Rabbi David Halpern, the longest serving rabbi in Brooklyn at a single synagogue, passed away on Shabbos at age 87.

Halpern was the founding rabbi of the Flatbush Park Jewish Center, where he served for 60 years.

In 1952 he started out in Brooklyn as the temporary leader of a fledgling synagogue that met in an Avenue N storefront after being newly ordained as a rabbi by Yeshiva University’s Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary.

At 23 he found himself in an area that could barely scrape together a daily minyan, but it began to grow with the promise of affordable homes and the influx of World War II survivors looking to start over in New York.

When Halpern’s congregants voted to go down the path of Orthodoxy as opposed to Conservative Judaism, he stayed with the congregation instead going to study in an Israeli yeshiva that had offered him a scholarship.

“I would have handed in my resignation,” Rabbi Halpern said, referring to the synagogue’s vote.

In 1956 Rabbi Halpern began serving in the 71st Infantry, 42nd Rainbow Division in the New York National Guard, reporting for duty every summer for two weeks over a six year period, reported the Canarsie Courier blog.

While the Mill Basin area evolved over the years to a large Orthodox Jewish community with close to a dozen synagogues, Rabbi Halpern spoke fondly of his early days in the area before his retirement in 2012.

“Those were years of striving together, a congregation, small as it was, in the first few years, praying and children learning in a rented store; yet having the power and vision to look to the future with confidence and courage and to name our venture: Flatbush Park Jewish Center,” said Rabbi Halpern. “They knew the journey would be fraught with obstacles. Yet, they would not be derailed or deterred. They continued and we persevered. Every family pitched in as much as they could.”

As a member of the New York Board of Rabbis, Rabbi Halpern delivered the opening prayer in the House of Representatives in 2003 and a joint legislative resolution honoring Rabbi Halpern and his wife Sheila upon his retirement from the Flatbush Park Jewish Center was passed in both houses of the state legislature praising the Halperns as “a beacon of light” to the borough of Brooklyn.

Rabbi Yisroel Perelson took over for Rabbi Halpern after his retirement. Perelson said that Halpern saw some of his congregants through their entire life cycle.

“He did everything for everybody,” Rabbi Perelson told VIN News. “He went through generations, from some congregants’ bris to marrying them to doing the same for their children. “There were some he saw from their bris to their graves.”

Rabbi Perelson said that Rabbi Halpern was a problem solver, an encourager, and a problem solver. He noted that Rabbi Halpern often offered him words of encouragement and attended services daily up until the final days of his life.

Rabbi Halpern’s funeral was held Monday at 11 AM at the Flatbush Park Jewish Center 6363 Avenue U with burial at Beth David Cemetery in Elmont, New York. He is survived by his wife, Sheila, his children Neil, Risa and Beth and several grandchildren.