The Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel
Schneerson, world leader of the Chabad – Lubavitch movement, is the
one individual singularly responsible for stirring and awakening the
conscience and spirit of world Jewry. Described as the most phenomenal
Jewish personality of our time, the Rebbe is revered by millions of
followers and admirers around the world, radiating hope, motivation
and encouragement in an era often rent with despair.
The Early Years
The Rebbe is the seventh the dynastic lineage
of Lubavitcher leaders, which began in the 18th century
by its founder Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi (1745- 1812)
author of the basic work of Chabad philosophy – the Tanya and the
Shulchan Aruch – the Code of Jewish Law.
The Rebbe was born in Nikolaev, Russia, on the
11th day of Nissan, 1902 to Rabbi Levi Yitzchak and
Rebbetzin Chana Schneerson. The Rebbe’s father was a renowned
Kabbalist and Talmudic scholar. The Rebbe’s mother was an
aristocratic woman from a prestigious rabbinic family. At the age of
five he moved with his parents to the Ukrainian city of
Yekatrinislav, now Dnepropetrovsk, where his father was appointed
Chief Rabbi.
From early childhood, the Rebbe displayed a
prodigious mental acuity and soon had to leave the cheder because he
was far ahead of his classmates. His father engaged private tutors
for him, and after that, taught him himself. By the time he reached
barmitzvah, the Rebbe was an illuy, a Torah prodigy. He spent his
teen years immersed in the study of Torah.
The Rebbe met the previous Lubavitcher Rebbe,
Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, in 1923, in Rostov, Russia. In
December 1928, the Rebbe married the previous Rebbe’s second
daughter, the Rebbetzin Chaya Mushka (1901-1988). The wedding took
place in Warsaw, Poland. The Rebbetzin is well remembered for her
exceptional erudition and compassion, yet unpretentious and humble
demeanor.
Later the Rebbe studied at the University of
Berlin (1928-1932) and then at the Sorbonne in Paris (1934-1938). It
may have been there that his formidable knowledge of mathematics and
the sciences began to blossom.
Arrival in the U.S.A.
On the 28th of Sivan, 5701 – June 23rd,
1941, the Rebbe and the Rebbetzin arrived in the United States,
having miraculously escaped the Nazi onslaught. His father-in-law,
the previous Rebbe, who had arrived in the United States a year
earlier, appointed him to head his newly founded organization:
Merkos L’Inyonei Chinuch, the education arm of the Lubavitch
movement; Machne Israel, the movement’s social service organization;
and Kehot Publication Society, the Lubavitch publishing house.
Shortly thereafter, the Rebbe began writing his
scholarly notations to various Chassidic and Kabbalistic treatises,
as well as a wide range of Torah response. With publication of these
works, scholars throughout the world soon recognized his genius.
Leadership
After the passing of the previous Rebbe, Rabbi
Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, on the 10th of Shvat, 1950,
Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, ascended to the leadership of the
flourishing movement.
Motivated by a profound lover for the Jewish
people, the Rebbe launched an unprecedented program to bring Judaism
to every individual Jew, wherever he or she may be. Inspired by the
Biblical mandate: “ And you shall spread forth to the West and to
the East and to the North and to the South,”
(Genesis 28:14), the Rebbe established a corps
of shluchim – Lubavitch emissaries – and charged them with
establishing Chabad- Lubavitch centers in every corner of the world.
These dedicated men and women reflect the commitment of Lubavitch to
the entire Jewish people. It is no wonder that, for many
communities, Chabad-Lubavitch, with its vast array of educational
and social services programs, has become the central address for all
matters Jewish.
In his years as leader of Chabad-Lubavitch, the
Rebbe established Chassidism not as one of the limbs, but as the
heart and life of Judaism. Indeed, many of the Rebbe’s innovations
are so deeply ingrained in Jewish life today that they are often no
longer identified as Lubavitch in origin.
Spanning the Globe
During more than four decades of inspired
leadership the Rebbe made Lubavitch the world’s largest outreach
organization.
Today, some 2400 Chabad-Lubavitch institutions
employing over 4000 full-time emissary families span more than 50
countries on six continents. These educational and social service
institutions serve a variety of functions for the entire spectrum of
Jews, regardless of affiliation or background. Indeed those programs
geared to humanitarian endeavors reach out beyond the Jewish
community, to all people.
Lubavitch institutions have been established in
Argentina, Armenia, Australia, Austria, Belarus, Belgium, Bolivia,
Brazil, Bulgaria, Canada, Chile, China Columbia, Costa Rica, Czech
Republic, Denmark, D. R. of the Congo, England, Estonia, France,
Georgia, Germany, Greece, Guatemala, Holland, Hong Kong, Hungary,
Ireland, Israel, Italy, Japan, Kazakhstan, Latvia, Lithuania,
Moldova, Morocco, Netherlands, New Zealand, Panama, Paraguay, Peru,
Romania, Russia, Scotland, Singapore, Slovakia, South Africa, Spain,
Sweden, Switzerland, Thailand, Tunisia, Ukraine, United States,
Uruguay, Uzbekistan, Venezuela, Zaire
Israel
In Israel, the “Chabadniks” are particularly
endeared to all. Their programs reach all segments of the community,
and they enjoy respect of the population regardless of affiliation.
