LONG READS Issue 902 · March 9, 2022

Nest of Golden Eggs

Shlomo Simcha and his seven brothers pay musical tribute to their father

Nest of Golden Eggs
Photos: Family archives

But one recent production stands out, both for its charm and its message. While this wasn’t a debut album for British-born veteran Jewish music star Shlomo Simcha Sufrin (that happened back in 1993 with “That Special Melody), he and his seven brothers recently released an inspiring and visually stunning video of Yigal Calek’s 1974 Pirchei Yerushalayim classic “Kan Tzipor” about the mitzvah of shiluach hakein, the Torah’s directive to send away the mother bird before taking her young or her eggs. With a technology-generated animated background and motion graphics of mountains, waterfalls, and fields, the voices of all of these musically-talented siblings blend in sweet harmony.

Yet that’s not why eight busy brothers across three continents — involved in business, rabbanus, shlichus, chazzanus, and Jewish music — got together for Shlomo Simcha’s latest production. Shlomo Simcha has released ten solo albums and has collaborated or been featured on at least two dozen more in his nearly three-decades-long career, but this one is different: It’s a family video created as a tribute to their father, Rabbi Mordechai Sufrin a”h, a fiery Yid and legendary mechanech — and someone who had a strong affinity for the special mitzvah of shiluach hakein, often having witnessed miraculous results through it. Rabbi Sufrin passed away five years ago on parshas Ki Seitzei, the sedrah in which the mitzvah appears.

Ultimate Connector

It was Rabbi Sufrin’s first day teaching at King David High School in Manchester. The class was a challenging bunch with a dubious reputation of dispatching their teachers within the first couple of days.

But today, pondered the principal, something seemed different. The usual stream of delinquent pupils making their way to his office hadn’t materialized, and neither had the teacher turned up to quit. What was wrong?

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