When Risa Mondâs friends urged her to attend the Chabad Teen International Shabbaton in New York last year, the 17-year-old from Plano, Texas, could never have imagined how it would change her life. Not only did she discover an organization that really spoke to her, but just one year later, at the 2015 conference in February, she was elected âInternational CTeen Leader of the Year.â
âCTeen really connects teens and really focuses on the Judaism aspect,â says Mond. âThereâs a feeling of unison with other CTeeners around the world ... itâs like a little community that you feel a part of.â
âFor me,â she goes on to say, âCTeen has two aspects that make it so great. The first is the nonjudgmental feeling: The focus on âYouâre a Jew, Iâm a Jew,â and weâre together. The second is how you can personalize the CTeen experience for you. Some people love the trip aspect; some people love the learning aspect.â
With programs ranging from holiday events to leadership training seminars to a two-week summer travel camp, CTeen has the ability to touch a real chord with young people.
âItâs all about instilling Jewish pride and showing Jewish teens they are powerful,â adds Mond. âThat youth is powerful.â
And with numbers like these, how can it not be? An estimated 40,000 teens worldwide have attended a CTeen program since it began as a small pilot program just five years ago.
âItâs fantastic to see how rapidly CTeen is growing,â says Rabbi Mendy Kotlarsky, executive director of Merkos Suite 302 in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, N.Y., which launched CTeen in 2010. âIn many cities, the program is initiated by the teens themselves; they see how much their friends in other places enjoy CTeen and are excited to be a part of it, too.â
âA Household Wordâ
The most recent CTeen national program, held last month, brought together thousands of Jewish young people from around the world to usher in Shabbat by attending regional Shabbatons in their local communities.
Marketed in the United States as âThank Gâd Itâs Shabbatâ (based on the popular saying, âThank Gâd Itâs Friday!â), the Shabbatons featured dinner, prayer, games and other activities. Events were held in 56 locales, including Massachusetts, Delaware, Georgia, Illinois and beyond. Several others will take place in the coming weeks for a total of more than 60 Friday-night celebrations.
Simultaneous programs were held in Canada.
âOur goal is to reconnect teens to their heritage in a safe, friendly environmentâsomewhere they can give back to their community and learn leadership skills while in a Jewish atmosphere,â says Leah Rivkin, co-director of CTeen with her husband, Rabbi Shimon Rivkin, who live and work in Crown Heights.
By far, the biggest CTeen event is the annual international Shabbaton held each winter in New York City. The program brings together Jewish teens from around the world for a weekend of education, sightseeing, entertainment and a traditional Shabbat experience. For the most part, the teens stay with host families in Crown Heights, and visit and spend time at 770 Eastern Parkway, Lubavitch World Headquarters.
This yearâs international conference was attended by more than 1,000 teens from a dozen countries. Already, interest is being drummed up for next year.
According to organizers, the vision is for every city to have a CTeen chapterâfor it to become a household word as the place for Jewish teenagers to go and have a good time, and learn about their heritage. Itâs also geared to build the Jewish leaders of tomorrow.
To that end, theyâve established a base of 150 teen leaders whose input is used to help plan programming, fundraising ideas and more. And like any active leader, they also serve to attract friends and others they meet to various events.
âThe Right Path in Lifeâ
Perhaps one clear indication of how seriously Chabad takes its programming for teens is that a significant number of new emissaries are setting out to focus exclusively on youth demographics and CTeen programming.
âIt is really thanks to Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky [vice chairman of Merkos LâInyonei Chinuch] and CTeen Central, who really saw the need for this program. We wouldnât have anything without them,â says Rabbi Mendy Mottal, who, along with his wife, Haya Mouchka, are the CTeen representatives to France.
Mottal estimates that nearly 30,000 Jewish teens live in France, and offering them CTeen programming will be crucial to helping them stay connected to Judaism and each other.
âFrench teens in Strasbourg or Toulouse have very little connection with teens in Paris,â he explains. âNow that they belong to CTeen, they are learning the same subjects, doing the same programs and having the same events. Itâs very important for them to belong to something Jewish in a country thatâs going through a very hard time.â
Since its inception last fall, CTeen France has hosted holiday programs throughout the country, participated in the international Shabbaton (more than 100 teens flew into New York for the event), held a regional Shabbaton and performed humanitarian projects, among other activities and good deeds.
âGiven the age of teens, they are looking for the right line, the right path in life,â says Rabbi Mendy Azimov, director of Beth Loubavitch Paris 16. His father, Rabbi Shmuel âMoulĂŠâ Azimov, the former leader of the Chabad community in Paris who passed away in November after serving as head shaliach (emissary) for more than 40 years, has long been credited with jump-starting a revival of Jewish life and institutions in France.
âThis is the time they study, and they are looking toward the future and what will be best to ensure success in life in general,â he continues. âFor this reason, if you can get someone doing the right thing at this age, odds are that they will continue to do the right thing.â
âTeens are everything,â stresses Rivkin. âThey are the future of tomorrow and at a most crucial age. They are questioning society and are open to learning more about Yiddishkeit. At the end of the day, they are the change-makers and the trendsetters. Anything that happens in history starts with the youth.
âYou only need one teen to realize he or she wants to make a difference,â she continues, âand that can change a whole town.â





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