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Menachem Mendel Schneerson

Menachem Mendel Schneerson (Rabbinic/old-fashioned Hebrew: מנחם מענדל שניאורסאהן; modern spelling: מנחם מנדל שניאורסון; April 5, 1902 OS – June 12, 1994; AM 11 Nissan 5662 – 3 Tammuz 5754), known to many as the Lubavitcher Rebbe or simply the Rebbe,[2][3] was a Russian Empire-born American Orthodox rabbi and the most recent Rebbe of the Lubavitch Hasidic dynasty. He is considered one of the most influential Jewish leaders of the 20th century.[4][5]

Rabbi

Menachem M. Schneerson
Menachem Mendel Schneerson in 1989
TitleLubavitcher Rebbe
Personal
BornApril 5, 1902 OS (11 Nisan 5662)[1]
DiedJune 12, 1994 (3 Tammuz 5754) (aged 92)
ReligionJudaism
NationalityRussian / American
SpouseChaya Mushka Schneerson
Parent(s)Levi Yitzchak Schneerson
Chana Yanovski Schneerson
Signature
Jewish leader
PredecessorYosef Yitzchak Schneersohn
Synagogue770 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, New York
Began10 Shevat 5711 / January 17, 1951
BuriedQueens, New York, U.S.
ResidenceBrooklyn, New York
DynastyChabad Lubavitch
SemichaRogatchover Gaon; Yechiel Yaakov Weinberg

As leader of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, he took an insular Hasidic group that almost came to an end with the Holocaust and transformed it into one of the most influential movements in religious Jewry,[6] with an international network of over 5,000 educational and social centers.[7][8][9] The institutions he established include kindergartens, schools, drug-rehabilitation centers, care-homes for the disabled, and synagogues.[10]

Schneerson's published teachings fill more than 400 volumes, and he is noted for his contributions to Jewish continuity and religious thought,[11] as well as his wide-ranging contributions to traditional Torah scholarship.[12] He is recognized as the pioneer of Jewish outreach.[13][14] During his lifetime, many of his adherents believed that he was the Messiah. His own attitude to the subject, and whether he openly encouraged this, is hotly debated among academics. During Schneerson's lifetime, the messianic controversy and other issues elicited fierce criticism from many quarters in the Orthodox world, especially earning him the enmity of Rabbi Elazar Shach.

In 1978, the U.S. Congress asked President Jimmy Carter to designate Schneerson's birthday as the national Education Day U.S.A.[15] It has been since commemorated as Education and Sharing Day.[16][17] In 1994, Schneerson was posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal for his "outstanding and lasting contributions toward improvements in world education, morality, and acts of charity."[18] Schneerson's resting place attracts both Jews and non-Jews for prayer.[19][20][10][21]

Biography

Early life and education

Menachem Mendel Schneerson was born on April 5, 1902 (OS) (11 Nissan, 5662) in the Black Sea port of Nikolaev in the Russian Empire (now Mykolaiv in Ukraine).[22] His father was rabbi Levi Yitzchak Schneerson, a renowned Talmudic scholar and authority on Kabbalah and Jewish law.[23] His mother was Rebbetzin Chana Schneerson (née Yanovski). He was named after the third Chabad rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneersohn, the Tzemach Tzedek, from whom he was a direct patrilineal descendant.

In 1907, when Schneerson was five years old, the family moved to Yekatrinoslav (today, Dnipro), where Levi Yitzchak was appointed Chief Rabbi of the city. He served until 1939, when he was exiled by the Soviets to Kazakhstan.[24] Schneerson had two younger brothers: Dov Ber, who was murdered in 1944 by Nazi collaborators, and Yisrael Aryeh Leib, who died in 1952 while completing doctoral studies at Liverpool University.[22]

During his youth, he received a private education and was tutored by Zalman Vilenkin from 1909 through 1913. When Schneerson was 11 years old, Vilenkin informed his father that he had nothing more to teach his son.[25] At that point, Levi Yitzchak began teaching his son Talmud and rabbinic literature, as well as Kabbalah. Schneerson proved gifted in both Talmudic and Kabbalistic study and also took exams as an external student of the local Soviet school.[26] He was considered an illui and genius, and by the time he was 17, he had mastered the entire Talmud, some 5,894 pages, as well as all its early commentaries.[27]

Throughout his childhood Schneerson was involved in the affairs of his father's office. He was also said to have acted as an interpreter between the Jewish community and the Russian authorities on a number of occasions.[28] Levi Yitzchak's courage and principles were a guide to his son for the rest of his life. Many years later, when he once reminisced about his youth, Schneerson said "I have the education of the first-born son of the rabbi of Yekaterinoslav. When it comes to saving lives, I speak up whatever others may say."[29]

Schneerson went on to receive separate rabbinical ordinations from the Rogatchover Gaon, Yosef Rosen,[30] and Yechiel Yaakov Weinberg, author of Sridei Aish.[31][32]

Marriage and family life

In 1923, Schneerson visited the sixth Chabad-Lubavitch Rebbe, Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, for the first time. He met the rabbi's middle daughter Chaya Mushka (Mousia) – they were distant cousins. Sometime later they became engaged, but were not married until 1928 in Warsaw, Poland.[33] Taking great pride in his son-in-law's outstanding scholarship, Yosef Yitzchak asked him to engage in learned conversation with the great Torah scholars that were present at the wedding, such as Meir Shapiro and Menachem Ziemba.[34] Menachem Mendel and Chaya Mushka were married for 60 years, and were childless.[35]

Menachem Mendel Schneerson and Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn were both descendants of Menachem Mendel Schneersohn, known as the Tzemach Tzedek, the third Rebbe of Chabad Lubavitch.[36] Schneerson later commented that the day of his marriage bound the community to him and him to the community.[37]

In 1947 Schneerson traveled to Paris, to take his mother, Chana Schneerson, back to New York with him.[38] Schneerson would visit her every day and twice each Friday and prepare her a tea.[39] In 1964, Chana Schneerson died.[40]

On February 10, 1988, Schneerson's wife, Chaya Mushka Schneerson died.[41] A year after the death of his wife, when the traditional year of Jewish mourning had passed, Schneerson moved into his study above the central Lubavitch synagogue on Eastern Parkway.[42]

Berlin

 
A monument for Schneerson in Berlin

After his wedding to Chaya Mushka in 1928, Schneerson and his wife moved to Berlin, where he was assigned specific communal tasks by his father-in-law Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, who also requested that he write scholarly annotations to the responsa and various hasidic discourses of the earlier Rebbes of Chabad-Lubavitch. Schneerson studied mathematics, physics, and philosophy at the University of Berlin.[43] He would later recall that he enjoyed Erwin Schrödinger's lectures.[44] His father-in-law took great pride in his erudite son-in-law's scholarly attainments, and paid for all the tuition expenses and helped facilitate his studies throughout.[45]

During his stay in Berlin, his father-in-law encouraged him to become more of a public figure, but Schneerson described himself as an introvert,[37] and was known to plead with acquaintances not to make a fuss over the fact that he was the son-in-law of Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn.[46]

While in Berlin, Schneerson met Joseph B. Soloveitchik and the two formed a friendship that remained between them years later when they both emigrated to America.[47][48][49][50] He wrote hundreds of pages of his own original Torah discourses,[51] and conducted a serious interchange of halachic correspondence with many of Eastern Europe's leading rabbinic figures, including the Talmudic genius known as the Rogachover Gaon.[52] In 1933 he also met with Chaim Elazar Shapiro, as well as with Talmudist Shimon Shkop.[53] During this time he kept a diary in which he would carefully document his private conversations with his father-in-law, as well as his kabbalistic correspondence with his father, Levi Yitzchak Schneerson.[54]

Paris

In 1933, after the rise of the Nazi party in Germany, the Schneersons left Berlin and moved to Paris, where Menachem Mendel (known as "RaMash" before accepting the leadership of Chabad) continued his religious and communal activities on behalf of his father-in-law, Yosef Yitzchak.

While in Paris he took a two year course in engineering at a vocational college, where he was a mediocre student; this was his only formal secular education.[55]

During that time, Yosef Yitzchak recommended that Professor Alexander Vasilyevitch Barchenko consult with Schneerson regarding various religious and mystical matters,[56] and prominent rabbis, such as Yerachmiel Binyaminson and Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler turned to Schneerson with their rabbinic and kabbalistic queries.[57][58]

On June 11, 1940, three days before Paris fell to the Nazis, the Schneersons fled to Vichy, and later to Nice, where they stayed until their final escape from Europe in 1941.[59]

New York

In 1941, Schneerson escaped from Europe via Lisbon, Portugal.[60] On the eve of his departure, Schneerson penned a treatise where he revealed his vision for the future of world Jewry and humanity.[61] He and his wife Chaya Mushka arrived in New York on June 23, 1941.[62]

Shortly after his arrival, his father-in-law appointed him director and chairman of the three Chabad central organizations, Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, Machneh Israel and Kehot Publication Society, placing him at the helm of the movement's Jewish educational, social services, and publishing networks. Over the next decade, Yosef Yitzchak referred many of the scholarly questions that had been inquired of him to his son-in-law. He became increasingly known as a personal representative of Yosef Yitzchak.[63]

During the 1940s, Schneerson became a naturalized US citizen and, seeking to contribute to the war effort, he volunteered at the Brooklyn Navy Yard, using his electrical engineering background to draw wiring diagrams for the battleship USS Missouri (BB-63),[64][65][66] and other classified military work.[67]

In 1942 Schneerson launched the Merkos Shlichus program where he would send pairs of yeshiva students to remote locations across the country during their summer vacations to teach Jews in isolated communities about their heritage and offer education to their children.[citation needed]

As chairman and editor in chief of Kehot, Schneerson published the works of the earlier Rebbes of Chabad. He also published his own works including the Hayom Yom in 1943 and Hagadda in 1946.[68]

On a visit to Paris in 1947 he established a school for girls and worked with local organizations to assist with housing for refugees and displaced persons.[38] Schneerson often explained that his goal was to "make the world a better place," and to do what he could to eliminate all suffering.[69] In a letter to Israeli President Yitzchak Ben Tzvi, Schneerson wrote that when he was a child the vision of the future redemption began to take form in his imagination "a redemption of such magnitude and grandeur through which the purpose of the suffering, the harsh decrees and annihilation of exile will be understood ..."[70]

In 1991, a car accompanying Schneerson's motorcade accidentally struck two Guyanese-American children while attempting to catch up to Schneerson's vehicle. One of the children was killed. The incident triggered the Crown Heights riot.[71]

Seventh Chabad Rebbe

After the death of Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn in 1950, Chabad followers began persuading Schneerson to succeed his father-in-law as Rebbe on the basis of his scholarship, piety, and dynasty.[72][73] Schneerson was reluctant, and actively refused to accept leadership of the movement. He continued, however, all the communal activities he had previously headed. It would take a full year until he was persuaded by the elders of the movement to accept the post.[74]

On the first anniversary of his father-in-law's passing, 10 Shevat 1951, in a ceremony attended by several hundred rabbis and Jewish leaders from all parts of the United States and Canada, Schneerson delivered a Hasidic discourse (Ma'amar), the equivalent to a President-elect taking the oath of office, and formally became the Rebbe.[75] On the night of his acceptance, members of the Israeli Cabinet and Israel's Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Herzog sent him congratulatory messages.[76]

Reiterating a longstanding core Chabad principle at his inaugural talk, he demanded that each individual exert themselves in advancing spiritually, and not rely on the Rebbe to do it for them, saying:[77] "Now listen, Jews. Generally, in Chabad it has been demanded that each individual work on themselves, and not rely on the Rebbes. One must, on their own, transform the folly of materialism and the passion of the 'animal soul' to holiness. I do not, God Forbid, recuse myself from assisting as much as possible, however; if one does not work on themselves, what good will submitting notes, singing songs, and saying lechayim do?" At the same talk, Schneerson said "one must go to a place where nothing is known of Godliness, nothing is known of Judaism, nothing is even known of the Hebrew alphabet, and while there to put oneself aside and ensure that the other calls out to God."[78] When he spoke to Forward journalist Asher Penn that year, he said, "we must stop insisting that Judaism is in danger, an assertion that does little but place Jewry on the defensive. We need to go on the offensive."[79]

As Rebbe, Schneerson would receive visitors for private meetings, known as yechidus, on Sunday and Thursday evenings. Those meetings would begin at 8pm and often continue until five or six in the morning and were open to everyone.[73][80] Schneerson, who spoke several languages including English, Yiddish, Hebrew, French, Russian, German and Italian, would converse with people on all issues and offer his advice on both spiritual and mundane matters.[81] Politicians and leaders from across the globe came to meet him, but Schneerson showed no preference to one person over another. His secretary once even declined to admit John F. Kennedy because Schneerson was already meeting 'ordinary' people who had requested appointments months previously.[10] Those meetings were discontinued in 1982 when it became impossible to accommodate the large number of people. Meetings were then held only for those who had a special occasion, such as a bride and groom for their wedding or a boy and his family on the occasion of a bar mitzvah.[81]

During his four decades as Rebbe, Schneerson would deliver regular addresses, centered on the weekly Torah portion and on various tractates of the Talmud. These talks, delivered without text or notes, would last for several hours,[82][83] and sometimes went for eight or nine hours without a break. During the talks, Schneerson demonstrated a unique approach in explaining seemingly different concepts by analysis of the fundamental principle common to the entire tractate,[84][85] and referenced both classic and esoteric sources from all periods, citing entire sections by heart.[82]

Outreach, spiritual and political campaigns

Women and girls

In 1951 Schneerson established a Chabad women's and girl's organization and a youth organisation in Israel. Their mission was to engage in outreach which was exclusively directed at women and teens. In 1953 he opened branches of these organizations in New York, London and Toronto. In a marked departure from an entrenched tendency to limit high-level Torah education to men and boys, Schneerson equally addressed his teachings to both genders.[86] He addressed meetings of the organisations, and led gatherings exclusively for women. Schneerson would describe the increase in Torah study by women as one of the "positive innovations of the later generations."[87]

