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‘Mezuzah Week’: A spiritual revolution in Tel Aviv

As part of the campaign, huge advertisements have been placed on buses in Gush Dan, via social media and in the mail for hundreds of thousands of metro-area residents.

A man holds a “mezuzah” at the site of the new National Memorial Hall at the entrance to the military cemetery on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem on April 27, 2017. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.
A man holds a “mezuzah” at the site of the new National Memorial Hall at the entrance to the military cemetery on Mount Herzl in Jerusalem on April 27, 2017. Photo by Yonatan Sindel/Flash90.

A revolutionary campaign under the title “Mezuzah Week in Tel Aviv” has recently been launched by the Central Chabad of Tel Aviv, where residents will be able to check the mezuzahs of their homes free of charge and purchase kosher mezuzahs if theirs are not.

Rabbi Joseph Gerlitzky, the Lubavitcher Rebbe’s chief emissary to Tel Aviv-Jaffa, says that the goal of the campaign is to ensure that every Jew in the city of Tel Aviv-Yafo is given the opportunity to be protected and secured by checking mezuzahs and installing kosher ones.

Mezuzah is one of the most beloved mitzvot of all the Jewish people throughout the ages. It is a testimony and declaration that Jews live here proud of their Jewishness and the tradition of their forefathers,” says Rabbi Gerlitzky. “Sometimes, out of lack of awareness or lack of time, there are those who still do not have kosher mezuzahs in their homes. That is why we initiated the [program] in Tel Aviv—to give everyone the opportunity and awareness of this issue of kosher and meticulous mezuzahs.”

A bus in Tel Aviv with a Chabad “Mezuzah Week” campaign advertisement.
A bus in Tel Aviv with a Chabad “Mezuzah Week” campaign ad.

As part of the campaign, huge advertisements have been placed on buses in Gush Dan, via social media and in the mail for hundreds of thousands of metro-area residents.

More than 35 Chabad centers throughout the city and its neighborhoods are participating. Homeowners can approach the nearest outpost, mezuzahs in hand, for free inspection with a certified scribe. They can also purchase new mezuzahs with a subsidy of 25 percent off the price.

Already, one day after the start of the campaign, Chabad reported a “flood” of calls to the special center set up by Central Chabad for residents who want to have their mezuzahs checked and/or order new ones at the special price.

“No Jew will not be left behind,” goes the campaign. “Everyone can participate in the spiritual revolution of Tel Aviv.”

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