$25 Million Campus in Buenos Aires Marks Milestone

Marking a milestone in Jewish education for their nation late last month, Argentina’s 250,000-strong Jewish community opened the Oholei Chinuch primary school for boys, blending modern technology and design with timeless Jewish tradition.

By Haydee M. Rodriguez – Chabad.org

Marking a milestone in Jewish education for their nation late last month, Argentina’s 250,000-strong Jewish community opened the Chabad-Lubavitch Oholei Chinuch primary school for boys. The school is the first stage of a $25 million educational campus, blending modern technology and design with timeless Jewish tradition.

“This building is more than a school. It is a dream, a vision,” architect Flavio Janches told the gathering of local and national dignitaries, including ambassadors from Israel and the United States, and the donors, parents and students who attended the opening in Buenos Aires. Janches noted that the school, crafted with attention to space, light and color, was designed to foster the holistic growth of students immersed in teachings of Chassidic principles—particularly joy, faith in G‑d, a positive, proactive outlook and compassion for all.

Rabbi Tzvi Grunblatt, regional director of Chabad-Lubavitch of Argentina, said that “to be here is a miracle, and above all, we are here because we have a guiding light, the Rebbe who shows us that the possibilities are always there, we just have to look and find them.”

Grunblatt said that the school will educate more than 800 boys from Jewish communities around Argentina each year. “The boys are going to live here, and the Torah they receive here, the behaviors they learn and model for others, the mitzvahs they do will all be a shining light for our nation.”

The school, spanning 80,000 square feet, features state-of-the-art classrooms; a comprehensive open library; playgrounds; eco-friendly lighting; a gym; flexible event room cafeteria; playgrounds and courtyards—all capped by a rooftop garden.

An adjacent 170,000-square-foot building that is in the works will house the institution’s preschool and girl’s Bnot Israel elementary and high schools, with the recreational spaces shared between the divisions. Another 23,700-square-foot wing will serve as the campus administrative center.

Longstanding Growth of Judaism in Argentina

The Buenos Aires educational hub was founded in 1974 by Rabbi Berel Baumgarten, the pioneering Chabad-Lubavitch emissary sent by the Rebbe to Argentina, who worked tirelessly to reinvigorate the community from 1955 until his untimely passing in 1978. When the community requested that Grunblatt—an Argentine native who had gone to study at Chabad headquarters in Brooklyn, N.Y.—return to Argentina, the Rebbe agreed. Not long after, Grunblatt celebrated his marriage to Shterna Kazarnovsky, and barely a week afterward, the couple landed in Buenos Aires.

As Chabad in Argentina grew, so did the school. It began with three students; “nobody dreamed it would reach these heights,” Grunblatt told Chabad.org last year.

“The school has, thank G‑d, a very good name,” Grunblatt said, noting that the reputation, coupled with other factors, led to its remarkable growth. That came even as the community began to shrink in the wake of political instability and exacerbated by the two mass terrorist attacks targeting Jews that have never been solved—one at the Israeli embassy in 1992, which killed 29 people; and the other at the AMIA (Argentine Jewish Mutual Aid Society) building in 1994, which killed 85 people and injured more than 300.

“The Chabad community has natural growth; families are having children,” he pointed out, adding that as a result of Chabad’s activities, parents from outside the immediate Chabad community are increasingly seeing Oholei Chinuch as the school of choice.

The impact of the Chabad school system on the nation’s Jewish children was highlighted just a few weeks after the opening of the new campus when thousands of young people turned out to watch President Javier Milei don a kippah two days after his inauguration and help light a giant menorah in the center of Buenos Aires.

As the event was televised live by Televisión Pública Argentina in a 90-minute program viewed by millions of people throughout Argentina, no doubt many more Jewish children looked on with Jewish pride and dedication to their fellow Jews. It’s something that their parents and teachers are dedicated to nurturing.

The school, crafted with attention to space, light and color, was designed to foster the holistic growth of students immersed in teachings of Chassidic principles—particularly joy, faith in G-d, a positive, proactive outlook and compassion for all.

To that end, the new school, honoring the memory of the parents of benefactors Jaime and Ruth Lapidus, will be “the place that creates leaders—those who will lead and revolutionize the growth of Judaism in Argentina,” said Gabriel Pines, executive director of the Oholei Chinuch school system.

“It is a school where the children will not only study Torah,” he added, “but will learn to always be there for each other.”

(Reprinted with permission from Chabad.org)

Discussion

We appreciate your feedback. If you have any additional information to contribute to this article, it will be added below.

Leave a Comment

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *


The reCAPTCHA verification period has expired. Please reload the page.

advertise package