Watch Ted Cruz make matzah with kids in Brooklyn ahead of NY primary

Andrew Tobin

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, making matzah with children at the Model Matzah Bakery in Brooklyn, New York, April 7, 2016. (Twitter)

Sen. Ted Cruz, R-Texas, making matzah with children at the Model Matzah Bakery in Brooklyn, New York, April 7, 2016. (Twitter)

NEW YORK (JTA) — Ahead of the presidential primaries in New York, Ted Cruz helped Jewish children make matzah in Brooklyn.

At the Chabad-run Model Matzah Bakery in Brighton Beach Thursday evening, the Texas senator and Republican presidential hopeful led some 15 children in making the unleavened Passover bread, singing “roll, roll, roll the matzah dough.”

Cruz was joined by Rabbi Moishe Winner and his wife, Leah Winner. He even sang and clapped with the children through a rendition of the Passover song “Dayenu,” according to ABC News.

Dozens of supporters chanted “Jews for Cruz” as the senator entered the bakery, and on his way out.

Cruz then met with Hasidic community leaders at the Jewish Center of Brighton Beach, where he talked “about our shared concerns, he talked about Israel, and the fact that we should stand together, and about foreign policy,” former New York State Sen. David Storobin, who helped organize the meeting, told DNAinfo.

Rabbi Winner told the local news website his organization does not endorse political candidates and that the Cruz campaign reached out to the center “because of our connection to the community.”

Asked Thursday about previously derisive references to Donald Trump’s “New York values,” Cruz told ABC he was referring to the state’s liberal Democrats.

READ: Ted Cruz says Donald Trump has ‘NY values,’ the Internet cries anti-Semitism

Cruz had been scheduled to speak at a Bronx high school Thursday, but the principal canceled the event after students threatened to walk out in protest of his stance on immigration, according to the New York Daily News.

Polls show Cruz trailing Donald Trump, the GOP front-runner, by double digits in New York. The state Republican and Democratic New York primaries will be held April 19, and are unusually pivotal to both parties. New York is the most-Jewish state in the United States, thanks the New York City, the most Jewish city.

Despite a big win in Wisconsin Tuesday, Cruz is unlikely to secure a majority of the delegates up for grabs in the GOP race. He hopes to block Trump from doing so, and to come into the Republican nominating convention in July in a respectable second place. By the current rules, in a brokered convention with no outright winner, delegates would be free to vote for Cruz.

The third republican candidate, Ohio Gov. John Kasich also campaigned in New York City Thursday. In the afternoon, he sampled the fare at Mike’s Deli in the Bronx, and on the way out declared, “I love New York values,” according to WNBC.

On the Democratic side, front-runner Hillary Clinton, a former New York senator, rode the subway, the 4 train, from Yankee Stadium to 170th Street in the Bronx, where she met with potential voters. She took a shot at her rival, Sen. Bernie Sanders, I-Vt., for saying in an interview with the New York Daily News editorial board that the subway takes tokens, though she reportedly had to swipe her subway card several times at the turnstile.

Trump, a Queens native and local real estate tycoon, and Sanders, who was born in Brooklyn, took the day off from campaigning.

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