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Chabad

Chabad, also known as Lubavitch, Habad and Chabad-Lubavitch[2] (Hebrew: חב"ד לובביץ; Yiddish: חב״ד ליובוויטש), is an Orthodox Jewish Hasidic dynasty. Chabad is one of the world's best-known Hasidic movements, particularly for its outreach activities. It is one of the largest Hasidic groups[3] and Jewish religious organizations in the world. Unlike most Haredi groups, which are self-segregating, Chabad operates mainly in the wider world and caters to secularized Jews.

Chabad
Hebrew: חב"ד
Group picture in Crown Heights, Brooklyn
Formation1775 (248 years ago) (1775)
FounderSchneur Zalman of Liadi
Founded atLiozno, Russian Empire
TypeJewish religious movement
Religious organization
Purposeeducational, philanthropic, religious studies, spirituality
HeadquartersBrooklyn, NY, U.S.
Region served
Worldwide
Membership
90,000–95,000[1]
Key people
Menachem Mendel Schneerson
AffiliationsHasidic Judaism
Websitechabad.org
lubavitch.com
chabad.network

Founded in 1775 by Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, the name "Chabad" (חב״ד‎) is an acronym formed from three Hebrew words—Chokhmah, Binah, Da'at (the first three sefirot of the kabbalistic Tree of Life) (חכמה, בינה, דעת): "Wisdom, Understanding, and Knowledge"—which represent the intellectual and kabbalistic underpinnings of the movement.[4][5] The name Lubavitch derives from the town in which the now-dominant line of leaders resided from 1813 to 1915.[6][7] Other, non-Lubavitch scions of Chabad either disappeared or merged into the Lubavitch line. In the 1930s, the sixth Rebbe of Chabad, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, moved the center of the Chabad movement from Russia to Poland. After the outbreak of World War II, he moved the center of the movement to the United States.

In 1951, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson formally accepted the leadership as the seventh Chabad Rebbe. He transformed the movement into one of the most widespread Jewish movements in the world today. Under his leadership, Chabad established a large network of institutions that seek to satisfy religious, social and humanitarian needs across the world.[8] Chabad institutions provide outreach to unaffiliated Jews and humanitarian aid, as well as religious, cultural and educational activities. Prior to his death in 1994, Schneerson was believed by some of his followers to be the Messiah, with his own position on the matter debated among scholars. Messianic ideology in Chabad sparked controversy in various Jewish communities and is still an unresolved matter. Following his death, no successor was appointed as a new central leader.

In 2018, Marcin Wodziński estimated that the Chabad movement accounted for 13% of the global Hasidic population. The total number of Chabad households is estimated to be between 16,000 and 17,000.[1] The number of those who sporadically or regularly attend Chabad events is far larger; in 2005 the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs reported that up to one million Jews attend Chabad services at least once a year.[9][10][11] In a 2020 study, the Pew Research Center found that 16% of American Jews attend Chabad services regularly or semi-regularly.[12]

History

The Chabad movement was established after the First Partition of Poland in the town of Liozno, Pskov Governorate, Russian Empire (now Liozna, Belarus), in 1775, by Shneur Zalman,[13] a student of Dov Ber of Mezeritch, the successor to Hasidism's founder, Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov. The movement was moved to Lyubavichi (Yiddish Lubavitch), today's Russia, by the second Rebbe of Chabad, Rabbi Dovber Shneuri, in 1813.[6] The movement was centered in Lyubavichi for a century until the fifth Rebbe, Rabbi Shalom Dovber left the village in 1915[7] and moved to the city of Rostov-on-Don. During the interwar period, following Bolshevik persecution, the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, under the Sixth Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak, was centered in Riga and then in Warsaw. The outbreak of World War II led to the Sixth Rebbe to move to the United States. Since 1940,[13] the movement's center has been in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn.[14][15]

 
Chabad newspaper, Huh-Ukh (1911)
 
Chabad of Boston Appeal (1927)

While the movement spawned a number of offshoot groups throughout its history, the Chabad-Lubavitch branch is the only one still active, making it the movement's main surviving line.[16] Historian Jonathan Sarna has characterized Chabad as having enjoyed the fastest rate of growth of any Jewish religious movement in the period 1946–2015.[17]

In the early 1900s, Chabad-Lubavitch legally incorporated itself under Agudas Chasidei Chabad ("Association of Chabad Hasidim").

Early community histories of Chabad produced by members or former members of the Chabad community include Toldot Amudei HaChabad (Konigsberg, 1876) by Michael Levi Rodkinson and Beit Rebbe (Berdichev, 1902) by Hayim Meir Heilman.[18][19][20]

Leadership

 
Schneersohn Family

The Chabad movement has been led by a succession of Hasidic rebbes. The main line of the movement, Chabad-Lubavitch, has had seven rebbes in total:

  • Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi (1745–1812), founded the Chabad movement in the town of Liozna. He later moved the movement's center to the town of Liadi. Rabbi Shneur Zalman was the youngest disciple of Dov Ber of Mezeritch, the principal disciple and successor of Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov, founder of Hasidism. The Chabad movement began as a separate school of thought within the Hasidic movement, focusing of the spread of Hasidic mystical teachings using logical reasoning (creating a kind of Jewish "rational-mysticism").[21] Shneur Zalman's main work is the Tanya (or Sefer Shel Beinonim, "Book of the Average Man"). The Tanya is the central book of Chabad thought and is studied daily by followers of the Chabad movement. Shneur Zalman's other works include a collection of writings on Hasidic thought, and the Shulchan Aruch HaRav, a revised version of the code of Halakha, both of which are studied regularly by followers of Chabad. Shneur Zalman's successors went by last names such as "Schneuri" and "Schneersohn" (later "Schneerson"), signifying their descent from the movement's founder. He is commonly referred to as the "Old Rebbe" (Yiddish: אַלטער רבי Alter Rebbe or Hebrew: אדמו״ר הזקן Admur Hazoken).[22][23]
  • Rabbi Dovber Schneuri (1773–1827), son of Rabbi Shneur Zalman, led the Chabad movement in the town of Lyubavichi (Lubavitch). His leadership was initially disputed by Rabbi Aaron Halevi of Stroselye, however, Rabbi Dovber was generally recognized as his father's rightful successor, and the movement's leader. Rabbi Dovber published a number of his writings on Hasidic thought, greatly expanding his father's work. He also published some of his father's writings. Many of Rabbi Dovber's works have been subsequently republished by the Chabad movement. He is commonly referred to as the Mitteler Rebbe (Yiddish: מיטעלער רבי "Middle Rabbi", Hebrew: אדמו״ר האמצעי Admur Ha'emtzoei).[24][25]
  • Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn (1789–1866), a grandson of Rabbi Shneur Zalman and son-in-law of Rabbi Dovber. Following his attempt to persuade the Chabad movement to accept his brother-in-law or uncle as rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel assumed the title of rebbe of Chabad, also leading the movement from the town of Lyubavichi (Lubavitch). He published a number of his works on both Hasidic thought and Jewish law. Rabbi Menachem Mendel also published some of the works of his grandfather, Rabbi Shneur Zalman. He is commonly referred to as the Tzemach Tzedek after the title of his responsa.[26]
  • Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn (1834–1882), was the seventh and youngest son of Rabbi Menachem Mendel. He assumed the title of rebbe in town of Lyubavichi (Lubavitch), while several of his brothers assumed the title of rebbe in other towns, forming Chabad groups of their own which existed for several decades. Years after his death, his teachings were published by the Chabad movement. He is commonly referred to as the Maharash, an acronym for Moreinu HaRav Shmuel ("our teacher, Rabbi Shmuel").[27][28]
  • Rabbi Shalom Dovber Schneersohn (1860–1920), Shmuel's second son, succeeded his father as rebbe. Rabbi Shalom Dovber waited some time before officially accepting the title of rebbe, as not to offend his elder brother, Zalman Aaron. He established a yeshiva called Tomchei Temimim. During World War I, he moved to Rostov-on-Don. Many of his writings were published after his death, and are studied regularly in Chabad yeshivas. He is commonly referred to as the Rashab, an acronym for Rabbi Shalom Ber.[29]
  • Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn (1880–1950), the only son of Sholom Dovber, succeeded his father as rebbe of Chabad. Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak was exiled from Russia, following an attempt by the Bolshevik government to have him executed.[30] He led the movement from Warsaw, Poland, until the start of World War II. After fleeing the Nazis, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak lived in Brooklyn, New York until his death. He established much of Chabad's current organizational structure, founding several of its central organizations as well as other Chabad institutions, both local and international. He published a number of his writings, as well as the works of his predecessors. He is commonly referred to as the Rayatz or the Frierdiker Rebbe ("Previous Rebbe").
  • Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902–1994),[31] son-in-law of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak, and a great-grandson of the third Rebbe of Lubavitch, assumed the title of rebbe one year after his father-in-law's death. Rabbi Menachem Mendel greatly expanded Chabad's global network, establishing hundreds of new Chabad centers across the globe. He published many of his own works as well as the works of his predecessors. His teachings are studied regularly by followers of Chabad. He is commonly referred to as "the Lubavitcher Rebbe", or simply "the Rebbe". Even after his death, many continue to revere him as the leader of the Chabad movement.[24]

Oppression and resurgence in Russia

The Chabad movement was subject to government oppression in Russia. The Russian government, first under the Czar, later under the Bolsheviks, imprisoned all but one of the Chabad rebbes.[32][33] The Bolsheviks also imprisoned, exiled and executed a number of Chabad Hasidim.[34][35][36] During the Second World War, many Chabad Hasidim evacuated to the Uzbek cities of Samarkand and Tashkent where they established small centers of Hasidic life, while at the same time seeking ways to emigrate from Soviet Russia due to the government's suppression of religious life.[37] The reach of Chabad in Central Asia also included earlier efforts that took place in the 1920s.[38] Following the war, and well after the center of the Chabad movement moved to the United States, the movement remained active in Soviet Russia, aiding the local Jews known as Refuseniks who sought to learn more about Judaism.[39] And throughout the Soviet era, the Chabad movement maintained a secret network across the USSR.[40] Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, state persecution of Chabad ceased. The Chief Rabbi of Russia, Berel Lazar, a Chabad emissary, maintains warm relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin.[41] Lazar also received the Order of Friendship and Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" medals from him.[42]

Relations with other Hasidic groups

The relations between the seventh Chabad Rebbe and the leaders of other Orthodox groups were recorded by Chabad author Rabbi Shalom Dov Wolpo in his three volume anthology titled Shemen Sasson MeChaveirecha.

In the 1980s, tensions arose between Chabad and Satmar Chasidim as a result of several assaults on Chabad Hasidim by Satmar Hasidim.[43][44][45]

Influence

Chabad's influence among world Jewry has been far reaching since World War II. Chabad pioneered the post-World War II Jewish outreach movement, which spread Judaism to many assimilated Jews worldwide, leading to a substantial number of baalei teshuva ("returnees" to Judaism). The very first Yeshiva/Rabbinical College for such baalei teshuva, Hadar Hatorah, was established by the Lubavitcher rebbe. It is reported that up to a million Jews attend Chabad services at least once a year.[10][11]

According to Steven I. Weiss, Chabad's ideology has dramatically influenced non-Hasidic Jews' outreach practice.[46] Because of its outreach to all Jews, including those quite alienated from religious Jewish tradition, Chabad has been described as the one Orthodox group which evokes great affection from large segments of American Jewry.[47]

Philosophy

Chabad Hasidic philosophy focuses on religious and spiritual concepts such as God, the soul, and the meaning of the Jewish commandments. Classical Judaic writings and Jewish mysticism, especially the Zohar and the Kabbalah of Rabbi Isaac Luria, are frequently cited in Chabad works. These texts are used both as sources of Chabad teachings and as material requiring interpretation by Chabad authors. Many of these teachings discuss what is commonly referred to as bringing "heaven down to earth", i.e. making this world a dwelling place for God. Chabad philosophy is rooted in the teachings of Rabbis Yisroel ben Eliezer, (the Baal Shem Tov, founder of Hasidism) and Dovber ben Avraham, the "Maggid of Mezritch" (Rabbi Yisroel's successor).[citation needed]

Rabbi Shneur Zalman's teachings, particularly in the Tanya, formed the basis of Chabad philosophy, as expanded by succeeding generations. Many Chabad activities today are understood as applications of Shneur Zalman's teachings.[citation needed]

Tanya

The Tanya (Hebrew: תניא) is a book by Rabbi Shneur Zalman first published in 1797. It is the first schematic treatment of Hasidic moral philosophy and its metaphysical foundations.[22]

According to the Tanya, the intellect consists of three interconnected processes: Chochma (wisdom), Bina (understanding), and Da'at (knowledge). While other branches of Hasidism focused primarily on the idea that "God desires the heart," Shneur Zalman argued that God also desires the mind, and that the mind is the "gateway" to the heart. With the Chabad philosophy he elevated the mind above the heart, arguing that "understanding is the mother of fear and love for God".[48]

The Tanya has five sections. The original name of the first section is Sefer Shel Beinonim, the "Book of the Intermediates". It is also known as Likutei Amarim ("Collected Sayings"). Sefer Shel Beinonim analyzes the inner struggle of the individual and the path to resolution. Citing the biblical verse "the matter is very near to you, in your mouth, your heart, to do",[49] the philosophy is based on the notion that the human is not inherently evil; rather, every individual has an inner conflict that is characterized by two different inclinations, the good and the bad.[50]

Chabad often contrasted itself with what is termed the Chagat schools of Hasidism.[51] While all schools of Hasidism put a central focus on the emotions, Chagat saw emotions as a reaction to physical stimuli, such as dancing, singing, or beauty. Shneur Zalman, on the other hand, taught that the emotions must be led by the mind, and thus the focus of Chabad thought was to be Torah study and prayer rather than esotericism and song.[22] As a Talmudist, Shneur Zalman endeavored to place Kabbalah and Hasidism on a rational basis. In Tanya, he defines his approach as moach shalit al halev (Hebrew: מוח שליט על הלב, "the brain ruling the heart").[52]

Community

 
A Lag BaOmer parade in front of Chabad headquarters at 770 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York, in 1987

An adherent of Chabad is called a Chabad Chasid (or Hasid) (Hebrew: חסיד חב"ד), a Lubavitcher (Yiddish: ליובאַוויטשער), a Chabadnik (Hebrew: חבדניק), or a Chabadsker (Yiddish: חבדסקער).[53] Chabad's adherents include both Hasidic followers, as well as non-Hasidim, who have joined Chabad synagogues and other Chabad-run institutions.[54]

The Chabad community consists of the followers (Hasidim) of the Chabad rebbes. Originally based in Eastern Europe, today, various Chabad communities span the globe; communities with high concentrations of Chabad's Hasidic followers include Crown Heights, Brooklyn, and Kfar Chabad, Israel.[55][56]

According to sociologists studying contemporary Jewry, the Chabad movement fits into neither the standard category of Haredi nor that of modern Orthodox among Orthodox Jews. This is due in part to the existence of the number of Chabad supporters and affiliates who are not Orthodox (dubbed by some scholars as "non-Orthodox Hasidim"), the general lack of official recognition of political and religious distinctions within Judaism, and the open relationship with non-Orthodox Jews represented by the activism of Chabad emissaries.[54][57]