International outreach

That same year, Schneerson sent his first emissary to Morocco, and established schools and a synagogue for the Moroccan Jewish community. In 1958 Schneerson established schools and synagogues in Detroit, Michigan, in Milan, Italy, and in London, England. In 1988, Schneerson sent 22-year-old Rabbi Shmuley Boteach as a Chabad-Lubavitch shaliach (emissary) to Oxford, England, where he served as rabbi to Oxford University's students for 11 years.[88]

Beginning in the 1960s, Schneerson instituted a system of "mitzvah campaigns" to encourage the observance of ten basic Jewish practices, such as tefillin for men, Shabbat candles for women, and loving your fellow for all people.[89] Schneersohn's campaign brought the concept of tefillin to Jewish men everywhere, and he has been referred to as "the great modern popularizer of tefillin." Until his campaign, tefillin was largely the domain of the meticulously observant.[90]

Following the death of his mother Chana Schneerson in 1964, Schneerson began to offer an additional weekly sermon in her memory. These sermons consisted of original insights and unprecedented analysis of Rashi's Torah commentary, which were delivered at the regular public gatherings. Schneerson gave these sermons each week until 1992.[91]

Chanukah campaign

In 1973, Schneerson started a Chanukah campaign to encourage all Jews worldwide to light their own menorah. After all tin menorahs were given out that year, a military manufacturer was commissioned to make tens of thousands of additional menorahs for distribution. In 1974, a public lighting of a Chanukah menorah was held by the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia, Pennsylvania and in years following menorah lightings on public grounds were conducted in cities worldwide. Legal challenges to the lightings on public grounds reached the Supreme Court and it was ruled that public lightings did not violate the Constitution. Public lightings continue in thousands of cities today.[92]

Lag BaOmer parade

Chabad established an annual Lag BaOmer parade at '770', one of the largest celebrations of its kind, where thousands of Jews celebrate the holiday.[93][94][better source needed]

Iran youth immigration

In 1979, during the Iranian Revolution and Iranian hostage crisis, Schneerson directed arrangements to rescue Jewish youth and teenagers from Iran and bring them to safety in the United States.[95] The militant Islamist hostilities towards the United States were seen by Schneerson as behavior that could threaten the country's status as an "untouchable" superpower, and that would cause it to try to appease Arab countries, thus "endanger[ing] the security of Israel."[96] As a result of Schneerson's efforts, several thousand Iranian children were flown from Iran to the safety of New York.[97]

Noahidism and Jewish outreach

In 1983 Schneerson launched a global campaign to promote awareness of the Supreme Being and observance of the Noahide Laws among all people,[98] arguing that this was the basis for human rights for all civilization.[99] Several times each year his addresses were broadcast on national television. On these occasions Schneerson would address the public on general communal affairs and issues relating to world peace such as a moment of silence in U.S. public schools, increased government funding for solar energy research, U.S. foreign aid to developing countries and nuclear disarmament.[100]

In 1984, Schneerson initiated a campaign for the daily study of Maimonides's Mishneh Torah.[101] Each year at the completion of the learning cycle there is Siyum celebration marking the end of the cycle and beginning of the new one. These events have been attended by many Jewish leaders.[102]

Sunday office hours for charity

In 1986, Schneerson began a custom where each Sunday he would stand outside his office, greet people briefly, give them a dollar bill and encourage them to donate to the charity of their choice.[103] Explaining his reason for encouraging charitable giving among all people, Schneerson quoted his father-in-law who said that "when two people meet, it should bring benefit to a third."[104] People in line would often take this opportunity to ask Schneerson for advice or request a blessing. Thousands of people attended this event each week, which lasted up to six hours, and is often referred to as "Sunday Dollars."[105]

Schneerson's wife, Chaya Mushka Schneerson died in 1988.[41] During the week of shiva Schneerson wrote a will in which he bequeathed his entire estate to Agudas Chasidei Chabad, the Chabad umbrella organisation.[106]

During a talk in 1991, Schneerson spoke passionately about Moshiach (the Messiah) and told his followers that he had done all that he could to bring world peace and redemption, but that it was now up to them to continue this task: "I have done my part, from now on you do all that you can." A few months later, when a reporter from CNN came to meet him at dollars, he said, "Moshiach is ready to come now, it is only on our part to do something additional in the realm of goodness and kindness."[107]

His message: become righteous

On Sunday, March 1, 1992, Gabriel Erem, the editor of Lifestyles Magazine told Schneerson that on the occasion of his ninetieth birthday they would be publishing a special issue and wanted to know what his message to the world was. Schneerson replied that "'Ninety', in Hebrew, is 'tzaddik'; which means 'righteous.' And that is a direct indication for every person to become a real tzaddik—a righteous person, and to do so for many years, until 120. "This message", Schneerson added, "applies equally to Jews and non-Jews".[108]

Work habits

During his decades of leadership, Schneerson worked over 18 hours a day and never took a day of vacation.[109] He rarely left Brooklyn except for visits to his father-in-law's gravesite in Queens, New York. Schneerson was opposed to retirement, seeing it as a waste of precious years.[110] In 1972, on the occasion of his 70th birthday, instead of announcing a retirement plan, Schneerson proposed the establishment of 71 new institutions to mark the beginning of the 71st year of his life.[111]

Illness and death

In 1977, during the hakafot ceremony on Shemini Atzeret, Schneerson suffered a heart attack. At his request, rather than transporting him to a hospital, the doctors set up a mini-hospital at his office where he was treated for the next four weeks by doctors Bernard Lown, Ira Weiss, and Larry Resnick.[112] He made a full recovery from the heart attack with few if any noticeable lasting effects or changes to his work habits. Fifteen years later Schneerson suffered a serious stroke while praying at the grave of his father-in-law. The stroke left him unable to speak, and paralyzed on the right side of his body. During this time, the hope that Schneerson could be revealed as the Messiah (Moshiach) became more widespread.[113][114]

On the morning of June 12, 1994 (3 Tammuz 5754), Schneerson died at the Beth Israel Medical Center and was buried at the Ohel next to his father-in-law, Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, at Montefiore Cemetery in Queens, New York.[115][116] Shortly after Schneerson's death, the executors of his will discovered several notebooks in a drawer in his office, in which Schneerson had written his scholarly thoughts and religious musings from his earliest years.[114] The majority of entries in these journals date between the years 1928 and 1950 and were subsequently published.[117]

 
The Rebbe's Tomb: Schneerson's burial place next to his father-in-law and predecessor in Queens, New York

Following age-old Jewish tradition that the resting place of a tzadik is holy, Schneerson's gravesite is viewed by many as a holy site and has been described by the Yedioth Ahronoth as "the American Western Wall", where thousands of people, Jews and non-Jews,[10] go to pray each week.[21][118][19] Many more send faxes and e-mails with requests for prayers to be read at the gravesite.[119]

Wills

Schneerson died without naming a successor as leader of the Chabad-Lubavitch dynasty, causing controversy within Chabad about Schneerson's will. He did, however, write one legal will, which was signed before witnesses, whereby he transferred stewardship of all the major Chabad institutions as well as all his possessions to Agudas Chassidei Chabad.[120]

Another will, no executed copies of which are known to be in existence, named three senior Chabad rabbis as directors of Agudas Chassidei Chabad.[120]

Messianism

Schneerson had a passion and desire to raise awareness of the coming of the Messiah. During his life, many of his admirers hoped that he would be revealed as the Messiah.[14][89] They pointed to traditional Jewish theology which teaches that in every generation there is one person who is worthy of being the Messiah, and if God deems the time right, he will be revealed by God as such.[121] Chabad followers also pointed to a tradition that in every generation there is one person who is considered the Messiah of the generation.[122][123] Schneerson's supporters have claimed that many Jews felt that if there was indeed a person worthy of such stature, it was Schneerson.[14][124] Although Schneerson constantly objected to any talk that he could be the Messiah, this notion sparked controversy, particularly among those who were unfamiliar with these traditional teachings.[14][35][26] Detractors criticized a children's song with the words "We want moshiach (the messiah) now / We don't want to wait," that Schneerson commended.[122] Since Schneerson's passing, the Messianic movement has largely shrunk, although some followers still believe him to be the Messiah.[122] The Chabad umbrella organization, Agudas Chasidei Chabad, has condemned Messianic behavior, stating that it defies the express wishes of Schneerson.[125]

Global positions

United States

 
A child announces one of the 12 verses
 
Waving to children at a Lag BaOmer parade

Schneerson spoke of the position of the United States as a world superpower, and would praise its foundational values of '"E pluribus unum'—from many one", and "In God We Trust".[126] He called on the government to develop independent energy, and not need to rely on totalitarian regimes whose countries national interests greatly differed from the U.S.[127][128] Schneerson also called for the U.S. Government to use its influence on countries who were receiving its foreign aid to do more for the educational and cultural needs of their deprived citizens.[129][130]

Schneerson placed a strong emphasis on education and often spoke of the need of a moral educational system for all people. He was an advocate of a Department of Education as a separate cabinet position from the Department of Health, Education and Welfare.[131] Schneerson proclaimed 1977 as a "Year of Education" and urged Congress to do the same. He stated that education "must think in terms of a 'better living' not only for the individual, but also for the society as a whole. The educational system must, therefore, pay more attention to the building of character, with emphasis on moral and ethical values. Education must put greater emphasis on the promotion of fundamental human rights and obligations of justice and morality, which are the basis of any human society".[132]

The Ninety-Fifth Congress of the United States issued a Joint Resolution proclaiming 1978 as a Year of Education and designating April 18, 1978, as "Education Day, U.S.A.".[133] Each year since, the President of the United States has proclaimed Schneerson's birthday as "Education Day, U.S.A." in his honor.[134]

During his life, Schneerson had great influence on numerous political leaders from across the aisle, many of whom would seek his advice. He was visited by Presidents, Prime Ministers, Governors, Senators, Congressmen and Mayors. Notable among them are John F. Kennedy, Robert Kennedy, Franklin D. Roosevelt Jr., Ronald Reagan, Jimmy Carter, Jacob Javits, Ed Koch, Rudy Giuliani, David Dinkins and Joe Lieberman.[67][135]

According to Howard Mortman's book, When Rabbis Bless Congress, Schneerson was the rabbi most mentioned in Congress.[136]

Israel

Schneerson took great interest in the affairs of the state of Israel, and did whatever was in his power to support the infrastructure of the state and advance its success.[89][137] He was concerned with the agricultural,[138] industrial and overall economic welfare of Israel,[139] and sought to promote its scientific achievements, and enhance Israel's standing in the international community.[140] Schneerson consistently expressed enormous recognition of the role of the Israel Defense Forces and stated that those who serve in the Israeli army perform a great mitzvah.[141]

In 1950, Schneerson encouraged the establishment of Israel's first automobile company, Autocars Co. Ltd. (Hebrew: אוטוקרס) of Haifa. By 1956, the company was responsible for 28% of Israel's exports. Schneerson established a network of trade schools in Israel to provide Israeli youth, new immigrants and Holocaust survivors with vocational training and livelihood. In 1954, Schneerson established a school for carpentry and woodwork. In 1955, he established a school for agriculture. In 1956, he established a school for printing and publishing and, in 1957, a school for textiles.[142]

Although he never visited Israel, many of Israel's top leadership made it a point to visit him.[143] Israeli President Zalman Shazar would visit Schneerson and corresponded extensively with him as would Prime Minister Menachem Begin who came to visit him before going to Washington to meet President Carter.[144] Ariel Sharon, who had a close relationship with Schneerson,[145] often quoted his views on military matters and sought his advice when he considered retiring from the military. Schneerson advised the general to remain at his post.[146] Yitzhak Rabin,[147] Shimon Peres and Benjamin Netanyahu[148] also visited and sought Schneerson's advice. Israeli politicians and military experts who came to consult with him were surprised by his detailed knowledge of their country's local affairs and international situation on strategic and diplomatic fronts.[89] Despite his advisory meetings with American and Israeli political notables, Schneerson stated his nonpartisan policy many times, warning of his non-involvement in politics.[149][150]

Schneerson publicly expressed his view that the safety and stability of Israel were in the best interests of the United States, calling Israel the front line against those who want the anti-Western nations to succeed.[151] He was opposed to land for peace, which he called an "illusion of peace", saying that it would not save lives, but harm lives. Schneerson stated that this position was not based on nationalistic or other religious reasons, but purely out of concern for human life.[152] Benjamin Netanyahu said that, while he was serving as Israel's ambassador to the United Nations in 1984, Schneerson told him: "you will be serving in a house of darkness, but remember, that even in the darkest place; the light of a single candle can be seen far and wide ..." Netanyahu later retold this episode in a speech at the General Assembly, on September 23, 2011.[153]

Just before the outbreak of the Six-Day War, Schneerson called for a global Tefillin campaign, to see that Jews observe the Mitzvah of wearing Tefillin as a means of ensuring divine protection against Israel's enemies.[154] Speaking to a crowd of thousands of people on May 28, 1967, only a few days before the outbreak of the war, he assured the world that Israel would be victorious.[155] He said Israel had no need to fear as God was with them, quoting the verse, "the Guardian of Israel neither sleeps nor slumbers".[156] Within the Haredi community, criticism of the campaign was voiced at the Agudat Israel convention of 1968. However, following the incident, Yitzchok Hutner, a prominent Orthodox rabbi who had corresponded with Schneersohn in the past,[157] wrote to Schneerson privately, distancing himself from the convention. Hutner wrote that he had not been at the convention and asked forgiveness for any pain his earlier letters (discussing halachic issues regarding the tefillin campaign) may have caused.[158]

After the Operation Entebbe rescue, in a public talk on 16 August 1976, Schneerson applauded the courage and selflessness of the IDF, "who flew thousands of miles, putting their lives in danger for the sole purpose of possibly saving the lives of tens of Jews". He said: "their portion in the Hereafter is guaranteed".[159][160] He was later vilified by ultra-haredi rabbis for publicly praising the courage of the IDF and suggesting that God chose them as a medium through which he would send deliverance to the Jewish people.[161] Schneerson protested vehemently against those elements within the ultra-haredi society who sought to undermine the motivations and actions of the soldiers.[162][163]

