Chabad Headed for America’s Breadbasket

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America’s “fruit basket” is happily anticipating the arrival of new Chabad representatives Rabbi Shmuel and Esther Malka Schlanger and three month old Leah, who will be arriving in time for the High Holidays.

Nicknamed for the surrounding farms that supply the country with mass amounts of produce, Bakersfield, just under two hours from LA, boasts a sizeable Jewish community of several thousand families. Community members approached Rabbi Boruch Shlomo Cunin, director of West Coast Chabad, with requests for a Chabad representative, and the Schlangers were hired by Rabbi Cunin earlier this year.

Since then, they have made several trips to Bakersfield to meet the community and arrange accommodations for themselves and the Chabad House. They are delighted by the warm reception they have received.

“Chabad has a proven track record in attracting the youth of the community,” says Gail Tenzer, a Bakersfield resident. “We are confident that Rabbi and Mrs. Schlanger will have a powerful, exciting impact on our children and community.”

The Schlangers’ first activities after the holidays will focus on youth programming, for the many young families in the community. “We want to establish a firm foundation of Yiddishkeit in the city,” says Esther Malka Schlanger. “Our future depends on the children, so we need to begin with them.” The couple also plan on introducing adult education, holiday awareness activities, and a full range of programs for the entire family.

Born and raised in the Lubavitch communities of London and Crown Heights, respectively, the Rabbi and Mrs. Schlanger are both intimately familiar with the life of Chabad shluchim, having worked in Chabad houses in Connecticut, Nevada, and Cleveland, among other places.

“There’s such terrific enthusiasm in Bakersfield,” says Rabbi Schlanger. “We can’t wait to get started.”

A Different Kind of Camp

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For children who have spent so much of their young lives giving to others, it was time to get a little in return. 26 sons of Shluchim from across the former Soviet Union and surrounding regions joined together in a campsite near Moscow last month for 10 days of fun and camaraderie with children who share similar lives and experiences as they do. For most of them, it was a totally new experience.

“Children who grow up on Shlichus in these areas are very isolated,” explains Fishel Zaklos, one of three counselors flown in from New York to direct the camp, “Some of these areas are so primitive, it’s easy to feel completely cut off from the rest of the Jewish world.” In addition to being far away, the children bear the responsibility of being a role model of Jewish living–often the only ones for miles. In recognition of this, Chabad of the former Soviet Union, in conjunction with the staff at the Shluchim Office in New York, veterans of several similar style camps in the U.S., set out to give these children a summer experience that would let them relax and just have a good time. “We wanted to capture the spirit and energy of a Chabad camp in the U.S. for these kids all the way out here,” says counselor Meir Kessler. Not an easy task, considering the small size of the group. But the three counselors poured heart and soul into the kids and their efforts paid off. The spirited singing and cheering had everyone joining in, and didn’t let up at all over the ten days.

Now in its second year, the camp is situated on a beautiful, state-of-the-art campsite, complete with swimming pools, horses and riding trails, and large playing fields and courts. Like any other camp, the days were packed with sports, learning classes and trips to amusement parks, bowling alleys, and even the newest Kosher attraction in Russia: a pizza shop located in the new Chabad Jewish Community Center in Moscow. A highlight of camp was a trip to the city of Lubavitch on the day of the Rebbe’s passing, the third of Tamuz. For children so devoted to the Rebbe’s work, a trip to the “hometown” of Chabad Chasidim has added meaning.

“The best part of camp for me was being just like everyone else,” says Sholom Pewsner, age 10, of S. Petersburg, where his parents serve as directors of Chabad, and his father Chief Rabbi of the city. While this may be a novelty in S. Petersburg, it was hardly one in camp, where all the kids were sons of Chabad shluchim and Rabbis. “They are very aware of their role,” says Zaklos, “and take a great deal of pride in it, but they’re still kids and it’s quite a responsibility they carry.”

The small size of the camp allowed the counselors to give individual attention to every camper, and form close relationships with them that continue even after camp.

