BANGALORE:
Had they acted on their plans the couple would have been well and truly alive
with their little child Moshe. A week after the Mumbai attacks it turns out that
the Jewish couple, Rabbi Gavriel Holztberg and Rivkah Holtzberg, killed by
terrorists in Nariman House, had finalized plans two weeks before the attacks to
visit and open a Chabad Jewish Centre in Bangalore similar to the one in
Mumbai.
While the attacks occurred on November 26, the plans for the
Bangalore centre had been made earlier. Had the couple arrived before November
26 and joined their friends, they would have inaugurated the centre in December
first week and then left for Mumbai - which meant they would not have been in
Mumbai at the time of the attacks.
A childhood friend and classmate
of Gavriel Holtzberg, Mordechai Kirschenbaum speaking from California on
Thursday morning, told TOI: "Gavriel was facilitating the setting up of the
centre in Bangalore. He was to visit the city and open the centre. He was in
fact making arrangements for another Jewish couple to come to Bangalore and
launch the centre. He was co-ordinating as he was the Chabad Jewish
representative in India and was to go back to Mumbai after opening the centre.
He was the Chabad facilitator in India.''
Kirschebaum added: "The
plans are all ready. It would have been wonderful to have had them around.
Gavriel would not be able to see the fruits of his labour. He had worked very
hard for the centre. We will go ahead with their wishes and bring up the Chabad
Bangalore Centre in about two weeks. I am told that the couple for whom Gavriel
was making arrangements are going around to get everything in
place.''
Interestingly, a report in the `Jerusalem Post' on December
2 confirms the Bangalore move. The Post mentions that Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky,
vice chairman of Chabad's educational arm, had last spoken to Rabbi Gavriel
Holtzberg as they put "the finishing touches'' on plans for the Bangalore
branch. "Holtzberg had selected the Bangalore emissaries, who were expected to
arrive within the next several days.''
What is also interesting is
that the Bangalore plans came up precisely at the very time Israeli security
agencies had decided to recommend to Chabad that it relocate its institutions in
Asian countries from "free-standing homes'' to "office buildings with better
security''.
The location of the Chabad House in Mumbai and its lax
security reportedly made it an "easy target'' for the terrorists who took it
over last week, killing six Israeli and Jewish occupants.
Kirschenbaum said Gavriel definitely had a plan to expand to
Bangalore while not being aware of the vulnerability of the Mumbai centre. "He
was so well known among the people and the immediate community that he did not
feel anything was out of place. It has been utterly shocking for all of us who
knew him.''
But an official of the Israeli government, according to
the `Jerusalem Post', had just around the time of the attacks, speaking about
the Chabad centres, said: "Security is something they are thinking
about.''
Chabad's facilities, dotting more than 70 countries around
the globe, provide a home away from home for thousands of Israelis travelling
abroad taking care of their cultural, religious and economic needs.