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Benoliel Brothers - Establishing Mikdash Melech
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Could you take us through those years
how you ended up forming Mikdasha? Who
are some of the other rabbis that you
crossed paths with in those early years?
Everybody likes to hear the names of
those great men that started out with
you back then and then we all want to
know how Mikdash became what what it
became.
Okay. uh chronologically uh I I I
started off in the community with the uh
with the rabbin it becoming uh the rabbi
of uh of u Ben Ysef which at that time
in 1968 was called Magen David of Ocean
Parkway. That was the original name. And
then Eddie Sid Shalom renamed the shul
that he built Ben Ysef mainly in in
memory of his father Ysef Sohan. Right.
Um it wasn't until 72 which was like
about four years later that um I started
to uh
realize my long-standing dream of having
a safari yesa and uh started with a
handful of boys
uh together with my brother-in-law Rabbi
David Lopeian Schlita and later on
another brother brother-in-law
Allah shalom. And um so we started off
actually
uh in Ben for a short time and then we
were able to buy the the building on
Ocean Parkway which at that time was a a
nursing home that was not functioning at
that
time. And talk about real estate, right?
People can't re can't believe that in in
those years
197072 that you could buy a building
like that for
1125 and we still needed to take a
mortgage because it was a lot of money
then 112,000 was it's all it's all
relevant right yeah but we think fondly
of many of the founders and uh I always
remember uh Joe RBB shalom he was one of
the the signers on the mortgage and uh
Isaac Misra shalom and and others really
that gave us that uh uh that push and
there's a a nice uh picture of uh myself
and Rabbi Lope sitting
with right I still had a red beard at
that time but that was uh a a meeting in
the home of Isaac Mah shalom that where
we got the blessings of the uh of to
start off. So we started off with what
we would call the shaim the the 10
original and some of them of course are
very famous our community such as Rabbi
David Ozeri and Rabbi David Cohen, Rabbi
Schlomma Wadish and others that were
that uh we never had another group like
that. the 10 pioneers that uh we we
started off in 1972 and u for a while we
were in what they call the the the uh
the
Gibble of Rabbi TS Shalom on Ocean
Parkway and then finally in our own home
in uh at um 1326 Ocean Parkway and um uh
of course a number of years later the
idea developed of having a branch in
Yaleim. Wow. Because we saw that uh a
lot of our young men were going uh with
the intent of having a year or two in
your and uh in there's Israel and in
many cases after a couple of months they
would come back because they just didn't
they didn't find the right environment
that that was uh uh welcoming to them as
far as their uh as far as their their
customs and and comfort zone in uh in in
in in the otic experience. So, uh we
thought that it was a a very important
resource to try to to to uh to have
these boys and really let give them the
opportunity of of a
um of a yeshiva experience experience.
Yeah.
Uh with all of the uh the background,
the sphartic uh uh menu and sphartic
tilot and so forth and here we are. So
Rabbi, it it it it's similar to it is
today. They finish high school and then
you wanted them to go for a year,
possibly two years toesh to Jerusalem to
learn, right? It was the same as it is
today. Post high school. Yeah. Post high
school. Rabbi, how how how common was
that or uncommon for parents way back
then to say, "I'm going to trust you.
I'm going to send my son after high
school versus all the other things that
they would have wanted for their boys.
Not all that common. Not all that
common. And that's why we we started off
with very small numbers. You know, we
started off with small numbers, but as
time went on, it became more accepted.
And uh in fact in the early years we
would have on average a third of our um
enrollment um ben Ashkanaz because the
there there weren't too many American
ashkanazi shivot in in in Israel. Right.
Uh now we hardly have any because the
Ashkanazim have their own. We understand
they don't need us. We surely understand
that. We understand it. But we still
stand for who we are and what we are
asphod. And I must say, yeah, I must say
to you, Rabbi, that we are all the whole
community. So proud of you that you were
a pioneer in starting in Brooklyn, not
being afraid. It wasn't common in those
years. And then to open up Mikdesh Melik
in Jerusalem and have boys experience
what has turned out to be the great what
I'm hearing now being close to you and
your son, Rabbi Abraham, the greatest
year of my life. It changed my life. I
don't know what I would have been
without it. I don't know who I would
have been. I don't know what would have
come of me. And I hear dozens and dozens
of remarks like that from these young
men that have come back, changed their
lives, given back to the community. And
it's just it's it's all but Hashem to
your credit for giving you that insight,
the fortitude uh to trust. Correction
correction only only. Okay. Holy.