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Edmond J. Safra Synagogue Torah Center Video
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
I'll be honest, it's actually hard to
describe what's taking place here
without getting emotional. I remember
first coming to the synagogue and
thinking to myself, would this place
ever become a real makum Torah, place of
Torah learning? Well, five rabbis later
with classes every single day of the
week, multiple classes in the morning,
people studying gimmar, people studying
halaka, people studying parasa, people
studying musayor. It is unbelievable.
>> Every class is full beyond beyond
capacity.
>> It has something for everybody. It
attracted many many people that never
would have participated. And uh I think
that's what led to this being a place of
1500 to 2,000 people.
>> This kabort squirreled away everywhere.
We have a young man Jack Dwek. He's got
a hab of boys learning every morning on
the porch cuz we couldn't even find a
place to put them. We have another group
of guys learning beun a little bit more
in depth.
>> These people want serious learning. I
mean, you come, you walk in the morning,
you see what's going on. Gimar class. I
think there's like six Gimar classes
going on at the same exact time. We
created a minyan. The 8 a.m. minan.
Everyone came to the 8 a.m. minan. That
was about 3 years ago. And now if you
walk in on a regular day, it's 3 years
in. [music] The minyan's thriving. Guy
comes in the morning to pray first and
he feels great. He's connecting to God.
Then you give the person an option also
to learn. And you really don't feel that
kind of stimulation and connecting with
your creator other than experiencing it
through learning.
>> The guys are finding that the Torah is
relatable. Torah is instruction. Torah
is for [music] life. To makes me a
better father, a better husband, better
friend. Doesn't only bring better into
my life. It makes me [music] into a more
blessed person. What started as a
begging and pleading for a teenyad has
mushroomed into a beautiful crowd of
teenagers coming to to [music] pray and
to learn. One of the fathers came in and
said, "You know, this is the most
beautiful minan in the whole [music]
school shoot. These are the ones that
are going to be the future. And if they
love coming, then you know we've got it
made." I took him to the social hall
downstairs. I said, "We have a minan for
the kids younger than the teens. We've
got learning for the kids that are 5 6 7
8 9 10 11 12 13 14 up to the teen miny.
They're downstairs with Ela Levi. Then I
took him next door to there where
there's a toddler's minan where they're
teaching them to pray and to kiss the
muzza and what Shabbat is and covering
their hands. The kids are our future
also. They are our foundation. He
started a program last year. It's
exploding with Jack Braha and he's
teaching all the young kids [music] how
to pray. After doing this for a few
times on my way home, I was driving home
and I was just thinking if this keeps up
the way that this is going and it keeps
growing. I picture myself coming back
here in five or 10 years and just seeing
[music] all these boys reading and Hazan
and Shulgo goers to be a part of this is
a very big [music] to me and it means a
lot to me and I'm very excited. It's an
unbelievable program. People are so
excited. People sending their kids and
[music] it's really it's going to make a
massive difference where they This is
the only gift that we can give these
kids for the rest of their life.
>> However much learning we had last year,
somehow we've upped the ante by like
50%. The girls wanted a class so they're
coming and learning with Jack Braha how
to say old school. I walk through the sh
and I hear them singing exactly in the
same tune that Kamaruk used to teach the
init all those years ago. And I know
that we're touching something which is
priceless. We are arming the future
generations with pride, with knowledge,
with understanding. Literally, I would
say we're probably doubling to tripling
our output. I deal primarily with the
young singles in their 20s and 30s. And
we've seen a tremendous growth of these
young men and women who are coming to
all of our programs. It's very hard to
find community here in Manhattan. They
finish their work, they go home, and
then they just wake up on this rat race
that can be Manhattan. What we have
created here at Saffra Synagogue is
something incredible. We've given them a
home away from home. This afternoon, I
got finished [music] doing a ladies
class downstairs. We have to turn the
whole downstairs into an auditorium with
tables everywhere because all the women
are sitting there writing notes.
grandmas, great grandmas sitting next to
young single girls to be [music] able to
study and to learn how to pray and
connect to God on the highest level. The
synagogue is flourishing.
Uh I'm not surprised. It all starts at
the top. Your rabbi is he's one of a
kind and it was godscent that he came
here and he's revolutionized
the uh programming and the goings on.
So, Rab Faraki is a in my opinion, he's
a superstar. He's a brand of his own.
He's uh an amazing energy level 247,
always available, always responsive. He
relates to everybody in many different
ways.
>> Rabbi Fahi really puts this community in
front of him at all times. [music] And
working with him has been the most
incredible, inspiring, evolving position
I've ever had in my 25 years [music] as
working as a rabbi. He's making a Torah
to become a part of their life and
really bring them closer to the true
meaning of life.
>> Every person who walks into the shul
should understand this is a
midrash. I know that if Edmund Safar
shalom and Lily Safra alum were here
today, as much as they would enjoy the
synagogues minyim that are packed, what
they would love to see more than
anything else is the young and the old
engaged in Torah learning. We cannot do
this without you. The programs are
exploding and the costs along with it.
Baroo Hashem, we have a community that
surrounds us with fundraising
opportunities. They love giving. People
have been so generous. But it's never
enough. More kids, more learning. More
women interested, more learning. You got
it. The answer here is always going to
be yes. When it comes to more Torah,
there is no greater investment that you
can make in this world than in Torah. As
our rabbis teach us, Tora
[music]
is worth more than everything.