Demographics

In 2018, the first global demographic estimate of Hasidim was conducted based on community directories for Hasidic communities. The estimate for Chabad's demographic size is approximately 13% of Hasidim globally, accounting for 16,000–17,000 households or 90,000–95,000 individuals.[1] Prior to this study, the demographic accounts on the Chabad movement varied greatly. Compared to other Hasidic groups, Chabad was thought to be either the largest,[58] or the third[59] or fourth[60] largest Hasidic movement. Chabad adherents were often reported to number some 200,000 persons.[61][62][63] Some scholars pointed to the lack of quantitative data to back this claim,[64][failed verification] while some placed the number of Chabad followers at around 40,000 but note that the number may be higher if the non-Hasidic Jews who join Chabad synagogues are included as well.[9] In 2018, Marcin Wodziński produced his Historical Atlas of Hasidism which used Chabad community directories to establish that Chabad included over 16,000 Hasidic households, translating to over 90,000 individuals, making the group the second largest Hasidic community after the Satmar community.[1]

United States

 
President Ronald Reagan receives menorah from the "American Friends of Lubavitch," White House, 1984

Estimates for Chabad and other Hasidic groups are often based on extrapolation from the limited information available in US census data for some of the areas where Hasidim live. A 2006 estimate was drawn from a study on the Montreal Chabad community (determining average household size), in conjunction with language and other select indicators from US census data, it is estimated that Chabad in the United States includes approximately 4,000 households, which contains between 22,000 and 25,000 people. In terms of Chabad's relation to other Hasidic groups, within the New York metropolitan area, Chabad in the New York area accounts for around 15% of the total New York Hasidic population. Chabad is estimated to have an annual growth of 3.6%.[65]

  • Crown Heights – The Crown Heights Chabad community's estimated size is 10,000 to 12,000[65][9] or 12,000 to 16,000.[66] In 2006, extrapolating based on census data, it was estimated that the Chabad community in Crown Heights make up some 11,000. It was estimated that between 25% and 35% of Chabad Hasidim in Crown Heights speak Yiddish. This figure is significantly lower than other Hasidic groups and may be attributed to the addition of previously non-Hasidic Jews to the community. It was also estimated that over 20% of Chabad Hasidim in Crown Heights speak Hebrew or Russian.[65] The Crown Heights Chabad community has its own Beis Din (rabbinical court) and Crown Heights Jewish Community Council (CHJCC).
  • Chabad hipsters – Beginning from the late 2000s through the 2010s, a minor trend of cross acculturation of Chabad Hasidim and contemporary hipster subculture appeared within the New York City Jewish community. According to The Jewish Daily Forward, a significant number of members of the Chabad Hasidic community, mostly residing in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, appear to now have adopted various cultural affinities of the local hipster subculture. These members are referred to as Chabad hipsters or Hipster Hasidim.[67][68]

Schools in the United States

The report findings of studies on Jewish day schools and supplementary Jewish education in the United States show that the student body currently enrolled in some 295 Chabad schools exceeds 20,750, although this figure includes Chabad Hasidic children as well as non-Chabad children.[69][70]

Israel

  • Kfar Chabad – Kfar Chabad's estimated size is 5,100; the residents of the town are believed to all be Chabad adherents. This estimate is based on figures published by the Israeli Census Bureau.[71] Other estimates place the community population at around 7,000.[66]
  • Safed – The Chabad community in Safad (Tzfat) originates from the wave of Eastern European immigration to Palestine of 1777–1840. The Chabad community established synagogues and institutions in Safad. The early settlement declined by the 20th century but was renewed following an initiative by the seventh rebbe in the early 1970s, which reestablished the Chabad community in the city.[72] Rabbi Yeshaya HaLevi Horowitz (1883–1978), a Safad-born direct descendant of Rabbi Yeshaya Horowitz, author of the Shnei Luchot HaBrit, served as the rabbi of the Chabad community in Safad from 1908 until his immigration to the U.S. during World War I.[73] Members of the Chabad community run a number of outreach efforts during the Jewish holidays. Activities include blowing the shofar for the elderly on Rosh Hashana, reading the Megilla for hospital patients on Purim and setting up a Sukka on the town's main street during the Succoth holiday.[72]

France

The Chabad community in France is estimated to be between 10,000 and 15,000. The majority of the Chabad community in France are the descendants of immigrants from North Africa (specifically Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia) during the 1960s.[66][74]

Canada

  • Montreal – The estimated size of the Chabad community of Greater Montreal is 1,590. The estimate is taken from a 2003 community study.[75][76] The Chabad community in Montreal originated sometime before 1931. While early works on Canadian Jewry make little or no mention of early Hasidic life in Canada, later researchers have documented Chabad's accounts in Canada starting from the 1900s and 1910s. Steven Lapidus notes that there is mention of two Chabad congregations in a 1915 article in the Canadian Jewish Chronicle listing the delegates of the first Canadian Jewish Conference. One congregation is listed as Chabad of Toronto, and the other is simply listed as "Libavitzer Congregation". The sociologist William Shaffir has noted that some Chabad Hasidim and sympathizers did reside in Montreal before 1941 but does not elaborate further. Steven Lapidus notes that in a 1931 obituary published in Keneder Odler, a Canadian Yiddish newspaper, the deceased Rabbi Menashe Lavut is credited as the founder of Anshei Chabad in Montreal and the Nusach Ari synagogue. Thus the Chabad presence in Montreal predates 1931.[77]

Spain

United Arab Emirates

 
Meeting of the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky with the rabbis of Ukraine on May 6, 2019

Ashkenazim and Sephardim

Although the Chabad movement was founded in Eastern Europe, a center of Ashkenazic Jewry, it has attracted a significant number of Sephardi Jews as adherents in the past several decades.[82] Some Chabad communities are now a mix of Ashkenazi and Sephardi Chabad Hasidim. In Montreal, close to 25% of Chabad households include a Sephardi parent.[83][84]

Customs and holidays

Customs

Chabad adherents follow Chabad traditions and prayer services based on Lurianic Kabbalah.[85] General Chabad customs, called minhagim (or minhagei Chabad), distinguish the movement from other Hasidic groups. Some of the main Chabad customs are minor practices performed on traditional Jewish holidays:

  • Passover – It is customary in Chabad communities, on Passover, to limit contact of matzah (an unleavened bread eaten on Passover) with water. This custom is called gebrokts (Yiddish: געבראָכטס, lit. 'broken'). However, on the last day of Passover, it is customary to intentionally have matzah come in contact with water.[86]
  • Chanukah – It is the custom of Chabad Hasidim to place the Chanukah menorah against the room's doorpost (and not on the windowsill).[87][88][89]
  • Prayer – The founder of Chabad wrote a very specific liturgy for the daily and festival prayers based on the teachings of the Kabbalists, primarily the Arizal.
  • The founder of Chabad also instituted various other halachic rulings, including the use of stainless steel knives for the slaughter of animals before human consumption, which are now universally accepted in all sects of Judaism.

Holidays

There are a number of days marked by the Chabad movement as special days. Major holidays include the liberation dates[clarification needed] of the leaders of the movement, the rebbes of Chabad, others corresponded to the leaders' birthdays, anniversaries of death, and other life events.

The days marking the leaders' release, are celebrated by the Chabad movement as "Days of Liberation" (Hebrew: יום גאולה (Yom Geulah)). The most noted day is Yud Tes Kislev—the liberation of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of the Chabad movement. The day is also called the "New Year of Hasidism".[87]

The birthdays of several of the movement's leaders are celebrated each year including Chai Elul, the birthday of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of the Chabad movement,[90][91] and Yud Aleph Nissan, the birthday of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh rebbe of Chabad.[92]

The anniversaries of death, or yartzeit, of several of the movement's leaders are celebrated each year, include Yud Shvat, the yartzeit of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, the sixth rebbe of Chabad,[93] Gimmel Tammuz, the yartzeit of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh rebbe of Chabad,[93][94] and Chof Beis Shvat, the yartzeit of Chaya Mushka Schneerson, the wife of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson.[95]

Organizations

Chabad's central organization representing the movement at large, Agudas Chasidei Chabad, is headed by Rabbi Abraham Shemtov. The educational, outreach and social services arms, Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch and Machneh Israel are headed by Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, as well as the Chabad-Lubavitch publishing house, Kehot Publication Society.

Local Chabad centers and institutions are usually incorporated as separate legal entities.[96]

 
Map of Countries with Chabad Shluchim

Institutions

As of 2020 there were over 3,500 Chabad centers in 100 countries.[97][98] The Chabad movement's online directory lists around 1,350 Chabad institutions. This number includes schools and other Chabad-affiliated establishments. The number of Chabad centers vary per country; the majority are in the United States and Israel. There are over 100 countries with a small Chabad presence.

In total, according to its directory, Chabad maintains a presence in 950 cities around the world: 178 in Europe, 14 in Africa, 200 in Israel, 400 in North America, 38 in South America, and about 70 in Asia (excluding Israel, including Russia).[99]

By geographic region

 
Russia's Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar (left) speaks with Russian President Vladimir Putin, 28 December 2016

Chabad presence varies from region to region. The continent with the highest concentration of Chabad centers is North America. The continent with the fewest centers is Africa.[100][101]

Geographic location Chabad institutions
North America 2,894
Europe 1,133
Asia 615
South America 208
Oceania 67
Africa 55
Total 4,972

Chabad house

A Chabad house is a form of Jewish community center, primarily serving both educational and observance purposes.[102][failed verification] Often, until the community can support its own center, the Chabad house is located in the shaliach's home, with the living room being used as the "synagogue". Effort is made to provide an atmosphere in which the nonobservant will not feel intimidated by any perceived contrast between their lack of knowledge of Jewish practice and the advanced knowledge of some of the people they meet there.[103] The term "Chabad House" originated with the creation of the first such outreach center on the campus of UCLA by Rabbi Shlomo Cunin.[104] A key to the Chabad house was given to the Rebbe and he asked if that meant that the new house was his home. He was told yes and he replied, "My hand will be on the door of this house to keep it open twenty-four hours a day for young and old, men and women alike."[105]

Followers of Chabad can be seen attending to tefillin booths at the Western Wall and Ben Gurion International Airport as well as other public places, and distributing Shabbat candles on Fridays. Chabad rabbis and their families are sent to various major cities around the globe, to teach college students, build day schools, and create youth camps. Many of these efforts are geared towards secular or less religious Jews. Additionally, unmarried rabbinical students spend weeks during the summer in locations that do not yet have a permanent Chabad presence, making housecalls, putting up mezuzot and teaching about Judaism. This is known as Merkos Shlichus.

Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson also initiated a Jewish children's movement, called Tzivos Hashem (lit. "Army [of] God"), for under bar/bat mitzvah-age children, to inspire them to increase in study of Torah and observance of mitzvot.

Rabbi Schneerson also encouraged the use of modern technology in outreach efforts such as Mitzva tanks, which are mobile homes that travel a city or country.[106] The Chabad website, chabad.org, a pioneer of Jewish religious outreach on the Internet, was started by Rabbi Yosef Y. Kazen and developed by Rabbi D. Zirkind.[citation needed]

In June 1994, Rabbi Schneerson died with no successor. Since then, over two thousand couples have taken up communal leadership roles in outreach, bringing the estimated total number of "Shluchim" to over five thousand worldwide.[107][108]

In the 2008 Mumbai attacks, the local Chabad house was targeted.[109][110] The local Chabad emissaries, Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his wife Rivka, and four other Jews were tortured and murdered by Islamic terrorists.[111] Chabad received condolences from around the world.[112][113]

Fundraising

Funds for activities of a Chabad center rely entirely on the local community. Chabad centers do not receive funding from Lubavitch headquarters. For the day-to-day operations, local emissaries do all the fundraising by themselves.

Chabad emissaries often solicit the support of local Jews.[114] Funds are used toward purchasing or renovating Chabad centers, synagogues and mikvahs.[115]

Activities

The Chabad movement has been involved in numerous activities in contemporary Jewish life. These activities include providing Jewish education to different age groups, outreach to non-affiliated Jews, publishing Jewish literature, and summer camps for children, among other activities.

Education

Chabad runs a number of educational institutions. Most are Jewish day schools; others offer secondary and adult education.

  • Day schools – In the United States, there are close to 300 day schools and supplementary schools run by Chabad.[116][69]
  • Secondary schools – Chabad runs multiple secondary education institutions, most notable are Tomchei Tmimim for young men, and Bais Rivka for young women.
  • Adult education – Chabad runs adult education programs including those organized by the Rohr Jewish Learning Institute[117][118] and the Jewish Learning Network.

Outreach activities

 
Group photo of Chabad Shluchim (emissaries) in 2015
 
Chabad chassidic Jews offer help with laying tefilin on the street

Many of the movement's activities emphasize outreach activities. This is due to Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson encouraging his followers to reach out to other Jews.[119] Chabad outreach includes activities promoting the practice of Jewish commandments (Mitzvah campaigns), as well as other forms of Jewish outreach. Much of Chabad's outreach is performed by Chabad emissaries (see Shaliach (Chabad)). Most of the communities that Chabad emissaries reach out to are other Jewish communities, such as Reform Jews.[120]

Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, 6th leader of the Chabad-Lubavitch branch of Hasidic Judaism, and then his successor, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson were responsible for focusing Chabad's activities on outreach. Rabbi Schneerson was a pioneer in the field of Orthodox Judaism outreach (Kiruv).

Each sent out large numbers of rabbinic emissaries, known as "Shluchim", to settle in places across the world for outreach purposes. The centers that these Shluchim established were termed "Chabad houses."

Chabad has been active in reaching out to Jews through its synagogues, and various forms of more direct outreach efforts. The organization has been recognized as one of the leaders in using free holiday services to reach out across denominations.[121]

Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, had a core of dedicated Hasidim who maintained underground yeshivos and mikvehs, and provided shechitah and ritual circumcision services in the Soviet Union.

Mitzvah campaigns

The Rebbes of Chabad have issued the call to all Jews to attract non-observant Jews to adopt Orthodox Jewish observance, teaching that this activity is part of the process of bringing the Messiah. Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson issued a call to every Jew: "Even if you are not fully committed to a Torah life, do something. Begin with a mitzvah—any mitzvah—its value will not be diminished by the fact that there are others that you are not prepared to do".[122]

Schneerson also suggested ten specific mitzvot that he believed were ideally suited for the emissaries to introduce to non-observant Jews. These were called mivtzoim—meaning "campaigns" or "endeavors". These were lighting candles before Shabbat and the Jewish holidays by Jewish women, putting on tefillin, affixing a mezuzah, regular Torah study, giving tzedakah, purchasing Jewish books, observing kashrut (kosher), kindness to others, Jewish religious education, and observing the family purity laws.[citation needed]

In addition, Schneerson emphasized spreading awareness of preparing for and the coming of the moshiach, consistent with his philosophy. He wrote on the responsibility to reach out to teach every fellow Jew with love, and implored that all Jews believe in the imminent coming of the moshiach as explained by Maimonides. He argued that redemption was predicated on Jews doing good deeds, and that gentiles should be educated about the Noahide Laws.