A unique camaraderie developed between the campers themselves, and continues even now. “I made so many new friends,” says Moshe Gurevitch, 12, from Lyons, France. Speaking mostly French, Gurevitch had no problem communicating with his peers. A shared lifestyle and purpose, and just a few words of Hebrew, can sometimes form an incredibly strong connection.

New Chabad Center for Ritzy Parioli

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(Parioli, Italy) — This prestigious, upper class Rome neighborhood, home to some 300 Jewish families, will now have its own Chabad-Lubavitch center.

Rabbi and Mrs. Aaron Isaac Benjaminson of New York, are due to arrive in Parioli next week, where they have plans to launch a whole range of Jewish educational programs.

A local minyan, adult education, youth programs, and the gamut of Chabad-Lubavitch trademark programs such as the Rosh Hashana shofar factory for children are all in the works. “Jews in Rome are thirsting for greater exposure to Judaism. Many here have never been exposed to traditional Torah Judaism so we’ve got a lot of work ahead of us that we’re very excited about,” says Chani Benjaminson. Chani is a native of Rome and the daughter of Rabbi Yitzchok Hazan, Director of Chabad-Lubavitch activities in Rome.

With an increasing number of families settling in this up-and-coming neighborhood which boasts the most spacious apartments in Rome, the Benjaminsons’ plans include a midwinter Shabbaton for teens, parenting sessions, weekly parshah classes for adults and monthly Rosh Chodesh gatherings for women. A family Shabbaton is already in the making for the post High Holiday season, at which the Chief Rabbi of Rome, Riccardo Shmuel Di Segni will speak.

“People keep asking me when the new Chabad couple will be settling in. The Jewish community there is really looking forward to growing and learning together with Chabad,” says Rabbi Hazan.

New Center in Charlottesville

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Rabbi Shlomo and Chana Mayer arrived to this campus town, home to the University of Virginia and some 500 Jewish families, last January.

Energetic and full of enthusiasm about this new challenge, the young couple wasted no time before launching a variety of Jewish cultural and educational programs.

Dubbed the only public ivy-league university, UVA has a Jewish student population of 1500. Dr. Vanessa Ochs, Director of Jewish studies at the university, expressed her enthusiasm about this development: “I celebrate the arrival of Rabbi Shlomo Mayer to our very small town. It’s an act of great courage and imagination on his part. I trust that many people will find an entrée into Judaism or a richer Judaism in his presence.”

Dr. Ochs’ enthusiasm was shared by many other faculty members who anticipate increased student involvement in Jewish activities with this new development.

The Mayers visited Charlottesville back in September, conducting High Holiday services for Jewish residents and students. The chemistry was good, and Rabbi Yossel Kranz, Director of Chabad of the Virginias, was asked to bring the Mayers back to Charlottesville to establish a permanent Chabad presence there. “Charlottesville is a unique town and needed unique Shluchim,” says Jan Chase, one of several interested community members. “The Mayers are warm and accepting; they maintain their strict standards of observance but remain open and non-judgmental of others regardless of affiliation or level of observance,”

The Mayers, neither of whom was raised in observant homes, accepted the invitation and arrived to Charlottesville with their two sons in tow: 19-month-old Reuven and Mendel of five months. The children have settled comfortably and are enjoying their new surroundings, says their mom, who conducts Torah classes for women on various topics.

Torah classes and prayer services conducted at the Mayer’s home off campus, as well as at the Hillel House, are well attended. The Mayers have a full house every Friday evening, for Shabbat dinner.

“Our goal is to have a vibrant center here, where students participate in Jewish life, spend Shabbat here, and are encouraged to marry Jewish,” says Rabbi Mayer.

Chabad Comes to Washington University

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One third of Washington University’s 12,000 students is Jewish. That’s 4,000 reasons for Rabbi Yosef Landa, director of Chabad in St. Louis, to recruit a young couple to establish a Chabad-Lubavitch center on campus.

Rabbi Hershey and Chana Rochel Novack arrived in St. Louis this week, working feverishly to set up the Chabad House and a host of programs in time for the fall semester.

Known for its highly regarded graduate schools, particularly a medical school with a research department rated third in the country, Washington U has an international student body.