He corresponded with David Ben-Gurion on the issue of Judaism in the State of Israel, asking the Prime Minister to ensure that Israel "remains Jewish". He lobbied Israeli politicians to pass legislation in accordance with Jewish law on the question "Who is a Jew?" and asked that they add the words "according to Halakha" to the declaration so that it state that "only one who is born of a Jewish mother or converted according to Halakha is Jewish". This caused a furor in the United States. Some American Jewish philanthropies stopped financially supporting Chabad-Lubavitch since most of their members were connected to Reform and Conservative Judaism.[citation needed]

Soviet Jewry

Schneerson greatly encouraged the Jews who lived in Communist states. He sent many emissaries on covert missions to sustain Judaism under Communist regimes and to provide them with their religious and material needs.[164] Many Jews from behind the Iron Curtain corresponded with Schneerson, sending their letters to him via secret messenger and addressing Schneerson in code name.[165]

Schneerson, who had an intimate knowledge of the Soviet government and their tactics,[citation needed] opposed demonstrations on behalf of Soviet Jews, stating that he had evidence that they were harming Russia's Jews. Instead he advocated quiet diplomacy, which he said would be more effective.[166][167] Schneerson did whatever was in his power to push for the release of Jews from the former Soviet Union and established schools, communities and other humanitarian resources to assist with their absorption into Israel. On one known occasion he instructed Senator Chic Hecht to provide President Ronald Reagan with contact information of people who wished to leave so that he could lobby their release.[168]

Following the Chernobyl disaster in 1986, Schneerson called for efforts to rescue Ukrainian Jewish children from Chernobyl and founded a special organization for this purpose.[169] The first rescue flight occurred on August 3, 1990, when 196 Jewish children were flown to Israel and brought to a shelter campus. Since then, thousands of children have been rescued and brought to Israel, where they receive housing, education, and medical care in a supportive environment.[170]

Natan Sharansky, the Chairman of the Jewish Agency, said that Chabad Lubavitch was an essential connector to Soviet Jewry during the Cold War,[171] while Shimon Peres has stated that it's to Schneerson's credit that "Judaism in the Soviet Union has been preserved".[172]

Legacy

Impact

Schneerson initiated Jewish outreach in the post-Holocaust era. He believed that world Jewry was seeking to learn more about its heritage, and sought to bring Judaism to Jews wherever they were.[13] British Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks said of Schneerson "that if the Nazis searched out every Jew in hate, the Rebbe wished to search out every Jew in love".[173] He oversaw the building of schools, community centers, and youth camps and created a global network of emissaries, known as shluchim.

Today there are shluchim in all of the 50 US states, in over 100 countries and 1,000 cities around the world, totaling more than 3,600 institutions including some 300 in Israel.[174][175] Chabad is very often the only Jewish presence in a given town or city and it has become the face of Jewish Orthodoxy for the Jewish and general world.[176]

Schneerson's model of Jewish outreach has been imitated by all Jewish movements including the Reform, Conservative, Orthodox and Haredi.[8][177] His published works fill more than 200 volumes and are often used as source text for sermons of both Chabad and non-Chabad rabbis.[12] Beyond the Jewish world, Peggy Noonan has written that moral issues would be better addressed by leaders such as Schneerson than by politicians,[178] and since his death, Schneerson has been referred to as the Rebbe for all people.[10]

Recognition

Schneerson's contributions to education and the betterment of mankind have been recognized by every president since Richard Nixon.[citation needed] In 1978, Schneerson became the first rabbi to have a U.S. national day proclaimed in his honor, when the U.S. Congress and President Jimmy Carter designated Schneerson's birthdate as "Education Day USA." Each year since, the President has called on all Americans to focus on education in honor of Schneerson. In 1982, Ronald Reagan proclaimed Schneerson's birthday as a "National Day of Reflection", and presented the "National Scroll of Honor" that was signed by the President, Vice-President and every member of Congress.[179][180]

Many officials attended Schneerson's funeral, including New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani, Benjamin Netanyahu and the entire staff of the Israeli consulate in Washington.[181]

President Bill Clinton penned a condolence letter "to the Chabad-Lubavitch community and to world Jewry" and spoke of Schneerson as "a monumental man who as much as any other individual, was responsible over the last half a century for advancing the instruction of ethics and morality to our young people." Israeli Prime Minister Yitzchak Rabin, cited Schneerson's great scholarship and contribution to the entire Jewish people and proclaimed "The Rebbe's loss is a loss for all the Jewish people." Foreign Minister Shimon Peres cited words from the prophet Malachi as applying with particular force to Schneerson: "He brought back many from iniquity. For a priest's lips shall guard knowledge, and teaching should be sought from his mouth. For he is a messenger of the Lord."[182]

Shortly after his death, Schneerson was posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal, honoring Schneerson for his "outstanding and enduring contributions toward world education, morality, and acts of charity".[18] President Bill Clinton spoke these words at the Congressional Gold Medal ceremony:

The late Rebbe's eminence as a moral leader for our country was recognized by every president since Richard Nixon. For over two decades, the Rabbi's movement now has some 2000 institutions; educational, social, medical, all across the globe. We (the United States Government) recognize the profound role that Rabbi Schneerson had in the expansion of those institutions.[183]

In 2009, the National Museum of American Jewish History selected Schneerson as one of eighteen American Jews to be included in their "Only in America" Hall of Fame.[184]

Schneerson's contribution with respect to comprehension of human emotion is considered by many to be unparalleled; as Elie Wiesel said of the Rebbe, "When the Rebbe was alone with anyone, it was an opening. He opened doors for his visitor, or his student or Chasid—secret doors that we all have. It wasn’t a break-in. It was just an invitation. And that was really the greatness of the Rebbe. I think the Rebbe had a great talent for that—one of the greatest and the best that Judaism has ever seen."[185] Schneerson is often considered to be one of the most, if not the most, influential rabbis of the twentieth century.

Criticism

From the 1970s onwards, Elazar Shach of the Ponevezh Yeshiva in Bnei Brak was publicly critical of Schneerson,[186] accusing him of creating a cult of crypto-messianism around himself.[187][188] He objected to his calling upon the Messiah to appear and eventually called for a boycott of Chabad and its institutions.[189] Though Schneerson never responded publicly to Shach's attacks, he did rebuke those who disparaged (religious and non-religious) Jews and for bringing division among them in apparent response to Shach, explaining that "every Jew, regardless of differences and levels of observances, is part of Am Echad," the unified Jewish people.[190]

Scholarship and works

 
Set of Torat Menachem

Schneerson is recognized for his scholarship and contributions to Talmudic, Halachic, Kabalistic and Chasidic teachings.[12][191] Joseph B. Soloveitchik, who knew Schneerson from their days in Berlin, and remained in contact once the two men came to America, told his students after visiting Schneerson "the Rebbe has a gewaldiger (awesome) comprehension of the Torah,"[192] and "He is a gaon, he is a great one, he is a leader of Israel."[193]

According to Mordechai Eliyahu, former Chief Rabbi of Israel, his meeting with Schneerson "covered all sections of the Torah". Eliyahu said, "The Rebbe jumped effortlessly from one Talmudic tractate to another, and from there to Kabbalah and then to Jewish law ... It was as if he had just finished studying these very topics from the holy books. The whole Torah was an open book in front of him".[194][195]

Schneerson's teachings have been published in more than two hundred volumes. Schneerson also penned tens of thousands of letters in reply to requests for blessings and advice. These detailed and personal letters offer advice and explanation on a wide variety of subjects, including spiritual matters as well as all aspects of life.[196]

Books in Hebrew and Yiddish

  • 1943: Hayom Yom – An anthology of Chabad aphorisms and customs arranged according to the days of the year.
  • 1944: Sefer HaToldot – Admor Moharash – Biography of the fourth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Shmuel Schneersohn.
  • 1946: Haggadah Im Likkutei Ta'amim U'minhagim – The Haggadah with a commentary written by Schneerson.
  • 1951–1992: Sefer HaMa'amarim Melukot – chassidic discourses (6 volumes).
  • 1951–2014: Sefer HaMa'amarim Hasidic discourses including 1951–1962, 1969–1977 with plans to complete the rest (29 volumes).
  • 1962–1992: Likkutei Sichot – Schneerson's discourses on the weekly Torah portions, Jewish Holidays, and other issues (39 volumes).
  • 1981–1992: Torat Menachem Hitvaduyot – transcripts of talks in Hebrew, 1982–1992 (63 volumes).
  • 1985: Chidushim UBiurim B'Shas – novellae on the Talmud (3 volumes).
  • 1985–1987: Sichot Kodesh – transcripts of talks in Yiddish from 1950 to 1981 (50 volumes).
  • 1985–2010: Igrot Kodesh – Schneerson's Hebrew and Yiddish letters (33 volumes).
  • 1987–1992: Sefer HaSichot – Schneerson's edited talks from 1987 to 1992. (12 volumes).
  • 1988: Hilchot Beit Habechira LeHaRambam Im Chiddushim U'Beurim – Talks on the Laws of the Holy Temple of the Mishneh Torah.
  • 1989: Biurim LePirkei Avot – talks on the Mishnaic tractate of "Ethics of the Fathers" (2 volumes).
  • 1990–2010: Heichal Menachem – Shaarei – talks arranged by topic and holiday (34 volumes).
  • 1991: Biurim LePeirush Rashi – talks on the commentary of Rashi to Torah (5 volume).
  • 1991: Yein Malchut – talks on the Mishneh Torah (2 volumes).
  • 1992: Torat Menachem – Tiferet Levi Yitzchok – talks on the works of his father, Levi Yitzchak Schneerson on the Zohar (3 volumes).
  • 1993–2022: Torat Menachem transcripts of talks in Hebrew, 1950–1973. Planned to encompass 1950–1992 (76 volumes).
  • 1994–2001: Reshimot – Schneerson's personal journal discovered after his death. Includes notes for his public talks before 1950, letters to Jewish scholars, notes on the Tanya, and thoughts on a wide range of Jewish subjects penned between 1928 and 1950 (10 volumes).

Books in English (original and translated)

  • The Teachings of The Rebbe - The Chassidic Discourses of The Rebbe in English.
  • Letters from the Rebbe – six volume set of Schneerson's English letters.
  • Path to Selflessness – work discussing the bond between the individual soul and God.[197]
  • Garments of the Soul – discussing the sublime importance of mundane activities, and their effect on the soul.[198]
  • The Letter and the Spirit – five volumes so far published of the Rebbe's English letters.[199]
  • Sichos In English – fifty-one volumes published of the Rebbe's talks in English.[200]

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  157. ^ Igros Kodesh, M.M. Schneerson, Kehot 1998 Vol. 7, pp. 2,49,192,215; Vol. 12, pp. 28,193; Vol. 14, pp. 167,266; Vol. 18, p. 251; Vol. 25, pp. 18-20; and Vol. 26, p. 485.
  158. ^ Mibeis Hagenozim, B. Levin, Kehot 2009, p.89.
  159. ^ Rapoport, Chaim. The Afterlife of Scholarship. p. 88 ISBN 9780615538976
  160. ^ Sichot Kodesh 5736, vol. 2, page 625
  161. ^ Mintz, Jerome. Hasidic People: A Place in the New World, page 52. Harvard University Press: Cambridge, 1992
  162. ^ Harris, Ben. "Chassidic Sects Battle Each Other", Canadian Jewish News, April 1, 1977
  163. ^ Sichot Kodesh 5736, vol. 2, pages 626-627
  164. ^ Hyam Maccoby (June 13, 1994). "Obituary: Rabbi Menachem Schneerson - People - News". The Independent. Archived from the original on May 12, 2022. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
  165. ^ Joseph Telushkin, Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History. HarperCollins, 2014. Page 299.
  166. ^ Telushkin, Pp. 291-292.
  167. ^ JTA, Lubavitcher Hassidim Oppose Public Demonstrations on Behalf of Soviet Jews 1970-12-31.
  168. ^ "Obituary: Senator Jacob ("Chic") Hecht (1929-2006)". May 15, 2006.
  169. ^ "Our Story - Who We Are". Chabad's Children of Chernobyl. Archived from the original on July 3, 2013. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
  170. ^ Eglash, Ruth (April 26, 2011). "Chabad's Children of Chernobyl project 'as vital as ever'". The Jerusalem Post. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
  171. ^ Lightstone, Mordechai (November 7, 2011). . Chabad Lubavitch World Headquarters. Archived from the original on November 13, 2013. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
  172. ^ Telushkin, page 566
  173. ^ The Jewish Week, "Free Book Excerpt From "Rebbe"" 2014-09-03 at the Wayback Machine
  174. ^ "Jewish Literacy", Telushkin, William Morrow 2001, p.470
  175. ^ List of Chabad Centers in Israel, chabad.org
  176. ^ Fishkoff, Sue. The Rebbe's Army, page 14
  177. ^ Eric Yoffie, The Chabad Challenge 2014-10-10 at the Wayback Machine . Union for Reform Judaism, 2002.
  178. ^ Peggy Noonan, What I Saw at the Revolution: A Political Life in the Reagan Era. Random House, 1990. Page 346.
  179. ^ "Ronald Reagan: Proclamation 4921 - National Day of Reflection". American Presidency Project. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
  180. ^ Joseph Telushkin, Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History. HarperCollins, 2014. Page 4.
  181. ^ "Tens of Thousands Mourn the Death of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. June 13, 1994. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
  182. ^ Joseph Telushkin, Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History. HarperCollins, 2014. Page 514.
  183. ^ "Behind the Headlines: Remembering the Rebbe As Washington Bestows Honors". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. July 3, 1995. Retrieved May 12, 2021.
  184. ^ "nmajh.org". nmajh.org. Retrieved January 29, 2012.
  185. ^ Lubavitch, Chabad (July 2019). "Chabad Lubavitch Brooklyn New York NY World Headquarters". lubavitch.com. Retrieved June 2, 2020.
  186. ^ See Mechtavim v'Ma'amorim [Letters and Speeches of Rabbi Shach in Hebrew. Bnei Brak, Israel. 03-574-5006]: Volume 1, Letter 6 (page 15), Letter 8 (page 19). Volume 3, Statements on pages 100–101, Letter on page 102. Volume 4, letter 349(page 69), letter 351 (page 71). Volume 5, letter 533 (page 137), letter 535 (page 139), speech 569 (page 173), statement 570 (page 174). See also here: (PDF) (in Hebrew). Archived from the original (PDF) on March 5, 2009. Retrieved March 5, 2009.
  187. ^ "Independent, The (London), November 10, 2001 by David Landau".
  188. ^ Lisa Beyer (March 23, 1992). "Expecting The Messiah". Time. Vol. 139. p. 42. Eliezer Schach, one of Israel's leading ultra-Orthodox rabbis, has publicly called Schneerson "insane," an "infidel" and "a false Messiah." The local papers carried Schach's outrageous charge that Schneerson's followers are "eaters of trayf," food such as pork that is forbidden to Jews.
  189. ^ Faith and Fate: The Story of the Jewish People in the 20th century, Berel Wein, 2001 by Shaar Press. pg. 340
  190. ^ "Lubavitcher Rebbe Speaks out Against Rabbi Schach's Message". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. April 4, 1990. Retrieved May 12, 2021.
  191. ^ Yehiel Poupko, Of God and Man: Some thoughts on the Rebbe 2014-10-18 at the Wayback Machine. 6/25/2014, JUF News.
  192. ^ Kowalsky, S.B. From My Zaidy's House, page 274-275
  193. ^ "Excerpt: The Rebbe and the Rav". YouTube. February 5, 2007. Archived from the original on December 11, 2021. Retrieved January 29, 2012.
  194. ^ Mordechai, Rabbi. "Teacher and Leader for All Jews - Life". Chabad.org. Retrieved November 13, 2013.
  195. ^ Following his attendance at one such talk, Yitzchak Yedidya Frankel said "I have witnessed the magnificence of Polish Jewry ... and I have known most of the great scholars of recent generations. But I have never seen such command of the material. That is genius." Out of the Depths Israel Meir Lau, Sterling Publishing, 2011 p.202.
  196. ^ "Hamodia" Vol.12944, June 13, 1994, pg.2
  197. ^ Coauthor Avraham Vaisfiche; Translated by Shmuel Simpson (2009). Path to Selflessness - Maamar Yehuda Ata (מאמר יהודה אתה תשל"ח). Kehot Publication Society. ISBN 9780826607508.
  198. ^ Translated by Yosef B. Marcus (2001). Garments of the Soul: A Chasidic Discourse. Kehot Publication Society. ISBN 9780826605528.
  199. ^ *Coauthor Nissan Mindel (1998). The Letter & the Spirit. Letters By the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Volume I. Brooklyn, NY: Kehot Publication Society. ISBN 9780826600059.
    • The Letter and the Spirit Volume II December 18, 2019, at the Wayback Machine, Nissan Mindel Publications 2013
  200. ^ *Sichos In English: Excerpts of Sichos delivered by Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, Volume I. Brooklyn, NY: Sichos In English. 1979. ISBN 1456349805.

