• Skip to main content

The JackB

"When you're in jail, a good friend will be trying to bail you out. A best friend will be in the cell next to you saying, 'Damn, that was fun'." Groucho Marx

  • About Jack
    • Other Places You Can Find Me
  • Contact Me
    • Disclosure
  • Where The Skeletons Are Buried

NY bus converted into oven for matzos

March 27, 2007 by Jack Steiner

Tweet
Share
Pin
Share
0 Shares

Here is some creative thinking you don’t see every day.

SPRING VALLEY, N.Y. – It wasn’t your typical fire. When police responded to a report that something smelled of smoke in the middle of the night, they found an old school bus that had been converted into a supersized oven for Passover matzos — complete with a smokestack, exhaust fans and working fire.

A building inspector said that while the bakery bus wasn’t nearly up to code, it was “very creative.”

The derelict red-and-white bus, connected by a plywood passageway to a single-family house, was out of sight of casual passers-by in a Hasidic Jewish neighborhood and had apparently escaped the notice of authorities.

Its owner, Rabbi Aaron Winternitz, said Monday he had been making the unleavened bread there for three Passovers and was eager to do the same this year, with Passover coming up in a week.

Winternitz made them for his 50-member Congregation Mivtzar Hatorah. Observant Jews eat matzo during Passover week to illustrate how the Jews had no time to let their bread rise as they fled slavery in Egypt.

He said that the oven-in-a-bus was his invention, and that he purposely bought an old school bus because “school buses are made strong and safe.”

Police Sgt. Lou Scorziello said police traced the smoke to the bus at about 3 a.m. Friday. He said the back door of the bus, formerly the emergency exit, was the oven door. “All the seats had been removed and the whole inside was an oven,” he said.

Click here for more information.

(Visited 43 times, 1 visits today)

Share this:

  • Share
  • Reddit
  • Twitter
  • LinkedIn
  • Facebook
  • Pinterest

Filed Under: Holidays, Judaism

There are no comments

Join The Conversation Cancel reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Please wait while you are being authenticated...

  
Please enter an e-mail address

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.

Copyright © 2021 · Author Pro on Genesis Framework · WordPress · Log in