“A campus this size needs people who are well prepared for the challenge,” explains Rabbi Landa. “In addition to their background and experience, they have an energy and enthusiasm that make them ideal campus Shluchim,” he says. Both have worked with college-age students before. In his hometown of Los Angeles, Rabbi Novack worked extensively with students at the UCLA campus, and his wife Chana Rochel, a native of New York, served as dorm counselor for college age students at the Mayanot Institute for Jewish Studies, a yeshiva in Jerusalem.

“We will be working closely with other Jewish student organizations to bolster their existing programs, and add new and innovative activities as well,” says Rabbi Novack. Some of these plans include open Shabbat meals, Kabbalah for Dummies–series of classes on Jewish mysticism, and public menorah lightings on Chanukah.

In addition to the students on campus, there is a sizeable local community as well, mostly consisting of young professionals–classmates of the graduate students, whom the Novacks plan to include in their programming.

The Chabad center will now be housed several blocks from campus secured by the generous assistance of the Rohr Family foundation, as part of an initiative to establish Chabad Houses on campuses nationwide. But the Novacks are searching for a more permanent location, perhaps on campus itself.

“There’s a lot of action on this campus,” says Chana Rochel Novack, “We want to be right in the thick of it!”

The Fifth Commandment

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S. PAUL, MN—They came from unaffiliated backgrounds, observant homes and everything in between. But one thing the forty teenagers who’ve just completed the 2002 Bais Chana summer session now have in common is a new respect for their parents.

Joining the ranks of thousands of women before them who have had the “Bais Chana experience,” these teenagers are guaranteed to think differently about a whole gamut of issues. Melissa Johnson, 18, spent several weeks at Bais Chana. “The experience has helped clarify many issues for me,” she says.

Now in its 31st year, Bais Chana’s highly unusual program has kept impressive pace with a changing milieu, continuing to attract women while responding to a very different set of dynamics. “In the 1980s,” recalls Rabbi Manis Friedman Dean of Bais Chana and key lecturer and teacher at the Institute, “people came in search of philosophical, theological truths.” By contrast, today he observes a moral confusion so debilitating as to have eaten away at any healthy impulse driving the existential quest. “They just want moral clarity,” he says. “Where once there was a clash of values, today, there’s a kind of resignation—people aren’t arguing—they’re just asking for some moral direction.”

Rabbi Friedman delivers with a back-to-basics sensibility that is refreshing for its simplicity amid a panoply of fancy healing and self-help fads. An advocate of old-fashioned morality, Friedman challenges the women to evaluate their lives with brutal honesty. “Rabbi Friedman’s openness and willingness to address topics ranging from religion to drug abuse and getting along with parents on a level that I could relate to was very compelling,” Melissa says.

Friedman, who has made the fifth commandment the theme of many of his lectures this session, speaks to the disintegration of family that, he claims, “has made parents altogether irrelevant to children. “It’s not that there is friction between children and parents today,” he laments, “but rather that parents just don’t figure at all in shaping their children’s values.” The only way to be functional and successful in life, he argues, is to behave consistently in a way that is morally right. For starters, mothers need to learn to behave as mothers, and to assert their authority as moral guides. That, he insists, will help children behave morally towards their parents, and ultimately as morally conscious adults.

Under the direction of Mrs. Hinda Leah Sharfstein, Bais Chana, which is based in S. Paul, has adapted its program (both winter and summer programs) to accommodate teenagers, couples and single women. All benefit from respective sessions that run 2-3 weeks and are designed to address their particular issues and interests. Some 100 women are expected at the session in August, to be followed by a retreat for couples.

With widespread interest in the program, Mrs. Sharfstein is now considering requests by Chabad Houses to coordinate Bais Chana sessions in their respective cities.

Named for Rebbetzin Chana Schneerson, mother of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Bais Chana was founded by Rabbi Moshe and Mindy Feller who were appointed Chabad-Lubavitch representatives to the Upper Midwest U.S. by the Rebbe back in the 60s. Bais Chana’s goal, says Rabbi Feller, “is to bring Jewish women the world over to a deeper understanding of Torah and Chassidut, and ultimately to a greater commitment to Judaism.”