Schneerson was emphatic about the need to encourage and provide strong education for every child, Jew and non-Jew alike. In honor of Schneerson's efforts in education the United States Congress has made Education and Sharing Day on the Rebbe's Hebrew birthday (11 Nissan).

Shluchim (Emissaries)

Following the initiative of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson spurred on the movement to what has become known as shlichus ("serving as an emissary [performing outreach]") in 1950–1951. As a result, Chabad shluchim ("emissaries", sing. shliach) have moved all over the world with the stated mission of encouraging non-observant Jews to adopt Orthodox Jewish observance. They assist Jews with all their religious needs, as well as with physical assistance and spiritual guidance and teaching. The stated goal is to encourage Jews to learn more about their Jewish heritage and to practice Judaism.[123]

The Chabad movement, motivated by Schneerson, has trained and ordained thousands of rabbis, educators, ritual slaughterers, and ritual circumcisers, who are then accompanied by their spouses to many locations around the world. Typically, a young Lubavitch rabbi and his wife, in their early twenties, with one or two children, will move to a new location, and as they settle in will raise a large family who, as a family unit, will aim to fulfill their mandate of bringing Jewish people closer to Orthodox Judaism and encouraging gentiles to adhere to the Seven Laws of Noah.[123] To date, there are around 5000 shluchim in 100 countries.[8]

Mitzvah tank

 
Chabad Lubavitch Mitzvah tank in Golders Green, London

A mitzvah tank is a vehicle used by Chabad members involved in outreach as a portable "educational and outreach center" and "mini-synagogue" (or "minagogue"). Mitzvah tanks are commonly used for advancing the mitzvah campaigns. Mitzvah tanks have been commonplace on the streets of New York City since 1974.[124] Today, they are used all over the globe in countries where Chabad is active.

Campus outreach

In recent years, Chabad has greatly expanded its outreach on university and college campuses. Chabad Student Centers are active on over 100 campuses, and Chabad offers varied activities at an additional 150 universities worldwide.[125][failed verification] Professor Alan Dershowitz has said "Chabad's presence on college campuses today is absolutely crucial," and "we cannot rest until Chabad is on every major college campus in the world."[126]

CTeen

CTeen is an international organization dedicated to educating Jewish youth about their heritage. It is the teen-focused arm of the Chabad movement operated by Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch. There are over 100,000 members worldwide[127] with 630 chapters across 44 countries.[128] CTeen is open to all Jewish teens, regardless of affiliation, and has been called “the fastest growing and most diverse Jewish youth organization in the world.”[129]

The organization was launched in 2010,[130] and operates worldwide in cities such as Paris, Rio de Janeiro, Leeds, Munich, Buenos Aires and New York.[131] Its director is Rabbi Shimon Rivkin, and Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky serves as chairman.[132] Individual chapters and programs are managed by local directors.

 
Picture of room '302'

CTeen runs a number of ongoing and annual programs, some of which include:

  • CTeen International Shabbaton, an annual inspirational weekend that brings together thousands of teens from around the world. The program includes a traditional Shabbat experience in the heart of Hasidic Crown Heights, a Torah completion ceremony in Times Square, and the CTeen Choice Awards at Brooklyn's Pier 12. The weekend includes a Saturday night concert in Times Square with guest performances by singers such as Gad Elbaz, Yakov Shwekey and American Hasidic rapper Nissim Black.[129][133]
  • CTeen XTREME, a summer travel camp where campers challenge themselves both physically and spiritually by partaking in extreme sports, observing a completely tech-free Shabbat, and keeping kosher on the road.[134]
  • CTeen U, a college-accredited program where teens learn about Jewish philosophy, ethics and history. The program was launched in 2019 through a partnership with Yeshiva University.[135]
  • Heritage Quest, educational travel programs that aim to deepen the connection of Jewish teens to their heritage through trips to Poland and Israel, offering teens the chance to explore their roots at the source.[136][137]
  • Kosher Food Club, a co-curricular high school club operating in over fifty high schools throughout the United States that serves as a humanitarian initiative to promote healthy lifestyles, feed the homeless, and provide educational and hands-on experiences making traditional Jewish foods.[138][139]
  • National Campus Office – coordinator of Chabad on Campus, a network of Jewish Student Centers on more than 230 university campuses worldwide (as of April 2016), as well as regional Chabad-Lubavitch centers at an additional 150 universities worldwide[140]
  • Suicide Alert, workshops that equip teens to assist peers dealing with anxiety and depression resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. The workshops have been organized by CTeen chapters in Florida, New Hampshire and New Jersey, among others, in partnership with the Gelt Charitable Foundation.[141][142]

Chabad Young Professionals

Targeting the demographic of young professionals, Chabad's new initiative focuses on social events and business networking to fuel Jewish activity in young professional's lives. With seminars on career advancement, social gatherings for Jewish holidays, and the ability to connect with other like-minded Jews in the area, Chabad Young Professionals (CYP) combines networking and meaning into many young people's lives.[citation needed]

Publishing

Chabad publishes and distributes Jewish religious literature. Under Kehot Publication Society, Chabad's main publishing house, Jewish literature has been translated into 12 different languages. Kehot regularly provides books at discounted prices, and hosts book-a-thons. Kehot commonly distributes books written or transcribed from the rebbes of Chabad, prominent chassidim and other authors who have written Jewish materials.

Kehot is a division of Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, the movement's educational arm.

Media

More than any other Jewish movement, Chabad has used media as part of its religious, social, and political experience. Their latest leader, Menachem Mendel Schneerson, was the most video-documented Jewish leader in history.[143][page needed]

Chabad.org

The Chabad movement publishes a wealth of Jewish material on the internet. Chabad's main website Chabad.org, is one of the first Jewish websites[144] and the first and largest virtual congregation.[145][146] It serves not just its own members but Jewish people worldwide in general.[147]

Community websites

Popular Chabad community websites include Chabad.org, asktherav.com, anash.org, CrownHeights.info, Shmais.com, Chdailynews.com, and the Hebrew site, COL.org.il.[148][149]

Summer camps

Chabad has set up an extensive network of camps around the world, most using the name Gan Israel, a name chosen by Schneerson although the first overnight camp was the girls division called Camp Emunah. There are 1,200 sites serving 210,000 children, most of whom do not come from Orthodox homes. Of these, 500 camps are in the United States.[150][151]

Political activities

Rabbi Schneerson involved himself in matters relating to the resolution of the Israeli-Arab conflict.[152] He maintained that as a matter of Jewish law,[153] any territorial concession on Israel's part would endanger the lives of all Jews in the Land of Israel, and is therefore forbidden. He also insisted that even discussing the possibility of such concessions showed weakness, would encourage Arab attacks, and therefore endanger Jewish lives.[154]

In US domestic politics, Schneerson supported government involvement in education and welcomed the establishment of the United States Department of Education in 1980, yet insisted that part of a school's educational mission was to incorporate the values espoused in the Seven Laws of Noah. He called for the introduction of a moment of silence at the beginning of the school day, and for students to be encouraged to use this time for such improving thoughts or prayers as their parents might suggest.[155]

In 1981, Schneerson publicly called for the use of solar energy. Schneerson believed that the US could achieve energy independence by developing solar energy technologies. He argued that the dependence on foreign oil may lead to the country compromising on its principles.[156][157]

Library dispute with Russia

In 2013, US federal judge Royce Lamberth ruled in favor of Chabad lawyers who sought contempt sanctions on three Russian organizations to return the Schneersohn Library, 12,000 books belonging to Rabbi Yosef Schneersohn seized and nationalized by the Bolsheviks in 1917–18, to the Brooklyn Chabad Library.[42][158] Chabad Rabbi Berel Lazar, Russia's Chief Rabbi, reluctantly accepted Putin's request in moving the Schneerson Library to Moscow's Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center as a form of compromise, which was criticized by the Chabad Library.[42]

Controversies

Several movement-wide controversies have occurred in Chabad's 200-year history. Two major leadership succession controversies occurred in the 19th century; one took place in the 1810s following the death of the movement's founder, the other occurred in the 1860s following the death of the third Rebbe. Two other minor offshoot groups were formed later in the movement's history. The movement's other major controversy is Chabad messianism, which began in the 1990s.

Succession disputes and offshoot groups

A number of groups have split from the Chabad movement, forming their own Hasidic groups, and at times positioning themselves as possible successors of previous Chabad rebbes. Following the deaths of the first and third rebbes of Chabad, disputes arose over their succession.

Following the death of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, the first Chabad rebbe, a dispute over his succession led to a break within the movement. While the recognized successor was his oldest son, Rabbi Dovber Schneuri, a student of Rabbi Schneur Zalman, Rabbi Aaron HaLevi assumed the title of rebbe, and led a number of followers from the town of Strashelye (forming the Strashelye dynasty). The new group had two rebbes, Rabbi Aaron and his son Rabbi Haim Rephael. The new group eventually disbanded following Rabbi Haim Rephael's death.[16][159] One of the main points the two rabbis disagreed on was the place of spiritual ecstasy in prayer. R' Aaron supported the idea while Rabbi Dovber emphasized genuine ecstasy can only be a result of meditative contemplation (hisbonenus). Rabbi Dovber published his arguments on the subject in a compilation titled Kuntres Hispa'alus ("Tract on Ecstasy").[160]

Following the death of the third Chabad rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn (the Tzemach Tzedek), a dispute over his succession led to the formation of several Chabad groups. While Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn was recognized as the heir to the Chabad-Lubavitch line, several of his brothers formed groups of their own in the towns of Kopys (forming the Kapust dynasty), Nezhin (forming the Niezhin dynasty), Lyady (forming the Liadi dynasty), and Ovruch (forming the Avrutch dynasty). The lifespan of these groups varied; Niezhin and Avrutch had one rebbe each, Liadi had three rebbes, and Kapust had four. Following the deaths of their last rebbes, these groups eventually disbanded.[161][162][163][164][165]

Two other minor offshoot groups were formed by Chabad Hasidim. The Malachim were formed as a quasi-Hasidic group. The group claims to recognize the teachings of the first four rebbes of Chabad, thus rivaling the later Chabad rebbes. The Malachim's first and only rebbe, Rabbi Chaim Avraham Dov Ber Levine haCohen (1859/1860–1938), also known as "The Malach" (lit. "the angel"), was a follower of the fourth and fifth rebbes of Chabad.[166][167][168] While Levine's son chose not to succeed him, the Malachim group continues to maintain a yeshiva and minyan in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.

Following the death of the seventh Chabad Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, an attempt by Shaul Shimon Deutsch to form a breakaway Chabad movement, with Deutsch as "Liozna Rebbe", failed to gain popular support.[169][170][171][172]

Chabad messianism

A few years prior to Schneerson's death, some members of the Chabad movement expressed their belief that Menachem Mendel Schneerson is the Jewish messiah. Those subscribing to the beliefs have been termed meshichists (messianists). A typical statement of belief for Chabad messianists is the song and chant known as yechi adoneinu ("long live our master", Hebrew: יחי אדונינו).[173] Customs vary among messianists as to when the phrase is recited.

Chabad Messianists either believe Schneerson will be resurrected from the dead to be revealed as the messiah, or go further and profess the belief that Schneerson never died in 1994 and is waiting to be revealed as messiah. The Chabad messianic phenomenon has been met mostly with public concerns or opposition from Chabad and non-Chabad Jewish leaders alike.[174]

In the arts

Art

Chabad Hasidic artists Hendel Lieberman and Zalman Kleinman have painted a number of scenes depicting Chabad Hasidic culture, including religious ceremonies, study and prayer. Chabad artist Michoel Muchnik has painted scenes of the Mitzvah Campaigns.[143]: 156 

Artist and shaliach Yitzchok Moully has adapted silkscreen techniques, bright colours and Jewish and Hasidic images to create a form of "Chasidic Pop Art".[175]

Music

Vocalists Avraham Fried and Benny Friedman have included recordings of traditional Chabad songs on their albums of contemporary Orthodox Jewish music. Bluegrass artist Andy Statman has also recorded Chabad spiritual melodies (niggunim).

Reggae artist Matisyahu has included portions of Chabad niggunim and lyrics with Chabad philosophical themes in some of his songs.

Literature

In the late 1930s, Dr Fishl Schneersohn, a psychiatrist, pedagogical theorist, and descendant of the founder of Chabad authored a Yiddish novel titled Chaim Gravitzer: The Tale of the Downfallen One from the World of Chabad. The novel explores the spiritual struggle of a Chabad Hasid who doubts his faith and finally finds peace in doing charitable work.[176]

Novelist Chaim Potok authored a work My Name is Asher Lev in which a Hasidic teen struggles between his artistic passions and the norms of the community. The "Ladover" community is a thinly veiled reference to the Lubavitcher community in Crown Heights.[177][178]

Chabad poet Zvi Yair has written poems on Chabad philosophical topics including Ratzo V'Shov (spiritual yearning).

The American Jewish writer and publisher, Clifford Meth, wrote a short science fiction story depicting the future followers of the "70th Rebbe" of Chabad and their outreach efforts on an alien planet called Tau Ceti IV. The story is told through the eyes of a young extraterrestrial yeshiva student.[179][180]

The American Jewish writer and publisher, Richard Horowitz, wrote a memoir, The Boys Yeshiva, describing his time teaching at a Chabad yeshiva in Los Angeles.[181]

Film and television

The Chabad-Lubavitch community has been the subject of a number of documentary films. These films include:

Other television

See also

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Sources

Further reading

  • Schneerson, Menachem Mendel. On the Essence of Chassidus: A Chasidic Discourse by Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson of Chabad-Lubavitch. Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, 2003 (ISBN 0-8266-0466-8)
  • Drake, Carolyn. . National Geographic (February 2006).
  • Ehrlich, Avrum M. Leadership in the Chabad Movement: A Critical Evaluation of Habad Leadership, History, and Succession, Jason Aronson, 2000. (ISBN 0-7657-6055-X)
  • Feldman, Jan L. Lubavitchers as Citizens: A Paradox of Liberal Democracy, Cornell University Press, 2003 (ISBN 0-8014-4073-4)
  • Fishkoff, Sue. The Rebbe's Army: Inside the World of Chabad-Lubavitch, Schocken, 2003 (ISBN 0-8052-4189-2)
  • Heilman, Samuel and Menachem Friedman. The Rebbe: The Life and Afterlife of Menachem Mendel Schneerson (Princeton University Press; 2010) 400 pages
  • Hoffman, Edward. Despite All Odds: The Story of Lubavitch. Simon & Schuster, 1991 (ISBN 0-671-67703-9)
  • Jacobson, Simon. Toward a Meaningful Life: The Wisdom of the Rebbe, William Morrow, 2002 (ISBN 0-06-051190-7)
  • Katz, Maya Balakirsky, "Trademarks of Faith: Chabad and Chanukah in America", Modern Judaism, 29,2 (2009), 239–267.
  • Challenge: An Encounter with Lubavitch-Chabad, Lubavitch Foundation of Great Britain, 1973. ISBN 0-8266-0491-9.
  • Miller, Chaim. Turning Judaism Outward: A Biography of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson the Seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe. Kol Menachem, 2014.
  • Mindel, Nissan. The Philosophy of Chabad. Chabad Research Center, 1973 (ISBN 082660417X)
  • Oberlander, Boruch and Elkanah Shmotkin. Early Years: The Formative Years of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, as Told by Documents and Archival Data, Kehot Publication Society. 2016. (ISBN 978-1-932349-04-7).
  • Steinsaltz, Adin Even Israel. My Rebbe. Koren Publishers, 2014.
  • Tannenbaum, Michal and Hagit Cohen. 2018. "Language Educational Policy in the Service of Group Identity: The Habad case". Language Policy Volume 17, Issue 3, pp 319–342.
  • Telushkin, Joseph. Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History. Harperwave, 2014.
  • Weiss, Steven I. (January 20, 2006). "Orthodox Rethinking Campus Outreach" 2007-05-05 at the Wayback Machine. The Jewish Daily Forward.

