The following article appeared in The Jewish Link of Bergen County:
A SPECIAL ARON KODESH FINDS A NEW HOME AT YESHIVAT NOAM
By: N. Aaron Troodler
As Yeshivat Noam welcomed in a new school year last week, it also
welcomed in a brand new Aron Kodesh in the Middle School Beit Medrash.
The tall and majestic Aron Kodesh has beautiful dark wooden doors
that are adorned with the design of a large golden menorah. One of its most
unique features is the brightly lit interior portion, which consists
of an ascending ladder that holds the Sifrei Torah, and which rotates when
touched. The Aron is home to Yeshivat Noam’s three Torahs, which have been
generously dedicated by Yeshivat Noam grandparents, Malca and Louis Drazin, and
Yeshivat Noam parents, Shira and Clive Lipshitz, and Tammi and Bennett
Schachter.
The
Aron Kodesh was the centerpiece of the Sanctuary at Lincoln Square Synagogue on
Manhattan’s West Side for years. Construction of the Synagogue’s new building a
few doors down was nearing completion at the end of 2012. At the time, the
congregation tried, without success, to find an appropriate place for the Aron
in the new building. Left with no other choice
when the congregation moved out of the old building, the Aron was dismantled
and put into storage. If a new home would
not be found for the Aron, it was ultimately to be buried.
Around the same time, Yeshivat Noam had completed the renovation of
its brand new Middle School. The school’s new Beit Knesset had a temporary
cabinet installed to hold its Sifrei Torah. Chaim Birman, a Yeshivat Noam parent
and board and building committee member, happened to be overseeing the Lincoln
Square Synagogue Project in his professional capacity. He brought the status of the Aron to principal
Rabbi Chaim Hagler’s attention. Rabbi Hagler, who was once a youth director at
Lincoln Square Synagogue, supported bringing this information to the Yeshivat
Noam executive board’s attention. The board decided to pursue discussions with
Lincoln Square Synagogue on possibly salvaging the Aron by relocating it into
the new Middle School’s Beit Knesset. Over
the months that followed, interested parties at both institutions worked
together to make this a reality, culminating in the Aron’s installation at Yeshivat
Noam at the end of August.
The Yeshivat Noam Middle School students received a special visit
from Rabbi Dr. Shlomo Riskin, the Chief Rabbi of Efrat, Israel, and the
Founding Rabbi of the Lincoln Square Synagogue, on the first day of Torah
reading following the students’ return to school, who told them the story of
the Aron Kodesh. Specifically, Rabbi Riskin discussed the extraordinary
individual who dedicated the Aron Kodesh to his shul.
The
Aron Kodesh, which was designed and built by Edward Jacobs, an architect who is
also Rabbi Riskin’s son-in-law, was dedicated by the late Mrs. Martha Cohn in
honor of the memory of her parents, both of whom perished in the Holocaust.
Rabbi
Riskin recounted how he hired Mrs. Cohn as the first full-time secretary of the
Lincoln Square Synagogue when he started the shul in 1964.
At
the time, Rabbi Riskin was seeking to hire a young and modern secretary as part
of his effort to attract people from the neighborhood around Lincoln Center
to the shul. Rabbi Riskin characterized them as “very liberal people
politically and not very given to religion.”
In walked a 64-year-old woman with a heavy German accent who said
that she wanted to be the secretary for the synagogue. “There was something
about her that made me feel this is the person,” he said. Martha Cohn was a widow
and was not blessed with children. Despite facing some challenges in her life,
Rabbi Riskin noted that, “she steadfastly always remained deeply religious.”
Martha Cohn was incredibly dedicated to the shul and to her work. Mrs. Cohn knew the phone numbers of all of the
congregants in Lincoln Square by heart. She understood that there was a great
deal of sensitivity needed in dealing with the Orthodox and non-Orthodox
members of the shul. “She knew everybody, she spoke to everybody, she knew
where everyone had to sit,” said Rabbi Riskin. “Her dedication is impossible to
describe. She noticed everything.”
Toward the end of her life, Mrs. Cohn told Rabbi Riskin that she
wanted to make a dedication to the shul. Although she was not a wealthy woman,
her life was dedicated to the Lincoln Square Synagogue and to Shaare Tzedek
Hospital in Israel. “Her life was service to Hakadosh Baruch Hu and Judaism,”
said Rabbi Riskin. Martha Cohn informed
Rabbi Riskin that she wanted an Aron Kodesh and that it should be in a place
where there were children who could kiss the Sifrei Torah inside the Aron
Kodesh.
Rabbi Riskin lovingly showed the Yeshivat Noam students the inside
of the Aron Kodesh, which swivels, and described how he used to spin the part
of the Aron that held the Torahs. “She used to say the Rabbi makes the Torah
dance and that’s what I would like – I would like the Torah to be dancing,”
said Rabbi Riskin. “So, all the years that I was the Rabbi of the synagogue, I
would make sure the Torah was dancing when the ark was opened.”
Rabbi Riskin explained to the Yeshivat Noam Middle School students
that Lincoln Square Synagogue moved to a new building and Martha Cohn’s Aron
Kodesh did not fit in the new sanctuary due to the height of the ceiling. The shul was planning to chop up the Aron
Kodesh and bury the pieces. “When I heard that, I burst out in tears,” said
Rabbi Riskin. “The Torah and children and the future of Torah were the most
important things to her.”
Instead, the Aron Kodesh found a new home at Yeshivat Noam. “When I
heard the Aron was coming here, you have no idea how happy it made me feel,”
said Rabbi Riskin. “It’s an Aron Kodesh
that was dedicated by a very, very, very special woman,” he said. “May it be
really a very fitting blessing and memorial to a very special woman, Martha
Cohn.”
The results are magnificent. Not only do the Aron and the Yeshivat
Noam Beit Knesset complement each other beautifully within the space, but it is
also a message to future generations of students about the respect we all
should have for Klei Kodesh. Furthermore, the Aron Kodesh that Mrs. Cohn
dedicated specifically for children to enjoy has now found its permanent home
in Yeshivat Noam, surrounded by hundreds of children who daven in its presence
daily.
“Not only were we fortunate to be the beneficiaries of an
aesthetically pleasing Aron Kodesh, but our Sifrei Torah also received a new
home that is infused with Kedusha because of the unique and beautiful story
behind its creation,” said Rabbi Chaim Hagler, Principal of Yeshivat Noam. “We
are extraordinarily grateful to have this special Aron Kodesh at Yeshivat Noam and
are extremely thankful to Rabbi Riskin for visiting with us and sharing with
our students the rich history behind this wonderful addition to our school.”
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