Kfar Chabad, the Lubavitch city near Tel
Aviv, is headquarters for Lubavitch there. Kfar Chabad’s unique
educational institutions and outreach facilities have become a
lifeline for thousands of Israeli citizens.
It was the people of Kfar Chabad who have
airlifted over a thousand children affected by the Chernobyl nuclear
disaster, bringing them to Israel for medical treatment. In addition
to the lifesaving medical attention, the rescued children live and
learn in the warm, friendly atmosphere of Kfar Chabad. This airlift
continues with more children arriving regurlarly.
From the soldier stationed on the front, to
the farmer on the kibbutz, feelings of veneration and respect for
the Rebbe run deep, as all have benefited in some way from his
concern.
Former Soviet Republics
It was in Russia that Chabad-Lubavitch was
born more than 200 years ago and since nurtured there by its Rebbes
in each generation.
A history of heroic, clandestine efforts by
Lubavitch has kept Judaism alive, under the most oppressive and
excruciating circumstances conceivable, before and especially after
the Bolshevik revolution and during the Communist regime.
Now that the Soviet Union has crumbled,
Lubavitch has emerged from the underground and the work continues
publicly unabated. There are more than two hundred Chabad-Lubavitch
institutions in the Commonwealth of Independent States and Latvia.
Hundreds of emissary families have taken up residence there to
promote Jewish activities. As developments unfold, Jewish
institutions under the auspices of Lubavitch are mushrooming
throughout the Commonwealth of Independent States and Eastern
Europe.
People of the Book
Under the Rebbe’s guidance, the Lubavitch
publishing house, Kehot Publication Society, has become the largest
Jewish publishing house in the world. Publishing and distributing
millions of books, pamphlets, cassettes and educational material in
Hebrew, Yiddish, English, French, Spanish, Italian, Russian,
Portuguese, Arabic, Farsi, Dutch, Swedish and German.
The central library and archive center of
Agudas Chassidei Chabad-Lubavitch, at the Lubavitch World
Headquarters, is one of the world’s most precious repositories of
Jewish books and literature. The library contains a vast collection
of rare books and manuscripts.
Reversing the Tide
The Rebbe was often heard to say, “We dare
not rest until every Jewish child receives a Jewish education.”
The American Jewish day-school system,
initiated and pioneered by Lubavitch in the 1940’s, has displaced
across a wide spectrum the once- prevalent ideology that Jewish
education was a dutiful appendage to the real business of acquiring
a secular education. Jewish day schools have since become accepted
and desirable even to those who opposed it then. This, as well as
the outreach programs of Chabad-Lubavitch has served as a guide for
others to emulate.
From full-time yeshivas for Jewish men and
women with little or no background in Torah study to literally tens
of thousands of classes at Chabad-Lubavitch centers and synagogues
around the world – the Rebbe is the vital life force behind an
outreach process that has affected the entire spectrum of Jewish
life.
His widespread mitzvah and holiday campaigns,
and the innovative mitzvah mobiles have raised awareness of Jewish
life and Jewish practice among millions of Jews, motivating them to
explore and to examine their identity.
From Hong Kong to Tel Aviv, Budapest to
Chicago, through the many Lubavitch schools, youth centers,
institutions, agencies and activities established and maintained by
the Rebbe’s emissaries, countless Jews have found their way home.
Light Unto The Nations
Responding to the demands of the time, the
Rebbe reached out beyond the Jewish community with a universal
message to all peoples of the world.
The Rebbe consistently called for greater
awareness of ht crucial importance of education for all mankind. The
Rebbe stressed that the goal of education is not just to provide a
child with information, but more essentially to develop child’s
character, together with his intellectual ability, with emphasis on
moral, spiritual and ethical values. Only such an education will
guarantee a generation of people who will abide by fundamental human
rights and societal obligations.
The Rebbe continuously maintained that
modern, secular man has an enduring need for moral values and a
religious philosophy by which to live.
He often spoke of the obligation of all
humankind to adhere, and live by, the “Seven Noahide Laws” – the
universal code of morality and ethics, given to all at Mt. Sinai.
This, the Rebbe insisted, is of the utmost necessity to bring sanity
and stability to a perplexed world.
The Rebbe’s brilliant insights into the human
experience and world events, his genuine compassion for others, his
strong leadership and his profound, endless flow of genius, made him
a legend in his lifetime, and won him the admiration, respect and
awe of all those who came to know him.
The Ohel
"The Ohel" is where the Rebbe was laid to
rest on the 3rd of Tammuz 5754 (June 12, 1994), next to his
father-in-law, the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Y.
Schneersohn, of righteous memory.
The term Ohel (lit.
"tent") refers to the structure built over the resting place of a
Tzaddik, a righteous person.
In his lifetime, the
Rebbe was receptive of every individual, regardless of background,
education or degree of religious involvement. All who approached the
Rebbe beheld his penetrating insight into their particular condition
and found solace in his purposeful words of blessing and advice.
Today this continues
as thousands of people from all walks of life come to the Ohel and
ask the Rebbe to intercede on High in their behalf and to receive
inspiration, vitality and direction.
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