Sources

  • Ehrlich, Avrum M. The Messiah of Brooklyn: understanding Lubavitch Hasidism past and present. Jersey City: KTAV Publishing, 2004. ISBN 0-88125-836-9.
  • Fishkoff, Sue. The Rebbe's Army: Inside the World of Chabad-Lubavitch. Schocken, 2005. ISBN 978-0805211382
  • Heilman, Samuel C.; Friedman, Menachem M. The Rebbe. The Life and Afterlife of Menachem Mendel Schneerson. Princeton and Oxford: Princeton University Press, 2010. ISBN 978-0-691-13888-6
  • Hoffman, Edward. Despite all odds: the story of Lubavitch. New York: Simon & Schuster, 1991. ISBN 0-671-67703-9
  • Rapoport, Chaim. The Afterlife of Scholarship. Oporto Press, 2011. ISBN 0615538975
  • Steinsaltz, Adin. My Rebbe. Maggid Books, 2014. ISBN 978-159-264-381-3
  • Telushkin, Joseph. Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History. HarperWave, 2014. ISBN 978-0062318985

Further reading

  • Chighel, Michael. (online book). Archived from the original on March 4, 2016. Retrieved July 23, 2015.
  • Deutsch, Shaul Shimon. Larger than Life: The life and times of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson. Volumes 1-2 Chasidic Historical Productions, Volume 1- 1995, Volume 2- 1997. ISBN 978-0964724303 (Volume 1), ISBN 978-0964724310 (Volume 2).
  • Elior, Rachel. "The Lubavitch Messianic Resurgence: The Historical and Mystical Background 1939–1996", in: Toward the Millennium – Messianic Expectations from the Bible to Waco (eds. P. Schafer and M. Cohen), Leiden: Brill 1998: 383–408. ISBN 978-9004110373.
  • Miller, Chaim. Turning Judaism Outwards: A Biography of the Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson. Kol Menachem, 2014. ISBN 978-1934152362.
  • Wolfson, Elliot R. Open Secret: Postmessianic Messianism and the Mystical Revision of Menahem Mendel Schneerson. New York: Columbia University Press, 2009. ISBN 978-0-231-14630-2.
  • Telushkin, Joseph "Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Schneerson, The Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History." HarperCollins, 2014
  • Eliezrie, David. The Secret of Chabad: Inside the World's Most Successful Jewish Movement. Toby Press LLC, 2015, ISBN 9781592643707
  • Dor-Shav (Dershowitz), Zecharia (2022). "Personal Experiences with Great Rabbis of My Generation". Dershowitz Family Saga. ISBN 9781510770232.

External links

Works available online

  • The Teachings of The Rebbe - Chassidic Discourses (English)
  • Chabad.org – Literature
  • Sichos B'Laha"k – The Rebbe's unedited talks (Hebrew)
  • Sichos in English
  • (Hebrew)
  • (Hebrew)
  • (Hebrew)
  • The Rebbe's 10-point Mitzvah campaign
  • Audio recordings of the Rebbe's addresses (Yiddish)
  • The Rebbe's weekday Farbrengen's (video)
  • The official archive of all the Rebbe's weekday talks (Yiddish)
  • Who Was Rabbi Schneerson?/Lecture by Dr. Henry Abramson/June 2013

Works available on iTunes

  • AskTheRebbe! - Answers from the Rebbe's Letters. (English)

Biography

  • Biography of Menachem Mendel Schneerson
  • The Rebbe's life (in Hebrew)
  • The Rebbe's life (English)
  • Video Lecture on Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson of Chabad by Dr. Henry Abramson of Touro College South
  • Early Years: The Formative Years of The Rebbe.

Historical sites

  • The Ohel, about Schneersons burial site
  • Videos of the rebbe
  • Proclamation of Education and Sharing Day 2002 by President George W. Bush also honoring the 100th birthdate of Rabbi Schneerson
  • Education and Sharing Day, U.S.A., 2007
  • Numerous proclamations by President Reagan citing work of Rabbi Schneerson and promotion of the Seven Noahide Laws
  • Congressional Gold Medal Recipient Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson
  • Tributes to the Lubavitcher Rebbe by Menachem Begin, Bill Clinton, Newt Gingrich, Israel Meir Lau, John Lewis, Joseph Lieberman, Yitzhak Rabin, Aviezer Ravitzky, Jonathan Sacks, Lawrence Schiffman, Adin Steinsaltz, Margaret Thatcher, Elie Wiesel and Elliot Wolfson.
  • Family Tree
  • Commemorative remarks 25 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine upon the occasion of the 10th Yahrzeit of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Rabbi Dr. Tzvi Hersh Weinreb of the Orthodox Union
  • My Encounter with the Rebbe, an oral history project undertaken by Jewish Educational Media, JEM to record the history of Rabbi Schneerson
AcharonimRishonimGeonimSavoraimAmoraimTannaimZugot
Preceded by Rebbe of Lubavitch
1951–1994
Succeeded by
N/A

