Purim On Rikers Island: My Experience

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purim-rikers-island-78By Yosef Shidler

[Photos below.] The time is 8:30 Purim morning in Crown Heights. Most people in the neighborhood are just getting up to hear the megillah and daven Shacharis. On the street corner of Empire and Albany, a group of Lubavitchers are gathering together to set out on a Purim day mission: a visit to the Rikers Island Correctional Facility. This ritual has taken place Purim day for the last 20 years. Established by Rabbi Yossel Tevel z”l and Rabbi Michoel Chazan, under the auspices of Tzach, it has become a hallmark outreach project for many bochurim and yungeleit of Crown Heights.

This Purim adventure has many legs to its journey. The first stop for all is the security checkpoint just outside of Rikers Island. Photo identifications are reviewed and clearance is given to proceed forward. The vehicles travel through an additional few checkpoints until they reach their destination. It’s now time to unload the cars packed with music equipment and delicious food and get ready to create the scene of the year at the facility.

Executive Jewish Chaplain Rabbi Leibowitz greets the group at the prison’s entrance. The scene is a familiar one, the energy is tangible, but the presence of Rabbi Yossel Tevel is sorely missed and ever so apparent. Yet, Yossel’s kids, along with the bochurim and yungerleit are determined to make this year’s Simchas Purim at Rikers no different than any other.

They continue their trek through the endless corridor of locked doors. One Prison door is opened, clearance is given, and then the group may proceed to the next room. As the group approaches the large gymnasium, you could hear R’ Mendel Tevel voice echoing through the air. “Let’s go in with a shturem…with a bang!

Inside the room, awaiting the bochurim, are approximately 20 tables of almost 100 inmates. Almost all of them are Jewish. They are wearing orange, grey or brown jumpsuits, and waiting anxiously for the Rabbis to show up.

Suddenly they burst in. “Happy Purim!” they shout. “Mishe Mishe Mishe… Nichnas Adar…” Song breaks out around the room. Bochrim rush over and grab inmates and pull them up to start dancing. It has caught these depressed souls by surprise. Many of them don’t even know how to respond. Dancing? Here? Now? Many have a hard time getting out of their seat. Bochurim grab them one by one until they have as many as possible on the dance floor.

The inmates are ecstatic. To be able to dance with a band in prison is unheard of! The bochurim dance with every bit of strength they have, making sure to look out for the inmates who look a little more depressed and who may need the extra energy. Five bochurim rush over to an Israeli with a long white beard who is  sitting and crying, pick up his chair and march him through the room as if it was his Bar Mitzvah day. Another prisoner is put on the shoulders of a bochur and paraded through the room making him feel on top of the world. For these inmates, this spirit is a power boost for an entire year. The scene in the room is alive.Music is blaring. The place is as alive as could be.

Next, bochurim use the opportunity to put on tefillin and read the megillah. As the megillah reading concludes, the festivities continue as five large yellow chickens come barging in dancing and distributing Purim delicacies to all.  If you were an outsider and didn’t know this is a prison one may have easily mistaken the scene in the room for a small wedding or a Bar mitzvah celebration!

It was a sight to behold. A Purim to remember. A lesson for all – that simcha, true joy, can penetrate even a dark dreary place like Rikers Island. 

 For Photos, see below:

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8 COMMENTS

  1. Thank you Matzav for sharing this with us. Yasher koach to the Chabad yungeleit for bringing so much joy to people in need.

  2. Inside the room, awaiting the bochurim, are approximately 20 tables of almost 100 inmates. Almost all of them are Jewish.

    Pretty depressing.

    Maybe more focus should be made to help Jews live within their means so they can experience Purim with their families rather than in jail.

  3. Makes no difference what the yiden are sitting for its a massive mitzvah which We cannot fathom the schar to livin up a depressed nishumu is a must and the schar must be enormous now molesters should never be tolerated but when they are out of harms way and their nishamus are in deep depression we must give them chizuk. There must be a massive schar in oilum habu for these chabad chasidim who do so much good and they definitely do it lishem shumayim to go on purim morning when everyones so busy you gotta be a massive tsadik

  4. Rabbi Chazan is welloknown for his Mesiras Nefesh for all Yiden, and as the article states, has been sharing his Purim with our bretheren in Reikers for 20 years. His father,z”l, the respected mechanech for over 40 years (and who I was priveleged to have had as my Rebbe),of Yeshiva of Central Queens, leined Megilah at Reikers for many years.

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