External links

  • Official website for the Chabad Teen Network
  • Chabad Lubavitch World Headquarters
  • Chabad.org
  • Chabad Outreach
  • Lubavitch Archives—Chabad history on the web
  • The Chabad Lubavitch Library
  • Chabad on Campus

chabad, lubavich, lubavitch, redirect, here, russian, village, associated, with, lyubavichi, rudnyansky, district, smolensk, oblast, other, uses, disambiguation, also, known, lubavitch, habad, lubavitch, hebrew, חב, לובביץ, yiddish, חב, ליובוויטש, orthodox, je. Lubavich and Lubavitch redirect here For the Russian village associated with Chabad see Lyubavichi Rudnyansky District Smolensk Oblast For other uses see Chabad disambiguation Chabad also known as Lubavitch Habad and Chabad Lubavitch 2 Hebrew חב ד לובביץ Yiddish חב ד ליובוויטש is an Orthodox Jewish Hasidic dynasty Chabad is one of the world s best known Hasidic movements particularly for its outreach activities It is one of the largest Hasidic groups 3 and Jewish religious organizations in the world Unlike most Haredi groups which are self segregating Chabad operates mainly in the wider world and caters to secularized Jews ChabadHebrew חב דGroup picture in Crown Heights BrooklynFormation1775 248 years ago 1775 FounderSchneur Zalman of LiadiFounded atLiozno Russian EmpireTypeJewish religious movementReligious organizationPurposeeducational philanthropic religious studies spiritualityHeadquartersBrooklyn NY U S Region servedWorldwideMembership90 000 95 000 1 Key peopleMenachem Mendel SchneersonAffiliationsHasidic JudaismWebsitechabad wbr org lubavitch wbr com chabad wbr networkFounded in 1775 by Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi the name Chabad חב ד is an acronym formed from three Hebrew words Chokhmah Binah Da at the first three sefirot of the kabbalistic Tree of Life חכמה בינה דעת Wisdom Understanding and Knowledge which represent the intellectual and kabbalistic underpinnings of the movement 4 5 The name Lubavitch derives from the town in which the now dominant line of leaders resided from 1813 to 1915 6 7 Other non Lubavitch scions of Chabad either disappeared or merged into the Lubavitch line In the 1930s the sixth Rebbe of Chabad Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn moved the center of the Chabad movement from Russia to Poland After the outbreak of World War II he moved the center of the movement to the United States In 1951 Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson formally accepted the leadership as the seventh Chabad Rebbe He transformed the movement into one of the most widespread Jewish movements in the world today Under his leadership Chabad established a large network of institutions that seek to satisfy religious social and humanitarian needs across the world 8 Chabad institutions provide outreach to unaffiliated Jews and humanitarian aid as well as religious cultural and educational activities Prior to his death in 1994 Schneerson was believed by some of his followers to be the Messiah with his own position on the matter debated among scholars Messianic ideology in Chabad sparked controversy in various Jewish communities and is still an unresolved matter Following his death no successor was appointed as a new central leader In 2018 Marcin Wodzinski estimated that the Chabad movement accounted for 13 of the global Hasidic population The total number of Chabad households is estimated to be between 16 000 and 17 000 1 The number of those who sporadically or regularly attend Chabad events is far larger in 2005 the Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs reported that up to one million Jews attend Chabad services at least once a year 9 10 11 In a 2020 study the Pew Research Center found that 16 of American Jews attend Chabad services regularly or semi regularly 12 Contents 1 History 1 1 Leadership 1 2 Oppression and resurgence in Russia 1 3 Relations with other Hasidic groups 1 4 Influence 2 Philosophy 2 1 Tanya 3 Community 3 1 Demographics 3 2 United States 3 2 1 Schools in the United States 3 3 Israel 3 4 France 3 5 Canada 3 6 Spain 3 7 United Arab Emirates 3 8 Ashkenazim and Sephardim 4 Customs and holidays 4 1 Customs 4 2 Holidays 5 Organizations 5 1 Institutions 5 1 1 By geographic region 5 2 Chabad house 5 3 Fundraising 6 Activities 6 1 Education 6 2 Outreach activities 6 2 1 Mitzvah campaigns 6 2 2 Shluchim Emissaries 6 2 3 Mitzvah tank 6 2 4 Campus outreach 6 2 5 CTeen 6 2 6 Chabad Young Professionals 6 3 Publishing 6 3 1 Media 6 3 1 1 Chabad org 6 3 1 2 Community websites 6 4 Summer camps 6 5 Political activities 6 5 1 Library dispute with Russia 7 Controversies 7 1 Succession disputes and offshoot groups 7 2 Chabad messianism 8 In the arts 8 1 Art 8 2 Music 8 3 Literature 8 4 Film and television 8 4 1 Other television 9 See also 10 References 11 Sources 12 Further reading 13 External linksHistory EditThe Chabad movement was established after the First Partition of Poland in the town of Liozno Pskov Governorate Russian Empire now Liozna Belarus in 1775 by Shneur Zalman 13 a student of Dov Ber of Mezeritch the successor to Hasidism s founder Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov The movement was moved to Lyubavichi Yiddish Lubavitch today s Russia by the second Rebbe of Chabad Rabbi Dovber Shneuri in 1813 6 The movement was centered in Lyubavichi for a century until the fifth Rebbe Rabbi Shalom Dovber left the village in 1915 7 and moved to the city of Rostov on Don During the interwar period following Bolshevik persecution the Chabad Lubavitch movement under the Sixth Rebbe Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak was centered in Riga and then in Warsaw The outbreak of World War II led to the Sixth Rebbe to move to the United States Since 1940 13 the movement s center has been in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn 14 15 Chabad newspaper Huh Ukh 1911 Chabad of Boston Appeal 1927 While the movement spawned a number of offshoot groups throughout its history the Chabad Lubavitch branch is the only one still active making it the movement s main surviving line 16 Historian Jonathan Sarna has characterized Chabad as having enjoyed the fastest rate of growth of any Jewish religious movement in the period 1946 2015 17 In the early 1900s Chabad Lubavitch legally incorporated itself under Agudas Chasidei Chabad Association of Chabad Hasidim Early community histories of Chabad produced by members or former members of the Chabad community include Toldot Amudei HaChabad Konigsberg 1876 by Michael Levi Rodkinson and Beit Rebbe Berdichev 1902 by Hayim Meir Heilman 18 19 20 Leadership Edit Schneersohn FamilyThe Chabad movement has been led by a succession of Hasidic rebbes The main line of the movement Chabad Lubavitch has had seven rebbes in total Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi 1745 1812 founded the Chabad movement in the town of Liozna He later moved the movement s center to the town of Liadi Rabbi Shneur Zalman was the youngest disciple of Dov Ber of Mezeritch the principal disciple and successor of Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov founder of Hasidism The Chabad movement began as a separate school of thought within the Hasidic movement focusing of the spread of Hasidic mystical teachings using logical reasoning creating a kind of Jewish rational mysticism 21 Shneur Zalman s main work is the Tanya or Sefer Shel Beinonim Book of the Average Man The Tanya is the central book of Chabad thought and is studied daily by followers of the Chabad movement Shneur Zalman s other works include a collection of writings on Hasidic thought and the Shulchan Aruch HaRav a revised version of the code of Halakha both of which are studied regularly by followers of Chabad Shneur Zalman s successors went by last names such as Schneuri and Schneersohn later Schneerson signifying their descent from the movement s founder He is commonly referred to as the Old Rebbe Yiddish א לטער רבי Alter Rebbe or Hebrew אדמו ר הזקן Admur Hazoken 22 23 Rabbi Dovber Schneuri 1773 1827 son of Rabbi Shneur Zalman led the Chabad movement in the town of Lyubavichi Lubavitch His leadership was initially disputed by Rabbi Aaron Halevi of Stroselye however Rabbi Dovber was generally recognized as his father s rightful successor and the movement s leader Rabbi Dovber published a number of his writings on Hasidic thought greatly expanding his father s work He also published some of his father s writings Many of Rabbi Dovber s works have been subsequently republished by the Chabad movement He is commonly referred to as the Mitteler Rebbe Yiddish מיטעלער רבי Middle Rabbi Hebrew אדמו ר האמצעי Admur Ha emtzoei 24 25 Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn 1789 1866 a grandson of Rabbi Shneur Zalman and son in law of Rabbi Dovber Following his attempt to persuade the Chabad movement to accept his brother in law or uncle as rebbe Rabbi Menachem Mendel assumed the title of rebbe of Chabad also leading the movement from the town of Lyubavichi Lubavitch He published a number of his works on both Hasidic thought and Jewish law Rabbi Menachem Mendel also published some of the works of his grandfather Rabbi Shneur Zalman He is commonly referred to as the Tzemach Tzedek after the title of his responsa 26 Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn 1834 1882 was the seventh and youngest son of Rabbi Menachem Mendel He assumed the title of rebbe in town of Lyubavichi Lubavitch while several of his brothers assumed the title of rebbe in other towns forming Chabad groups of their own which existed for several decades Years after his death his teachings were published by the Chabad movement He is commonly referred to as the Maharash an acronym for Moreinu HaRav Shmuel our teacher Rabbi Shmuel 27 28 Rabbi Shalom Dovber Schneersohn 1860 1920 Shmuel s second son succeeded his father as rebbe Rabbi Shalom Dovber waited some time before officially accepting the title of rebbe as not to offend his elder brother Zalman Aaron He established a yeshiva called Tomchei Temimim During World War I he moved to Rostov on Don Many of his writings were published after his death and are studied regularly in Chabad yeshivas He is commonly referred to as the Rashab an acronym for Rabbi Shalom Ber 29 Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn 1880 1950 the only son of Sholom Dovber succeeded his father as rebbe of Chabad Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak was exiled from Russia following an attempt by the Bolshevik government to have him executed 30 He led the movement from Warsaw Poland until the start of World War II After fleeing the Nazis Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak lived in Brooklyn New York until his death He established much of Chabad s current organizational structure founding several of its central organizations as well as other Chabad institutions both local and international He published a number of his writings as well as the works of his predecessors He is commonly referred to as the Rayatz or the Frierdiker Rebbe Previous Rebbe Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson 1902 1994 31 son in law of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak and a great grandson of the third Rebbe of Lubavitch assumed the title of rebbe one year after his father in law s death Rabbi Menachem Mendel greatly expanded Chabad s global network establishing hundreds of new Chabad centers across the globe He published many of his own works as well as the works of his predecessors His teachings are studied regularly by followers of Chabad He is commonly referred to as the Lubavitcher Rebbe or simply the Rebbe Even after his death many continue to revere him as the leader of the Chabad movement 24 Oppression and resurgence in Russia Edit The Chabad movement was subject to government oppression in Russia The Russian government first under the Czar later under the Bolsheviks imprisoned all but one of the Chabad rebbes 32 33 The Bolsheviks also imprisoned exiled and executed a number of Chabad Hasidim 34 35 36 During the Second World War many Chabad Hasidim evacuated to the Uzbek cities of Samarkand and Tashkent where they established small centers of Hasidic life while at the same time seeking ways to emigrate from Soviet Russia due to the government s suppression of religious life 37 The reach of Chabad in Central Asia also included earlier efforts that took place in the 1920s 38 Following the war and well after the center of the Chabad movement moved to the United States the movement remained active in Soviet Russia aiding the local Jews known as Refuseniks who sought to learn more about Judaism 39 And throughout the Soviet era the Chabad movement maintained a secret network across the USSR 40 Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 state persecution of Chabad ceased The Chief Rabbi of Russia Berel Lazar a Chabad emissary maintains warm relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin 41 Lazar also received the Order of Friendship and Order For Merit to the Fatherland medals from him 42 Relations with other Hasidic groups Edit The relations between the seventh Chabad Rebbe and the leaders of other Orthodox groups were recorded by Chabad author Rabbi Shalom Dov Wolpo in his three volume anthology titled Shemen Sasson MeChaveirecha In the 1980s tensions arose between Chabad and Satmar Chasidim as a result of several assaults on Chabad Hasidim by Satmar Hasidim 43 44 45 Influence Edit Chabad s influence among world Jewry has been far reaching since World War II Chabad pioneered the post World War II Jewish outreach movement which spread Judaism to many assimilated Jews worldwide leading to a substantial number of baalei teshuva returnees to Judaism The very first Yeshiva Rabbinical College for such baalei teshuva Hadar Hatorah was established by the Lubavitcher rebbe It is reported that up to a million Jews attend Chabad services at least once a year 10 11 According to Steven I Weiss Chabad s ideology has dramatically influenced non Hasidic Jews outreach practice 46 Because of its outreach to all Jews including those quite alienated from religious Jewish tradition Chabad has been described as the one Orthodox group which evokes great affection from large segments of American Jewry 47 Philosophy EditMain article Chabad philosophy Chabad Hasidic philosophy focuses on religious and spiritual concepts such as God the soul and the meaning of the Jewish commandments Classical Judaic writings and Jewish mysticism especially the Zohar and the Kabbalah of Rabbi Isaac Luria are frequently cited in Chabad works These texts are used both as sources of Chabad teachings and as material requiring interpretation by Chabad authors Many of these teachings discuss what is commonly referred to as bringing heaven down to earth i e making this world a dwelling place for God Chabad philosophy is rooted in the teachings of Rabbis Yisroel ben Eliezer the Baal Shem Tov founder of Hasidism and Dovber ben Avraham the Maggid of Mezritch Rabbi Yisroel s successor citation needed Rabbi Shneur Zalman s teachings particularly in the Tanya formed the basis of Chabad philosophy as expanded by succeeding generations Many Chabad activities today are understood as applications of Shneur Zalman s teachings citation needed Tanya Edit Main article Tanya Judaism The Tanya Hebrew תניא is a book by Rabbi Shneur Zalman first published in 1797 It is the first schematic treatment of Hasidic moral philosophy and its metaphysical foundations 22 According to the Tanya the intellect consists of three interconnected processes Chochma wisdom Bina understanding and Da at knowledge While other branches of Hasidism focused primarily on the idea that God desires the heart Shneur Zalman argued that God also desires the mind and that the mind is the gateway to the heart With the Chabad philosophy he elevated the mind above the heart arguing that understanding is the mother of fear and love for God 48 The Tanya has five sections The original name of the first section is Sefer Shel Beinonim the Book of the Intermediates It is also