PROJECT FUNDED
Funded: $300,010
NEEDED: $0.00
Rabbi Levi Pinson
5 Chem. des Genêts, 20000 Ajaccio, France
Nice, France - 50 min. plane ride
10
Ajaccio is the capital city of Corsica, a French island in the Mediterranean Sea, renowned as the birthplace of the French Emperor Napoleon Bonaparte. Many Jews were drawn to the area during Napoleon’s reign, due to his favorable view on religion, however, as foreseen by the holy Baal Hatanya zt”l, they eventually assimilated with the general population and not a trace of Yiddishkeit remained. This pattern repeated itself over the years with Yidden settling in the area and then either leaving or assimilating.
The year 5760/2000 saw a sudden influx of Yidden to Ajaccio with the arrival of several prominent doctors and the uptick of the economy. When the current Chabad Shliach, Rabbi Levi Pinson, first visited Ajaccio he met great grandchildren of the original settlers who had come hundreds of years earlier. Many of their grandmothers who intermarried, now— unbelievably—have grandchildren studying in the local Talmud Torah!
The community swells during the summer months with the arrival of vacationers to the area. During this time there is a minyan every day, not just on Shabbos, and the enthusiasm lasts through the uplifting Yomim Tovim, bringing many unaffiliated Yidden closer to their roots.
Adhering to the laws of family purity involved a plane ride and an ample dose of Mesiras Nefesh, as there was no Mikvah in all of Corsica. As such, Rabbi Pinson threw himself into the project of establishing a comfortable, fully-equipped local Mikvah and he reached out to Mikvah Tahara to make it happen.
Rabbi Halpern is connected with around 500 local Yidden and 30 have already joined his community as committed Shomer Torah U’mitzvos. There were around 10 individuals who endured a long, difficult journey to get to a Mikvah each month and once Mikvah Tahara heard of their Mesiras Nefesh, we committed to making a local Mikvah possible. In the two months since its unofficial opening, the Mikvah was used for 25 Tevilos.