Raymond the Barber clipped his celebrity career for spiritual heights
Raymond (Refael Aryeh) Cohen a”h, or Raymond the Barber as he was known in the Sephardic community, was a man of many facets.
Fearless yet softhearted, an Ashkenazi from birth who lived as a Sephardi, an artist and a businessman, a loyal friend and fearsome enemy. For almost 20 years he owned Manhattan’s largest, most glamorous beauty salon, enjoying the fame and fortune that came with hobnobbing with celebrities. But when his rabbi told him that a women’s salon wasn’t an appropriate business for him or his sons, he walked away and never looked back.
The word in Hebrew for a barber is “sapar,” which shares a root with sefer, a Torah book; and sippur, a story. Raymond, who passed away at age 80 last year on 9 Adar II, left celebrity hairdressing for a life of Torah and seforim, becoming the stuff not only of sippurim, but legends. Known for his impeccable dress, charisma, and charming British accent (“He could make reading the phone book sound interesting,” says Rabbi David Ozeri, the rav of Yad Yosef Torah Center), he was also a six-foot-tall tough guy, always ready to face down any bad guy, whether criminals, bullies, or neo-Nazis.
More importantly, he was a powerhouse of chesed. Raymond was a fierce advocate for the elderly, and in the context of his work he got to know Rabbi Menachem Horowitz of Chayim Aruchim, the organization that helps the elderly and their families navigate end-of-life care. Perhaps Rabbi Horowitz puts it best when he says, “When people asked Raymond, ‘What do you do?’ he’d answer, ‘I do whatever people need me to do.’ ”
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