinner.
After the event, Colel Chabad director of development Rabbi Zalman Duchman said that he was impressed with the diversity of the crowd, and hoped people walked away with a sense of what individuals can accomplish by joining together.
âThe energy was outstanding, very positive energy in the room,â he explained. âAnd the bottom line is the element of commitment for us to continue.â
Jatin Shah, professor of surgery at Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center, said he attended to support Sant Singh Chatwal.
âI met so many people I didnât know,â he said. âThe food is good, but thatâs not the reason Iâm here.â
Shah explained that he felt such functions were âcrucialâ to highlighting the shared priorities between communities.
âThe family values and the cultural values of the Jewish people are very similar,â he offered. âJewish people are committed to family and religion and so areâ Indians.


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