Steve and Rachel Sicherman rented a home in Palm Beach County, Fla., for a few years before settling down for good last winter. Today, they live about a mile from Chabad of West Boca Raton. âWe finally found something just right in the communityâand we found it in the house, the atmosphere and the rabbi,â he says.
Then, before the High Holidays, the Cleveland native and his family got to be part of another beginning as the Chabad House opened a brand-new building, equidistant from their house as the old one and offering much more space for the community to convene.
âItâs the same environment, the same warmth, the same spiritual awareness as the old shulâand pretty much every other shul that emulates the Chabad tradition,â Sicherman tells Chabad.org. Chabadâs prior location in a rented storefrontâacross from Century Village, one of four huge residential complexes in South Florida for older adultsâsimply could not accommodate all the activity, programs and growing attendance over the years. Now, they have a 12,000-square-foot building on a busy main street.
The new location also means new facesâpeople who may have noticed the large crowds at holiday time and then returned to check out the center for themselves. âBecause of the awareness of the new building, people are not only visiting for the first time but planting their feet there,â says Sicherman, the father of three school-age children. He hopes more locals and tourists walk through the doors, as they do during the winter snowbird season and the summer, when families head there for vacation or to spend time with relatives.
With nearly 100,000 residentsâmore than half of them JewishâBoca has seen a rapid increase in population and housing in the past 15 years. Sicherman feels itâs got just the right ingredients for young professionals and families looking to build a career or life with strong Jewish offerings available to them.
âThat Warm Chabad Feelingâ
Rabbi Zalman and Chani Bukiet, who co-direct Chabad of West Boca, have geared programs towards the larger numbers of children in the area, as they also focus on the local aging population. Itâs one of five Chabad Houses in Boca Raton, in addition to a Chabad Student Center serving Florida Atlantic University, Lynn University, both in Boca Raton, and Palm Beach Community College in nearby Lake Worth. A Chabad Israeli Center is also situated on West Palmetto Park Road, a central thoroughfare that runs east to west through the city.
âWe still have the hamische elementâthat very warm Chabad feelingâbut now in such a beautiful, beautiful place,â notes the rabbi.
The new facility, on two acres of land, took four years of fundraising to come to fruition. It is home to a sanctuary, social hall, library, rooms for the Hebrew school and other classes, a smaller shul for daily minyan and a commercial kosher kitchen. A mikvah is in the works.
âItâs really true, the saying, âIf you build it, they will come,â â says the rabbi. âWe built it, and people have come by in droves to see the place, get involved and become part of the shul.â
The coupleâhe is from Brooklyn, N.Y., and she hails from Londonâhas served as emissaries for 28 years, along with Rabbi Moishe and Rivkah Denburg, co-directors of Chabad of Central Boca. The Bukiets are now assisted by Rabbi Moshe and Shaina Kramer, who serve young families moving to the area.
âWeâre here to encourage every Jew to affiliate with Yiddishkeit in some wayâwhether through prayer, Torah, a mitzvahâany way we can welcome a Jewish person and get them involved,â says Bukiet. âWe try to offer something for everyone. Thatâs what the Rebbe [Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory] mandatedâto reach out to any Jew, any level, any background, any age. Weâre here to serve them.â
âA Very Holy Spaceâ
Ann Spoont, who has lived in West Boca with her husband since 1987, got involved after a March of the Living trip to Poland and Israel in 2008. A woman she met on the trip invited her to the local Chabad. She started attending services and was stunned when, after a monthâs absence, the rabbi approached her, asking where she had been. It was that personal touch she found very meaningful, she says.
Spoont, who has four grown children, adds that she has also been impressed by the diversity of programs offered, especially the classes, some of which she has taken.
âItâs a really wonderful, welcoming place,â she says. âThe rabbis invite you over to their house for Shabbat, and if you ever have a problem, you call themâand theyâre right there.â
West Boca residents Sarah Rejman-Drummond and her husband, Yehudah, have six children ranging in age from 3 to 19. She discovered Chabad about six years ago, seeking bar mitzvah lessons for their son and conversion to Judaism for her husband. âThe first time we went there, that first Shabbat, I remember entering the building and our children felt at home right away,â she says. âWe just knew this was somewhere we were going to stay and grow and learn and expandâand weâve been there ever since.â
The new building, with its marble floors, gold accents and elegant lines, has only elevated Chabadâs efforts, she says. âItâs a very holy and very beautiful space,â says Rejman-Drummond. âOur 5-year-old son Abraham canât wait to go to shul on Shabbat; he looks forward to it all week long.â
The space means more classes, and more room for celebrations and programs: âThereâs always something going on there; thereâs always something beautiful happening.â
Chani Bukiet points to the luxury of now being able to set up different areas for simultaneous events. âIn the old place, weâd make Kiddush outside, and then a group of people would rush inside to quickly put up the tables and set up the room,â she explains. âNow we have the social hall; it can be ready beforehand to handle any number of guests. You finish praying and go right in. Itâs a wonderful development.â
Rabbi Bukiet notes a line in the Torah that says: Veasu li mikdash veshachanti betochaom . . . âMake for me a dwelling place and I will rest in with you.â
âWe have made a beautiful dwelling for Gâd and man,â he says, âand we hope it brings only nachas to all Jews living in and visiting Boca.â





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