It is with great sadness that Matzav.com reports the petirah of Mrs. Rivka Rubashkin a”h, the revered matriarch of the Rubashkin family whose Brooklyn home served as a beacon of hospitality, generosity, and compassion for generations. She was in her late nineties.
For decades, Mrs. Rubashkin was a familiar and beloved presence in Boro Park, where she and her husband created an environment defined by Torah values, Chassidus, and extraordinary devotion to helping others. Countless guests, neighbors, bochurim, and families in need found a welcoming home and a caring heart under her roof.
Mrs. Rubashkin was married to Reb Avraham Aharon Rubashkin OBM, the pioneering force in the kosher meat industry, noted philanthropist, and patriarch of a large Lubavitch family. Reb Avraham Aharon passed away in 2020 after a lifetime of communal leadership and generosity. Together, the couple became known for opening their home and extending assistance to anyone who needed support.
Born Rivka Chazanov, a member of the renowned Chein family from Nevel, she escaped the Nazi invasion of her hometown in July 1941. She later married Reb Avraham Aharon in Samarkand, Uzbekistan, where many refugees from the Soviet Union had sought safety during the war years.
Following the end of World War II, the family made its way out of the Soviet Union through Lemberg. After spending a period in Austria, they eventually established themselves in Paris in 1947.
Their journey continued in 1953 when they immigrated to New York. There, Reb Avraham Aharon and his partner, Reb Alter Lieberman, launched Lieberman & Rubashkin Glatt Kosher Butchers on 14th Avenue in Boro Park, a business that would later become widely known as Rubashkin’s.
While her husband was building enterprises that helped reshape the American kosher food market, Mrs. Rubashkin focused on building a home that became synonymous with warmth, kindness, and unwavering hospitality.
Throughout the years, she earned a reputation as someone who never turned away a visitor. Whether the person at her door was a yeshiva bochur, a neighbor, a traveler, or someone facing difficult circumstances, they were received with sincerity and care. Many of her acts of kindness were performed quietly and remained known only to those she helped.
She also became a well-known figure through Crown’s Deli on 13th Avenue, which she operated beginning in the early 1960s. Although the establishment was technically a family-run business, many remembered it as a center of chessed rather than a restaurant. People in need could always count on receiving a meal, regardless of whether they could afford to pay. Despite operating for decades, the deli, which ultimately closed in the late 2000s, was never profitable.
Her commitment to helping others reached far beyond her immediate circle. Alongside her husband, she supported numerous Torah institutions, charitable organizations, and communal initiatives. The couple regularly assisted struggling families, recent immigrants, widows, yeshiva students, and many others confronting hardship. In countless cases, beneficiaries never learned who had provided the assistance. People from every background knew that the Rubashkin home was a place where they could find food, lodging, encouragement, and a sense of belonging.
Mrs. Rubashkin is survived by her children: Mrs. Gitel Goldman of Miami Beach, Florida; Mrs. Sara Balkany of Boro Park; Mrs. Rochel Leah Rosenfeld of Tzfas; Reb Yossi Rubashkin of Crown Heights; Reb Moshe Rubashkin of Crown Heights; Reb Sholom Mordechai Rubashkin of Jackson, New Jersey; Mrs. Chayala Gourarie of Crown Heights; Reb Heshy Rubashkin of Postville, Iowa; and Mrs. Chana Zelda Minkowicz of Crown Heights. She is also survived by numerous grandchildren, great-grandchildren, and great-great-grandchildren.
She is additionally survived by her brother, Meir Simcha Chazanow, and her sister, Rochel Leah Dagan. She was predeceased by her sisters, Basya Kalmenson and Miriam Chazanow.
The levayah is taking place now at 5500 15th Avenue in Boro Park.
Yehi zichrah boruch.
{Matzav.com}