Rabbi Chaim Bergstein strives to live a Torah life, inspired by the late Lubavitch leader. LYNNE MEREDITH COHN STAFF WRITER ronment of non-belief. Even in yeshiva, similar in Detroit. But Bergstein was why I should believe was never discussed," wrong. "Here, you had to create the interest, he says. The Torah "sounds like antiquat- ed lore, [but it is] a lot more than just sto- knock on doors. A lot of people didn't think ries — there's a whole spiritual dynamic." we could succeed," he recalls. As a Lubavitcher, Rabbi Bergstein has Until Bais Chabad of Farmington Hills spent his life trying to reach out to unin- opened in late 1986, Bergstein led daven- volved or unaffiliated Jews. He says it is a ing in his basement. And it has not been challenge "to rejuvenate the next genera- easy. "When I advertised, I found out it was tion." But to an extent, the Lubavitchers illegal [to have a synagogue in a home]. I have done it. "They used to make fun of Lubavitch- didn't know. The zoning board came and ers, the Orthodox, the black hatters. Now tried to close us down. It was fun — but at there are over 100,000 ba'ale teshuvah (re- the time it didn't feel like fun." When they were about to open the shul turnees to the faith) all over the world. It on Middlebelt Road in Farmington Hills, really started with the rebbe," he says. The rebbe in his a neighbor opposed the Lubavitch pres- lifethhe, and by some ence. 'The woman took us to court every Rabbi Chaim Bergstein: since his death, was second week; the police would dismiss it. It is a challenge "to revered by many ob- It's sort of a miracle that we got it. The day rejuvenate the next servant Jews as the we got approval from the zoning board, the generation." Moshiach (Messiah). lady across the street put her house up for "We have the ability to communicate the sale." Some neighbors thought the synagogue Torah to our friends, those we have con- tact with. The rebbe said this is for every- would "make an unpresentable property at the opening to the subdivision. It's a very one," Bergstein says. residential neighborhood; they thought we "It's not just Lubavitch — it's Torah." Bergstein grew up in yeshivas in Brook- would make it dumpy," he recalls. The Bergsteins now have seven children, lyn, followed by a brief stint at Brooklyn College and ultimately studied in yeshiva ranging in age from 12 to 26, and five in Israel. While there, he lived in Kfar grandchildren. Since the rebbe's death in 1994, Berg- Chabad, the Village of Chabad, between stein says ithas been "lonely" — although Lod and Tel Aviv. He was in Israel for four years, includ- he had mininilal contact with the revered ing during the Six-Day War. "We were get- Lubavitch leader during his lifetime — ting letters from the State Department "just the actual smile, occasionally, was saying they could not be responsible for sufficient to be inspired for a long time. "All of us had to do a lot of soul-search- our safety, get out as soon as possible," he recalls. 'The rebbe said there was nothing ing. The messages of the rebbe, what we dedicated our lives to, continue — in to worry about, stay and study." The group of about 33 young men of greater measure because we have to do it which Bergstein was a part, all with for- on our own. You will see as time goes on the amount of hours and intensity of aim eign passports, remained. "I witnessed not only the miracle of the of the rebbe to bring yiddishkeit to all Jews Six-Day War, but was there when they will increase," Bergstein says. "I've seen an intensity among my col- opened the Kotel [Western Wall of the tem- ple in Jerusalem]," Bergstein recalls. 'The leagues, no less," since his death. 'The pass- sports fan in me [was thrilled] to be there." ing of the rebbe only intensified our people and achieving the goals set forth by "We studied all night on Shavuos, went resolve." "The challenge of each Jewish person the late Lubavitcher Rebbe Menachem to the mikvah, that's when they opened has to be viewing himself as the last Jew- Schneerson. [the Western Wall] for the first time to the A framed black and white picture of the public. I was there, among the first ish person on earth, that survival depends on him, [that he has] the power to recre- rebbe sits on his desk. The walls of Rabbi minyanim." A few weeks later, he trekked to the ate Jewish life." Bergstein's basement office in Bais Chabad He tells the story of Rabbi Mendel Futer- of Farmington Hills are bare. Seated at his Tomb of the Patriarchs — another first. desk, the rabbi can look out onto a green That visit, Bergstein says, "was much more fas, who left the Soviet Union a hunted yard, complete with swing set and pine emotional — I identify much more with man because he had built secret yeshiv- as behind the Iron Curtain. Futerfas spoke people than with things. trees. • Back in the United States, Bergstein very little English, but on a trip from Lon- the rebbe was a man of God," he "I know met his wife on a "standard shidduch don to New York in 1964, he sat beside an says. He grows excited talking about the com- [matchmaking]," and they married in 1970. English-speaking man. The rabbi held his tefillin and tallit bag o, puter codes that have been used to find For six years, they lived in Boston, where C knowledge of political and secular events he taught in a Lubavitch yeshiva. In 1977, on his lap the entire flight. The man be- (rabbinic ordination). side him eyed the bag every so often, but _ he received smicha hidden in the Torah. "The rabbis have told us for thousands In November of that year, Bergstein they could not communicate verbally. Fi- of years that the Torah has all the knowl- moved his family to suburban Detroit to nally, the rabbi said, "I Jew, you Jew," = edge," he says.`As we became more so- start up a Lubavitch presence in the sub- pointing to the other man. "I tefillin, you CD = phisticated, [we] challenged [that notion]. urbs. teen•" That day, the man donned tefillin for a "I didn't realize just how assimilated peo- Along came a rabbi with a long beard dis- cussing codes. Later came computer analy- ple were in the suburbs," he recalls. "I had the first time in 40 years, Bergstein says. "If I can leave a message, it is: 'I Jew, 1 helped start a shul in Boston, was the spir- sis — it's not just arbitrary. 'We have been brought up in an envi- itual leader there." He thought it would be you Jew, I,Torah, you Torah." 0 Rebb y ou wouldn't know from looking at Rabbi Chaim Bergstein that behind his long white beard and heavy black coat hides a wealth of sports trivia. His striking blue eyes dance when he talks about his favorite baseball player, Brooklyn Dodgers first baseman Gil Hodges, whom the rabbi claims deserves to be in the Hall of Fame. As a child in Brooklyn, Rabbi Bergman took to the streets for punchball or stick- ball. By sixth grade, his yeshiva erected a basketball hoop, and "I was smitten," he recalls. A love of sports "has been with me all my life." He has seen the Tigers, Lions, Pis- tons and Red Wings play, although he no longer watches sports on TV. Now, he uses the tube only to watch videos, but the sports interest remains, albeit latent. But the rabbi's days of keeping dose tabs on sports are long gone. Today, he is more concerned with the future of the Jewish • • "