Yes, Miky, There Are Rabbis in Montana

Big Don

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Yes, Miky, There Are Rabbis in Montana

By ERIC A. STERNDecember 5, 2009
Religion Journal
The New York Times Excerpt:


HELENA, Mont. — In Montana, a rabbi is an unusual sight. So when a Hasidic one walked into the State Capitol last December, with his long beard, black hat and long black coat, a police officer grabbed his bomb-sniffing German shepherd and went to ask the exotic visitor a few questions.
Though there are few Jews in Montana today, there once were many. In the late 19th century, there were thriving Jewish populations in the mining towns, where Jews emigrated to work as butchers, clothiers, jewelers, tailors and the like.
The city of Butte had kosher markets, a Jewish mayor, a B’nai B’rith lodge and three synagogues. Helena, the capital city, had Temple Emanu-El, built in 1891 with a seating capacity of 500. The elegant original facade still stands, but the building was sold and converted to offices in the 1930s, when the congregation had dwindled to almost nothing, the Jewish population having mostly assimilated or moved on to bigger cities.
There is a Jewish cemetery in Helena, too, with tombstones dating to 1866. But more Jews are buried in Helena than currently live here.
And yet, in a minor revival, Montana now has three rabbis, two in Bozeman and one (appropriately) in Whitefish. They were all at the Capitol on the first night of Hannukah last year to light a menorah in the ornate Capitol rotunda, amid 100-year-old murals depicting Sacajawea meeting Lewis and Clark, the Indians beating Custer, and the railway being built. The security officer and the dog followed the rabbi into the rotunda, to size him up.
<<SNIP>>

&#8220;I&#8217;m Officer John Fosket of the Helena Police,&#8221; he said. &#8220;This is Miky, our security dog. Do you mind if I ask you a few questions?&#8221;
Miky, pronounced Mikey, is in a Diaspora of his own. He was born in an animal shelter in Holland and shipped as a puppy to Israel, where he was trained by the Israeli Defense Forces to sniff out explosives. Then one day, Miky got a plane ticket to America. Rather than spend the standard $20,000 on a bomb dog, the Helena Police Department had shopped around and discovered that it could import a surplus bomb dog from the Israeli forces for the price of the flight. So Miky came to his new home in Helena, to join the police force.
The problem, the officer explained, was that Miky had been trained entirely in Hebrew.

END EXCERPT
Read the whole article, it is entertaining and the last sentence is a thing of beauty.

CORRECT LINK
 
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girlbug2

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The link goes to a window that asks me for a member id to log in...I'd love to read the whole thing, but I'm not a member.
 

Tez3

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Aw, bless, that's a nice story! cheers for that.
 

Jenny_in_Chico

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My sister's dog is a Chihuahua rescue from Mexico City. She responds to Spanish and English. It's sad that a dogin our family is bilingual but I'm not.
 

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