| 
 August 6, 2000 As the two Chabad Yeshiva students Elly Andrusier and Moshe Fox were setting out 
for their journey in the former Yugoslavia in early July, reminders of the 
recent war in the region were everywhere. Indeed, guides had warned them that 
traveling to Jewish communities in Croatia, Serbia, Bosnia and Slovenia required 
great care and that Belgrade itself was still far too dangerous to visit. Taking 
in the bombed out buildings, destroyed railway lines, bullet-pocked homes and 
barbed wire-encroached military posts, the pair saw first hand the devastation 
from the civil war as they moved about seeking out local Jews.  
Each summer, pairs of rabbinical students fan out around the globe to meet with 
Jews in some of the world's most remote locations to help them with pastoral 
services as well as practically -- with books and religious items not easily 
accessible to them throughout the year.  
The community outreach program, known in some circles as the Lubavitch "Summer 
Peace Corps," was developed more than 50 years ago by the Lubavitcher Rebbe, 
Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory. It is sponsored by Merkos 
L'inyonei Chinuch, the educational arm of the Lubavitch movement, and 
coordinated by its staff, who help with travel plans, visas, contacts in various 
countries, and lodging. The volunteer rabbinical students maintain contact with 
the Lubavitch World Headquarters throughout the summer, reporting on their 
progress and seeking assistance when needed.  
Each day of the trip was spent visiting Jewish communities. In Zagreb, Croatia, 
the rabbinical students organized Torah classes; in the coastal town of Rijeka 
they visited the synagogues and spoke with congregants; in Bosnia they toured 
army bases and met Jewish servicemen on duty there.  
Alternating between visits to the large cities and day trips to the small towns 
with as few as a dozen Jews, Andrusier and Fox maneuvered through shelled 
roadways and navigated dozens of local languages, to enhance Jewish life in 
these all but forgotten communities. The travel arrangements and routes had been 
coordinated with Chabad Centers in the cities.  
"We kept having difficulties with our visas because you can never really get 
proper information before you set out," explains Andrusier. "So we utilized each 
delay in our itinerary for a quick visit to this or that village whose Jews we 
might not have had the chance to meet otherwise. It's hard to say who was more 
excited when we greeted them, we or the local community. They couldn't get over 
the idea we had come specifically for them."  "It was in the final hours of the fast on the 17th of Tammuz as we were walking along a deserted street in Sarajevo," relates Moshe Fox. "Someone started shouting and running towards us in an excited manner. Turns out it was a local boy who had just completed his three years in the Israeli army and returned home to visit his elderly parents. He was so overwhelmed to see Chassidic Jews in the midst of his home village that he ran out to greet us..." | 
 
		