menachem, mendel, schneerson, this, article, need, reorganization, comply, with, wikipedia, layout, guidelines, please, help, editing, article, make, improvements, overall, structure, december, 2021, learn, when, remove, this, template, message, 19th, century,. This article may be in need of reorganization to comply with Wikipedia s layout guidelines Please help by editing the article to make improvements to the overall structure December 2021 Learn how and when to remove this template message For the 19th century third Rebbe of the Chabad Lubavitch dynasty see Menachem Mendel Schneersohn For other people named Schneerson or Schneersohn see Schneersohn Menachem Mendel Schneerson Rabbinic old fashioned Hebrew מנחם מענדל שניאורסאהן modern spelling מנחם מנדל שניאורסון April 5 1902 OS June 12 1994 AM 11 Nissan 5662 3 Tammuz 5754 known to many as the Lubavitcher Rebbe or simply the Rebbe 2 3 was a Russian Empire born American Orthodox rabbi and the most recent Rebbe of the Lubavitch Hasidic dynasty He is considered one of the most influential Jewish leaders of the 20th century 4 5 RabbiMenachem M SchneersonMenachem Mendel Schneerson in 1989TitleLubavitcher RebbePersonalBornApril 5 1902 OS 11 Nisan 5662 1 Nikolaev Kherson Governorate Russian Empire present day Mykolaiv Ukraine DiedJune 12 1994 3 Tammuz 5754 aged 92 Manhattan New York U S ReligionJudaismNationalityRussian AmericanSpouseChaya Mushka SchneersonParent s Levi Yitzchak Schneerson Chana Yanovski SchneersonSignatureJewish leaderPredecessorYosef Yitzchak SchneersohnSynagogue770 Eastern Parkway Brooklyn New YorkBegan10 Shevat 5711 January 17 1951BuriedQueens New York U S ResidenceBrooklyn New YorkDynastyChabad LubavitchSemichaRogatchover Gaon Yechiel Yaakov WeinbergAs leader of the Chabad Lubavitch movement he took an insular Hasidic group that almost came to an end with the Holocaust and transformed it into one of the most influential movements in religious Jewry 6 with an international network of over 5 000 educational and social centers 7 8 9 The institutions he established include kindergartens schools drug rehabilitation centers care homes for the disabled and synagogues 10 Schneerson s published teachings fill more than 400 volumes and he is noted for his contributions to Jewish continuity and religious thought 11 as well as his wide ranging contributions to traditional Torah scholarship 12 He is recognized as the pioneer of Jewish outreach 13 14 During his lifetime many of his adherents believed that he was the Messiah His own attitude to the subject and whether he openly encouraged this is hotly debated among academics During Schneerson s lifetime the messianic controversy and other issues elicited fierce criticism from many quarters in the Orthodox world especially earning him the enmity of Rabbi Elazar Shach In 1978 the U S Congress asked President Jimmy Carter to designate Schneerson s birthday as the national Education Day U S A 15 It has been since commemorated as Education and Sharing Day 16 17 In 1994 Schneerson was posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal for his outstanding and lasting contributions toward improvements in world education morality and acts of charity 18 Schneerson s resting place attracts both Jews and non Jews for prayer 19 20 10 21 Contents 1 Biography 1 1 Early life and education 1 2 Marriage and family life 1 3 Berlin 1 4 Paris 1 5 New York 1 6 Seventh Chabad Rebbe 1 7 Outreach spiritual and political campaigns 1 7 1 Women and girls 1 7 2 International outreach 1 7 3 Chanukah campaign 1 7 4 Lag BaOmer parade 1 7 5 Iran youth immigration 1 7 6 Noahidism and Jewish outreach 1 7 7 Sunday office hours for charity 1 7 8 His message become righteous 1 8 Work habits 1 9 Illness and death 1 9 1 Wills 1 9 2 Messianism 2 Global positions 2 1 United States 2 2 Israel 2 3 Soviet Jewry 3 Legacy 3 1 Impact 3 2 Recognition 3 3 Criticism 4 Scholarship and works 4 1 Books in Hebrew and Yiddish 4 2 Books in English original and translated 5 References 6 Sources 7 Further reading 8 External links 8 1 Works available online 8 2 Works available on iTunes 8 3 Biography 8 4 Historical sitesBiography EditEarly life and education Edit Menachem Mendel Schneerson was born on April 5 1902 OS 11 Nissan 5662 in the Black Sea port of Nikolaev in the Russian Empire now Mykolaiv in Ukraine 22 His father was rabbi Levi Yitzchak Schneerson a renowned Talmudic scholar and authority on Kabbalah and Jewish law 23 His mother was Rebbetzin Chana Schneerson nee Yanovski He was named after the third Chabad rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneersohn the Tzemach Tzedek from whom he was a direct patrilineal descendant In 1907 when Schneerson was five years old the family moved to Yekatrinoslav today Dnipro where Levi Yitzchak was appointed Chief Rabbi of the city He served until 1939 when he was exiled by the Soviets to Kazakhstan 24 Schneerson had two younger brothers Dov Ber who was murdered in 1944 by Nazi collaborators and Yisrael Aryeh Leib who died in 1952 while completing doctoral studies at Liverpool University 22 During his youth he received a private education and was tutored by Zalman Vilenkin from 1909 through 1913 When Schneerson was 11 years old Vilenkin informed his father that he had nothing more to teach his son 25 At that point Levi Yitzchak began teaching his son Talmud and rabbinic literature as well as Kabbalah Schneerson proved gifted in both Talmudic and Kabbalistic study and also took exams as an external student of the local Soviet school 26 He was considered an illui and genius and by the time he was 17 he had mastered the entire Talmud some 5 894 pages as well as all its early commentaries 27 Throughout his childhood Schneerson was involved in the affairs of his father s office He was also said to have acted as an interpreter between the Jewish community and the Russian authorities on a number of occasions 28 Levi Yitzchak s courage and principles were a guide to his son for the rest of his life Many years later when he once reminisced about his youth Schneerson said I have the education of the first born son of the rabbi of Yekaterinoslav When it comes to saving lives I speak up whatever others may say 29 Schneerson went on to receive separate rabbinical ordinations from the Rogatchover Gaon Yosef Rosen 30 and Yechiel Yaakov Weinberg author of Sridei Aish 31 32 Marriage and family life Edit In 1923 Schneerson visited the sixth Chabad Lubavitch Rebbe Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn for the first time He met the rabbi s middle daughter Chaya Mushka Mousia they were distant cousins Sometime later they became engaged but were not married until 1928 in Warsaw Poland 33 Taking great pride in his son in law s outstanding scholarship Yosef Yitzchak asked him to engage in learned conversation with the great Torah scholars that were present at the wedding such as Meir Shapiro and Menachem Ziemba 34 Menachem Mendel and Chaya Mushka were married for 60 years and were childless 35 Menachem Mendel Schneerson and Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn were both descendants of Menachem Mendel Schneersohn known as the Tzemach Tzedek the third Rebbe of Chabad Lubavitch 36 Schneerson later commented that the day of his marriage bound the community to him and him to the community 37 In 1947 Schneerson traveled to Paris to take his mother Chana Schneerson back to New York with him 38 Schneerson would visit her every day and twice each Friday and prepare her a tea 39 In 1964 Chana Schneerson died 40 On February 10 1988 Schneerson s wife Chaya Mushka Schneerson died 41 A year after the death of his wife when the traditional year of Jewish mourning had passed Schneerson moved into his study above the central Lubavitch synagogue on Eastern Parkway 42 Berlin Edit A monument for Schneerson in Berlin After his wedding to Chaya Mushka in 1928 Schneerson and his wife moved to Berlin where he was assigned specific communal tasks by his father in law Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn who also requested that he write scholarly annotations to the responsa and various hasidic discourses of the earlier Rebbes of Chabad Lubavitch Schneerson studied mathematics physics and philosophy at the University of Berlin 43 He would later recall that he enjoyed Erwin Schrodinger s lectures 44 His father in law took great pride in his erudite son in law s scholarly attainments and paid for all the tuition expenses and helped facilitate his studies throughout 45 During his stay in Berlin his father in law encouraged him to become more of a public figure but Schneerson described himself as an introvert 37 and was known to plead with acquaintances not to make a fuss over the fact that he was the son in law of Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn 46 While in Berlin Schneerson met Joseph B Soloveitchik and the two formed a friendship that remained between them years later when they both emigrated to America 47 48 49 50 He wrote hundreds of pages of his own original Torah discourses 51 and conducted a serious interchange of halachic correspondence with many of Eastern Europe s leading rabbinic figures including the Talmudic genius known as the Rogachover Gaon 52 In 1933 he also met with Chaim Elazar Shapiro as well as with Talmudist Shimon Shkop 53 During this time he kept a diary in which he would carefully document his private conversations with his father in law as well as his kabbalistic correspondence with his father Levi Yitzchak Schneerson 54 Paris Edit In 1933 after the rise of the Nazi party in Germany the Schneersons left Berlin and moved to Paris where Menachem Mendel known as RaMash before accepting the leadership of Chabad continued his religious and communal activities on behalf of his father in law Yosef Yitzchak While in Paris he took a two year course in engineering at a vocational college where he was a mediocre student this was his only formal secular education 55 During that time Yosef Yitzchak recommended that Professor Alexander Vasilyevitch Barchenko consult with Schneerson regarding various religious and mystical matters 56 and prominent rabbis such as Yerachmiel Binyaminson and Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler turned to Schneerson with their rabbinic and kabbalistic queries 57 58 On June 11 1940 three days before Paris fell to the Nazis the Schneersons fled to Vichy and later to Nice where they stayed until their final escape from Europe in 1941 59 New York Edit In 1941 Schneerson escaped from Europe via Lisbon Portugal 60 On the eve of his departure Schneerson penned a treatise where he revealed his vision for the future of world Jewry and humanity 61 He and his wife Chaya Mushka arrived in New York on June 23 1941 62 Shortly after his arrival his father in law appointed him director and chairman of the three Chabad central organizations Merkos L Inyonei Chinuch Machneh Israel and Kehot Publication Society placing him at the helm of the movement s Jewish educational social services and publishing networks Over the next decade Yosef Yitzchak referred many of the scholarly questions that had been inquired of him to his son in law He became increasingly known as a personal representative of Yosef Yitzchak 63 During the 1940s Schneerson became a naturalized US citizen and seeking to contribute to the war effort he volunteered at the Brooklyn Navy Yard using his electrical engineering background to draw wiring diagrams for the battleship USS Missouri BB 63 64 65 66 and other classified military work 67 In 1942 Schneerson launched the Merkos Shlichus program where he would send pairs of yeshiva students to remote locations across the country during their summer vacations to teach Jews in isolated communities about their heritage and offer education to their children citation needed As chairman and editor in chief of Kehot Schneerson published the works of the earlier Rebbes of Chabad He also published his own works including the Hayom Yom in 1943 and Hagadda in 1946 68 On a visit to Paris in 1947 he established a school for girls and worked with local organizations to assist with housing for refugees and displaced persons 38 Schneerson often explained that his goal was to make the world a better place and to do what he could to eliminate all suffering 69 In a letter to Israeli President Yitzchak Ben Tzvi Schneerson wrote that when he was a child the vision of the future redemption began to take form in his imagination a redemption of such magnitude and grandeur through which the purpose of the suffering the harsh decrees and annihilation of exile will be understood 70 In 1991 a car accompanying Schneerson s motorcade accidentally struck two Guyanese American children while attempting to catch up to Schneerson s vehicle One of the children was killed The incident triggered the Crown Heights riot 71 Seventh Chabad Rebbe Edit After the death of Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn in 1950 Chabad followers began persuading Schneerson to succeed his father in law as Rebbe on the basis of his scholarship piety and dynasty 72 73 Schneerson was reluctant and actively refused to accept leadership of the movement He continued however all the communal activities he had previously headed It would take a full year until he was persuaded by the elders of the movement to accept the post 74 On the first anniversary of his father in law s passing 10 Shevat 1951 in a ceremony attended by several hundred rabbis and Jewish leaders from all parts of the United States and Canada Schneerson delivered a Hasidic discourse Ma amar the equivalent to a President elect taking the oath of office and formally became the Rebbe 75 On the night of his acceptance members of the Israeli Cabinet and Israel s Chief Rabbi Yitzhak Herzog sent him congratulatory messages 76 Reiterating a longstanding core Chabad principle at his inaugural talk he demanded that each individual exert themselves in advancing spiritually and not rely on the Rebbe to do it for them saying 77 Now listen Jews Generally in Chabad it has been demanded that each individual work on themselves and not rely on the Rebbes One must on their own transform the folly of materialism and the passion of the animal soul to holiness I do not God Forbid recuse myself from assisting as much as possible however if one does not work on themselves what good will submitting notes singing songs and saying lechayim do At the same talk Schneerson said one must go to a place where nothing is known of Godliness nothing is known of Judaism nothing is even known of the Hebrew alphabet and while there to put oneself aside and ensure that the other calls out to God 78 When he spoke to Forward journalist Asher Penn that year he said we must stop insisting that Judaism is in danger an assertion that does little but place Jewry on the defensive We need to go on the offensive 79 As Rebbe Schneerson would receive visitors for private meetings known as yechidus on Sunday and Thursday evenings Those meetings would begin at 8pm and often continue until five or six in the morning and were open to everyone 73 80 Schneerson who spoke several languages including English Yiddish Hebrew French Russian German and Italian would converse with people on all issues and offer his advice on both spiritual and mundane matters 81 Politicians and leaders from across the globe came to meet him but Schneerson showed no preference to one person over another His secretary once even declined to admit John F Kennedy because Schneerson was already meeting ordinary people who had requested appointments months previously 10 Those meetings were discontinued in 1982 when it became impossible to accommodate the large number of people Meetings were then held only for those who had a special occasion such as a bride and groom for their wedding or a boy and his family on the occasion of a bar mitzvah 81 During his four decades as Rebbe Schneerson would deliver regular addresses centered on the weekly Torah portion and on various tractates of the Talmud These talks delivered without text or notes would last for several hours 82 83 and sometimes went for eight or nine hours without a break During the talks Schneerson demonstrated a unique approach in explaining seemingly different concepts by analysis of the fundamental principle common to the entire tractate 84 85 and referenced both classic and esoteric sources from all periods citing entire sections by heart 82 Outreach spiritual and political campaigns Edit Women and girls Edit In 1951 Schneerson established a Chabad women s and girl s organization and a youth organisation in Israel Their mission was to engage in outreach which was exclusively directed at women and teens In 1953 he opened branches of these organizations in New York London and Toronto In a marked departure from an entrenched tendency to limit high level Torah education to men and boys Schneerson equally addressed his teachings to both genders 86 He addressed meetings of the organisations and led