For so many of the 10,000 women who have been to Bais Chana, the experience has proven itself a watershed, marking a dramatic change in their personal identities and consequently, in their lives.

But these days, Rabbi Friedman is content to define success in concrete measures. “It was nice back when people argued the big philosophical issues. But today, when someone leaves Bais Chana and says, ‘I’ll never talk that way to my mother again,’ that’s very dramatic. It’s a really practical change.

“And that,” he says, “is the bottom line.”

The Jewish Expo Completes Tour of France

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On its most recent tour abroad, the Jewish Expo spent several months in France, attracting more than 10,000 Jewish schoolchildren from all parts of the country.

Now in its 10th year, the Expo, a project of the Shluchim Office, has traveled to Europe, Australia, United Kingdom, Canada and 40 U.S. states, reaching more than one million Jewish children. An interactive, multimedia Jewish museum with hands-on activities, the Expo features seven narrated exhibits which take viewers on a journey through 2,000 years of Jewish history beginning with the story of creation. A Torah “Concentration” gameshow that challenges participants’ Jewish knowledge; arts and crafts workshops; and a screened musical on Jewish holiday celebrations, are all packed into two and half hours of a spellbinding experience.

“Children with little previous exposure to Judaism come away from the Expo eager to learn more about their Jewish identity. This is an accomplishment of immeasurable value,” explains Rabbi Moshe Pinson of the Shluchim Office. The Shluchim Office is a division of Merkos L’Inyonei Chinuch, the educational arm of Lubavitch.

Designed to travel, the Expo is set up on location in no more than 5 hours and requires 10,000 square feet of space. For each foreign language tour, the entire Expo is professionally translated. “It is a costly project,” says Rabbi Berl Goldman who was one of the creators of the Expo, “but Shluchim worldwide appreciate its tremendous value as an educational tool for their communities.”

Indeed, the letters that pour into the Shluchim Office after each tour are some indication of the projects positive impact.

The Shluchim Office is now considering implementing substantive additions to the Expo. “We are hoping,” says Rabbi Moshe Shemtov, who traveled with the Expo to France, “to incorporate many of the Living Legacy Workshops.” Shemtov is referring to the whole range of “factories” that bear the Chabad –Lubavitch trademark and have become a phenomenon in their own right: the shofar making factory, the matzah bakery, Tefillin workshops, the Chanukah olive press, and others which have been critical in facilitating tremendous awareness of Jewish holidays.

Getting Into The Habit

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In the age of anthrax threats and sinister emails, this is one piece of mail that people will be delighted to open.

Embossed in white lettering on the front of a black envelope are the words, “Three things you can do to honor the victims.” Inside, a cardboard charity box with the words, “Defy darkness with light. Do kindness beyond reason,” and a letter that begins: “On September 11th 2001, our world was changed forever.”

Glued to the bottom of the letter is a shiny penny.

The kit is part of a worldwide tzedakah campaign sponsored by the Shluchim Office and implemented through Chabad Houses around the country. Not everyone can build a monument or write a song to honor the victims. But the three easy steps illustrated in this kit are a challenge to every individual to make even a small, but daily effort to reach out to others: find a worthy cause to support; give charity every day; get a friend to do the same.

“We thought this is a very effective way to encourage a positive habit of giving and sharing in the aftermath of 9/11,” explains Rabbi Gedalya Shemtov, director of the Shluchim Office. The Shluchim Office, which is dedicated largely to developing creative and educational programming materials for the benefit of Shluchim, anticipates that a quarter million people nationwide, will have received this kit before the first anniversary of 9/11. The Shluchim Office is a division of Merkos L’Inyonei Chinuch, the educational arm of Lubavitch.

Chabad Rabbi Guides Astronaut in Keeping Shabbat in Space

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An Israeli Jew scheduled to fly as a payload specialist on the shuttle Columbia is making headlines. First, Col. Ilan Ramon, 47, of Tel Aviv, asked NASA to provide him with kosher food. More recently, he turned to his Chabad-Lubavitch representative, Rabbi Tzvi Konikov of Satellite Beach, to consult on the logistics of marking Shabbat in outer space.

