The Oklahoman

‘You really see what God made here’

- BY SHARYN JACKSON CHABAD.ORG]

Star Tribune (Minneapoli­s)

SIOUX FALLS, S.D. — In the living room of a sprawling house on the edge of Sioux Falls, Mendel Alperowitz is winding a leather strap around the arm and fingers of Stuart Jacobs.

A box attached to the strap rests in Jacobs’ elbow; inside is a scroll inscribed with seminal Jewish prayers that proclaim one God and profess man’s duty to love that God. Another box rests on his forehead. They are performing the Jewish ritual of tefillin at Jacobs’ home.

Alperowitz leads Jacobs in a prayer he once had memorized.

“V’ahavata. Et. Adonai. Elohecha. B’chol. L’vavcha,” Alperowitz says and Jacobs repeats. “You shall love your God with all your heart.”

When the prayer is over, Alperowitz takes out a ram’s horn, a shofar, through which he blows a series of long and short blasts.

Jacobs, 55, takes it in with a wide grin.

“It always makes me feel better to do tefillin,” Jacobs said, “because it takes me back to where I belong.”

Jacobs, who was born and raised in the Bronx, is part of a tiny community of Sioux Falls Jews that has long gathered to pray and commune without a permanent rabbi. The last fulltime spiritual leader of Mount Zion — the only synagogue in South Dakota east of the Black Hills — retired in 1978.

Lay leaders have picked up the slack, along with rabbinical students who fly in every other week from Hebrew Union College in Cincinnati. But some of the more observant felt something was lacking.

“I was starved for a leader,” said Beverly Christense­n, who has lived in South Dakota for 24 years.

Enter Mendel Alperowitz. A clergyman without a congregati­on, Alperowitz moved to this city on the prairie to serve as a kind of Pied Piper for the Jews who don’t have a spiritual home.

“My goal is that there should not be a single Jew in the state of South Dakota who feels that they don’t have a way to express their Judaism,” he said.

Although there are two synagogues and long establishe­d Jewish communitie­s in South Dakota, Alperowitz has come for the isolated and the unaffiliat­ed, whether they are devout or haven’t prayed since childhood.

“No matter how far away they live from the Jewish community, however far across the state, we’ll be there, we’ll be visiting with them, in touch with them, doing Jewish things together,” he said.

Since his arrival, the people who go to his classes or welcome him into their homes seem almost giddy to take part. Some have cried. Others have stopped him in public just to ask questions.

“I walk down the street, I’m a symbol of Judaism,” he said, “whether I like it or not.”

The 27-year-old has no intention of interferin­g with the state’s synagogues, Mount Zion in Sioux Falls and Synagogue of the Hills in Rapid City. (While welcoming Alperowitz and his family, leaders from both synagogues say they’ve been selfsuffic­ient long enough without a rabbi.)

But with most of South Dakota’s Jews practicing a far more liberal strain of Judaism, or none at all, some of the state’s Jews are asking whether Alperowitz is the rabbi South Dakota needs.

‘So much more meaning’

Alperowitz made a splash last fall when he announced his relocation to South Dakota from an insular and ultrarelig­ious Jewish neighborho­od of Crown Heights, in Brooklyn.

The story spread, in part because of its novelty: a deeply religious man with a frizzy red beard, who dresses in the black suit and fedora of the old world, moving to the prairie?

Alperowitz is a member of the Chabad Lubavitch sect of Hasidic Jews, who believe that every ritual performed by a Jew brings the Messiah a step closer. Like Mormons, Chabad rabbis take up posts around the world, establishi­ng or enriching Jewish presence in far-flung places, from Nigeria to Nepal. By setting up houses for worship and gathering, Chabad managed to place at least one Jewish spiritual leader in every U.S. state. Except one.

As an emissary of Chabad, Alperowitz visited Sioux Falls in 2016 to lead a celebratio­n for the holiday of Purim. He sensed among some of the local Jews a thirst for a deeper connection to their religion.

“I don’t have too many people like myself,” Jacobs said. “It’s been very difficult for me, difficult for my children. There was nobody to teach them Hebrew.”

Alperowitz, a longtime resident of New York, also noticed a thirst in himself — a desire for open space, a yard for his two young girls to play in, and a mission.

When he returned to New York, he and his wife, Mussie, talked about what it would mean to move to a place with few amenities for people who follow strict Jewish dietary laws and pray three times daily. They would be giving up the villagelik­e life in Crown Heights, where they lived among extended families. There would be no Jewish school for their children. They would have to drive four hours to Minneapoli­s to buy kosher meat.

Plus, money would be a concern. Alperowitz, whose post is funded through donations, will have to convince enough South Dakotans to support his work financiall­y to keep him there.

“From a Jewish perspectiv­e, it’s a whole lot easier and simpler in New York,” Alperowitz said. “Will I miss that kosher sushi? I’m sure I will. But there is so much more meaning to what we’re doing here than a piece of sushi.”

In midsummer, the Alperowitz­es left New York for a small Sioux Falls house with a grassy backyard, minutes from cornfields and cow pastures.

“The tundra is not as frozen anymore,” said Mendel Feller, a Chabad rabbi in St. Paul, Minnesota.

‘Got my religion back’

Every Tuesday night, Pat Skewes drives an hour and a half each way from Marshall, Minnesota, to take Alperowitz’s Torah study class, which he holds in the basement of his home.

Recently, a dozen attendees crammed around the table for a lively conversati­on about incriminat­ion and justice. Some tried to stump Alperowitz on his interpreta­tion of Jewish law.

The rabbi explained that there are some pleasures over which prayers are necessary, and some which aren’t. Food, drink and aroma all have blessings.

“What about heat?” someone asked. “South Dakota is cold in the winter.”

There is no blessing for heat, Alperowitz replied.

“If you lose heat and get it back,” said another, “you thank God.”

Skewes listened carefully. Although she wasn’t born Jewish, she has felt a pull toward the religion for two decades. In Marshall, there was no outlet for her curiosity. “I was very hungry,” she said.

She prayed for a real opportunit­y to learn more about Judaism. Then, she heard the news about Alperowitz. “I wanted to say, ‘Thank God, somebody knows I’m out here,’?” she said.

She plans to continue to make the 180-mile round-trip drive, even when the roads turn icy.

Another Torah classmate, Beverly Christense­n, felt completely cut off from other Jews in her rural community outside Sioux Falls. She started attending a church, believing that was the only way she could give her children a religious upbringing. When she saw a news story about Alperowitz moving to the state, she broke down.

“I sat in front of the television, and I cried for hours,” she said. “I got my religion back.”

The Alperowitz­es invited Christense­n to a Shabbat dinner in their home. It was her first in 30 years. After the multicours­e kosher meal that Mussie prepared, they sat around the table and sang together. Christense­n requested all the Jewish tunes she could remember — a folk song, prayers for holidays eight months away.

“It’s like Mendel is here to find those of us who had been lost all of these years,” she said.

TRIBUNE NEWS SERVICE

 ?? [PHOTO BY ELIYAHU PARYPA, ?? In this Nov. 25 photo provided by Chabad. org, Rabbi Mendel Alperowitz, walks with his wife, Mussie, and daughters in the Brooklyn borough in New York before moving to Sioux Falls, South Dakota.
[PHOTO BY ELIYAHU PARYPA, In this Nov. 25 photo provided by Chabad. org, Rabbi Mendel Alperowitz, walks with his wife, Mussie, and daughters in the Brooklyn borough in New York before moving to Sioux Falls, South Dakota.

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