gatherings exclusively for women Schneerson would describe the increase in Torah study by women as one of the positive innovations of the later generations 87 International outreach Edit That same year Schneerson sent his first emissary to Morocco and established schools and a synagogue for the Moroccan Jewish community In 1958 Schneerson established schools and synagogues in Detroit Michigan in Milan Italy and in London England In 1988 Schneerson sent 22 year old Rabbi Shmuley Boteach as a Chabad Lubavitch shaliach emissary to Oxford England where he served as rabbi to Oxford University s students for 11 years 88 Beginning in the 1960s Schneerson instituted a system of mitzvah campaigns to encourage the observance of ten basic Jewish practices such as tefillin for men Shabbat candles for women and loving your fellow for all people 89 Schneersohn s campaign brought the concept of tefillin to Jewish men everywhere and he has been referred to as the great modern popularizer of tefillin Until his campaign tefillin was largely the domain of the meticulously observant 90 Following the death of his mother Chana Schneerson in 1964 Schneerson began to offer an additional weekly sermon in her memory These sermons consisted of original insights and unprecedented analysis of Rashi s Torah commentary which were delivered at the regular public gatherings Schneerson gave these sermons each week until 1992 91 Chanukah campaign Edit In 1973 Schneerson started a Chanukah campaign to encourage all Jews worldwide to light their own menorah After all tin menorahs were given out that year a military manufacturer was commissioned to make tens of thousands of additional menorahs for distribution In 1974 a public lighting of a Chanukah menorah was held by the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia Pennsylvania and in years following menorah lightings on public grounds were conducted in cities worldwide Legal challenges to the lightings on public grounds reached the Supreme Court and it was ruled that public lightings did not violate the Constitution Public lightings continue in thousands of cities today 92 Lag BaOmer parade Edit Chabad established an annual Lag BaOmer parade at 770 one of the largest celebrations of its kind where thousands of Jews celebrate the holiday 93 94 better source needed Iran youth immigration Edit In 1979 during the Iranian Revolution and Iranian hostage crisis Schneerson directed arrangements to rescue Jewish youth and teenagers from Iran and bring them to safety in the United States 95 The militant Islamist hostilities towards the United States were seen by Schneerson as behavior that could threaten the country s status as an untouchable superpower and that would cause it to try to appease Arab countries thus endanger ing the security of Israel 96 As a result of Schneerson s efforts several thousand Iranian children were flown from Iran to the safety of New York 97 Noahidism and Jewish outreach Edit In 1983 Schneerson launched a global campaign to promote awareness of the Supreme Being and observance of the Noahide Laws among all people 98 arguing that this was the basis for human rights for all civilization 99 Several times each year his addresses were broadcast on national television On these occasions Schneerson would address the public on general communal affairs and issues relating to world peace such as a moment of silence in U S public schools increased government funding for solar energy research U S foreign aid to developing countries and nuclear disarmament 100 In 1984 Schneerson initiated a campaign for the daily study of Maimonides s Mishneh Torah 101 Each year at the completion of the learning cycle there is Siyum celebration marking the end of the cycle and beginning of the new one These events have been attended by many Jewish leaders 102 Sunday office hours for charity Edit In 1986 Schneerson began a custom where each Sunday he would stand outside his office greet people briefly give them a dollar bill and encourage them to donate to the charity of their choice 103 Explaining his reason for encouraging charitable giving among all people Schneerson quoted his father in law who said that when two people meet it should bring benefit to a third 104 People in line would often take this opportunity to ask Schneerson for advice or request a blessing Thousands of people attended this event each week which lasted up to six hours and is often referred to as Sunday Dollars 105 Schneerson s wife Chaya Mushka Schneerson died in 1988 41 During the week of shiva Schneerson wrote a will in which he bequeathed his entire estate to Agudas Chasidei Chabad the Chabad umbrella organisation 106 During a talk in 1991 Schneerson spoke passionately about Moshiach the Messiah and told his followers that he had done all that he could to bring world peace and redemption but that it was now up to them to continue this task I have done my part from now on you do all that you can A few months later when a reporter from CNN came to meet him at dollars he said Moshiach is ready to come now it is only on our part to do something additional in the realm of goodness and kindness 107 His message become righteous Edit On Sunday March 1 1992 Gabriel Erem the editor of Lifestyles Magazine told Schneerson that on the occasion of his ninetieth birthday they would be publishing a special issue and wanted to know what his message to the world was Schneerson replied that Ninety in Hebrew is tzaddik which means righteous And that is a direct indication for every person to become a real tzaddik a righteous person and to do so for many years until 120 This message Schneerson added applies equally to Jews and non Jews 108 Work habits Edit During his decades of leadership Schneerson worked over 18 hours a day and never took a day of vacation 109 He rarely left Brooklyn except for visits to his father in law s gravesite in Queens New York Schneerson was opposed to retirement seeing it as a waste of precious years 110 In 1972 on the occasion of his 70th birthday instead of announcing a retirement plan Schneerson proposed the establishment of 71 new institutions to mark the beginning of the 71st year of his life 111 Illness and death Edit In 1977 during the hakafot ceremony on Shemini Atzeret Schneerson suffered a heart attack At his request rather than transporting him to a hospital the doctors set up a mini hospital at his office where he was treated for the next four weeks by doctors Bernard Lown Ira Weiss and Larry Resnick 112 He made a full recovery from the heart attack with few if any noticeable lasting effects or changes to his work habits Fifteen years later Schneerson suffered a serious stroke while praying at the grave of his father in law The stroke left him unable to speak and paralyzed on the right side of his body During this time the hope that Schneerson could be revealed as the Messiah Moshiach became more widespread 113 114 On the morning of June 12 1994 3 Tammuz 5754 Schneerson died at the Beth Israel Medical Center and was buried at the Ohel next to his father in law Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn at Montefiore Cemetery in Queens New York 115 116 Shortly after Schneerson s death the executors of his will discovered several notebooks in a drawer in his office in which Schneerson had written his scholarly thoughts and religious musings from his earliest years 114 The majority of entries in these journals date between the years 1928 and 1950 and were subsequently published 117 The Rebbe s Tomb Schneerson s burial place next to his father in law and predecessor in Queens New York Following age old Jewish tradition that the resting place of a tzadik is holy Schneerson s gravesite is viewed by many as a holy site and has been described by the Yedioth Ahronoth as the American Western Wall where thousands of people Jews and non Jews 10 go to pray each week 21 118 19 Many more send faxes and e mails with requests for prayers to be read at the gravesite 119 Wills Edit Schneerson died without naming a successor as leader of the Chabad Lubavitch dynasty causing controversy within Chabad about Schneerson s will He did however write one legal will which was signed before witnesses whereby he transferred stewardship of all the major Chabad institutions as well as all his possessions to Agudas Chassidei Chabad 120 Another will no executed copies of which are known to be in existence named three senior Chabad rabbis as directors of Agudas Chassidei Chabad 120 Messianism Edit Main article Chabad messianism Schneerson had a passion and desire to raise awareness of the coming of the Messiah During his life many of his admirers hoped that he would be revealed as the Messiah 14 89 They pointed to traditional Jewish theology which teaches that in every generation there is one person who is worthy of being the Messiah and if God deems the time right he will be revealed by God as such 121 Chabad followers also pointed to a tradition that in every generation there is one person who is considered the Messiah of the generation 122 123 Schneerson s supporters have claimed that many Jews felt that if there was indeed a person worthy of such stature it was Schneerson 14 124 Although Schneerson constantly objected to any talk that he could be the Messiah this notion sparked controversy particularly among those who were unfamiliar with these traditional teachings 14 35 26 Detractors criticized a children s song with the words We want moshiach the messiah now We don t want to wait that Schneerson commended 122 Since Schneerson s passing the Messianic movement has largely shrunk although some followers still believe him to be the Messiah 122 The Chabad umbrella organization Agudas Chasidei Chabad has condemned Messianic behavior stating that it defies the express wishes of Schneerson 125 Global positions EditUnited States Edit A child announces one of the 12 verses Waving to children at a Lag BaOmer parade Schneerson spoke of the position of the United States as a world superpower and would praise its foundational values of E pluribus unum from many one and In God We Trust 126 He called on the government to develop independent energy and not need to rely on totalitarian regimes whose countries national interests greatly differed from the U S 127 128 Schneerson also called for the U S Government to use its influence on countries who were receiving its foreign aid to do more for the educational and cultural needs of their deprived citizens 129 130 Schneerson placed a strong emphasis on education and often spoke of the need of a moral educational system for all people He was an advocate of a Department of Education as a separate cabinet position from the Department of Health Education and Welfare 131 Schneerson proclaimed 1977 as a Year of Education and urged Congress to do the same He stated that education must think in terms of a better living not only for the individual but also for the society as a whole The educational system must therefore pay more attention to the building of character with emphasis on moral and ethical values Education must put greater emphasis on the promotion of fundamental human rights and obligations of justice and morality which are the basis of any human society 132 The Ninety Fifth Congress of the United States issued a Joint Resolution proclaiming 1978 as a Year of Education and designating April 18 1978 as Education Day U S A 133 Each year since the President of the United States has proclaimed Schneerson s birthday as Education Day U S A in his honor 134 During his life Schneerson had great influence on numerous political leaders from across the aisle many of whom would seek his advice He was visited by Presidents Prime Ministers Governors Senators Congressmen and Mayors Notable among them are John F Kennedy Robert Kennedy Franklin D Roosevelt Jr Ronald Reagan Jimmy Carter Jacob Javits Ed Koch Rudy Giuliani David Dinkins and Joe Lieberman 67 135 According to Howard Mortman s book When Rabbis Bless Congress Schneerson was the rabbi most mentioned in Congress 136 Israel Edit Schneerson took great interest in the affairs of the state of Israel and did whatever was in his power to support the infrastructure of the state and advance its success 89 137 He was concerned with the agricultural 138 industrial and overall economic welfare of Israel 139 and sought to promote its scientific achievements and enhance Israel s standing in the international community 140 Schneerson consistently expressed enormous recognition of the role of the Israel Defense Forces and stated that those who serve in the Israeli army perform a great mitzvah 141 In 1950 Schneerson encouraged the establishment of Israel s first automobile company Autocars Co Ltd Hebrew אוטוקרס of Haifa By 1956 the company was responsible for 28 of Israel s exports Schneerson established a network of trade schools in Israel to provide Israeli youth new immigrants and Holocaust survivors with vocational training and livelihood In 1954 Schneerson established a school for carpentry and woodwork In 1955 he established a school for agriculture In 1956 he established a school for printing and publishing and in 1957 a school for textiles 142 Although he never visited Israel many of Israel s top leadership made it a point to visit him 143 Israeli President Zalman Shazar would visit Schneerson and corresponded extensively with him as would Prime Minister Menachem Begin who came to visit him before going to Washington to meet President Carter 144 Ariel Sharon who had a close relationship with Schneerson 145 often quoted his views on military matters and sought his advice when he considered retiring from the military Schneerson advised the general to remain at his post 146 Yitzhak Rabin 147 Shimon Peres and Benjamin Netanyahu 148 also visited and sought Schneerson s advice Israeli politicians and military experts who came to consult with him were surprised by his detailed knowledge of their country s local affairs and international situation on strategic and diplomatic fronts 89 Despite his advisory meetings with American and Israeli political notables Schneerson stated his nonpartisan policy many times warning of his non involvement in politics 149 150 Schneerson publicly expressed his view that the safety and stability of Israel were in the best interests of the United States calling Israel the front line against those who want the anti Western nations to succeed 151 He was opposed to land for peace which he called an illusion of peace saying that it would not save lives but harm lives Schneerson stated that this position was not based on nationalistic or other religious reasons but purely out of concern for human life 152 Benjamin Netanyahu said that while he was serving as Israel s ambassador to the United Nations in 1984 Schneerson told him you will be serving in a house of darkness but remember that even in the darkest place the light of a single candle can be seen far and wide Netanyahu later retold this episode in a speech at the General Assembly on September 23 2011 153 Just before the outbreak of the Six Day War Schneerson called for a global Tefillin campaign to see that Jews observe the Mitzvah of wearing Tefillin as a means of ensuring divine protection against Israel s enemies 154 Speaking to a crowd of thousands of people on May 28 1967 only a few days before the outbreak of the war he assured the world that Israel would be victorious 155 He said Israel had no need to fear as God was with them quoting the verse the Guardian of Israel neither sleeps nor slumbers 156 Within the Haredi community criticism of the campaign was voiced at the Agudat Israel convention of 1968 However following the incident Yitzchok Hutner a prominent Orthodox rabbi who had corresponded with Schneersohn in the past 157 wrote to Schneerson privately distancing himself from the convention Hutner wrote that he had not been at the convention and asked forgiveness for any pain his earlier letters discussing halachic issues regarding the tefillin campaign may have caused 158 After the Operation Entebbe rescue in a public talk on 16 August 1976 Schneerson applauded the courage and selflessness of the IDF who flew thousands of miles putting their lives in danger for the sole purpose of possibly saving the lives of tens of Jews He said their portion in the Hereafter is guaranteed 159 160 He was later vilified by ultra haredi rabbis for publicly praising the courage of the IDF and suggesting that God chose them as a medium through which he would send deliverance to the Jewish people 161 Schneerson protested vehemently against those elements within the ultra haredi society who sought to undermine the motivations and actions of the soldiers 162 163 He corresponded with David Ben Gurion on the issue of Judaism in the State of Israel asking the Prime Minister to ensure that Israel remains Jewish He lobbied Israeli politicians to pass legislation in accordance with Jewish law on the question Who is a Jew and asked that they add the words