That sent Rabbi Konikov on a mission of his own, consulting with rabbinic experts worldwide. “On earth,” explained Rabbi Konikov, “we mark the Sabbath every 7th day.” But Col. Ramon will be orbiting earth every 90 minutes. Each orbit counts as one day, because for the astronauts, the sun will have risen and set in each orbit. Should Col. Ramon then observe the Sabbat every 7th orbit?

“This has been a theoretical question for some time,” says Rabbi Konikov. “But rabbinical scholars have now been confronted with this as a real life situation.” The rabbis have resolved it, says Rabbi Konikov, explaining that “Col. Ramon will mark the Sabbath according to Cape Canaveral time—the site of the launch.”

Recognizing the role model he serves being the first Israeli astronaut, Col. Ramon, formerly the head of weapons-system development acquisition for the Israeli air force says, “I feel I am representing all Jews and all Israelis.”

“Ilan Ramon is an inspiration as a Jew; his integrity is reflected in his interest in observing Shabbos and kosher while in space despite his personal secular lifestyle,” says Rabbi Konikov, who at the request of Col. Ramon, will be present and offer his blessings at the launch, which has thus far been delayed due to technical difficulties.

As director of Chabad of the Space Coast for the past ten years, Rabbi Konikov has been involved with space missions before. When Jeff Hoffman flew on the shuttle Columbia, in March of 1996, Rabbi Konikov helped arrange that Hoffman be able to celebrate Chanukah while in space. Subsequently Rabbi Konikov was invited to Washington DC to present Dr. Hoffman with a menorah upon his return.

Ilan’s’s decision has had larger implications than he had expected: Rabbi Konikov recently received a phone call from a top NASA engineer about koshering the Radisson Resort at the Port, a popular hotel in Port Canaveral, near the launching site, where many Israeli officials will be staying on the day of the launch.

Chabad-Lubavitch and Childrens Hospital Los Angeles Collaborate

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Part of a $6million Chabad educational complex to rise in the heart of Los Angeles will include the Kraines Family Early Childhood Education Center, a cutting edge, state of the art, integrated academic and medical model program to serve some 200 children from low-income families.

The Early Childhood Education Center, dedicated by Mr. Maurice Kraines and the Kraines family with a $1.5 million donation, will be housed in the new Bais Sonya Gutte Campus, a 47,000 square foot complex that will also include the Bais Chaya Mushka Elementary and Bais Rebbe High School. The elementary and high school will continue serving children from the Jewish community of greater Los Angeles with a strong Judaic studies curriculum. But the new preschool will cater to children from ethnically diverse backgrounds, employing the most advanced pedagogical models to lay the foundation for school readiness, while ensuring the health, social and emotional well-being of these children.

The Childrens Hospital collaboration will be directed by Dr. Robert Adler, associate chair of the Department of Pediatrics and Director of Medical Education at Children’s Hospital, and Ellen Iverson, Deputy Director of its Health Service and Community Health Research Program. At a well-attended groundbreaking ceremony last June, Dr. Adler spoke to the idea of this joint venture between Chabad and Childrens Hospital. “Chabad shares the same values as Childrens Hospital,” he said. “Chabad serves the whole community, giving every child a chance to fulfill his or her contribution to our greater community . . .”

The four-story complex, made possible in large part by Karen and Gary Winnick who donated $3 million toward the campus named for their grandmother, Sonya Gutte, will allow the school to expand enrollment by another 375 children. Currently, the school serves 400 children. “All the students who pursue knowledge and wisdom at this Campus,” said Karen Winnick, who spoke at the groundbreaking of her grandmother, “will be blessed with Sonya’s goodness . . .”

A $1.5 million grant by Andy and Beverly Ligget of Los Angeles, dedicated the girls school Bais Chaya Mushka, in honor of the wife of the Lubavitcher Rebbe. “The Lubavitcher Rebbe,” noted Rabbi Boruch Shlomo Cunin, Director of Chabad-Lubavitch of the West Coast, “taught us that in the face of darkness we must light a candle. We are building a campus where every child will have the opportunity to gain wisdom and knowledge, and to learn to illuminate the world with goodness and kindness.”