known as Likutei Amarim Collected Sayings Sefer Shel Beinonim analyzes the inner struggle of the individual and the path to resolution Citing the biblical verse the matter is very near to you in your mouth your heart to do 49 the philosophy is based on the notion that the human is not inherently evil rather every individual has an inner conflict that is characterized by two different inclinations the good and the bad 50 Chabad often contrasted itself with what is termed the Chagat schools of Hasidism 51 While all schools of Hasidism put a central focus on the emotions Chagat saw emotions as a reaction to physical stimuli such as dancing singing or beauty Shneur Zalman on the other hand taught that the emotions must be led by the mind and thus the focus of Chabad thought was to be Torah study and prayer rather than esotericism and song 22 As a Talmudist Shneur Zalman endeavored to place Kabbalah and Hasidism on a rational basis In Tanya he defines his approach as moach shalit al halev Hebrew מוח שליט על הלב the brain ruling the heart 52 Community Edit A Lag BaOmer parade in front of Chabad headquarters at 770 Eastern Parkway Brooklyn New York in 1987An adherent of Chabad is called a Chabad Chasid or Hasid Hebrew חסיד חב ד a Lubavitcher Yiddish ליובא וויטשער a Chabadnik Hebrew חבדניק or a Chabadsker Yiddish חבדסקער 53 Chabad s adherents include both Hasidic followers as well as non Hasidim who have joined Chabad synagogues and other Chabad run institutions 54 The Chabad community consists of the followers Hasidim of the Chabad rebbes Originally based in Eastern Europe today various Chabad communities span the globe communities with high concentrations of Chabad s Hasidic followers include Crown Heights Brooklyn and Kfar Chabad Israel 55 56 According to sociologists studying contemporary Jewry the Chabad movement fits into neither the standard category of Haredi nor that of modern Orthodox among Orthodox Jews This is due in part to the existence of the number of Chabad supporters and affiliates who are not Orthodox dubbed by some scholars as non Orthodox Hasidim the general lack of official recognition of political and religious distinctions within Judaism and the open relationship with non Orthodox Jews represented by the activism of Chabad emissaries 54 57 Demographics Edit In 2018 the first global demographic estimate of Hasidim was conducted based on community directories for Hasidic communities The estimate for Chabad s demographic size is approximately 13 of Hasidim globally accounting for 16 000 17 000 households or 90 000 95 000 individuals 1 Prior to this study the demographic accounts on the Chabad movement varied greatly Compared to other Hasidic groups Chabad was thought to be either the largest 58 or the third 59 or fourth 60 largest Hasidic movement Chabad adherents were often reported to number some 200 000 persons 61 62 63 Some scholars pointed to the lack of quantitative data to back this claim 64 failed verification while some placed the number of Chabad followers at around 40 000 but note that the number may be higher if the non Hasidic Jews who join Chabad synagogues are included as well 9 In 2018 Marcin Wodzinski produced his Historical Atlas of Hasidism which used Chabad community directories to establish that Chabad included over 16 000 Hasidic households translating to over 90 000 individuals making the group the second largest Hasidic community after the Satmar community 1 United States Edit President Ronald Reagan receives menorah from the American Friends of Lubavitch White House 1984Estimates for Chabad and other Hasidic groups are often based on extrapolation from the limited information available in US census data for some of the areas where Hasidim live A 2006 estimate was drawn from a study on the Montreal Chabad community determining average household size in conjunction with language and other select indicators from US census data it is estimated that Chabad in the United States includes approximately 4 000 households which contains between 22 000 and 25 000 people In terms of Chabad s relation to other Hasidic groups within the New York metropolitan area Chabad in the New York area accounts for around 15 of the total New York Hasidic population Chabad is estimated to have an annual growth of 3 6 65 Crown Heights The Crown Heights Chabad community s estimated size is 10 000 to 12 000 65 9 or 12 000 to 16 000 66 In 2006 extrapolating based on census data it was estimated that the Chabad community in Crown Heights make up some 11 000 It was estimated that between 25 and 35 of Chabad Hasidim in Crown Heights speak Yiddish This figure is significantly lower than other Hasidic groups and may be attributed to the addition of previously non Hasidic Jews to the community It was also estimated that over 20 of Chabad Hasidim in Crown Heights speak Hebrew or Russian 65 The Crown Heights Chabad community has its own Beis Din rabbinical court and Crown Heights Jewish Community Council CHJCC Chabad hipsters Beginning from the late 2000s through the 2010s a minor trend of cross acculturation of Chabad Hasidim and contemporary hipster subculture appeared within the New York City Jewish community According to The Jewish Daily Forward a significant number of members of the Chabad Hasidic community mostly residing in Crown Heights Brooklyn appear to now have adopted various cultural affinities of the local hipster subculture These members are referred to as Chabad hipsters or Hipster Hasidim 67 68 Schools in the United States Edit The report findings of studies on Jewish day schools and supplementary Jewish education in the United States show that the student body currently enrolled in some 295 Chabad schools exceeds 20 750 although this figure includes Chabad Hasidic children as well as non Chabad children 69 70 Israel Edit Kfar Chabad Kfar Chabad s estimated size is 5 100 the residents of the town are believed to all be Chabad adherents This estimate is based on figures published by the Israeli Census Bureau 71 Other estimates place the community population at around 7 000 66 Safed The Chabad community in Safad Tzfat originates from the wave of Eastern European immigration to Palestine of 1777 1840 The Chabad community established synagogues and institutions in Safad The early settlement declined by the 20th century but was renewed following an initiative by the seventh rebbe in the early 1970s which reestablished the Chabad community in the city 72 Rabbi Yeshaya HaLevi Horowitz 1883 1978 a Safad born direct descendant of Rabbi Yeshaya Horowitz author of the Shnei Luchot HaBrit served as the rabbi of the Chabad community in Safad from 1908 until his immigration to the U S during World War I 73 Members of the Chabad community run a number of outreach efforts during the Jewish holidays Activities include blowing the shofar for the elderly on Rosh Hashana reading the Megilla for hospital patients on Purim and setting up a Sukka on the town s main street during the Succoth holiday 72 France Edit The Chabad community in France is estimated to be between 10 000 and 15 000 The majority of the Chabad community in France are the descendants of immigrants from North Africa specifically Algeria Morocco and Tunisia during the 1960s 66 74 Canada Edit Montreal The estimated size of the Chabad community of Greater Montreal is 1 590 The estimate is taken from a 2003 community study 75 76 The Chabad community in Montreal originated sometime before 1931 While early works on Canadian Jewry make little or no mention of early Hasidic life in Canada later researchers have documented Chabad s accounts in Canada starting from the 1900s and 1910s Steven Lapidus notes that there is mention of two Chabad congregations in a 1915 article in the Canadian Jewish Chronicle listing the delegates of the first Canadian Jewish Conference One congregation is listed as Chabad of Toronto and the other is simply listed as Libavitzer Congregation The sociologist William Shaffir has noted that some Chabad Hasidim and sympathizers did reside in Montreal before 1941 but does not elaborate further Steven Lapidus notes that in a 1931 obituary published in Keneder Odler a Canadian Yiddish newspaper the deceased Rabbi Menashe Lavut is credited as the founder of Anshei Chabad in Montreal and the Nusach Ari synagogue Thus the Chabad presence in Montreal predates 1931 77 Spain Edit Tenerife In 2022 Chabad established Chabad of the Canary Islands Tenerife in the city of Puerto de la Cruz 78 United Arab Emirates Edit Dubai The Jewish Community Center of UAE has a synagogue and a Talmud Torah 1 000 kosher chickens per week are provided to the community by local kosher shechita The community is headed by community president Solly Wolf and Rabbi Levi Duchman 79 80 81 Meeting of the President of Ukraine Volodymyr Zelensky with the rabbis of Ukraine on May 6 2019Ashkenazim and Sephardim Edit Although the Chabad movement was founded in Eastern Europe a center of Ashkenazic Jewry it has attracted a significant number of Sephardi Jews as adherents in the past several decades 82 Some Chabad communities are now a mix of Ashkenazi and Sephardi Chabad Hasidim In Montreal close to 25 of Chabad households include a Sephardi parent 83 84 Customs and holidays EditMain article Chabad customs and holidays Customs Edit Chabad adherents follow Chabad traditions and prayer services based on Lurianic Kabbalah 85 General Chabad customs called minhagim or minhagei Chabad distinguish the movement from other Hasidic groups Some of the main Chabad customs are minor practices performed on traditional Jewish holidays Passover It is customary in Chabad communities on Passover to limit contact of matzah an unleavened bread eaten on Passover with water This custom is called gebrokts Yiddish געברא כטס lit broken However on the last day of Passover it is customary to intentionally have matzah come in contact with water 86 Chanukah It is the custom of Chabad Hasidim to place the Chanukah menorah against the room s doorpost and not on the windowsill 87 88 89 Prayer The founder of Chabad wrote a very specific liturgy for the daily and festival prayers based on the teachings of the Kabbalists primarily the Arizal The founder of Chabad also instituted various other halachic rulings including the use of stainless steel knives for the slaughter of animals before human consumption which are now universally accepted in all sects of Judaism Holidays Edit There are a number of days marked by the Chabad movement as special days Major holidays include the liberation dates clarification needed of the leaders of the movement the rebbes of Chabad others corresponded to the leaders birthdays anniversaries of death and other life events The days marking the leaders release are celebrated by the Chabad movement as Days of Liberation Hebrew יום גאולה Yom Geulah The most noted day is Yud Tes Kislev the liberation of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi the founder of the Chabad movement The day is also called the New Year of Hasidism 87 The birthdays of several of the movement s leaders are celebrated each year including Chai Elul the birthday of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi the founder of the Chabad movement 90 91 and Yud Aleph Nissan the birthday of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson the seventh rebbe of Chabad 92 The anniversaries of death or yartzeit of several of the movement s leaders are celebrated each year include Yud Shvat the yartzeit of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn the sixth rebbe of Chabad 93 Gimmel Tammuz the yartzeit of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson the seventh rebbe of Chabad 93 94 and Chof Beis Shvat the yartzeit of Chaya Mushka Schneerson the wife of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson 95 Organizations EditMain article Chabad affiliated organizations Chabad s central organization representing the movement at large Agudas Chasidei Chabad is headed by Rabbi Abraham Shemtov The educational outreach and social services arms Merkos L Inyonei Chinuch and Machneh Israel are headed by Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky as well as the Chabad Lubavitch publishing house Kehot Publication Society Local Chabad centers and institutions are usually incorporated as separate legal entities 96 Map of Countries with Chabad ShluchimInstitutions Edit As of 2020 there were over 3 500 Chabad centers in 100 countries 97 98 The Chabad movement s online directory lists around 1 350 Chabad institutions This number includes schools and other Chabad affiliated establishments The number of Chabad centers vary per country the majority are in the United States and Israel There are over 100 countries with a small Chabad presence In total according to its directory Chabad maintains a presence in 950 cities around the world 178 in Europe 14 in Africa 200 in Israel 400 in North America 38 in South America and about 70 in Asia excluding Israel including Russia 99 By geographic region Edit Russia s Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar left speaks with Russian President Vladimir Putin 28 December 2016Further information Chabad affiliated organizations Chabad institutions by geographic region Chabad presence varies from region to region The continent with the highest concentration of Chabad centers is North America The continent with the fewest centers is Africa 100 101 Geographic location Chabad institutionsNorth America 2 894Europe 1 133Asia 615South America 208Oceania 67Africa 55Total 4 972Chabad house Edit Main article Chabad house A Chabad house is a form of Jewish community center primarily serving both educational and observance purposes 102 failed verification Often until the community can support its own center the Chabad house is located in the shaliach s home with the living room being used as the synagogue Effort is made to provide an atmosphere in which the nonobservant will not feel intimidated by any perceived contrast between their lack of knowledge of Jewish practice and the advanced knowledge of some of the people they meet there 103 The term Chabad House originated with the creation of the first such outreach center on the campus of UCLA by Rabbi Shlomo Cunin 104 A key to the Chabad house was given to the Rebbe and he asked if that meant that the new house was his home He was told yes and he replied My hand will be on the door of this house to keep it open twenty four hours a day for young and old men and women alike 105 Followers of Chabad can be seen attending to tefillin booths at the Western Wall and Ben Gurion International Airport as well as other public places and distributing Shabbat candles on Fridays Chabad rabbis and their families are sent to various major cities around the globe to teach college students build day schools and create youth camps Many of these efforts are geared towards secular or less religious Jews Additionally unmarried rabbinical students spend weeks during the summer in locations that do not yet have a permanent Chabad presence making housecalls putting up mezuzot and teaching about Judaism This is known as Merkos Shlichus Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson also initiated a Jewish children s movement called Tzivos Hashem lit Army of God for under bar bat mitzvah age children to inspire them to increase in study of Torah and observance of mitzvot Rabbi Schneerson also encouraged the use of modern technology in outreach efforts such as Mitzva tanks which are mobile homes that travel a city or country 106 The Chabad website chabad org a pioneer of Jewish religious outreach on the Internet was started by Rabbi Yosef Y Kazen and developed by Rabbi D Zirkind citation needed In June 1994 Rabbi Schneerson died with no successor Since then over two thousand couples have taken up communal leadership roles in outreach bringing the estimated total number of Shluchim to over five thousand worldwide 107 108 In the 2008 Mumbai attacks the local Chabad house was targeted 109 110 The local Chabad emissaries Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his