according to Halakha to the declaration so that it state that only one who is born of a Jewish mother or converted according to Halakha is Jewish This caused a furor in the United States Some American Jewish philanthropies stopped financially supporting Chabad Lubavitch since most of their members were connected to Reform and Conservative Judaism citation needed Soviet Jewry Edit Schneerson greatly encouraged the Jews who lived in Communist states He sent many emissaries on covert missions to sustain Judaism under Communist regimes and to provide them with their religious and material needs 164 Many Jews from behind the Iron Curtain corresponded with Schneerson sending their letters to him via secret messenger and addressing Schneerson in code name 165 Schneerson who had an intimate knowledge of the Soviet government and their tactics citation needed opposed demonstrations on behalf of Soviet Jews stating that he had evidence that they were harming Russia s Jews Instead he advocated quiet diplomacy which he said would be more effective 166 167 Schneerson did whatever was in his power to push for the release of Jews from the former Soviet Union and established schools communities and other humanitarian resources to assist with their absorption into Israel On one known occasion he instructed Senator Chic Hecht to provide President Ronald Reagan with contact information of people who wished to leave so that he could lobby their release 168 Following the Chernobyl disaster in 1986 Schneerson called for efforts to rescue Ukrainian Jewish children from Chernobyl and founded a special organization for this purpose 169 The first rescue flight occurred on August 3 1990 when 196 Jewish children were flown to Israel and brought to a shelter campus Since then thousands of children have been rescued and brought to Israel where they receive housing education and medical care in a supportive environment 170 Natan Sharansky the Chairman of the Jewish Agency said that Chabad Lubavitch was an essential connector to Soviet Jewry during the Cold War 171 while Shimon Peres has stated that it s to Schneerson s credit that Judaism in the Soviet Union has been preserved 172 Legacy EditImpact Edit Schneerson initiated Jewish outreach in the post Holocaust era He believed that world Jewry was seeking to learn more about its heritage and sought to bring Judaism to Jews wherever they were 13 British Chief Rabbi Jonathan Sacks said of Schneerson that if the Nazis searched out every Jew in hate the Rebbe wished to search out every Jew in love 173 He oversaw the building of schools community centers and youth camps and created a global network of emissaries known as shluchim Today there are shluchim in all of the 50 US states in over 100 countries and 1 000 cities around the world totaling more than 3 600 institutions including some 300 in Israel 174 175 Chabad is very often the only Jewish presence in a given town or city and it has become the face of Jewish Orthodoxy for the Jewish and general world 176 Schneerson s model of Jewish outreach has been imitated by all Jewish movements including the Reform Conservative Orthodox and Haredi 8 177 His published works fill more than 200 volumes and are often used as source text for sermons of both Chabad and non Chabad rabbis 12 Beyond the Jewish world Peggy Noonan has written that moral issues would be better addressed by leaders such as Schneerson than by politicians 178 and since his death Schneerson has been referred to as the Rebbe for all people 10 Recognition Edit Schneerson s contributions to education and the betterment of mankind have been recognized by every president since Richard Nixon citation needed In 1978 Schneerson became the first rabbi to have a U S national day proclaimed in his honor when the U S Congress and President Jimmy Carter designated Schneerson s birthdate as Education Day USA Each year since the President has called on all Americans to focus on education in honor of Schneerson In 1982 Ronald Reagan proclaimed Schneerson s birthday as a National Day of Reflection and presented the National Scroll of Honor that was signed by the President Vice President and every member of Congress 179 180 Many officials attended Schneerson s funeral including New York Mayor Rudolph Giuliani Benjamin Netanyahu and the entire staff of the Israeli consulate in Washington 181 President Bill Clinton penned a condolence letter to the Chabad Lubavitch community and to world Jewry and spoke of Schneerson as a monumental man who as much as any other individual was responsible over the last half a century for advancing the instruction of ethics and morality to our young people Israeli Prime Minister Yitzchak Rabin cited Schneerson s great scholarship and contribution to the entire Jewish people and proclaimed The Rebbe s loss is a loss for all the Jewish people Foreign Minister Shimon Peres cited words from the prophet Malachi as applying with particular force to Schneerson He brought back many from iniquity For a priest s lips shall guard knowledge and teaching should be sought from his mouth For he is a messenger of the Lord 182 Shortly after his death Schneerson was posthumously awarded the Congressional Gold Medal honoring Schneerson for his outstanding and enduring contributions toward world education morality and acts of charity 18 President Bill Clinton spoke these words at the Congressional Gold Medal ceremony The late Rebbe s eminence as a moral leader for our country was recognized by every president since Richard Nixon For over two decades the Rabbi s movement now has some 2000 institutions educational social medical all across the globe We the United States Government recognize the profound role that Rabbi Schneerson had in the expansion of those institutions 183 In 2009 the National Museum of American Jewish History selected Schneerson as one of eighteen American Jews to be included in their Only in America Hall of Fame 184 Schneerson s contribution with respect to comprehension of human emotion is considered by many to be unparalleled as Elie Wiesel said of the Rebbe When the Rebbe was alone with anyone it was an opening He opened doors for his visitor or his student or Chasid secret doors that we all have It wasn t a break in It was just an invitation And that was really the greatness of the Rebbe I think the Rebbe had a great talent for that one of the greatest and the best that Judaism has ever seen 185 Schneerson is often considered to be one of the most if not the most influential rabbis of the twentieth century Criticism Edit From the 1970s onwards Elazar Shach of the Ponevezh Yeshiva in Bnei Brak was publicly critical of Schneerson 186 accusing him of creating a cult of crypto messianism around himself 187 188 He objected to his calling upon the Messiah to appear and eventually called for a boycott of Chabad and its institutions 189 Though Schneerson never responded publicly to Shach s attacks he did rebuke those who disparaged religious and non religious Jews and for bringing division among them in apparent response to Shach explaining that every Jew regardless of differences and levels of observances is part of Am Echad the unified Jewish people 190 Scholarship and works Edit Set of Torat Menachem Schneerson is recognized for his scholarship and contributions to Talmudic Halachic Kabalistic and Chasidic teachings 12 191 Joseph B Soloveitchik who knew Schneerson from their days in Berlin and remained in contact once the two men came to America told his students after visiting Schneerson the Rebbe has a gewaldiger awesome comprehension of the Torah 192 and He is a gaon he is a great one he is a leader of Israel 193 According to Mordechai Eliyahu former Chief Rabbi of Israel his meeting with Schneerson covered all sections of the Torah Eliyahu said The Rebbe jumped effortlessly from one Talmudic tractate to another and from there to Kabbalah and then to Jewish law It was as if he had just finished studying these very topics from the holy books The whole Torah was an open book in front of him 194 195 Schneerson s teachings have been published in more than two hundred volumes Schneerson also penned tens of thousands of letters in reply to requests for blessings and advice These detailed and personal letters offer advice and explanation on a wide variety of subjects including spiritual matters as well as all aspects of life 196 Books in Hebrew and Yiddish Edit 1943 Hayom Yom An anthology of Chabad aphorisms and customs arranged according to the days of the year 1944 Sefer HaToldot Admor Moharash Biography of the fourth Lubavitcher Rebbe Shmuel Schneersohn 1946 Haggadah Im Likkutei Ta amim U minhagim The Haggadah with a commentary written by Schneerson 1951 1992 Sefer HaMa amarim Melukot chassidic discourses 6 volumes 1951 2014 Sefer HaMa amarim Hasidic discourses including 1951 1962 1969 1977 with plans to complete the rest 29 volumes 1962 1992 Likkutei Sichot Schneerson s discourses on the weekly Torah portions Jewish Holidays and other issues 39 volumes 1981 1992 Torat Menachem Hitvaduyot transcripts of talks in Hebrew 1982 1992 63 volumes 1985 Chidushim UBiurim B Shas novellae on the Talmud 3 volumes 1985 1987 Sichot Kodesh transcripts of talks in Yiddish from 1950 to 1981 50 volumes 1985 2010 Igrot Kodesh Schneerson s Hebrew and Yiddish letters 33 volumes 1987 1992 Sefer HaSichot Schneerson s edited talks from 1987 to 1992 12 volumes 1988 Hilchot Beit Habechira LeHaRambam Im Chiddushim U Beurim Talks on the Laws of the Holy Temple of the Mishneh Torah 1989 Biurim LePirkei Avot talks on the Mishnaic tractate of Ethics of the Fathers 2 volumes 1990 2010 Heichal Menachem Shaarei talks arranged by topic and holiday 34 volumes 1991 Biurim LePeirush Rashi talks on the commentary of Rashi to Torah 5 volume 1991 Yein Malchut talks on the Mishneh Torah 2 volumes 1992 Torat Menachem Tiferet Levi Yitzchok talks on the works of his father Levi Yitzchak Schneerson on the Zohar 3 volumes 1993 2022 Torat Menachem transcripts of talks in Hebrew 1950 1973 Planned to encompass 1950 1992 76 volumes 1994 2001 Reshimot Schneerson s personal journal discovered after his death Includes notes for his public talks before 1950 letters to Jewish scholars notes on the Tanya and thoughts on a wide range of Jewish subjects penned between 1928 and 1950 10 volumes Books in English original and translated Edit The Teachings of The Rebbe The Chassidic Discourses of The Rebbe in English Letters from the Rebbe six volume set of Schneerson s English letters Path to Selflessness work discussing the bond between the individual soul and God 197 Garments of the Soul discussing the sublime importance of mundane activities and their effect on the soul 198 The Letter and the Spirit five volumes so far published of the Rebbe s English letters 199 Sichos In English fifty one volumes published of the Rebbe s talks in English 200 References Edit In the West the date was April 18 1902 New Style Noah Feldman Jun 25 2014 Remembering a Force in Jewish History BloombergView Shmuly Yanklowitz Rabbi Telushkin s Newest Book on the Lubavitcher Rebbe A Testament to Greatness Huffington Post 30 May 2014 Matt Flegenheimer Thousands Descend on Queens on 20th Anniversary of Grand Rebbe s Death The New York Times Steve Langford Crowds Flock To Queens To Remember Influential Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson CBS New York Schneerson Led a Small Hasidic Sect to World Prominence New York Times June 13 1994 National Geographic Magazine February 2006 Ngm nationalgeographic com Archived from the original on December 27 2010 Retrieved May 12 2010 a b Maayan Jaffe June 8 2014 20 Years After Rebbe s Death Jewish Movements Increasingly Emulate Chabad Archived from the original on October 11 2014 Annual International Conference of Chabad Shluchim Opens Today Lubavitch November 12 2020 Retrieved March 3 2021 a b c d e Editorial 07 08 14 Rebbe to the city and Rebbe to the world The New York Observer The Messiah of Brooklyn Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present M Avrum Ehrlich p 106 KTAV Publishing ISBN 0 88125 836 9 a b c Rabbi Tzvi Hersh Weinreb Vice President of the Orthodox Union The Contributions of the Lubavitcher Rebbe to Torah Scholarship Jewish Action Magazine a b Sue Fishkoff 10 Years After His Death Reach of Lubavitcher Rebbe Continues To Grow Jewish Federations of North America Archived from the original on November 12 2013 Retrieved November 13 2013 a b c d Susan Handelman The Lubavitcher Rebbe Died 20 Years Ago Today Who Was He Tablet Magazine Page United States Statutes at Large Volume 92 Part 1 djvu 254 Wikisource Retrieved November 13 2013 Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 pp 30 36 Fishkoff Sue The Rebbe s Army Schoken 2003 08052 11381 Page 192 a b Public Law 103 457 Thomas loc gov Archived from the original on July 14 2012 Retrieved May 12 2010 a b Sarah Maslin Nir Jews Make a Pilgrimage to a Grand Rebbe s Grave September 13 2013 The New York Times Matt Flegenheimer Thousands Beat Path to Queens Cemetery to Remember a Jewish Leader July 1 2014 The New York Times a b Menachem Butler Visiting the Lubavitcher Rebbe s Grave in Queens N Y Tablet Magazine 2 July 2014 a b Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 455 Introduction to Likkutei Levi Yitzchak Kehot Publications 1970 Shmuel Marcus Rebbetzin Chana Schneerson A brief biography Chana Vilenkin Zalman s daughter on The Early Years Vol I Jewish Educational Media 2006 segment Nikolaev Russia 1902 UPC 874780 000525 a b Adin Steinsaltz My Rebbe Maggid Books page 24 Slater Elinor Great Jewish Men ISBN 0 8246 0381 8 page 277 Schneerson Chana A Mother in Israel Kehot Publications 1983 ISBN 0 8266 0099 9 page 13 Adin Steinsaltz My Rebbe Maggid Books 2014 Page 25 Selegson Michoel A Introduction to From Day to Day English translation of the Hayom Yom ISBN 0 8266 0669 5 p A20 Rabbinic Ordination Program Three Hundred Nine Living Torah Chabad org Retrieved January 29 2012 Dovid Zaklikowsky Details of the Rebbes Rabbinical Ordination Authenticated January 21 2013 Ehrlich Avrum M 2004 The Messiah of Brooklyn understanding Lubavitch Hasidism past and present KTAV Publishing House Inc p 35 ISBN 9780881257809 Chaim Rapoport The Afterlife of Scholarship A Critical Review of The Rebbe by Samuel Heilman and Menachem Friedman Oporto Press 2011 ISBN 9780615538976 p 77 a b Dara Horn June 13 2014 Rebbe of Rebbe s Book Review Rebbe by Joseph Telushkin and My Rebbe by Adin Steinsaltz The Wall Street Journal Retrieved 2014 12 28 Chana Schneerson Memoirs of Rebbetzin Chana Part 34 Kehot 2011 a b Eli Rubin High Holidays in Riga Self and Community a b Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 475 Chana Schneerson My Son Visits Every Day Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 488 a b The New York Times Chaya Schneerson February 11 1988 Alan Feuer January 14 2009 No One There but This Place Is Far From Empty The New York Times The Early Years Volume II 1931 1938 Jewish Educational Media 2006 UPC 74780 00058 Eli Rubin Studies in Berlin Science Torah amp Quantum Theory Heilman Samuel Friedman Menachem 2010 The Rebbe The Life and Afterlife of Menachem Mendel Schneerson Princeton University Press pp 94 106 ISBN 978 0 691 13888 6 Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 465 Of God and Man Some thoughts on the Rebbe JUF News June 25 2014 Archived from the original on October 18 2014 Retrieved December 27 2014 Kowalsky Sholem B The Rebbe and the Rav Chabad org Retrieved October 10 2007 A Relationship from Berlin to New York Windows Media Video Documentary Brooklyn NY Chabad org Retrieved October 10 2007 The Rebbe in Berlin Germany Windows Media Video Documentary Brooklyn NY Chabad org Retrieved October 10 2007 Menachem M Schneerson Reshimot Kehot Publication Society 1994 2003 Likkutei Levi Yitzchak Igrot Kodesh Kehot Publication Society 1972 Aryeh Solomon May 2000 The Educational Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson Jason Aronson Inc p 310 ISBN 0 7657 6092 4 The Rebbe s Early Years Ch 5 Pg 326 Oberlander 2012 https www haaretz com 2007 02 11 ty article the lubavitcher rebbe as a god 0000017f dc1a df9c a17f fe1aa9c40000 amp true While in Paris he acquired his only formal education he took a two year vocational course in electrical engineering at a Montparnase Vocational College where he achieved mediocre grades The Afterlife of Scholarship Pg 76 Fn 196 The Afterlife of Scholarship Page 143 ISBN 978 0 615 53897 6 Schneerson Menachem M Igrot Kodesh vol 1 p 19 23 The Early Years Volume IV JEM 2008 ASIN B001M1Z62I Last Sea Route From Lisbon to U S Stops Ticket Sale to Refugees New York Times March 15 1941 Eli Rubin Lisbon 1941 The Messiah the Invalid and the Fish Caption An article that appeared in The Argus Melbourne Australia Tuesday May 6 1941 Jewish Educational Media The Rebbe and Rebbetzin Arrive in America The Early Years vol 4 Rapoport Chaim The Afterlife of Scholarship Page 144 ISBN 978 0 615 53897 6 Fishkoff Sue The Rebbe s Army Schoken 2003 08052 