In a dramatic show of support for this project and for the work of Chabad in Los Angeles, Jewish figures from across the spectrum participated at the groundbreaking ceremony. Rabbi Marvin Hier of the Simon Wiesenthal Center applauded the work of Chabad, pointing to Chabad’s historic role in Jewish education around the world. Actor Elliot Gould thanked Rabbi Cunin and Chabad for “making sure that this community has such a school,” noting that he has been privileged to appear and work all over the world, yet he “has not been any place more significant or more important than here, now.”

The campus, which will be erected on Pico Boulevard, on the same site as Chabad’s girls school currently stands, is expected to be completed by September 2003.”

New Chabad Center for Israeli’s

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The Israeli community of Montgomery County is thrilled about the arrival, Monday, July 15, of new Chabad-Lubavitch representatives, Rabbi and Mrs. Shlomo Baitch. The young couple will establish a local Chabad-Lubavitch center in this sizable Israeli community of more than 5,000 families, which until now, was served by Chabad rabbinical students on a temporary basis.

Rabbi Baitch, a native of Israel, was recruited by Rabbi Shmuel Kaplan, director of Chabad activities in the state of Maryland, after he conducted services and programs for the community during the various holidays throughout the past year. “The Israeli community is very excited about Chabad coming here,” says Rabbi Kaplan, pointing out that, “unlike many American Jews, who appreciate the risks of intermarriage as a result of living in a largely non-Jewish society, Israelis growing up in secular homes in Israel have never really been made aware of this issue.” Rabbi Kaplan sees this as one of the primary objectives of Chabad’s activities. “In a country where intermarriage has reached an all-time high, we must, and we can, prevent this through creating a vibrant Jewish community and a strong sense of Jewish identity.”

The Baitches are developing plans for a Hebrew School, a program especially attractive to Israeli parents who feel a widening gap as their children’s public school education leaves them without even the basic knowledge of Judaism and Jewish culture. Holiday programs and events for children, educational classes for adults and plans to establish a shul in the area, will create a whole new dynamic in this community.

Situated in the Greater Washington area, many of Montgomery County’s Jewish residents are in diplomatic service at the Israeli embassy, and others are researchers with the National Institute of Health in Washington D.C. The growing number of high tech companies in the area is another draw for Israelis interested in business. Many who come at first expecting to stay only temporarily, end up residing here permanently.

“Our goal is to strengthen Jewish self-awareness,” says Rabbi Baitch in his native Hebrew, which will serve him well in dealing with the community. The young couple is brimming with enthusiasm about the challenge ahead of them. “Our thanks go out to Rabbi Moshe Kotlarksy of Lubavitch World Headquarters and Rabbi Efraim Mintz of the Merkos Shluchim Office for their help in making this shlichus possible,” says Rabbi Beitch.

Jewish Agency Awards Chabad of Dnepropetrovsk for Achievements in Jewish Education

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The Max Fisher Prize for Excellence in Jewish Education was awarded this year to Rabbi Shmuel and Chani Kaminetzki, directors of Chabad-Lubavitch in the Dnepropetrovsk region of Ukraine.

At a formal ceremony at the Israel Museum in Jerusalem, attended by leading members of world Jewry, members of Knesset and Israeli government officials, the Jewish Agency for Israel and the Pinkus Foundation, recognized the incredible work of Lubavitch in the Ukraine. The prize took note, in particular, of the education infrastructure in the city built up over the last 12 years by the Kaminetzkis and eighteen other Chabad couples working with them. Chabad-Lubavitch of the Ukraine is a member of the Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS.

Awarded annually to individuals or organizations for extraordinary achievements in Jewish education in the Diaspora, this is the first time the prize went to an Orthodox institution. Chabad’s education system in Dnepropetrovsk includes the Levi Yitzchok Kindergarten, Or Avner Jewish Day School–the largest in Eastern Europe, with current enrollment of over 700 children–a boy’s Yeshiva High school and high school for girls. Newly established as well, is the Beit Chana teachers seminary, recognized by both the Ukranian and Israeli Ministry of Education, ensures employment for its graduates, while providing Jewish schools across the Former Soviet Union with qualified, dedicated teachers. This sprawling network of institutions currently educates over 1200 students and employs nearly 700 staff members.

