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Lubavitch library to be transformed

April 29, 2010 10:30
Stacks and shares: Zvi Rabin in the new premises with some of the library’s 15,000 volumes

BySimon Rocker, Simon Rocker

2 min read

The place is overrun with books, scatterered in wobbly towers across tables and too numerous for the stacks that are meant to contain them. For years, a cramped room in Lubavitch HQ in Stamford Hill has been home to the country's largest Jewish lending library.

Threading my way through the narrowest of passages, I am assured by Faigie Rabin - who for many years has guided borrowers to their sought-after volume: "It's nothing like it was two months ago."

That is because the contents are gradually being transferred from their overcrowded conditions to a bigger and brighter new home which will officially open in the summer. The new library, decked out with light blue shelves and mauve armchairs, is located on the first floor of the recently built Lubavitch children centre.

Mrs Rabin's husband, Zvi, a qualified librarian who worked for Tower Hamlets Council, has been the honorary custodian of the books since the Lubavitch library opened 37 years ago. "We started off in a cupboard," he said. "Now we have some 15,000 volumes."