
Rivka Rubashkin, Boro Park Matriarch Whose Door Was Open to All, Dies
BROOKLYN, N.Y. (VINnews) — Rivka Rubashkin, the matriarch of the Rubashkin family whose home became synonymous with hospitality and charitable giving in Brooklyn’s Boro Park neighborhood, died this week. She was in her late 90s.
Rubashkin was the widow of Avraham Aharon Rubashkin, a pioneer in the kosher meat industry and a founder of the now-defunct Agriprocessors kosher food empire. Together, they built a family whose name became closely associated with philanthropy, community service and support for those in need.
For decades, the Rubashkin home in Boro Park maintained an open-door policy that became legendary in Orthodox Jewish circles. Visitors, yeshiva students, travelers, immigrants and struggling families knew they could find a warm meal, a place to stay or a helping hand. Community members often described the family’s home as a center of chessed, where virtually anyone seeking assistance was welcomed.
Friends and neighbors recalled Rubashkin’s quiet generosity and countless acts of kindness, many of which were carried out privately and without recognition. She was also associated with the family’s longtime kosher restaurant in Boro Park, which became known as a gathering place where no one in need was turned away.
Born in Eastern Europe, Rubashkin survived the turmoil of World War II before eventually settling in New York, where she and her husband helped build one of the most prominent Lubavitch families in the United States.
She is survived by a large family spanning multiple generations, with descendants living throughout the United States and Israel.
Her passing was widely mourned across the Jewish community, where she was remembered not only as the matriarch of a prominent family but as a symbol of generosity, hospitality and devotion to helping others.