Remembering The Jewish Lives Lost To COVID-19

25

NEW York ((JNS) – Reality dawned slowly, painfully. In mid-March, it suddenly became clear that the novel coronavirus that first ravaged China, and then parts of Europe, was becoming a global pandemic. Five months later, the death toll remains staggering.

Join our WhatsApp group

Subscribe to our Daily Roundup Email


On Aug. 20, Chabad.org published “Each Person, a World,” a memorial page paying tribute to the 1,200 Jewish victims of COVID-19 from around the globe, and includes links to obituaries of many. While there are undoubtedly unknown names missing from the list, the project is the most comprehensive Jewish one of its kind and will continue to be updated.

Back in March, as the joyous holiday of Purim approached, and synagogues and Jewish schools around the world made the decision to shut their doors, few could have imagined what the next weeks and months would look like.

But within days, it became clear that COVID-19’s toll would not just be the halt of communal prayer and gathering, nor the unprecedented and sudden school shutdowns. Something far worse loomed. As the first text messages and social-media posts requesting prayers for people infected with the virus made their rounds, the Jewish community braced itself for the unthinkable. And then it came.

“There was a feeling early on that this wasn’t just going to blow over, but then came this deluge of death within the worldwide Jewish community,” recalls Motti Seligson, director of media relations for Chabad.org. “When we started seeing message after message stating Baruch Dayan HaEmet [‘Blessed Are the True Judge,’ traditionally affirmed when receiving the news of a death], it was just overwhelming.”

Various segments of the Jewish community have been hit at different times—some earlier and some later, but none have been immune. Month after month, the death toll has mounted. Holocaust survivors, victims of Soviet oppression and war veterans, rabbis and laypeople, community leaders and teachers, Torah scholars and professionals, parents, grandparents and great-grandparents. Lost to an unseen enemy.

Of course, COVID-19’s deadly toll is a tragedy that has transcended religion, ethnicity and nationality, and the Jewish community joins with people around the world in mourning the loss of all life. Even now, months later, parts of the globe continue to battle the deadly virus, and the world continues to pray for an end to this plague.

From the beginning of the pandemic, the team at Chabad.org has worked hard to help individuals cope with loss, putting out numerous articles and videos on death and mourning. Among the initiatives has also been its Coronavirus Quarantine Kaddish Service, a special free service allowing anyone around the world without access to a minyan to input the name of a deceased loved one and have the Kaddish prayer said for them.

Yet Seligson still felt something had to be done to memorialize those who have passed. Each and every person lost to the COVID-19 plague represents a full life, a world unto itself. Especially as the numbers tragically grew, Seligson knew that every single name had to be recorded for posterity.

“This plague touches every part of the Jewish community without distinction,” says Seligson. “A Jewish memorial for the victims has to do the same. We are one people.”

And so even before Passover began, Chabad.org launched “Each Person, a World”—a project to document names, ages and some biographical information about every Jewish person who passed away as a result of COVID-19. At the time, no one knew how big of an undertaking it would end up being.

In the months that followed, Chabad.org staff writer Mendel Super and media associate Tzali Reicher, both Australians who have been stranded Down Under since the beginning of the pandemic, liaised with Jewish community leaders around the world while scouring Jewish community news bulletins, papers and social-media postings to create the most comprehensive list of Jewish victims from the United States, France, Italy, Israel, Morocco and everywhere in between—about 1,200 names to date.

Super and Reicher also wrote hundreds of biographical sketches for those about whom information was accessible. This effort was joined by Chabad.org staff editors Menachem Posner and Dovid Margolin, who penned longer obituaries for figures as diverse as the former chief rabbi of Israel to the leader of an underground network aiding Soviet Jews. Other contributors include Eli Rubin, Mordechai Rubin, Motti Wilhelm and Aharon Loschak.

All those who have passed led lives that can and must be learned from. In the aftermath of any death within the Jewish community, the individual is mourned communally with friends, family and neighbors gathering to share memories of those lost. Due to social distancing and lockdowns, many of those who died during the pandemic were denied a regular funeral, a traditional shiva and even the recital of Kaddish.

The losses have hit the entire Jewish people, no matter which community, level of observance or socio-economic status, underlining the intrinsic unity of the Jewish nation. By publishing all of the names in this special section, Chabad.org hopes to give every one of the departed the honor and dignity they deserve, as well as allow readers to leave well-wishes and condolences.