wife Rivka and four other Jews were tortured and murdered by Islamic terrorists 111 Chabad received condolences from around the world 112 113 Fundraising Edit Funds for activities of a Chabad center rely entirely on the local community Chabad centers do not receive funding from Lubavitch headquarters For the day to day operations local emissaries do all the fundraising by themselves Chabad emissaries often solicit the support of local Jews 114 Funds are used toward purchasing or renovating Chabad centers synagogues and mikvahs 115 Activities EditThe Chabad movement has been involved in numerous activities in contemporary Jewish life These activities include providing Jewish education to different age groups outreach to non affiliated Jews publishing Jewish literature and summer camps for children among other activities Education Edit Chabad runs a number of educational institutions Most are Jewish day schools others offer secondary and adult education Day schools In the United States there are close to 300 day schools and supplementary schools run by Chabad 116 69 Secondary schools Chabad runs multiple secondary education institutions most notable are Tomchei Tmimim for young men and Bais Rivka for young women Adult education Chabad runs adult education programs including those organized by the Rohr Jewish Learning Institute 117 118 and the Jewish Learning Network Outreach activities Edit Group photo of Chabad Shluchim emissaries in 2015 Chabad chassidic Jews offer help with laying tefilin on the streetMany of the movement s activities emphasize outreach activities This is due to Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson encouraging his followers to reach out to other Jews 119 Chabad outreach includes activities promoting the practice of Jewish commandments Mitzvah campaigns as well as other forms of Jewish outreach Much of Chabad s outreach is performed by Chabad emissaries see Shaliach Chabad Most of the communities that Chabad emissaries reach out to are other Jewish communities such as Reform Jews 120 Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn 6th leader of the Chabad Lubavitch branch of Hasidic Judaism and then his successor Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson were responsible for focusing Chabad s activities on outreach Rabbi Schneerson was a pioneer in the field of Orthodox Judaism outreach Kiruv Each sent out large numbers of rabbinic emissaries known as Shluchim to settle in places across the world for outreach purposes The centers that these Shluchim established were termed Chabad houses Chabad has been active in reaching out to Jews through its synagogues and various forms of more direct outreach efforts The organization has been recognized as one of the leaders in using free holiday services to reach out across denominations 121 Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn had a core of dedicated Hasidim who maintained underground yeshivos and mikvehs and provided shechitah and ritual circumcision services in the Soviet Union Mitzvah campaigns Edit Main article Chabad mitzvah campaigns The Rebbes of Chabad have issued the call to all Jews to attract non observant Jews to adopt Orthodox Jewish observance teaching that this activity is part of the process of bringing the Messiah Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson issued a call to every Jew Even if you are not fully committed to a Torah life do something Begin with a mitzvah any mitzvah its value will not be diminished by the fact that there are others that you are not prepared to do 122 Schneerson also suggested ten specific mitzvot that he believed were ideally suited for the emissaries to introduce to non observant Jews These were called mivtzoim meaning campaigns or endeavors These were lighting candles before Shabbat and the Jewish holidays by Jewish women putting on tefillin affixing a mezuzah regular Torah study giving tzedakah purchasing Jewish books observing kashrut kosher kindness to others Jewish religious education and observing the family purity laws citation needed In addition Schneerson emphasized spreading awareness of preparing for and the coming of the moshiach consistent with his philosophy He wrote on the responsibility to reach out to teach every fellow Jew with love and implored that all Jews believe in the imminent coming of the moshiach as explained by Maimonides He argued that redemption was predicated on Jews doing good deeds and that gentiles should be educated about the Noahide Laws Schneerson was emphatic about the need to encourage and provide strong education for every child Jew and non Jew alike In honor of Schneerson s efforts in education the United States Congress has made Education and Sharing Day on the Rebbe s Hebrew birthday 11 Nissan Shluchim Emissaries Edit Main article Shaliach Chabad Following the initiative of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson spurred on the movement to what has become known as shlichus serving as an emissary performing outreach in 1950 1951 As a result Chabad shluchim emissaries sing shliach have moved all over the world with the stated mission of encouraging non observant Jews to adopt Orthodox Jewish observance They assist Jews with all their religious needs as well as with physical assistance and spiritual guidance and teaching The stated goal is to encourage Jews to learn more about their Jewish heritage and to practice Judaism 123 The Chabad movement motivated by Schneerson has trained and ordained thousands of rabbis educators ritual slaughterers and ritual circumcisers who are then accompanied by their spouses to many locations around the world Typically a young Lubavitch rabbi and his wife in their early twenties with one or two children will move to a new location and as they settle in will raise a large family who as a family unit will aim to fulfill their mandate of bringing Jewish people closer to Orthodox Judaism and encouraging gentiles to adhere to the Seven Laws of Noah 123 To date there are around 5000 shluchim in 100 countries 8 Mitzvah tank Edit Main article Mitzvah tank Chabad Lubavitch Mitzvah tank in Golders Green LondonA mitzvah tank is a vehicle used by Chabad members involved in outreach as a portable educational and outreach center and mini synagogue or minagogue Mitzvah tanks are commonly used for advancing the mitzvah campaigns Mitzvah tanks have been commonplace on the streets of New York City since 1974 124 Today they are used all over the globe in countries where Chabad is active Campus outreach Edit Main article Chabad on Campus International Foundation In recent years Chabad has greatly expanded its outreach on university and college campuses Chabad Student Centers are active on over 100 campuses and Chabad offers varied activities at an additional 150 universities worldwide 125 failed verification Professor Alan Dershowitz has said Chabad s presence on college campuses today is absolutely crucial and we cannot rest until Chabad is on every major college campus in the world 126 CTeen Edit CTeen is an international organization dedicated to educating Jewish youth about their heritage It is the teen focused arm of the Chabad movement operated by Merkos L Inyonei Chinuch There are over 100 000 members worldwide 127 with 630 chapters across 44 countries 128 CTeen is open to all Jewish teens regardless of affiliation and has been called the fastest growing and most diverse Jewish youth organization in the world 129 The organization was launched in 2010 130 and operates worldwide in cities such as Paris Rio de Janeiro Leeds Munich Buenos Aires and New York 131 Its director is Rabbi Shimon Rivkin and Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky serves as chairman 132 Individual chapters and programs are managed by local directors Picture of room 302 CTeen runs a number of ongoing and annual programs some of which include CTeen International Shabbaton an annual inspirational weekend that brings together thousands of teens from around the world The program includes a traditional Shabbat experience in the heart of Hasidic Crown Heights a Torah completion ceremony in Times Square and the CTeen Choice Awards at Brooklyn s Pier 12 The weekend includes a Saturday night concert in Times Square with guest performances by singers such as Gad Elbaz Yakov Shwekey and American Hasidic rapper Nissim Black 129 133 CTeen XTREME a summer travel camp where campers challenge themselves both physically and spiritually by partaking in extreme sports observing a completely tech free Shabbat and keeping kosher on the road 134 CTeen U a college accredited program where teens learn about Jewish philosophy ethics and history The program was launched in 2019 through a partnership with Yeshiva University 135 Heritage Quest educational travel programs that aim to deepen the connection of Jewish teens to their heritage through trips to Poland and Israel offering teens the chance to explore their roots at the source 136 137 Kosher Food Club a co curricular high school club operating in over fifty high schools throughout the United States that serves as a humanitarian initiative to promote healthy lifestyles feed the homeless and provide educational and hands on experiences making traditional Jewish foods 138 139 National Campus Office coordinator of Chabad on Campus a network of Jewish Student Centers on more than 230 university campuses worldwide as of April 2016 as well as regional Chabad Lubavitch centers at an additional 150 universities worldwide 140 Suicide Alert workshops that equip teens to assist peers dealing with anxiety and depression resulting from the COVID 19 pandemic The workshops have been organized by CTeen chapters in Florida New Hampshire and New Jersey among others in partnership with the Gelt Charitable Foundation 141 142 Chabad Young Professionals Edit This section does not cite any sources Please help improve this section by adding citations to reliable sources Unsourced material may be challenged and removed August 2020 Learn how and when to remove this template message Targeting the demographic of young professionals Chabad s new initiative focuses on social events and business networking to fuel Jewish activity in young professional s lives With seminars on career advancement social gatherings for Jewish holidays and the ability to connect with other like minded Jews in the area Chabad Young Professionals CYP combines networking and meaning into many young people s lives citation needed Publishing Edit Main article Kehot Publication Society Chabad publishes and distributes Jewish religious literature Under Kehot Publication Society Chabad s main publishing house Jewish literature has been translated into 12 different languages Kehot regularly provides books at discounted prices and hosts book a thons Kehot commonly distributes books written or transcribed from the rebbes of Chabad prominent chassidim and other authors who have written Jewish materials Kehot is a division of Merkos L Inyonei Chinuch the movement s educational arm Media Edit More than any other Jewish movement Chabad has used media as part of its religious social and political experience Their latest leader Menachem Mendel Schneerson was the most video documented Jewish leader in history 143 page needed Chabad org Edit Main article Chabad org The Chabad movement publishes a wealth of Jewish material on the internet Chabad s main website Chabad org is one of the first Jewish websites 144 and the first and largest virtual congregation 145 146 It serves not just its own members but Jewish people worldwide in general 147 Community websites Edit Main article List of Chabad websites Popular Chabad community websites include Chabad org asktherav com anash org CrownHeights info Shmais com Chdailynews com and the Hebrew site COL org il 148 149 Summer camps Edit Main article Gan Israel Camping Network Chabad has set up an extensive network of camps around the world most using the name Gan Israel a name chosen by Schneerson although the first overnight camp was the girls division called Camp Emunah There are 1 200 sites serving 210 000 children most of whom do not come from Orthodox homes Of these 500 camps are in the United States 150 151 Political activities Edit Rabbi Schneerson involved himself in matters relating to the resolution of the Israeli Arab conflict 152 He maintained that as a matter of Jewish law 153 any territorial concession on Israel s part would endanger the lives of all Jews in the Land of Israel and is therefore forbidden He also insisted that even discussing the possibility of such concessions showed weakness would encourage Arab attacks and therefore endanger Jewish lives 154 In US domestic politics Schneerson supported government involvement in education and welcomed the establishment of the United States Department of Education in 1980 yet insisted that part of a school s educational mission was to incorporate the values espoused in the Seven Laws of Noah He called for the introduction of a moment of silence at the beginning of the school day and for students to be encouraged to use this time for such improving thoughts or prayers as their parents might suggest 155 In 1981 Schneerson publicly called for the use of solar energy Schneerson believed that the US could achieve energy independence by developing solar energy technologies He argued that the dependence on foreign oil may lead to the country compromising on its principles 156 157 Library dispute with Russia Edit In 2013 US federal judge Royce Lamberth ruled in favor of Chabad lawyers who sought contempt sanctions on three Russian organizations to return the Schneersohn Library 12 000 books belonging to Rabbi Yosef Schneersohn seized and nationalized by the Bolsheviks in 1917 18 to the Brooklyn Chabad Library 42 158 Chabad Rabbi Berel Lazar Russia s Chief Rabbi reluctantly accepted Putin s request in moving the Schneerson Library to Moscow s Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center as a form of compromise which was criticized by the Chabad Library 42 Controversies EditSeveral movement wide controversies have occurred in Chabad s 200 year history Two major leadership succession controversies occurred in the 19th century one took place in the 1810s following the death of the movement s founder the other occurred in the 1860s following the death of the third Rebbe Two other minor offshoot groups were formed later in the movement s history The movement s other major controversy is Chabad messianism which began in the 1990s Succession disputes and offshoot groups Edit Main article Chabad offshoot groups A number of groups have split from the Chabad movement forming their own Hasidic groups and at times positioning themselves as possible successors of previous Chabad rebbes Following the deaths of the first and third rebbes of Chabad disputes arose over their succession Following the death of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi the first Chabad rebbe a dispute over his succession led to a break within the movement While the recognized successor was his oldest son Rabbi Dovber Schneuri a student of Rabbi Schneur Zalman Rabbi Aaron HaLevi assumed the title of rebbe and led a number of followers from the town of Strashelye forming the Strashelye dynasty The new group had two rebbes Rabbi Aaron and his son Rabbi Haim Rephael The new group eventually disbanded following Rabbi Haim Rephael s death 16 159 One of the main points the two rabbis disagreed on was the place of spiritual ecstasy in prayer R Aaron supported the idea while Rabbi Dovber emphasized genuine ecstasy can only be a result of meditative contemplation hisbonenus Rabbi Dovber published his arguments on the subject in a compilation titled Kuntres Hispa alus Tract on Ecstasy 160 Following the death of the third Chabad rebbe Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn the Tzemach Tzedek a dispute over his succession led to the formation of several Chabad groups While Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn was recognized as the heir to