Shlomó Köves
It was arranged for Israelis studying in Budapest, workers at a kosher slaughterhouse and families of Israeli businessmen in Hungary.
“The agreement marks a significant milestone in the resurrection of the Hungarian Jewish community, which was almost wiped out during the Holocaust,” said Chief Rabbi of EMIH–Association of United Hungarian Jewish Congregation Shlomo Koves.
“I finished the two Torah scrolls myself at the place where 75 years ago, our martyrs were brutally shot into the water,” said Rabbi Shlomo Koves in Budapest.
Rabbi Shlomó Köves, chief rabbi of the EMIH-Hungarian Jewish Alliance and a Chabad-Lubavitch emissary in Budapest, discusses the prime minister and his nationalistic approach, as well as the thinking of some of his critics.