By Brian J. Varela – Ventura County Star
Rabbi Dov Muchnik moved from class to class at Lamplighters Jewish Academy in Oxnard with a ram’s horn in hand Wednesday morning.
Jewish communities customarily sound the horn, called a shofar, each day for a month leading up to Rosh Hashanah — the Jewish New Year ― in mid-September.
The quick and long blasts Muchnik produced were almost drowned out by the remaining construction on the school’s new building.
Chabad of Oxnard Jewish Center, which oversees the academy, held a grand opening on Aug. 27 for their new facility at 2860 Harbor Blvd. in Channel Islands Harbor. It combines the Jewish community center and the academy under one large roof.
The building, at about 10,000 square feet, is an upgrade over the center’s previous 2,000-square-foot facility at Hollywood Beach.
The event also marked the center’s 20th anniversary of strengthening and growing the local Jewish community.
“My mission has always been to try to bring every Jew closer to their roots,” Muchnik said.
Chabad of Oxnard is part of a worldwide movement that promotes a traditional Judaic lifestyle, similar to Orthodox Judaism, said Cheri Dekofsky, executive director of the Jewish Federation of Ventura County.
The center is a synagogue for local families and visitors throughout Ventura and Santa Barbara counties and the Conejo Valley, Muchnik said. It’s also a place for spiritual growth and learning and acts as a venue for weddings and guest speakers.
Small start
Muchnik opened the Jewish center in May 2003 in his Oxnard apartment with his wife, Racheli.
After two years, the center moved to a larger Oxnard facility to accommodate the growing congregation. It moved again seven years later to the Hollywood Beach site, where the Lamplighters Academy was housed in a similar-sized building near the harbor.
Chabad of Oxnard now operates out of a spacious two-story facility that overlooks docks studded with masts from an array of ships. The synagogue is regularly visited by about 100 families.
Shalom Loschak, a 13-year-old Lamplighters student from Goleta, called the new building beautiful and said he enjoys the view.
He’s currently studying the Talmud, a collection of Jewish commentaries and stories, in Hebrew and Aramaic. Despite the difficulty of the subject, Loschak said he likes his classes and plans to take advantage of his last year in the academy.
In the mornings, students from first through twelfth grades learn about Judaism, prayer and Jewish history, ethics and laws. The students get their general studies education through a charter school, which the academy facilitates in the afternoons.
Yaffa Muchnick, the rabbi’s daughter, enrolled in the academy in sixth grade and graduated in 2021. She said the academy gave her the independence to study what she wanted and prepared her for life after graduation. She went to seminary school in Israel and Brooklyn and has recently been volunteering at the academy.
“There’s a warm, loving environment here that you don’t find in all schools,” the 20-year-old said.
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