by Dovid Zaklikowski, lubavitch.com
When Rabbi Shalom Mendel Kalmanson approached the city of Aubervilliers in 1963, seeking permits to open a new Jewish day school, Jack Ralite, then the city’s minister of education and a member of the French Communist Party, foreswore any such development: “In Aubervilliers there will be no private Jewish day school.”
Last week, when the city affixed the sign of a new street named Rue Mendel Kalmanson for the rabbi who passed away in 2011, the local Jewish community saw it is as confirmation of Kalmanson’s life work promoting Jewish education.
Ralite, who used his influence with the various government offices to block the opening of the school, underestimated Kalmanson. A survivor of communism with unflagging conviction, he worked relentlessly, refusing to let up until the Jewish day school opened.
“My father was a soldier. When he believed in something, he would not give up until he saw it fulfilled, no matter how long it took and how difficult it was,” says Haya Nisilevitch, Kalmanson’s daughter and today, the director of the Chne-Or Day School.
After much effort and political haggling, Kalmanson acquired the permits, and then the premises for the new Jewish day school. His challenges far from over as municipal authorities put roadblocks in the way of the school’s growth, withholding the sale of government land near the school, Kalmanson maneuvered the obstacle course laid out for him by his opponents.
He purchased homes and rented space to house additional classes in the growing school. In the early 1980’s he purchased a large parcel of land with a vision for a new school building. Again, the city refused to grant him building permits to allow him to proceed, and the land stood vacant, as Kalmanson continued tirelessly.
In April 2002, after local Muslim extremists burned down two buses that were parked on the vacant premises, things began to turn. With the spotlight on the school, Ralite, by then Aubervilliers’ mayor who 40 years earlier predicted that there will be no Jewish school in the Paris suburb, signed the permits to build the large building complex. The building was completed in 2003; Kalmanson, now well into his 80s, had prevailed.
Today the large educational complex Chne-Or Day School counts 650 students. The Jewish community, no stranger to the curse of anti-Semitism, has had blessed quiet in recent years, with local Jews out and about wearing their identity fearlessly.
To be sure, apprehension has crept into the local Jewish community following the terror attacks in Paris, and while there’s been no noticeable move on the part of Aubervilliers’s Jews to leave, they have, says Nisilevitch, been transferring their children to Jewish schools where they feel they will be safer than in public schools.
After Kalmenson’s passing in 2011 at the age of ninety, the Aubervilliers Mayor Jacques Salvator proposed naming a new street under construction near the school building for the city’s long time Jewish educator.
“A man who dedicated close to fifty years to our city on behalf of kindness, education and care for others, should be honored with a street named after him,” Salvator told the city council. The name was approved and the street sign was installed last week.
“My father stood up to local government for his values and principles, for his love of Jewish education. And now they are honoring him for that,” says Nisilevitch. “When I look at the sign, I see a reminder that we should stand up for what is right, and ultimately we will be successful in our mission.”
Really really nice.
Incredible!!
Every community should emulate the achdus and passion this community has! The Shluchim are so dedicated and loving and instill a love for yidishkeit and the REBBE ingrained in all that pass through. Thank you Kalmanson family and the other shluchim families involved!
The most interesting and well written articles come from lubavitch.com. Great website. Thank you collive for sharing.
was such a special man!!! Everyone in auberville looked up to him and admired him
i am very proud of my brother in law he is a real tzaddic i grew up knowing him and how much he helped me may he bring Moshiach now
I went to that school in 1982-1983 I was 11-12 years old.
It was the beginning of my exposure to Yidishkeit.
I have such fond memories of Rabbi Kalmenson and his entire family and of course Morah Chaya. They are soooo dedicated and kind. Rabbi Kalmenson was the one who read the letter I had received from the Rebbe for my Bar Mitzvah. Now my family is on Shlichus!