The Chabad-affiliated Rabbinical College of America outside of Morristown, N.J., presented certificates to 257 newly ordained rabbis, the majority of whom congregated on Sunday in the leafy suburb with family and friends for what is possibly the largest celebration of its kind in the world this year.

The rabbis, who have graduated from the college within the past four years, received their ordination from a panel that included Rabbi Israel Meir Lau, former Ashkenazi chief rabbi of Israel and current chief rabbi of Tel Aviv. They were joined by nearly 700 guests from 10 states and eight different countries who attended the event under a giant tent on the Rabbinical College grounds. During the ceremony, trustee Ed Mosberg presented a 200-year-old Torah scroll rescued from the Holocaust to the academic institution.

The size of the cohort (second only to the college’s 2012 group of 280 rabbis) is an indicator of Chabad’s robust position as a source of rabbis to Jewish communities around the world, noted Rabbi Moshe Herson, dean and president of the institution. The diverse group of rabbis includes native speakers of English, Hebrew, Spanish, Portuguese, Russian, French, German, Italian and even Swedish.

“They are ready and able to serve virtually every Jewish community in the world,” said Herson.

The Lubavitcher Rebbe—Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory—urged young Chassidim to be certified as rabbis, explaining that they owed it to themselves and to the larger Jewish world. Many of the students will go on to join the 4,450 Chabad rabbis and their wives who serve Jewish communities on six continents.

The Morristown program is one of many Chabad-affiliated institutions that grant semichah to aspiring rabbis, including yeshivahs in Israel; Pretoria, South Africa; Los Angeles; and, of course, the Central Lubavitcher Yeshivah at Lubavitch Word Headquarters in Brooklyn, N.Y.

Rabbi Israel Lau, former Ashkenazi chief rabbi of Israel and current chief rabbi of Tel Aviv. holds a 200-year-old Torah scroll rescued from the Holocaust. He is flanked by Miles Berger, a trustee of the college.
Rabbi Israel Lau, former Ashkenazi chief rabbi of Israel and current chief rabbi of Tel Aviv. holds a 200-year-old Torah scroll rescued from the Holocaust. He is flanked by Miles Berger, a trustee of the college.
Dean of the college Rabbi Moshe Herson, director of Lubavitch of New Jersey, congratulates Ed Mosberg of Parsippany, N.J., a college trustee who presented the Torah scroll.
Dean of the college Rabbi Moshe Herson, director of Lubavitch of New Jersey, congratulates Ed Mosberg of Parsippany, N.J., a college trustee who presented the Torah scroll.