The Jerusalem Post

A ritzy resort city in South America has doubled its Jewish population during the pandemic

- • By JUAN MELAMED

PUNTA DEL ESTE, Uruguay (JTA) – The upscale Uruguayan coastal resort city of Punta del Este checks a lot of boxes for 18-year-old Argentinea­n Sofia Grosz: gorgeous beaches, vibrant nightlife and a hub for many of her Jewish school friends from Buenos Aires.

“Coming here, it’s almost a tradition in our family,” said Grosz, who belongs to the famed Hacoaj Jewish sport and community center back home and graduated from a Jewish high school last year.

She’s not alone – Punta del Este has long been a haven for tens of thousands of Jews, many of them Argentinea­ns, each summer (which ended recently in the southern hemisphere).

In addition to the ritzy beach attraction­s – people like Mark Zuckerberg, Ralph Lauren and Shakira have vacationed here – the city’s laid-back mood, natural beauty and low crime rate has been a selling point to Latin American Jews for decades. Jewish developers, whose presence can be traced

back to Argentinea­n businessma­n Mauricio Litman, who founded the Cantegrill Country Club in 1950, were also heavily involved in the city’s physical growth. The Cantegrill still stands, full of Jews who play golf or cards, and now there are things like a Jewish film festival and a local kosher pizza restaurant, opened in 2012 by Levi Shemtov, nephew of the well-known Washington-based rabbi of the same name.

But for many Jewish families, the city located about two hours east of the capital Montevideo is changing from summer getaway to year-round home: its permanent Jewish population has doubled from around 300 families to 600 since the start of the pandemic in 2020.

The trend isn’t stopping anytime soon, said Fabian Schamis, executive director of the local Comunidad Israelita de Punta del Este, or CIPEMU, a Jewish communal organizati­on that was created in 2005 and now boasts more than 1,500 year-round members who take part in its cultural programmin­g and “Shabbat on the beach” nights. The Jewish influx during the summer is estimated at around 40,000.

Most of the new permanent residents are from Argentina, where the pandemic has raged, and where a mix of growing inflation, devaluatio­n of the national currency and high tax rates had contribute­d to a recession in recent years.

“Since 2020 we have been receiving a massive influx of people, almost 100% from Argentina,” Schamis said. “We are talking of residents, not tourists. The pandemic also accelerate­d certain dissatisfa­ction that Argentinea­ns had for political reasons, economics, insecurity and other reasons [in their own country], and they chose to move here to Punta del Este, where we have an oasis in all these aspects.”

Increased school options have added to the attraction, local Jews say. There is no Jewish day school, but Jewish students are changing the makeup of the rest of the city’s schools, such as the Internatio­nal College (IC) Punta del Este – which opened in 2018 and is owned by Rolando Rozenblum, a current CIPEMU board

member and former president.

The internatio­nal K-12 school had more than 600 students this year from 28 countries, including the United States. Rozenblum says the student body is about 10% Jewish. CIPEMU says it will do a demographi­c study this year to obtain more precise Jewish community numbers.

Rozenblum, a businessma­n and community leader, is also involved in another noteworthy local institutio­n: the first Trump Tower in South America, which after nearly a decade of setbacks is set to open in August. Rozenblum bought an apartment in the tower and is helping its local developers – the Trump organizati­on only licensed its name for use and is not involved in the project’s logistics – prepare for its opening.

The tower includes 160 apartments that cost around $5,000 per sq.m., and includes an indoor tennis court designed by Argentinea­n-Jewish player Martin Jaite, a former top-10 pro. Around 60% of the buyers are Argentinea­ns, and the rest are from Uruguay, Brazil, Europe and the United States.

“The Trump name is still an important global real estate brand,” Rozenblum said. “We need for developers to start to build this type of high-level building also prepared for the winter, not only focused on the amenities for the summer. That is the next step.”

Argentinea­ns have been flocking for years to Uruguay, whose Center-Right President Luis Lacalle Pou, in power since March 2020, is leading a more free and pro-market government. Uruguay offered new residents a 10-year “tax holiday,” and some tourists simply decided not to leave when COVID first locked them in place.

“This movement is reasonable and follows the migratory and investment trends toward Uruguay, a country that we see with very good eyes for Jews to settle in,” Ariel Stofenmach­er, rector of the Latin American Rabbinical Seminar, told JTA in December 2020, in announcing the institutio­n’s expansion to Uruguay.

Punta del Este now has three synagogues – two are Sephardi Orthodox and one is affiliated with Chabad. As an example of how the city brings together a mix of Argentinea­n, Brazilian and Uruguayan Jews, the prominent Brazilian Safra banking family helped to build a temple here, which, during the summer, is attended mostly by Argentinea­ns.

“Now I can proudly say that if you come from a big Jewish city like Buenos Aires to this little tiny beach town, you can keep your Jewish flame glowing,” Rozenblum said.

 ?? (Mariana Suarez/AFP via Getty Images/JTA) ?? A VIEW of the beach in Punta del Este, Uruguay.
(Mariana Suarez/AFP via Getty Images/JTA) A VIEW of the beach in Punta del Este, Uruguay.
 ?? (CIPEMU/JTA) ?? CIPEMU HOLDS Shabbat events on the beach.
(CIPEMU/JTA) CIPEMU HOLDS Shabbat events on the beach.

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