Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, 67, ‘A Warm Heart’ Who Supported Jewish Causes Worldwide
рус   |   eng
Search
Sign in   Register
Help |  RSS |  Subscribe
Euroasian Jewish News
    World Jewish News
      Analytics
        Activity Leadership Partners
          Mass Media
            Xenophobia Monitoring
              Reading Room
                Contact Us

                  World Jewish News

                  Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, 67, ‘A Warm Heart’ Who Supported Jewish Causes Worldwide

                  Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein, 67, ‘A Warm Heart’ Who Supported Jewish Causes Worldwide

                  15.02.2019

                  Provided $1.5 billion for programs helping Jews in 50 countries

                  To the myriads of people who worked with him, Rabbi Yechiel Eckstein was a man full of life and vitality, always looking for his next project. Eckstein, the president of the International Fellowship of Christians and Jews (IFCJ), an organization he founded in 1983 that has grown to become a major supporter of Jewish causes in Israel, the former Soviet Union and around the world, passed away suddenly on Wednesday morning at his home in Jerusalem. He was 67 years old.

                  “We are all shocked,” Rabbi Berel Lazar, the chief rabbi, and head Chabad-Lubavitch emissary to Russia tells Chabad.org. “When I met with him a week ago, we discussed plans for the future, new ideas, new projects. He was always looking for ways he could make a positive change.”

                  Eckstein was raised in Canada and studied at Yeshiva University, where he received his rabbinic ordination and completed his bachelor’s, master’s and doctoral degrees. He later served as a lecturer at Columbia University and was a member of the executive board of the American Jewish Joint Distribution Committee (JDC).

                  His major lifework began in 1983, when he founded the Fellowship. In the years since, he raised more than $1.5 billion, mostly from non-Jews, for programs helping Jews in more than 50 countries, leaving an indelible mark on the worldwide Jewish community.

                  Chief among Eckstein’s partners in the former Soviet Union was the Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS, the umbrella organization for Jewish communities in the former Communist bloc. Working with Chabad emissaries on the ground, the Fellowship was able to provide direct assistance to tens of thousands of Jews, from refugees of the war in Ukraine to impoverished families and orphans in Belarus to the elderly and infirm in Moscow.

                  “He really cared for every single Jew,” says Lazar. “He had a special warmth, a warm heart, a special ability to feel someone else’s plight.”

                  While Eckstein directed aid to the Jewish communities in the FSU, he was also keen to see the situation on the ground himself, being among the first to respond during a crisis or times of need.

                  “He always wanted to see for himself how he could help—whether it was bringing people to Israel or sponsoring children’s homes and soup kitchens,” says Lazar, adding that that Eckstein would join Chabad of Russia’s yearly Eurostars trip for young people because he felt he had to be there to experience it together with them. “And there were also many projects that people don’t even know he was involved in.”

                  Lazar notes the personal connection Eckstein had with people he encountered, how he could mesmerize crowds young and old because he exuded a feeling of caring and concern. He was exuberant and always traveled with his guitar, with which he performed at a moment’s notice.

                  “He listened to their heartbeat, and in turn, was able to touch their hearts,” he says. “We could have a discussion about a particular story, and he would break down crying. He wasn’t faking; that was the secret to his success—he really cared.”

                  Bringing People Closer to Their Heritage

                  Eckstein was also a strong supporter of security against anti-Semitic and terrorist threats. When, for example, threatening messages were painted on the fence of the Chabad synagogue and community center in Uzhgorod, Ukraine, it was Eckstein’s Fellowship that immediately allocated funds for an upgrade in security. That grant was a part of millions of dollars that the Fellowship allocated for security for Jewish centers, including those in France, since the 2008 terror attack on the Chabad House in Mumbai, India.

                  Beyond caring for the material well-being of the Jewish people the Fellowship’s funds supported, Eckstein worked to bring Jewish people closer to their heritage as well. The Gan Israel summer camp network in the FSU was one of his pet projects, having a material and spiritual impact on thousands of Jewish young people every year. The Fellowship also supports numerous other educational projects, including schools, orphanages and medical centers.

                  In recent years, Eckstein, whose organization has offices in Chicago and Jerusalem, was joined in his work by his daughter Yael Eckstein, who serves as global executive vice president.

                  For the last 15 years, another close partner of the Fellowship’s has been Colel Chabad, which—founded in 1788 by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of the Chabad movement—is the oldest continuously operating charity in Israel. Colel Chabad runs a national food bank, a series of soup kitchens and nonprofit supermarkets, provides meals on wheels, groceries for the elderly and holiday help for the poor, among other projects. Just this past December, Eckstein was honored at the organization’s annual gala in New York, where he offered a personal perspective on “Partnering with Colel Chabad to make miracles happen.”

                  “He was a very close friend and very dedicated to the Rebbe [Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory] and the Rebbe’s causes,” says Rabbi Sholom Duchman, director of Colel Chabad. “He was always questioning: What else can we do? Always on the alert to try to do the right thing, to help in the right way. He was full of Ahavas Yisroel, full of love for every single Jew, and realized and appreciated the impact of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, and helped the emissaries wherever he could worldwide.”

                  Eckstein, says Duchman, always made it a point when he was in New York City to stop at the Ohel, the Rebbe’s resting place in Queens.

                  But Eckstein’s help extended beyond the communal and to the personal as well. Duchman recalls how a few years ago Eckstein heard that a group of shluchot, women Chabad emissaries, were unable to attend the annual gathering in New York. He instantly sponsored tickets for the women who had never been there.

                  “It wasn’t just support,” says Duchman. “It was a personal relationship.”

                  Lazar echoes Duchman’s sentiment: “He helped tens of thousands of people, probably much more, that’s true, but aside from the sheer numbers, there was that one-on-one relationship he had with people. He always had people, individuals, in mind.

                  “The Jewish people and Israel has lost a very special soul.”

                  Eckstein is survived by his wife, Joelle; three daughters; and many grandchildren.

                  By Dovid Margolin

                  Chabad.org