In the face of the worst flooding in Venice since the mid-1960sâcausing two deaths and hundreds of millions of dollars in damageâthe cityâs longtime Chabad-Lubavitch emissaries struggled to save their own facility while reaching out to do what they could to help residents and visitors overcome the catastrophic conditions.
âChabad of Venice is completely flooded,â wrote Shachar Banin, co-director of the Chabad center with her husband, Rabbi Ramy Banin. A video on social media showed water gushing through an open doorway of the centerâs synagogue, where nearly a foot of water covered the floor up to the ark, as an individual struggled to seal the door shut. The Banins, who have served the community for nearly three decades, were doing their best to reach out to community members in a city where even on normal days the only means of transportation is by boat, but âitâs not an easy day to communicate,â the rabbi messaged to Chabad.org.
Amid heavy rains beginning late Tuesday night, floodwaters in the historic Italian city exceeded 6 feet, or 74 inches, representing the second-highest water levels since records began in 1923, just short of the 76 inches measured in 1966. A second deluge inundated the city on Wednesday morning as residents could be seen wading through knee-deep waters inside and outside historic sites and around their homes.
On the island of Pellestrinaâa strip of land that separates the lagoon that Venice sits on from the Adriatic Seaâtwo people died as a result of the flooding. One was electrocuted while trying to start a pump in his home, and another was found dead elsewhere on the island. At the height of high tide, officials reported more than 80 percent of the city under water.
Italyâs Prime Minister Giuseppe Conte declared a state of emergency following a similar action taken by the mayor of Venice, Luigi Brugnaro, describing the flooding as âa blow to the heart of the country.â
âIt hurts to see the city so damaged ... its commercial activities on its knees,â he said. Brugnaro predicted that the damage would run into the âhundreds of millions of euros.â
The city of Venice is made up of more than 100 islands inside a lagoon off the northeast coast of the country, making it vulnerable to yearly flooding and periodic serious damage.
Established by Doge Leonardo Loredan in 1516, the Ghetto of Veniceâwhere Jews were compelled to live under the Venetian Republicâwas one of the worldâs first places where people were forcibly segregated because of their religion. The English word âghettoâ is derived from the Jewish Ghetto in Venice, originating from the Venetian word ghèto and the Italian word ghetto.
Today, the city is home to between 450 and 500 Jews, down from 5,000 residents at its height in the 17th century, though hosts thousands of Jewish tourists who visit each year. The community boasts four other synagogues and the Baninsâ thriving Chabad center, situated within the ghetto. They and another emissary, Rabbi Amichay Rieber, run a yeshivah, restaurant and tourist center, and host weekly Shabbat meals, offer kosher takeout food and provide a wealth of educational information for residents and tourists.
To assist in the recovery efforts, visit the Chabad of Venice page.


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