Tens of thousands of Hasidic Jews flood tiny Hungarian town for ‘miracle rabbi’ pilgrimage

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HUNGARY (JTA) — As many as 50,000 Jews traveled to a Hungarian town for the anniversary of a noted rabbi’s death this week, marking significant growth for the annual pilgrimage and generating what the town’s mayor called “culture shock” for non-Jewish locals.

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Since the fall of communism in 1989, Jewish pilgrims have been visiting Bodrogkeresztur, known as Kerestir in Yiddish, in April, timed to the death of Rabbi Yeshaya Steiner, a Hasidic rabbi known as Reb Shayele whom some believe had special powers. The number of pilgrims has swelled in recent years, thanks in part to efforts by the rabbi’s descendants to elevate his profile.

The estimated 50,000 visitors this year — other estimates placed the number lower, but still in the tens of thousands — would be over 60 times the number of the town’s year-round population. It also would likely set a new record for a Jewish pilgrimage in Europe, outpacing even the famed gatherings in Uman, Ukraine, at the grave of Rabbi Nachman of Breslov.

“It’s all a bit surreal,” Istvan Rozgonyi, mayor of the town in northeast Hungary, told Agence France-Presse this week. “Christians and Jews co-existed peacefully here for centuries, but the sudden influx in the last decade of so many foreign Jews has been a culture shock for some locals.”

In fact, Kerestir has not had a significant Jewish population since 1944, when the town’s Jews were murdered in the Holocaust. Some of Reb Shayale’s family members were among them, though the rabbi himself died in 1925 and others in his family, including a brother and some of his children, had previously made their way to the United States, where his brother’s Staten Island grave is a pilgrimage site of its own.

Reb Shayele is considered in some Hasidic circles to be a “miracle rabbi” who had supernatural powers of healing. He also famously advised a follower about how to rid his granary of mice, leading to the practice of affixing a picture of the “Mouser Rabbi” in one’s home to keep mice away.

“People call me every day to ask if I have the power from my grandfather,” Israel Grosz, the rabbi’s grandson and oldest living relative, told AFP.

Grosz lives in the United States. He believes, as many of the pilgrims do, that access to Reb Shayele’s powers is strongest at his grave. Many of the Jewish pilgrims to Kerestir, mostly but not exclusively men who gather in the town a few days before the anniversary of his death, go to the grave to ask for help with personal issues or for blessings. They visit his former house and the local Jewish cemetery where he is buried.

In recent decades, family members have worked to build up a Jewish infrastructure in Kerestir. They purchased the family’s home and erected a permanent tent over Reb Shayele’s grave, then bought the building next door to serve as a guesthouse. During the pilgrimage season, they add more tents to accommodate visitors to the grave and run shuttles to and from the airport in Budapest. Dozens of buildings in the town of about 1,100 have been purchased by people affiliated with the pilgrimage.

United Hatzalah, a Jewish emergency service based in Israel, sent a delegation to Kerestir. It treated well over 100 people this week, mostly for minor injuries and illnesses, it said in a press release.

The influx briefly changes the town — police had to close it off for three days so fleets of buses full of Jewish pilgrims from across the globe could proceed through its narrow streets — and has induced tensions among locals who are divided on whether the pilgrimage is good for Bodrogkeresztur.

“They should go back to where they came from. I do not care that they used to live here,” one woman told the Christian Science Monitor in early 2020, arguing that Jews were driving up housing costs by buying buildings to serve as guesthouses. Another villager disagreed, telling the outlet, “They have the right to be here as their ancestors were unjustly taken away and killed in 1944.”

Orthodox Jews make other yearly pilgrimages to the burial sites of prominent rabbis across Europe, including in Turkey and elsewhere in Hungary. The most prominent of the pilgrimage sites is Uman, where the Rosh Hashanah event is known as a raucous affair. It took place last year despite the dangers of the Russia-Ukraine war and against the wishes of authorities, with a lower-than-usual number of visitors.

The highest estimate for Uman attendance was 40,000, in 2018. This week’s Kerestir pilgrimage could have topped that, according to its organizers.

“We are proud that more people than ever came to Hungary this year to commemorate my grandfather’s memory and his influential teachings,” Menachem Mendel Rubin, who organized the event from his home in the United States, said in a press release. He thanked local police and the Hungarian government for their support.

As large as this year’s pilgrimage was, it’s unlikely to be the largest: Organizers expect record crowds in two years, for the 100th anniversary of Reb Shayele’s death.


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26 Comments
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5TResident
Noble Member
5TResident
1 year ago

Not to take anything away from R’ Shayele, A”H, but this “special powers” stuff bothers me. Moshe Rabbeinu, the greatest tzaddik and Navi in the history of the Jewish people, had no special powers; everything he was able to do came from Hashem. I don’t think it’s right to believe that any human being has special powers.

Tales
Tales
1 year ago

Not taking anything away from these holy places , but in the last few decades the travel industries figured out a PR campaign to make a dollar. This big business wasn’t around even 40 years ago.

skipp
skipp
1 year ago

As my Rosh Yeshiva once said, “Abi nisht leren”, that’s all.

lazerx
lazerx
1 year ago

I don’t know why people go to visit countries that were helpful to the Nazis. Why give them our money? The antisemites are still there and living in the stolen properties from the Jews who were killed.

Caveat emptor
Caveat emptor
1 year ago

From the photos and video that I saw, it doesn’t seem that 50,000 were there. Not even close.

Anonymous
Anonymous
1 year ago

The population of the town being around 1000, every person who travels should give $5 for the inconvenience of the locals. Each town person would get $250, which is a lot of money. It would show our hakoros Hatov, keep the tzion safer throughout the year, and would not add so much more to the cost of the trip. Show them you care and it will go a long way!

Last edited 1 year ago by Anonymous
Avi
Avi
1 year ago

1stly, the main street was only closed 1 day. Secondly, at most there was 15-20,000 Jewish participant …far less than expressed above. I attend both Uman and Kerister every year and you can not even compare the crowds.. Thirdly, at most there were 15-20 people who sought medical attention…all minor except for 2 car accidents which were dealt with outside of Kerister…get facts straight before going to print!!!!

Please Explain
Please Explain
1 year ago

A rabbi’s “special powers” are found “stronger at his grave”? And we wonder about secular Jews being OTD? Gevalt…

Ruby
Ruby
1 year ago

A few thoughts
Klal yisroel is not crazy.. anyone that has gone will tell you they have good intentions and felt a hisorerus.
Why davka by this tzadik thats from shomayim not ads in a paper.
Finally all this running is symbolic of the terrible matzav hador that along with so much shefa there is so much need and suffering in so many areas of yahadus.. and yidden are desperate for yeshuos biprat ubichlal

Moi
Moi
1 year ago

I was there

Triumphinwhitehouse
Triumphinwhitehouse
1 year ago

Reb shayale was a tzadik

shloime
shloime
1 year ago

call it “bodrog”, because “keresztúr” isn’t something that a frum yid should be saying.

Last edited 1 year ago by voros
A concerned yid
A concerned yid
1 year ago

If this us a frum site ,please edit accordingly. ” pilgrimage” ? Etc?…