“We are trying to be as comprehensive as possible,” says Reicher. “The goal is to get every single name down. No one should be forgotten.”

Ultimately, the most important element of memorializing a loved one wrote the Rebbe—Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory—in a Hebrew letter to a family would be the way their offspring lived their lives. For they are “a living monument. Their deeds and behavior in their everyday lives … act as a living inscription on a living monument; the wording of this inscription is in their hands, and only theirs.”

May the memory of those who have passed be a blessing for the entire Jewish people and all humankind, and their stories a living legacy for all.


Listen to the VINnews podcast on:

iTunes | Spotify | Google Podcasts | Stitcher | Podbean | Amazon

Follow VINnews for Breaking News Updates


Connect with VINnews

Join our WhatsApp group


25 Comments
Most Voted
Newest Oldest
Inline Feedbacks
View all comments
Archy's Worst Nightmare
Archy's Worst Nightmare
3 years ago

Archy’s gonna be angry you posted this . . . . . .because, you know, only a small handful died of COVID. You know, like, it’s not really a bad thing, mostly a hoax, anyway, no worse than the flu, and besides, if you daven, nothing will happen to you. You don’t even need a mask. The virus will just disappear, you know, like, by April, of 2020 I mean, Just like Trump said. Barring that, it will be gone by the summer of 2020, because, you know, like, the heat will kill it.

Donny
Donny
3 years ago

I am a New Yorker, residing in NYC.
I was somewhat surprised that NYC Mayor DiBlasio and his then sidekick health Commissioner were exhorting people to get out, eat in restaurants and do all the things common sense told me not to do. This was even in March 2020.Countless New Yorkers got the wrong signal from our Mayor and health Commissioner and paid the ultimate price.

Moshe
Moshe
3 years ago

I wonder if Catholic and Christian groups also have articles about all the people that were lost in their olam.

PaulinSaudi
PaulinSaudi
3 years ago

So how did they decide who was a Jew? Reading press reports seems iffy.

Well, the whole project strikes me as very strange .

alljewsforBiden2020
alljewsforBiden2020
3 years ago

More Yiden died i a months due the Negligence of the POTUS than anytime in the last 75 years. The USA is the joke of the world.

sam hirschh
sam hirschh
3 years ago

@archy – they obviously checked for bris milah…
I thought covid was fake news? Im confused.
a cousin of mine works for chevra kadisha has done 150+ covid levayos in queens…

wear a mask… cant hurt.

Yoel Kanner
Yoel Kanner
3 years ago

Im curious how the compilers of the list determined the person passed away due to covid-19. 2 of the names of the list are relatives of mine. One was nifter just before pesach, however, not due to covid-19. he was in his 90s, with many health issues and was in and out of the hospital numerous times the last years of his life. he was niftar at home and NEVER contracted covid. Another family member on the list happened to contract covid, but, did not die because of it. Its lists like these, with known inaccuracies that make people disbelieve all sorts of covid info.

Emes
Emes
3 years ago

Over 1000 people are dying of Covid every day so I wouldn’t say it has gone away. So far, heat hasn’t killed it. That seems to have been the official strategy. Maybe cold will do the job. That can be the new strategy.

Winky
Winky
3 years ago

Archy has been consistent all along. He never said Corona was a hoax. He said it was just a flu that will disappear in a few weeks. And in all the months since it started he is still saying it’s just a flu and will magically disappear in a few weeks.
And what about all the dead people? Most of them weren’t Jewish. But what about the Jewish ones? Most of them weren’t frum. And what about the frum ones? Most of them were old and sick anyway.

Educated Archy
Educated Archy
3 years ago

Nope I never ever said that last line you wrote, Never CVS.

What I did argue is that perhaps you can reopen now as by now the older and more ill know to social distance and are less at risk. That’s sensible.

Yes I did beleive it was the flu. Its called optmism and yes it is a flu. Well tehnically a cold as every cold is corona. I still stick to my guns . I do not regert being an optmist. I continue to be an ptimist and say the worse has gone by. It will be over soon. I wish I knew how soon but soon. I still hope before the summer is over.

FL use to have 15K new cases a day and its now down to 4K!

Winky
Winky
3 years ago

Of course you’ll stick to your guns, your religion is Trump. According to that religion, you must never admit you’re wrong.
FL averages 150 dead a day, sometimes over 200. But it’s only 200 dead, right? And they all had preconditions anyway. [Which in fact you did say several times.]