Amid a resplendent display of British pomp and national pride, King Charles III ascended to the throne of England on Shabbat, and Jewish communities throughout the Commonwealth celebrated the coronation with special prayers for his welfare during Shabbat services, followed by expressions of goodwill for the new king.
âItâs a remarkable time for the Jewish people,â said Rabbi Bentzi Sudak, co-director with his wife, Ruchie, of Chabad of Hampstead Garden. Speaking to his congregation in Hampstead on Shabbat, Sudak told them that âwe need to stop and focus on how blessed we are.â
âItâs easy to get so distracted and feel so pulled down by antisemitism that we don't enjoy the unprecedented special times that we have, he told Chabad.org. âThis coronation is a great time to be reminded of how fortunate we areâwe have a king who is going out of his way to accommodate and welcome the Jewish people.â
Sudak noted how Charles hosted Chief Rabbi Sir Ephraim Mirvis in his own home so that he could attend the coronation on Shabbat and had the microphones turned off when the rabbi spoke. âIf you think about some of the previous coronations in England, like the coronation of Richard the Lionhearted in 1189 where mobs murdered 30 Jews, they were catastrophic for the Jewish people.â
An Invitation to Jewish Community Leaders
In Birmingham, Chabad of the Midlands emissaries Rochel Jacobs and her husband, Rabbi Yossi Jacobs, Chief Minister of Birmingham Hebrew Congregation, reflected on their personal interactions with the new king and his thoughtfulness towards the Jewish population. The Jacobses, who had previously been invited to Buckingham Palace to a royal garden party in honor of Queen Elizabethâs Jubilee, were invited to come again on Wednesday before the kingâs coronation.
At the garden party, The rabbi told the monarch that he and his congregation would be praying for him at their 166-year-old synagogue, known informally as the Singers Hill Shul, the Midlandsâ oldest and largest congregation, and King Charles replied that Shabbat âwas the wrong day of the weekâ for a coronation. As promised, a large congregation attended services on Shabbat and recited a special prayer in the kingâs honor. The synagogue was also decorated specially for the occasion and hosted a âCoronation kiddush.â
âKing Charles was actually the first royal to ever attend the installation of a chief rabbi,â Rachel Jacobs remarked. âHe was in attendance when Rabbi Lord Jonathan Sacks inducted Chief Rabbi Mirvis. He was also the first royal to visit Israel and is now showing strong support for the Jewish community, and we all feel and appreciate it.â
Following Rabbi Sacksâs passing, Charles eulogized him as âa close friend and personal advisor for many years.â
At the garden party, the Jacobses blessed the new king, âWe wish him the strength to rule over the country with wisdom, and with the royal stature with which his mother set a splendid example, as a defender of all faiths. And that he have the energy and stamina and the wisdom to be able to inspire a country at large, which requires tremendous leadership.â
Sudak added a blessing that God give him a successful reign of good health and peace of mind. âAnd may his reign be known as a prosperous, peaceful time for the world, for England, for the country, for the Jewish people and for his family.â
Congratulations From Canberra to the Caribbean
In Melbourne, Rabbi Shmuel Feldman remarked that the Australian Jewish community feels the same warmth to the new king and appreciates his efforts to protect minority communities like their own. On Shabbat, he led his congregation in the special prayer for the new king, composed by the Chief Rabbinate of the United Kingdom.
âWe prayed that the Almighty King of Kings gives King Charles a lot of success in doing the good work that he has done over the years in serving the Commonwealth and that he may continue to do so for many years to come, in good health and success and happiness.â
In the Cayman Islands, a British Overseas territory in the Western Caribbean, the locals feel a special relationship after King Charles and Queen Camilla paid a visit in 2019.
The Chabad Cayman Jewish Community Center, led by Rabbi Berel and Rikal Pewzner, held a special Shabbat service with a packed crowd, alongside a bar mitzvah boy.
âWe recited special prayers in honor of the Coronation of King Charles III,â Pewzner told Chabad.org. âWe pray that King Charlesâ reign be lengthy and prosperous, and may Hashem guide him to continue to seek the betterment of our world, bringing us closer to the era of Moshiach.â
Reflecting on the event, with all the royal pomp and ceremony, Rachel Jacobs hopes that people are inspired to find their own inner royalty and ability to inspire and uplift those around them.
âWe all have a spark of royalty inside of us, and can rule over ourselves in a way that we pull others up and encourage everyone to stand tall and make a better world.â



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