11381 Page 73 Milton Fechtor Wiring the Missouri Jewish Educational Media Yaakov Hardof Rabbi Engineer Jewish Educational Media a b No One There But This Place Is Far From Empty The New York Times January 14 2009 Retrieved November 13 2013 Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 472 Schneerson Rabbi Menachem Mendel Sefer Hama amorim Melukot Al Seder Chodshei Hashana Volume 2 Kehot Publications 2002 ISBN 978 1 56211 602 6 page 271 Menachem M Schneerson Igrot Kodesh Kehot Publications 1989 ISBN 0 8266 5812 1 Volume 12 page 404 Goldman Ari L June 13 1994 Rabbi Schneerson Led A Small Hasidic Sect To World Prominence The New York Times Retrieved April 30 2010 Adin Steinsaltz My Rebbe Maggid Books 2014 Page 106 a b Shenker Israel The New York Times Monday March 27 1972 reprinted on Chabad org Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 161 Shevat 10 A Day of Two Rebbes Chabad org Retrieved May 12 2010 JTA New Rebbe Installed January 23 1951 Toras Menachem Hisva aduyos vol 2 p 212 213 Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 39 Kranzler Gershon Jewish Life Sept Oct 1951 Weiner Herbert Nine and 1 2 Mystics page 158 a b H Rabinowicz 1970 The World of Hasidism Hartmore House p 237 ISBN 978 0 85303 035 5 a b Out of The Depth s Israel Meir Lau p 201 Edward Hoffman May 1991 Despite All Odds The Story of Lubavitch Simon amp Schuster p 32 ISBN 0 671 67703 9 Jonathan Sacks Introduction Torah Studies Kehot Publication Society 1986 Hamodia newspaper Vol 12944 June 13 1994 Heilman Samuel Friedman Menachem 2010 The Rebbe The Life and Afterlife of Menachem Mendel Schneerson Princeton University Press p 176 ISBN 978 0 691 13888 6 Dr Susan Handelman The Rebbe s Views on Women Today Soskis Benjamin March 29 2001 Who is Shumuley Boteach He s the Jewish missionary in the A list position Slate Retrieved February 13 2015 a b c d Ruth R Wisse June 1 2014 The Rebbe Twenty Years After Commentary Magazine Liel Leibovitz Tefillin The Love Tablet Magazine December 30 2015 Chaim Miller Rashi s Method of Biblical Commentary Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 498 The Little Drummer Boy CHABAD LUBAVITCH OF LOUISIANA Retrieved July 5 2020 Over the years mostly when Lag B omer fell on a Sunday big parades were staged on Eastern Parkway a major Brooklyn thoroughfare on which Chabad HQ 770 is located Thousands sometimes tens of thousands of Jewish children and their parents teachers etc would rally and then march in honor of Lag B omer The Hebrew Academy A Yeshiva Day School serving Toddler through Eighth Grade Lag Baomer www thehebrewacademy org Exodus from Iran Lubavitch Archives Retrieved November 13 2013 Shlomo Shamir August 24 2013 The Israeli Journalist Iran and the Rebbes Vision Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Pages 289 290 Universal Morality The Seven Noahide Laws chabad org 2006 1983 Mankind Life amp Times chabad org Shmuley Boteach April 13 2014 Rebbe to the non Jews Times of Israel Torat Menachem Hitvaduyot 5744 vol 3 pg 1544 Tekufat Limud HaRambam Merkos L Inyonei Chunuch Brooklyn 1987 Hoffman 1991 p 47 Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Pages 506 507 Eliezer Zalmanov What Does A Dollar from the Rebbe Represent The Baltimore Sun June 15 1994 Rabbi Schneerson names no successor in will CNN with the Rebbe 20 October 1991 Eye to Eye Acts of Goodness and Kindness Jewish Educational Media JEM Retrieved 28 December 2014 Media Player w captions Gary Tuchman and his CNN crew were also given dollars Eli Rubin Everyone A Tzaddik Miracles Transmission and Ascent Shmully Hecht 2014 06 29 Remembering Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson The New York Times Shmuley Boteach Judaism for Everyone Page 209 ISBN 0 465 00794 5 70 Years 71 New Institutions The Living Archive March 26 1972 Jewish Educational Media JEM Living Torah Archive Living Torah Chabad org Retrieved September 9 2012 The Washington Post June 20 1999 5 Years After Death Messiah Question Divides Lubavitchers Leyden Liz a b Gonzalez David November 8 1994 Lubavitchers Learn to Sustain Themselves Without the Rebbe The New York Times Retrieved May 12 2010 The Encyclopedia of Hasidism by Tzvi Rabinowicz p 432 ISBN 1 56821 123 6 The New York Times June 13 1994 p A1 The Rebbe s Notebook The Reshimot chabad org David M Gitlitz amp Linda Kay Davidson 2005 Pilgrimage and the Jews Praeger pp 118 120 ISBN 978 0 275 98763 3 How to Send a letter Ohel Chabad Lubavitch Ohelchabad org Archived from the original on August 14 2010 Retrieved September 9 2012 a b The Messiah of Brooklyn Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present M Avrum Ehrlich Chapter 20 KTAV Publishing ISBN 0 88125 836 9 J Immanuel Schochet The Personality of Mashiach 1991 a b c Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 431 Aharon Lichtenstein Eulogy for the Rebbe June 16 1994 The Rebbe s Army Page 320 The New York Times Statement From Agudas Chasidei Chabad Feb 9 1996 Menachem M Schneerson The Difference Between Faith and Trust January 15 1981 Yosef Abramowitz Better Energy The Rebbe s Energy The Jerusalem Post 07 01 2014 Menachem M Schneerson Americas Mandate Energy Independence April 15 1981 The Start of Education Day USA compiled by Dovid Zaklikowski Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 162 Sue Fishkoff The Rebbe s Army Random House 2003 Pages 192 193 Menachem M Schneerson Education is the Cornerstone of Humanity April 18 1978 95th Congress Public Law 95 262 Apr 17 1978 Ron Kampeas Obama Schneerson s legacy is brighter future April 15 2011 JTA Ehrlich M Avrum The Messiah of Brooklyn Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present KTAV Publishing January 2005 p 109 ISBN 0 88125 836 9 Jewish prayers on Capitol Hill From Lincoln to Roosevelt to Biden The Jerusalem Post Retrieved May 13 2021 The Messiah of Brooklyn Understanding Lubavitch Hasidim Past and Present M Avrum Ehrlich p 105 KTAV Publishing ISBN 0 88125 836 9 The Letter and the Spirit pages 251 252 The Letter and the Spirit page 324 Letters from the Lubavitcher Rebbe vol 5 page 234 The Afterlife of Scholarship Page 106 Oporto Press 2011 Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 478 Faithful and Fortified Jewish Educational Media Begin with the Rebbe Jewish Educational Media Sharon and the Rebbe Jewish Educational Media The Rebbe to Sharon Don t Leave the IDF letter to Ariel Sharon translated from the original Hebrew Rabin with the Rebbe Jewish Educational Media Dont Be Intimidated Jewish Educational Media Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 563 Menacehm M Schneerson I don t interfere in politics April 1 1990 The Lubavitcher Rebbe On Syria and Iran YouTube July 14 2009 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved November 13 2013 Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Pages 271 290 The Light of Truth at the UN video Excerpt Prime Minister Netanyahu at the General Assembly September 23 2011 Challenge page 144 Jerrold amp Sons Menachem M Schneerson G d is Guarding His Children You Can Help Jewish Educational Media Collier Bernard L May 27 1968 Hassidic Jews Confront Hippies to Press a Joyous Occasion New York New York Times pp 49 Igros Kodesh M M Schneerson Kehot 1998 Vol 7 pp 2 49 192 215 Vol 12 pp 28 193 Vol 14 pp 167 266 Vol 18 p 251 Vol 25 pp 18 20 and Vol 26 p 485 Mibeis Hagenozim B Levin Kehot 2009 p 89 Rapoport Chaim The Afterlife of Scholarship p 88 ISBN 9780615538976 Sichot Kodesh 5736 vol 2 page 625 Mintz Jerome Hasidic People A Place in the New World page 52 Harvard University Press Cambridge 1992 Harris Ben Chassidic Sects Battle Each Other Canadian Jewish News April 1 1977 Sichot Kodesh 5736 vol 2 pages 626 627 Hyam Maccoby June 13 1994 Obituary Rabbi Menachem Schneerson People News The Independent Archived from the original on May 12 2022 Retrieved November 13 2013 Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 299 Telushkin Pp 291 292 JTA Lubavitcher Hassidim Oppose Public Demonstrations on Behalf of Soviet Jews 1970 12 31 Obituary Senator Jacob Chic Hecht 1929 2006 May 15 2006 Our Story Who We Are Chabad s Children of Chernobyl Archived from the original on July 3 2013 Retrieved November 13 2013 Eglash Ruth April 26 2011 Chabad s Children of Chernobyl project as vital as ever The Jerusalem Post Retrieved November 13 2013 Lightstone Mordechai November 7 2011 Natan Sharansky Praises Work of Chabad at Federation General Assembly Chabad Lubavitch World Headquarters Archived from the original on November 13 2013 Retrieved November 13 2013 Telushkin page 566 The Jewish Week Free Book Excerpt From Rebbe Archived 2014 09 03 at the Wayback Machine Jewish Literacy Telushkin William Morrow 2001 p 470 List of Chabad Centers in Israel chabad org Fishkoff Sue The Rebbe s Army page 14 Eric Yoffie The Chabad Challenge Archived 2014 10 10 at the Wayback Machine Union for Reform Judaism 2002 Peggy Noonan What I Saw at the Revolution A Political Life in the Reagan Era Random House 1990 Page 346 Ronald Reagan Proclamation 4921 National Day of Reflection American Presidency Project Retrieved November 13 2013 Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 4 Tens of Thousands Mourn the Death of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson Jewish Telegraphic Agency June 13 1994 Retrieved November 13 2013 Joseph Telushkin Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Page 514 Behind the Headlines Remembering the Rebbe As Washington Bestows Honors Jewish Telegraphic Agency July 3 1995 Retrieved May 12 2021 nmajh org nmajh org Retrieved January 29 2012 Lubavitch Chabad July 2019 Chabad Lubavitch Brooklyn New York NY World Headquarters lubavitch com Retrieved June 2 2020 See Mechtavim v Ma amorim Letters and Speeches of Rabbi Shach in Hebrew Bnei Brak Israel 03 574 5006 Volume 1 Letter 6 page 15 Letter 8 page 19 Volume 3 Statements on pages 100 101 Letter on page 102 Volume 4 letter 349 page 69 letter 351 page 71 Volume 5 letter 533 page 137 letter 535 page 139 speech 569 page 173 statement 570 page 174 See also here על המסיתים להתגרות באומות ועל לשונות העוקרים את ה אני מאמין בביאת המשיח PDF in Hebrew Archived from the original PDF on March 5 2009 Retrieved March 5 2009 Independent The London November 10 2001 by David Landau Lisa Beyer March 23 1992 Expecting The Messiah Time Vol 139 p 42 Eliezer Schach one of Israel s leading ultra Orthodox rabbis has publicly called Schneerson insane an infidel and a false Messiah The local papers carried Schach s outrageous charge that Schneerson s followers are eaters of trayf food such as pork that is forbidden to Jews Faith and Fate The Story of the Jewish People in the 20th century Berel Wein 2001 by Shaar Press pg 340 Lubavitcher Rebbe Speaks out Against Rabbi Schach s Message Jewish Telegraphic Agency April 4 1990 Retrieved May 12 2021 Yehiel Poupko Of God and Man Some thoughts on the Rebbe Archived 2014 10 18 at the Wayback Machine 6 25 2014 JUF News Kowalsky S B From My Zaidy s House page 274 275 Excerpt The Rebbe and the Rav YouTube February 5 2007 Archived from the original on December 11 2021 Retrieved January 29 2012 Mordechai Rabbi Teacher and Leader for All Jews Life Chabad org Retrieved November 13 2013 Following his attendance at one such talk Yitzchak Yedidya Frankel said I have witnessed the magnificence of Polish Jewry and I have known most of the great scholars of recent generations But I have never seen such command of the material That is genius Out of the Depths Israel Meir Lau Sterling Publishing 2011 p 202 Hamodia Vol 12944 June 13 1994 pg 2 Coauthor Avraham Vaisfiche Translated by Shmuel Simpson 2009 Path to Selflessness Maamar Yehuda Ata מאמר יהודה אתה תשל ח Kehot Publication Society ISBN 9780826607508 Translated by Yosef B Marcus 2001 Garments of the Soul A Chasidic Discourse Kehot Publication Society ISBN 9780826605528 Coauthor Nissan Mindel 1998 The Letter amp the Spirit Letters By the Lubavitcher Rebbe Volume I Brooklyn NY Kehot Publication Society ISBN 9780826600059 The Letter and the Spirit Volume II Archived December 18 2019 at the Wayback Machine Nissan Mindel Publications 2013 Sichos In English Excerpts of Sichos delivered by Rabbi Menachem M Schneerson Volume I Brooklyn NY Sichos In English 1979 ISBN 1456349805 Sources EditEhrlich Avrum M The Messiah of Brooklyn understanding Lubavitch Hasidism past and present Jersey City KTAV Publishing 2004 ISBN 0 88125 836 9 Fishkoff Sue The Rebbe s Army Inside the World of Chabad Lubavitch Schocken 2005 ISBN 978 0805211382 Heilman Samuel C Friedman Menachem M The Rebbe The Life and Afterlife of Menachem Mendel Schneerson Princeton and Oxford Princeton University Press 2010 ISBN 978 0 691 13888 6 Hoffman Edward Despite all odds the story of Lubavitch New York Simon amp Schuster 1991 ISBN 0 671 67703 9 Rapoport Chaim The Afterlife of Scholarship Oporto Press 2011 ISBN 0615538975 Steinsaltz Adin My Rebbe Maggid Books 2014 ISBN 978 159 264 381 3 Telushkin Joseph Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperWave 2014 ISBN 978 0062318985Further reading EditChighel Michael Hosanna The Rebbe s Correspondence with Elie Wiesel online book Archived from the original on March 4 2016 Retrieved July 23 2015 Deutsch Shaul Shimon Larger than Life The life and times of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson Volumes 1 2 Chasidic Historical Productions Volume 1 1995 Volume 2 1997 ISBN 978 0964724303 Volume 1 ISBN 978 0964724310 Volume 2 Elior Rachel The Lubavitch Messianic Resurgence The Historical and Mystical Background 1939 1996 in Toward the Millennium Messianic Expectations from the Bible to Waco eds P Schafer and M Cohen Leiden Brill 1998 383 408 ISBN 978 9004110373 Miller Chaim Turning Judaism Outwards A Biography of the Rebbe Menachem Mendel Schneerson Kol Menachem 2014 ISBN 978 1934152362 Wolfson Elliot R Open Secret Postmessianic Messianism and the Mystical Revision of Menahem Mendel Schneerson New York Columbia University Press 2009 ISBN 978 0 231 14630 2 Telushkin Joseph Rebbe The Life and Teachings of Menachem M Schneerson The Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History HarperCollins 2014 Eliezrie David The Secret of Chabad Inside the World s Most Successful Jewish Movement Toby Press LLC 2015 ISBN 9781592643707 Dor Shav Dershowitz Zecharia 2022 Personal Experiences with Great Rabbis of My Generation Dershowitz Family Saga ISBN 9781510770232 External links EditThis article s use of external links may not follow Wikipedia s policies or guidelines Please improve this article by removing excessive or inappropriate external links and converting useful links where appropriate into footnote references May 2018 Learn how and when to remove this template message Works available online Edit Wikiquote has quotations related to Menachem Mendel Schneerson Wikimedia Commons has media related to Menachem Mendel Schneerson The Teachings of The Rebbe Chassidic Discourses English Chabad org Literature Sichos B Laha k The Rebbe s unedited talks Hebrew Sichos in English Igros Kodesh Hebrew Toras Menachem Hebrew Hayom Yom Hebrew The Rebbe s 10 point Mitzvah campaign Audio recordings of the Rebbe s addresses Yiddish The Rebbe s weekday Farbrengen s video The official archive of all the Rebbe s weekday talks Yiddish Who Was Rabbi Schneerson Lecture by Dr Henry Abramson June 2013Works available on iTunes Edit AskTheRebbe Answers from the Rebbe s Letters English Biography Edit Biography of Menachem Mendel Schneerson The Rebbe s life in Hebrew The Rebbe s life English Video Lecture on Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson of Chabad by Dr Henry Abramson of Touro College South Early Years The Formative Years of The Rebbe Historical sites Edit The Ohel about Schneersons burial site Videos of the rebbe Proclamation of Education and Sharing Day 2002 by President George W Bush also honoring the 100th birthdate of Rabbi Schneerson Education and Sharing Day U S A 2007 Numerous proclamations by President Reagan citing work of Rabbi Schneerson and promotion of the Seven Noahide Laws Congressional Gold Medal Recipient Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson Tributes to the Lubavitcher Rebbe by Menachem Begin Bill Clinton Newt Gingrich Israel Meir Lau John Lewis Joseph Lieberman Yitzhak Rabin Aviezer Ravitzky Jonathan Sacks Lawrence Schiffman Adin Steinsaltz Margaret Thatcher Elie Wiesel and Elliot Wolfson Family Tree Commemorative remarks Archived 25 January 2006 at the Wayback Machine upon the occasion of the 10th Yahrzeit of the Lubavitcher Rebbe Rabbi Dr Tzvi Hersh Weinreb of the Orthodox Union Timeline of Menachem Mendel Schneerson 1928 1938 My Encounter with the Rebbe an oral history project undertaken by Jewish Educational Media JEM to record the history of Rabbi SchneersonPreceded byYosef Yitzchak Schneersohn Rebbe of Lubavitch1951 1994 Succeeded byN A Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title Menachem Mendel Schneerson amp oldid 1133594528, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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