the Chabad Lubavitch line several of his brothers formed groups of their own in the towns of Kopys forming the Kapust dynasty Nezhin forming the Niezhin dynasty Lyady forming the Liadi dynasty and Ovruch forming the Avrutch dynasty The lifespan of these groups varied Niezhin and Avrutch had one rebbe each Liadi had three rebbes and Kapust had four Following the deaths of their last rebbes these groups eventually disbanded 161 162 163 164 165 Two other minor offshoot groups were formed by Chabad Hasidim The Malachim were formed as a quasi Hasidic group The group claims to recognize the teachings of the first four rebbes of Chabad thus rivaling the later Chabad rebbes The Malachim s first and only rebbe Rabbi Chaim Avraham Dov Ber Levine haCohen 1859 1860 1938 also known as The Malach lit the angel was a follower of the fourth and fifth rebbes of Chabad 166 167 168 While Levine s son chose not to succeed him the Malachim group continues to maintain a yeshiva and minyan in Williamsburg Brooklyn Following the death of the seventh Chabad Rebbe Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson an attempt by Shaul Shimon Deutsch to form a breakaway Chabad movement with Deutsch as Liozna Rebbe failed to gain popular support 169 170 171 172 Chabad messianism Edit Main article Chabad messianism A few years prior to Schneerson s death some members of the Chabad movement expressed their belief that Menachem Mendel Schneerson is the Jewish messiah Those subscribing to the beliefs have been termed meshichists messianists A typical statement of belief for Chabad messianists is the song and chant known as yechi adoneinu long live our master Hebrew יחי אדונינו 173 Customs vary among messianists as to when the phrase is recited Chabad Messianists either believe Schneerson will be resurrected from the dead to be revealed as the messiah or go further and profess the belief that Schneerson never died in 1994 and is waiting to be revealed as messiah The Chabad messianic phenomenon has been met mostly with public concerns or opposition from Chabad and non Chabad Jewish leaders alike 174 In the arts EditArt Edit Chabad Hasidic artists Hendel Lieberman and Zalman Kleinman have painted a number of scenes depicting Chabad Hasidic culture including religious ceremonies study and prayer Chabad artist Michoel Muchnik has painted scenes of the Mitzvah Campaigns 143 156 Artist and shaliach Yitzchok Moully has adapted silkscreen techniques bright colours and Jewish and Hasidic images to create a form of Chasidic Pop Art 175 Music Edit Vocalists Avraham Fried and Benny Friedman have included recordings of traditional Chabad songs on their albums of contemporary Orthodox Jewish music Bluegrass artist Andy Statman has also recorded Chabad spiritual melodies niggunim Reggae artist Matisyahu has included portions of Chabad niggunim and lyrics with Chabad philosophical themes in some of his songs Literature Edit In the late 1930s Dr Fishl Schneersohn a psychiatrist pedagogical theorist and descendant of the founder of Chabad authored a Yiddish novel titled Chaim Gravitzer The Tale of the Downfallen One from the World of Chabad The novel explores the spiritual struggle of a Chabad Hasid who doubts his faith and finally finds peace in doing charitable work 176 Novelist Chaim Potok authored a work My Name is Asher Lev in which a Hasidic teen struggles between his artistic passions and the norms of the community The Ladover community is a thinly veiled reference to the Lubavitcher community in Crown Heights 177 178 Chabad poet Zvi Yair has written poems on Chabad philosophical topics including Ratzo V Shov spiritual yearning The American Jewish writer and publisher Clifford Meth wrote a short science fiction story depicting the future followers of the 70th Rebbe of Chabad and their outreach efforts on an alien planet called Tau Ceti IV The story is told through the eyes of a young extraterrestrial yeshiva student 179 180 The American Jewish writer and publisher Richard Horowitz wrote a memoir The Boys Yeshiva describing his time teaching at a Chabad yeshiva in Los Angeles 181 Film and television Edit The Chabad Lubavitch community has been the subject of a number of documentary films These films include The Spark a 28 minute film produced in 1974 providing an overview of the Lubavitch and Satmar of New York 182 The film was directed by Mel Epstein 183 The Return A Hasidic Experience a 1979 documentary film on Jews who joined the Chabad movement directed by Yisrael Lifshutz and Barry Ralbag 184 185 186 183 What Is a Jew a 1989 documentary on Chabad produced by the BBC for the series Everyman King of Crown Heights a 60 minute 1993 film on Lubavitcher Hasidim by Columbia University student Roggerio Gabbai 182 Fires in the Mirror Crown Heights Brooklyn and Other Identities a 1993 TV adaptation of the one person play by Anna Deavere Smith It explores the Black and Hasidic viewpoints of people connected directly and indirectly to the Crown Heights riots 187 The adaptation was produced by PBS as part of its American Playhouse series 188 The Return of Sarah s Daughters a 1997 documentary film contrasting three Jewish women one of whom joins Chabad 189 Blacks and Jews A 1997 documentary written and directed by Deborah Kaufman and Alan Snitow on the Crown Heights riot and other incidents involving intergroup conflict 190 Welcome to the Waks Family a 2003 documentary of a Chabad family in Australia 191 Leaving the Fold a 2008 documentary on young men and women who left the Hasidic Jewish community The film was directed by Eric R Scott and the stories featured include former Hasidic Jews living in the United States Israel and Canada 192 193 Featured in the film are two young men from a Chabad family in Montreal as well as a French Lubavitch rabbi Gut Shabbos Vietnam a 2008 documentary on a Chabad family in Vietnam Written and directed by Ido and Yael Zand 194 Shekinah Rising a 70 min 2013 documentary exploring the perspectives of the female students of a Chabad school in Montreal 195 196 197 Kathmandu a 2012 television series aired on Israeli television based on the lives of the Chabad emissaries in Kathmandu Thailand 198 Project 2x1 a 30 min 2013 documentary on the Chabad Hasidim and West Indian residents of Crown Heights using Google Glass in place of conventional camera techniques 199 200 201 202 The Rabbi Goes West a 2019 documentary on a Chabad rabbi who moves to Montana 203 Other television Edit Religious America Lubavitch a 28 minute 1974 PBS documentary series episode focusing on a day in the life of a Lubavitcher man 182 Outback Rabbis 2018 50 min television segment by Australian TV network SBS covering the regional and rural Australia RARA program of Chabad Directed by Danny Ben Moshe Featured on the SBS Untold Australia series See also Edit Jewish portal Judaism portalHasidic Judaism List of Hasidic dynasties and groupsReferences Edit a b c d Marcin Wodzinski Historical Atlas of Hasidism Princeton University Press 2018 pp 192 196 Additional spellings include Lubawitz and Jabad in Spanish speaking countries Hasidism jewishvirtuallibrary org Dara Horn June 13 2014 Rebbe of Rebbe s Archived October 26 2014 at the Wayback Machine The Wall Street Journal About Chabad Lubavitch on Chabad org Retrieved 2010 05 12 a b Swastikas daubed on Russian Chabad center in cradle of Lubavitch Hasidic movement August 21 2018 a b Green David B March 21 2013 This Day in Jewish History 1920 Lubavitcher Rabbi Who Met with Freud Dies Haaretz a b Uganda is 100th outpost for Chabad Lubavitch 2017 11 20 via Jewish Telegraphic Agency a b c Heilman Samuel December 15 2005 The Chabad Lubavitch Movement Filling the Jewish Vacuum Worldwide Jerusalem Center for Public Affairs Retrieved January 13 2015 a b Slater Elinor and Robert Great Jewish Men Jonathan David Publishers 1996 ISBN 08246 03818 p 279 a b Sharon Chisvin 5 August 2007 Chabad Lubavitch centre set for River Heights area Winnipeg Free Press Archived from the original on 27 September 2007 Jewish Americans in 2020 PDF Pew Research Center a b AGUDAS CHASIDEI CHABAD OF 650 F Supp 1463 1987 Leagle com Leagle Archived from the original on June 9 2015 Sholom DovBer Schneersohn 1860 1920 Chabad Retrieved January 13 2015 Altein R Zaklikofsky E Jacobson I Out of the Inferno The Efforts That Led to the Rescue of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn of Lubavitch from War Torn Europe in 1939 40 p 270 Merkos L Inyonei Chinuch 2002 ISBN 0 8266 0683 0 a b Beck Atara 16 August 2012 Is Chabad Lubavitch The Jerusalem Post Jonathan D Sarna October 14 2015 The Jewish Future What will be the condition of the Jewish community 50 years from now Commentary Magazine Commentary Tworek W 2017 Lubavitch Hasidism Oxford Bibliographies Karlinsky N 2007 The Dawn of Hasidic Haredi Historiography Modern Judaism A Journal of Jewish Ideas and Experience 27 1 20 46 Assaf D 2010 Untold Tales of the Hasidim Crisis amp Discontent in the History of Hasidism UPNE Mindel Nissan 1985 Intro The Philosophy of Chabad Vol 2 Brooklyn Kehot Publication Society ISBN 978 0826604170 a b c The Encyclopedia of Hasidism Habad Jonathan Sacks pp 161 164 Hasidism The movement and its masters Harry M Rabinowicz 1988 pp 83 92 Jason Aronson London ISBN 0 87668 998 5 a b Leadership in the Chabad movement Avrum Erlich Jason Aronson 2000 ISBN 0 7657 6055 X Hayom Yom p A10 Chanoch Glitzenshtein Sefer Hatoldos Tzemach Tzedek Hayom Yom p A14 Sefer HaToldos Admur Maharash Archived from the original on April 22 2008 Retrieved March 8 2008 Hayom Yom pp 15 16 Encyclopedia of Hasidism Schneersohn Joseph Isaac Naftali Lowenthal Aronson London 1996 ISBN 1 56821 123 6 He dropped the second h from his name Skolnik Fred Berenbaum Michael eds 2007 Encyclopaedia Judaica Blu Cof Granite Hill Publishers permanent dead link Maya Balakirsky Katz October 11 2010 The Visual Culture of Chabad Cambridge University Press p 40 ISBN 9780521191630 Mrs Sima Itkin OBM The Joseph and Rebecca Peltz Center for Jewish Life The Former Soviet Union Chabad org The communists persecuted chased and harassed the Rebbe and his operatives Through the years of communism hundreds of Chassidic activists were executed Thousands more were arrested and sent to Siberia for years of hard labor Rabbi Yehuda Ceitlin November 30 2012 Chabadniks proud of criminal past Estraikh G 2018 Escape through Poland Soviet Jewish Emigration in the 1950s Jewish History 31 3 4 291 317 Levin Z 2015 1 The Wastelands The Jews of Central Asia In Collectivization and Social Engineering Soviet Administration and the Jews of Uzbekistan 1917 1939 pp 7 26 Brill Beizer M 2007 The Jews of struggle the Jewish national movement in the USSR 1967 1989 Gitelman Z 2007 Do Jewish Schools Make a Difference in the Former Soviet Union East European Jewish Affairs 37 3 377 398 Ben Sales 10 April 2017 Politico says Chabad is Trump s partner in something Not so fast Jewish Telegraphic Agency Retrieved 4 June 2017 a b c Cnaan Lipshiz 5 June 2015 Why Russian Chief Rabbi stands by Vladimir Putin The Forward Retrieved June 4 2017 Jew cleared in beard cutting case Philadelphia Daily News May 25 1984 Goldman Ari L 22 June 1983 ATTACK ON RABBI BRINGS ANGUISH TO BOROUGH PARK The New York Times Letters to the Editor Time August 1 1983 Weiss Steven I January 20 2006 Orthodox Rethinking Campus Outreach The Jewish Daily Forward Retrieved January 13 2015 Jewish Literacy Telushkin William Morrow 2001 p 471 Tanya Shneur Zalman of Liadi Chapter 13 Deuturonomy 30 14 The Encyclopedia of Hasidism Tanya Jonathan Sacks pp 475 477 15682 11236 Chagat is an acronym for Chesed Gevurah Tiferet kindness severity beauty the Kabbalistic terms for the three primary emotions Schools of Hasidic thought stressing emotive patterns of worship have been termed Chagat in the Chabad philosophy Tanya ch 12 Cohen J Simcha December 28 1999 How Does Jewish Law Work Jason Aronson p 329 ISBN 978 0 7657 6090 6 Retrieved September 4 2009 a b Liebman Charles S Orthodoxy in American Jewish Life The American Jewish Year Book 1965 21 97 Goldschmidt Henry 2006 Race and Religion Among the Chosen People of Crown Heights New Brunswick NJ Rutgers University Press ISBN 9780813538839 JSTOR j ctt5hj1p2 Retrieved 5 October 2020 JTA 11 February 2016 In all Chabad Israeli village Brooklyn meets country living The Times of Israel Retrieved 5 October 2020 Ferziger Adam S Church sect theory and American orthodoxy reconsidered Ambivalent Jew Charles S Liebman in memoriam ed Stuart Cohen and Bernard Susser 2007 107 124 Two centuries after the death of its founder Chabad launches year long celebration with reissue of his works The Times of Israel Archived from the original on 2016 10 05 Retrieved 2016 08 10 Gall Timothy L ed 1998 Worldmark Encyclopedia of Cultures and Daily Life Vol 3 Asia and Oceania Cleveland OH Gale Research p 776 ISBN 978 0787605551 The Messiah of Brooklyn Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present M Avrum Ehrlich ch 15 note 5 KTAV Publishing ISBN 0 88125 836 9 The perfect matzo a matter of timing TODAY Associated Press April 12 2006 Retrieved January 13 2015 Occhiogrosso Peter 1996 Judaism The Joy of Sects A Spirited Guide to the World s Religious Traditions New York Doubleday p 250 ISBN 9780385425650 Andryszewski Tricia 1997 Communities of the Faithful American Religious Movements Outside the Mainstream Bookfield Connecticut Millbrook Press p 95 ISBN 978 0761300670 Hasidic Jews continued Adherents com Archived from the original on February 9 2004 Retrieved January 13 2015 a href Template Cite web html title Template Cite web cite web a CS1 maint unfit URL link a b c Comenetz Joshua Census based estimation of the Hasidic Jewish population Contemporary Jewry 26 no 1 2006 35 a b c Shaffir William The renaissance of Hassidism Archived 2016 11 06 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Journal of Sociology 48 no 2 2006 Greenfield Nicole Birth of Hipster Hasidism Religion Dispatches University of Southern Carolina February 2 2012 Nussbaum Cohen Debra Of Hasids Hipsters and Hipster Hasids The Jewish Daily Forward January 26 2012 a b Schick Marvin October 2009 A Census of Jewish Day Schools in the United States 2008 2009 PDF Avi Chai Foundation Retrieved January 13 2015 Wertheimer Jack August 2008 A Census of Jewish Supplementary Schools in the United States 2006 2007 PDF Avi Chai Foundation Retrieved January 13 2015 Israeli Census Reveals Population of Kfar Chabad CrownHeights info July 11 2012 Retrieved January 13 2015 a b The Chabad Hassidic Community in Tzfat Safed co il Retrieved September 14 2014 Sefer HaZohar Including Glosses by Rabbi Yeshaya Horowitz of Safad and His Son Rabbi Shmuel Horowitz Author of Yemei Shmuel Judaica Auction no 27 Books and Manuscripts Archived October 6 2016 at the Wayback Machine Kedem Auction House Retrieved September 14 2014 Retrieved 24 April 2016 Gutwirth Jacques 2005 Hassidim in France today Jewish Journal of Sociology 47 1 2 pp 5 21 Chabad of Montreal Here s the stats The Chabad Sociologist October 13 2013 Retrieved January 13 2015 Shahar Charles Main Report A Comprehensive Study of the Ultra Orthodox Community of Greater Montreal 2003 Federation CJA Montreal 2003 pp 7 33 Lapidus Steven 2004 The Forgotten Hasidim Rabbis and Rebbes in Prewar Canada Canadian Jewish Studies 12 Retrieved January 13 2014 On the Canary Islands New Beginnings for an Old Jewish Community Chabad org Retrieved 2023 03 21 Salami Daniel 2020 06 11 A robust Jewish life exists in the U A E ynetnews Retrieved 2020 06 18 Baltimore Jewish Life A New Talmud Torah Opens in Dubai baltimorejewishlife com Retrieved 2020 06 18 Kiddush Torah learning and gefilte fish in Dubai Jewish World Arutz Sheva 11 June 2020 Retrieved 2020 06 18 Shokeid Moshe 1988 Children of Circumstances Israeli Emigrants in New York Anthropology of Contemporary Issues Ithaca Cornell University Press pp 139 160 ISBN 978 0801420788 Did You Know 25 of Chabad in Montreal are Sefardi The Chabad Sociologist July 9 2013 Shahar Charles A Comprehensive Study of the Ultra Orthodox Community of Greater Montreal 2003 Federation CJA Montreal 2003 Nissan