כ״א אייר ה׳תשפ״ו | May 8, 2026
1,000 Gather at Grand Lag Baomer Celebration in Queens
1,000 people filled the streets of Rego Park and Forest Hills for a massive Lag Baomer celebration featuring Jewish pride displays, carnival attractions, live music, mitzvah activities, and a spirited children’s parade marking 50 years of the Twelve Pesukim.
A grand Lag Baomer celebration was attended by close to 1,000 in the heart of Rego Park / Forest Hills, Queens, arranged by Rabbi Yaakov Horvitz of Chabad Youth Queens, in partnership with the QJCC.
65th Avenue near 99th Street, a large street that is within a 10-minute walk of 7 public schools with hundreds of Jewish kids, was the location chosen to host the event. The street was lined with signs about Jewish observance and pride, and about Moshiach, and there were also huge Jewish symbols like Tefillin, Mezuza, Shabbos candles, and more.
The street was blocked off with help from the 112th precinct – special thanks to Community Affairs Officers Touhey and Desantis and the entire team, and Shmira of Queens helped with the safety – notably, Shabsie Saphirstein, Avrohom Pinchasov, and Daniel Winchester.
Before the event opened to the public, JIQ’s elementary school (Jewish Institute of Queens) had its own special Lag Baomer rally and fun on-site.
When the event opened to the public, and as attendees arrived at the event, they were greeted by volunteers Elliote Malakov and Arianna Yashayev – both students in Forest Hills High School who attend the Jewish Club with Rabbi Horvitz at the school every week.
The event had lots of rides – inflatables, a rock climbing wall. It also had a full petting zoo, and the kids got a chance to feed the many animals and learn about Kosher. The Chabad Yeshiva (which used to be located in Queens) came with all types of educational carnival games and even a Jewish photo booth, and of course, Tefilin and Os Bsefer Torah.
The Doira Zann Entertainment played at the event – and sure enough, when they were younger, the DJ himself attended Chabad’s teen programs! Levy Percussion wowed the crowd with immigrant cultural art music, playing on the Doira and Darbuka, instruments that come from the Middle East and Uzbekistan, and transforming the event into a welcoming immigrant cultural art event, sponsored by the NYC Cultural Affairs.
Throughout the event, many Jewish kids who are enrolled in public school and their parents learned about the different Jewish programs that Chabad has in the neighborhood, most notably the Release Time Jewish Hour program.
The highlight of the event was when the kids all received Tzivos Hashem parade flags with Mitzvos and paraded down the street, right to the stage. There, the kids gathered and said the 12 Pesukim with extra strength, marking the 50th anniversary of the 12 pesukim. Pens with the pesukim on them were distributed to children who participated nicely, and every child received a Pesukim booklet.
After hearing about the significance of the holy day of Lag Baomer, Rabbi Horvitz asked the kids to raise their hand if they are in a Jewish school, and then to raise their hand if they are in public school.
At that moment, one kid ran to the stage because he had something to share, “Rabbi, right now I am in public school, but very soon I am changing to a Jewish school!” he exclaimed.
There was a spontaneous round of applause…
In connection with Lag Baomer – when bonfires are customarily lit, the event finished off with an astounding fire and bike show by Joe Janicki, who in the past has performed in 770 and at many Chabad events. The kids were mesmerized by the show.
Positive feedback for the event poured out on social media platforms and more, with people remarking, ‘need more stuff like this’ and ‘this event was OFF THE CHARTS’.
Special thanks to the many sponsors of the event, among them: EMU Health, Kand Law, Apple Bank Elmhurst – Gary Chernivsky, Crown Torah Truck, and many more.
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