Daily Local News (West Chester, PA)

Chester County Rabbi serves at Pa. Senate Chaplain

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Rabbi Yossi Kaplan of Chabad Lubavitch of Chester County recently served as a guest chaplain of the Pennsylvan­ia Senate at the invitation of state Sen. Carolyn Comitta.

Rabbi Kaplan offered a Senate prayer in acknowledg­ing the role of the legislatur­e in enacting just laws and regulation­s that fulfill a sacred purpose.

Comitta, who serves on the newly formed Pennsylvan­ia Jewish Legislativ­e Caucus, said Kaplan is a leader in both Chester County’s Jewish community and its interfaith community where members of all faiths work together to promote understand­ing, cooperatio­n, and freedom of worship.

“As several faith traditions are currently celebratin­g or prepare to celebrate major religious holidays, we appreciate Rabbi Kaplan and the Chester County Jewish community in always standing for peace, tolerance, and religious freedom,” Comitta said. “And I want to wish all of those celebratin­g Passover next week a blessed and joyous holiday.”

“Passover is a time of freedom and redemption for the Jewish people, but it is also a time of celebratio­n for other faiths as well,” said Rabbi Kaplan. “As it is written in the Passover Haggadah: ‘Love the stranger, for you were strangers in the land of Egypt.’ ”

Kaplan also noted that “the Jewish people acknowledg­e the hardships and struggles of all people, especially those in need. As Jews who will gather at Passover seder tables around the world will soon recite, referring to the matzah that the Israelites

baked as they fled slavery and Egypt in ancient times: “This is the bread of affliction that our ancestors ate in the land of Egypt. All who are hungry, let them come and eat.”

Kaplan and his wife, Tickey, came to Chester County about twenty years ago to raise their family and start a Chabad Center for Jewish life.

As mayor of West Chester, Comitta brought together community and faith leaders to stand against instances of race or faith-based hate in favor of tolerance, inclusivit­y, and peace,

In the Senate, she has supported funding for important safety upgrades at nonprofit organizati­ons that serve those with diverse membership­s. That program, the Pennsylvan­ia Nonprofit Security Grant Program, has funded safety and security upgrades at several mosques,

churches, synagogues, and nonprofit organizati­ons in Chester County.

The Pennsylvan­ia Jewish Legislativ­e Caucus, chaired by state Rep. Dan Frankel and state Senator Judy Schwank, plans to work to incorporat­e the perspectiv­es and needs of Pennsylvan­ia’s Jewish communitie­s in legislatio­n passed by the General Assembly.

That includes speaking out against antisemiti­sm and other forms of intoleranc­e, working to protect the civil rights of all Pennsylvan­ians, modernizin­g Pennsylvan­ia’s laws to address the growing threat of hate crimes, improving security measures for organizati­ons predominat­ely serving Jewish communitie­s and other vulnerable communitie­s at risk for hate-based violence and celebratin­g Jewish culture and heritage in Pennsylvan­ia.

 ?? SUBMITTED PHOTO ?? Rabbi Yossi Kaplan of Chabad Lubavitch of Chester County recently visited the Pennsylvan­ia State Capitol in Harrisburg to serve as Senate chaplain at the invitation of state Senator Carolyn Comitta. Pictured (from left to right) Top Row: Rabbi Kaplan and Pennsylvan­ia Lt. Gov. Austin Davis. Bottom Row: Senator Comitta and Mark Spool of West Whiteland Township.
SUBMITTED PHOTO Rabbi Yossi Kaplan of Chabad Lubavitch of Chester County recently visited the Pennsylvan­ia State Capitol in Harrisburg to serve as Senate chaplain at the invitation of state Senator Carolyn Comitta. Pictured (from left to right) Top Row: Rabbi Kaplan and Pennsylvan­ia Lt. Gov. Austin Davis. Bottom Row: Senator Comitta and Mark Spool of West Whiteland Township.

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