Mindel Rabbi Isaac Luria The Ari Hakodosh Chabad Retrieved January 13 2015 Gebrokts Wetted Matzah Chabad Retrieved January 13 2015 a b Shabbat Candle Lighting Times chabad org Schneersohn Shalom Dovber Tanu Rabbanan Ner Chanukah Sichos In English N Y 1990 Laws and Customs Chanukah CrownHeights info November 24 2013 Retrieved January 13 2015 Dalfin Chaim September 6 2012 Chabad Elul Customs Shmais com Retrieved January 13 2015 Menachem Mendel Schneerson Chai Elul Breathing New Life Into Our Divine Service Chabad Retrieved January 13 2015 Dade Jews throw birthday party for New York Rabbi David Hancock The Miami Herald April 14 1992 a b Yahrtzeit Observances Chabad Retrieved January 13 2015 A Brief Biography Chabad Retrieved January 13 2015 Chof Beis Shvat Chabad info Archived from the original on December 16 2013 Burstein Paul 2011 Jewish Nonprofit Organizations in the U S A Preliminary Survey Contemporary Jewry 31 2 129 148 doi 10 1007 s12397 010 9028 5 S2CID 144478093 Drake Carolyn February 2006 A Faith Grows in Brooklyn National Geographic Archived from the original on 2006 02 03 Retrieved 2006 01 23 Facts and Statistics Chabad org Chabad Lubavitch Directory Chabad Retrieved January 13 2015 Lubavitch Chabad Chabad Lubavitch Brooklyn New York NY World Headquarters lubavitch com Archived from the original on 2013 09 01 Retrieved 2013 11 06 Lubavitch Chabad Chabad Lubavitch Brooklyn New York NY World Headquarters lubavitch com Archived from the original on 2015 10 16 Retrieved 2013 11 04 Marcelle S Fischler December 16 2005 Is It a Home or a House of Worship The New York Times Retrieved January 13 2015 Passover seders around the world Kentucky New Era Associated Press March 23 2007 p 28 Retrieved January 13 2015 Challenge Chumash Devarim New York Kehot Publication Society 2011 pp vii ISBN 978 0 8266 0194 0 N Y Region Are You Jewish The New York Times archived from the original on 2021 12 12 retrieved 2019 12 05 Banquet Partner Kinus Hashluchim Retrieved 2019 12 05 Shluchim Roll Call International Conference of Chabad Emissaries 2019 Chabad org Retrieved 2019 12 05 Ralph Blumenthal November 29 2008 Jewish Center Is Stormed and 6 Hostages Die The New York Times p A13 Retrieved January 13 2015 Joshua Runyan November 30 2008 Funeral Preparations for Chabad House Victims Under Way Chabad Retrieved 2010 05 12 Damien McElroy December 1 2008 Mumbai attacks Jews tortured before being executed during hostage crisis Archived from the original on 2022 01 12 Retrieved February 8 2017 Obama sends condolences to Chabad Jewish Telegraph Agency JTA December 4 2008 Retrieved January 13 2015 Israeli Chabad couple to be expelled from India for spying The Times of Israel The Times of Israel Retrieved 2021 06 10 Mark Avrum Ehrlich 2004 The Messiah of Brooklyn Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present Jersey City N J KTAV p 134 ISBN 978 0881258363 Fishkoff Sue The Rebbe s Army Inside the World of Chabad Lubavitch Schocken Books 2003 ISBN 08052 11381 pages 160 161 Comparing Full Time and Part Time Numbers at Chabad Schools The Chabad Sociologist August 6 2013 Retrieved January 13 2015 Wertheimer Jack June 16 2014 Why the Lubavitch Movement Thrives in the Absence of a Living Rebbe JA Mag in Jewish World Orthodox Union Retrieved 30 September 2014 Among the latter is the Jewish Learning Institute the largest educational program for Jewish adults in the world with the possible exception of the Daf Yomi enterprise which currently enrolls over 66 000 teens and adults at some 850 sites around the world each following a prescribed course of study according to a set timetable Dashefsky Arnold Sheskin Ira eds 2014 National Jewish Organizations American Jewish Year Book Vol 113 Volume 113 ed Springer International Publishing pp 447 597 doi 10 1007 978 3 319 01658 0 10 ISBN 978 3 319 01657 3 S2CID 154745222 is currently the largest provider of adult Jewish learning JLI s mission is to inspire Jewish learning worldwide and to transform Jewish life and the greater community through Torah study Its goal is to create a global network of informed students connected by bonds of shared Jewish experience JLI s holistic approach to Jewish study considers the impact of Jewish values on personal and interpersonal growth The authors of the book are Professor Ira Sheskin of Department of Geography and Regional Studies The Jewish Demography Project The Sue and Leonard Miller Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies University of Miami and Professor Arnold Dashefsky Department of Sociology The Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life University of Connecticut Hayom Yom p A38 Heilman Samuel C 2017 06 06 ChaBaD Lubavitch Who Will Lead Us University of California Press doi 10 1525 california 9780520277236 003 0006 ISBN 9780520277236 retrieved 2022 04 26 Fishkoff Sue Praying without paying becoming a more popular option among shuls permanent dead link Texas Jewish Post Accessed September 22 2007 Many people credit Chabad Lubavitch with spearheading the movement for free holiday services across the denominational spectrum The Rebbe s 10 Point Mitzvah Campaign Chabad Retrieved 2010 05 12 a b Fishkoff Sue The Rebbe s Army Schocken books 2003 ISBN 08052 11381 page needed 1974 The Mitzvah Tank on Chabad Retrieved 2011 04 13 Directory of Chabad on Campus Chabad Retrieved 2010 05 12 Address by Professor Alan Dershowitz Oxford Chabad Society 2005 11 27 Retrieved January 13 2015 Jewish school shooting survivors seek healing at New York meet up Times of Israel Chabad Teen Network CTeen a b CTeen International Orlando well represented at International CTeen Shabbaton Heritage Florida Jewish News Levy Faygie 28 May 2015 In Just Five Years CTeen Movement Attracts Tens of Thousands of Young Jews eJewish Philanthropy Archived from the original on 2015 06 01 Smilk Carin M July 21 2017 Teens and mentors from Bangkok to Brazil at Poconos Retreat Israel National News Retrieved 2021 09 14 Bowling Suzanna 2 March 2020 Thousands of Jewish Teens Gather in Times Square For Havdalah Times Square Chronicles Times Square Chronicles Archived from the original on 2020 05 24 Retrieved 2021 11 23 Local teens have time of their lives at NYC Shabbaton Jewish Community Voice 10 April 2019 Chabad of Hunterdon CTeen group makes impact in community Nj 26 February 2015 Chabad and Yeshiva University Offer Torah Class for High Schoolers Jewish Journal 14 October 2020 Archived from the original on 2020 10 14 CTeen Summer Quest to Explore Roots in Poland and Israel Another adventure in the roster of programs for Jewish youth Chabad org Meet Hallandale s New CTeen Directors 17 October 2019 CTeen Leadership CTeen Jewish Teens in Skokie Ill Respond to Hate With Celebration Windows smashed in nearby synagogue followed by outpouring of Jewish pride Chabad org The National Campus Office lubavitch com 2009 Archived from the original on 19 August 2010 Retrieved 25 September 2010 By us for us LivingWorks Suicide Prevention Training Workshop TAPinto a b Maya Balakirsky Katz 2010 The Visual Culture of Chabad Cambridge University Press Zaleski Jeffrey P June 1997 The Soul of Cyberspace How New Technology Is Changing Our Spiritual Lives Harpercollins ISBN 978 0 06 251451 6 Retrieved April 7 2007 Our Founding Director Archived August 27 2016 at the Wayback Machine Chabad org Harmon Ami December 13 1998 Yosef Kazen Hasidic Rabbi And Web Pioneer Dies at 44 The New York Times Retrieved January 1 2010 Steinfels Peter January 22 2000 Beliefs The New York Times Retrieved January 13 2015 Golan Oren 2012 Frontiers of online religious communities The case of Chabad Jews In Heidi Campbell ed Digital Religion Understanding Religious Practice in New Media Worlds Routledge p 160 ISBN 9780415676106 Archived from the original on April 19 2014 Retrieved April 17 2014 Shaer Matthew 2011 Among Righteous Men A Tale of Vigilantes and Vindication in Hasidic Crown Heights John Wiley amp Sons ISBN 9781118095201 Archived from the original on April 19 2014 Retrieved April 17 2014 page needed Julie Wiener September 1 2000 Chabad camps electrify many Jews not just Lubavitch J The Jewish News of Northern California Jewish Telegraphic Agency Camp Gan Israel Directory Chabad Retrieved 2010 05 12 When Silence is a Sin Sichos in English Letter to Zalman Shazar Archived November 13 2014 at the Wayback Machine Based on Shulchan Aruch Orach Chayim 328 Essentially his argument sought merely the position that would prevent loss of life rather than taking a stance in the nature of the Land of Israel and Zionism Freeman Tzvi Should I Pray for the Death of Terrorists Chabad Retrieved 2010 05 12 Hayom Yom p A29 Website video link chabad org April 15 1981 Retrieved 2010 05 12 Chabad org website video link chabad org 1981 04 15 Retrieved 2010 05 12 Avital Chizhik September 30 2013 Putin refuses to let the Lubavitcher Rebbe s library leave Moscow Tablet Retrieved June 4 2017 Ehrlich Avrum M Ehrlich Mark Avrum 2000 11 The Leadership of Dov Ber Leadership in the HaBaD Movement A critical evaluation of HaBaD leadership history and succession Jason Aronson ISBN 978 0765760555 page needed Ehrlich Leadership in the HaBaD Movement pp 160 192 esp pp 167 172 Encyclopedia of Hasidism entry Schneersohn Shmaryahu Noah Naftali Lowenthal Aronson London 1996 ISBN 1 56821 123 6 Kaminetzky Yosef Y 2005 Days in Chabad Brooklyn Kehot Publication Society p 19 ISBN 978 0826604897 Rabbi Chaim Schneur Zalman of Liadi PDF L Maan Yishmeu 128 2012 Zevin Shelomoh Yosef Kaploun Uri 1980 A Treasury of Chassidic Tales on the Torah A Collection of Inspirational Chassidic Stories Relevant to the Weekly Torah Readings Vol 1 Mesorah Publications p 115 ISBN 978 0899069005 Dalfin Chaim 1998 The Seven Chabad Lubavitch Rebbes Jason Aronson ISBN 978 1461710134 B Sobel The M lochim Ehrlich M Avrum 2000 Leadership in the HaBaD movement a critical evaluation of HaBaD leadership history and succession Northvale N J J Aronson pp 269 271 ISBN 0 7657 6055 X OCLC 39633846 Mintz Jerome R 1992 Hasidic People A Place in the New World Harvard University Press pp 21 26 ISBN 978 0674041097 Dissidents Name Rebbe The Forward December 6 1996 Heinon Herb Bigger than Death The Jerusalem Post August 15 1997 Segall Rebecca Holy Daze The problems of young Lubavitcher Hasidim in a world without the Rebbe The Village Voice September 30 2000 Eisenberg Charles The Book of Daniel A Well Kept Secret Xulon Press 2007 Page 103 The full text is Yechi adoneinu moreinu v rabbeinu melech ha moshiach l olam vo ed Long live our master our teacher and our rabbi King Messiah for ever and ever Kilgannon Corey 20 June 2004 Lubavitchers Mark 10 Years Since Death of Revered Rabbi The New York Times Retrieved 19 January 2010 Under the Black Hat Pop Art in Jerusalem Focuses on Chassidim Rabbi Yitzchok Moully brings spiritual and emotional depth to a new exhibit chabad org חיים גרא װיצער די געשיכטע פ ון דעם געפ א לענעם פ ון דער חבדישער װעלט Chaim Gravitzer The Tale of the Downfallen One From the World of Chabad In geveb Hirsch Succeeds with Theatrical Production of My Name is Asher Lev 29 August 2012 https uta ir tdl org uta ir bitstream handle 10106 5378 Cochrum uta 2502M 10893 pdf sequence 1 bare URL PDF Aardwolf 1994 comic books Comics Bulletin Clifford Meth Meth Addict A Funny Thing Happened on the Way to the Library permanent dead link Horowitz Richard The Boys Yeshiva A Memoir via Amazon a b c Documentary Films about Hasidism PBS Archived May 3 2015 at the Wayback Machine a b Movies Theater Guide New York September 15 1986 p 176 via Google Books An Interview with the Slopeover Rebbe thejewishreview org News Brief Jewish Telegraphic Agency 29 April 1981 The Return a Hasidic experience June 18 2020 OCLC 50902286 Smith Anna Deavere Fires in the Mirror New York City Bantam Doubleday Dell Publishing Group Inc 1993 O Connor John J April 28 1993 Review Television One Woman Show on Black vs Jew The New York Times A Life Apart Hasidism In America Filmography PBS Broadcast of Deborah Kaufman s Blacks and Jews Jewish Women s Archive jwa org Welcome to the Waks Family NFSA Online Shop Unreich Rachelle June 23 2008 Leaving the fold The Sydney Morning Herald http 7thart com press leavingthefold Leaving 20the 20Fold PRESSKIT pdf bare URL PDF Search results from Film Video Vietnam Vietnam Hebrew Library of Congress Secrets and lives of Hasidic women The Globe and Mail New film Shekinah provides unprecedented access to the world of young Hasidic women TheSuburban com October 11 2013 Archived from the original on December 20 2013 Retrieved January 13 2015 Arnold Janice October 20 2013 Film presents chassidic women s attitudes to intimacy The Canadian Jewish News Retrieved January 13 2015 Zany Heartfelt Kathmandu Evokes the Soul of Jewish Culture in Nepal December 5 2012 Hampton Matthew November 26 2013 Crown Heights Google Glass Doc Premieres Next Month Prospect Heights Patch Retrieved January 13 2015 Piras Lara October 9 2013 Google Glass Filmed Documentary Goes Where Normal Camera Crews Can t psfk com Retrieved January 13 2015 Evans Lauren October 7 2013 Intrepid 20 Somethings Examine Crown Heights Through Google Glass Gothamist Archived from the original on December 25 2014 Retrieved January 13 2015 Sharp Sonja October 7 2013 Crown Heights Documentary Claims to be First Ever Shot With Google Glass DNAInfo Archived from the original on November 4 2014 Retrieved January 13 2015 Rabbi Goes West The jfi org Sources EditMenachem Mendel Schneerson 1994 Hayom Yom Kehot Publication Society ISBN 978 0 8266 0669 3 Further reading EditSchneerson Menachem Mendel On the Essence of Chassidus A Chasidic Discourse by Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson of Chabad Lubavitch Merkos L Inyonei Chinuch 2003 ISBN 0 8266 0466 8 Drake Carolyn A Faith Grows in Brooklyn National Geographic February 2006 Ehrlich Avrum M Leadership in the Chabad Movement A Critical Evaluation of Habad Leadership History and Succession Jason Aronson 2000 ISBN 0 7657 6055 X Feldman Jan L Lubavitchers as Citizens A Paradox of Liberal Democracy Cornell University Press 2003 ISBN 0 8014 4073 4 Fishkoff Sue The Rebbe s Army Inside the World of Chabad Lubavitch Schocken 2003 ISBN 0 8052 4189 2 Heilman Samuel and Menachem Friedman The Rebbe The Life and Afterlife of Menachem Mendel Schneerson Princeton University Press 2010 400 pages Hoffman Edward Despite All Odds The Story of Lubavitch Simon amp Schuster 1991 ISBN 0 671 67703 9 Jacobson Simon Toward a Meaningful Life The Wisdom of the Rebbe William Morrow 2002 ISBN 0 06 051190 7 Katz Maya Balakirsky Trademarks of Faith Chabad and Chanukah in America Modern Judaism 29 2 2009 239 267 Challenge An Encounter with Lubavitch Chabad Lubavitch Foundation of Great Britain 1973 ISBN 0 8266 0491 9 Miller Chaim Turning Judaism Outward A Biography of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson the Seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe Kol Menachem 2014 Mindel Nissan The Philosophy of Chabad Chabad Research Center 1973 ISBN 082660417X Oberlander Boruch and Elkanah Shmotkin Early Years The Formative Years of the Rebbe Rabbi Menachem M Schneerson as Told by Documents and Archival Data Kehot Publication Society 2016 ISBN 978 1 932349 04 7 Steinsaltz Adin Even Israel My Rebbe Koren Publishers 2014 Tannenbaum Michal and Hagit Cohen 2018 Language Educational Policy in the Service of Group Identity The Habad case Language Policy Volume 17 Issue 3 pp 319 342 Telushkin Joseph Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History Harperwave 2014 Weiss Steven I January 20 2006 Orthodox Rethinking Campus Outreach Archived 2007 05 05 at the Wayback Machine The Jewish Daily Forward External links Edit Wikimedia Commons has media related to Chabad Official website for the Chabad Teen Network Chabad Lubavitch World Headquarters Chabad org Chabad Outreach Lubavitch Archives Chabad history on the web The Chabad Lubavitch Library Chabad on Campus Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Chabad amp oldid 1169072991, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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