This Article is From Aug 26, 2014

Chabad House, Mumbai Jewish Centre Stormed in 2008 Attacks Reopens

Chabad House, Mumbai Jewish Centre Stormed in 2008 Attacks Reopens

Rabbi Moshe Gourarie from New Jersey looks at a hole caused by the 2008 terror attack. August 26, 2014. (Associated Press)

Mumbai: A Jewish centre in Mumbai reopened on Tuesday, nearly six years after heavily-armed Pakistani terrorists stormed the building and killed six people inside during the 2008 attacks  that seared the city. (In Pics: Jewish Centre Targeted in 26/11 Attacks Reopens)

One of several high-profile targets assaulted by the gunmen, Chabad House in South Mumbai was left bullet-ridden and bereft of its directors Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his pregnant wife Rivky, who were both killed in the siege.

They were among 166 people killed in the three-day onslaught in November 2008, which targeted five-star hotels, the popular Leopold Cafe and the main train station.

The refurbished five-storey Chabad House has a synagogue, a cafeteria and a function room for the Jewish community. The top two floors, due to be turned into a museum, have been left bearing the damage from bullets and grenades as a reminder of the tragedy.
In the synagogue, candles mark the spot where Rabbi Holtzberg was shot dead, and pictures of him, his wife and their surviving young child adorn the stairwells.

"I think this is really a message for the whole world," said Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky, a prominent member of the orthodox Chabad-Lubavitch movement, who helped to rebuild the centre.

"You can overcome challenges, even the most horrific of challenges. You can and must rebuild, and this project serves as a beacon of light and hope that evil will not prevail," he said in a statement.

Chabad House, tucked away down a narrow lane in the bustling area of Colaba market, was established as an open house for visiting Jews and the local community by the Holtzbergs after they arrived in Mumbai in 2003.

While they were among six people taken hostage in the centre and killed by the gunmen, their young son, then aged two, was plucked to safety by his nanny.

On Tuesday, 25 rabbis from across Asia gathered at the newly renovated centre, where a $2.5-million Jewish Museum is to be established.

"We're not moving into a new building -- we are returning to our original building and we will be continuing and expanding all the activities that took place here," said Rabbi Israel Kozlovsky, new co-director of the centre with his wife, Chaya.
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