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Abu Dhabi wedding a landmark event in Arab world

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Rabbi Levi Duchman and Lea Hadad were married this month in Abu Dhabi, capital of the United Arab Emirates, surrounded by 1,500 guests from around the world — including Emirati royals, prominent rabbis, dignitaries and much of the country’s burgeoning Jewish community. 

Hundreds of local Jews and Arabs, for whom this was the first Jewish wedding ever experienced, were in attendance.

The wedding, the largest Jewish event in the Arabian Gulf in recent history, was held in Abu Dhabi’s Hilton Yas Island and catered by the hotel’s team of international chefs. Kosher certification was provided by EAKC (Emirates Agency for Kosher Certification), the sole government-certified koshers upervision agency, which was founded by the groom, who is the Chabad-Lubavitch emissary to the UAE.

Ahead of, and since, the signing of the Abraham Accords in the fall of 2020, the availability of Jewish amenities in the UAE has greatly enhanced. Dozens of young children attend Mini Miracles, the country’s first Jewish school, while dozens of other children attend a Talmud Torah. Both the grades and enrollment are expected to expand year over year in the near future. There is a well-trafficked mikvah, completed last year in Dubai.

With kosher certification and supplies available, privately owned kosher restaurants and caterers have begun to pop up. Many hotels now offer kosher catering and room service, something not often available outside of Israel. There are daily and weekly Torah classes and prayer services held across Dubai and Abu Dhabi.

Jews from around the world are finding the UAE a viable place to visit and live because of the growing Jewish infrastructure that Rabbi Duchman helped create, and the kosher options now available as a result.

The Jewish community enjoys strong support from UAE leadership and openly celebrates Jewish life and holidays.

The bride is the daughter of Rabbi Menachem and Batcheva Hadad, Chabad emissaries to Brussels, where her father serves as chief rabbi. Her grandparents, Rabbi Yeshua and Rachel Hadad, served for decades as Chabad emissaries to Milan, where her grandfather was the leader of the Sephardic Jewish community, sent there by the Rebbe in 1961 before he was married.

“As the child of Chabad emissaries, I grew up in an open home,” says the bride. “People would come at all times for a meal or just for support, and I plan to do the same in Abu Dhabi.”

Hadad received her primary Jewish education in Antwerp, followed by three years at the BMC Center, a seminary in Sainte Agathe, Quebec, near Montreal. After graduation, she returned to Brussels, where she assisted her father in providing kosher certification in the city and ran a host of communal programs.

The groom, 29, is the son of Rabbi Sholom and Feige Duchman. His maternal great-grandparents, Rabbi Bentzion and Golda Shemtov, were longstanding Chabad emissaries in the USSR and then the United Kingdom. They had married impoverished, in Siberia, where Rabbi Shemtov just finished four years of harsh labor as a punishment for the crime of teaching Judaism. A bent spoon served as the improvised wedding band, which stands in stark contrast to the wedding of their great-grandson.

The groom’s father, Rabbi Sholom Duchman was appointed as the director of Colel Chabad by the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson zt”l. Colel Chabad was founded in 1788 by Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, the first Chabad Rebbe, and is the longest-operating charity in the Holy Land. Today, it is the largest food-security organization in Israel.

Since his teens, Rabbi Duchman has been finding creative ways to engage Jews around Jewish practice and life, and with relatives serving in Chabad emissaries all over the world, it was only natural for him to spread his wings and find a place to do the same.

Having learned Arabic while assisting his sister and brother-in-law, Chabad emissaries in Morocco, he moved to the Emirates  in 2014 and has since seen the Jewish community become the Arab world’s fastest-growing community.