Dnepropetrovsk has a special place in the history of Chabad, as the childhood home of the Rebbe and the city in which his father, Rabbi Levi Yitzchak Schneerson, served as chief Rabbi for over thirty years. “The Rebbe would often speak nostalgically of Dnepropetrovsk, describing it as the bustling hub of Jewish life in the Ukraine,” says Rabbi Kaminetzki. “So the revitalization of Jewish life here is quite a celebration.” Aside for its educational network, Chabad oversees a variety of social services, including a soup kitchen which feeds 3000 of the city’s destitute each day, holiday awareness programs that typically draw crowds numbering in the thousands, and summer camps for over 3000 children from across the region.”

Exploring the Rebbe’s Theology

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The thousands of Chabad-Lubavitch centers, in some sixty countries around the globe, demonstrate the phenomenal successes of the Lubavitch movement under the leadership of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of blessed memory.

In all the Rebbe’s talks, as well as in his innovative, worldwide ubiquitous mitzvah campaigns, one discerns a unifying system which binds the physical to the spiritual, and empowers every individual to actualize their potential to impact their immediate surroundings, their community, and ultimately, the world.

HEAVEN ON EARTH first outlines, then details a theological system which the author labels “Dirah Betachtonim,” arguing that this system is the driving force behind the Rebbe’s entire array of social, academic, and religious programs.

The author sets out to demonstrate that the physical, mundane world, specifically because it is physical and mundane, is intimately related to G-d’s essence, and hence, is the true arena for religious endeavor.

The research and the scholarship required to present ideas as confidently as the author has is not to be underestimated.

What has heretofore been available in only scattered fragments, has emerged in this work as a relatively comprehensive system. Book is sold on www.kehotonline.com.

Lubavitch Publishing House Exhibits at AJL Convention

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Delegates to the Convention of the Association of Jewish Librarians had the opportunity, this past June 23-26, to examine a wide selection of publications from the Lubavitch publishing house.

The book exhibit, which ran for the duration of the Convention, at which Jewish librarians from all affiliations participated, included an impressive display of Merkos and Kehot Jewish literature, tapes, videos and more. Visitors received the glossy Kehot/Merkos catalog, and the colorful, exclusively designed Blessing Card that is quickly becoming a hot item with Jewish children. Raffle winners took home exciting winnings of selected popular volumes.

Representing the Merkos/Kehot publishing house were Rabbi Yosef and Sheine Friedman. “We are always gratified by the widespread interest in our titles,” observed Rabbi Friedman. In particular, Mrs. Friedman noted a lot of interest on the part of librarians in Merkos’ line of children’s and youth titles. “I think it’s fair to say that our children’s division is producing books that appeal to Jewish parents and educators from all backgrounds and affiliations, and are graphically very attractive to young readers,” says Mrs. Friedman, who established contacts with new libraries and took orders from many librarians.

Among those titles that garnered interest by school and temple librarians were The Bat Mitzvah Club, The Teeny Tiny Yarmulka, Quarters Dimes Nickels & Pennies, and the recently released Lost & Found.

Kehot/Merkos is looking forward to ever more exposure at the upcoming CAJE convention in August.

The Lubavitch publishing house is currently celebrating its 60th anniversary. It was established by the sixth Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, and directed (from it inception) by his successor, the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of blessed memory.”

Argentine Crisis Continues

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Since Lubavitch International last reported on the establishment of the Argentine Relief Commission last February, the crisis has not abated. “The situation unfortunately continues to deteriorate, as more and more people are losing their jobs,” says Rabbi Tzvi Gruenblatt, the director of Chabad-Lubavitch in Argentina, one of the largest Jewish humanitarian aid providers in the country. “As of April 2002 we have been sustaining 1,564 families with their comprehensive, basic needs including food staples, housing, and medical services,” he says.

Rabbi Gruenblatt and Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky of Lubavitch World Headquarters have established the Argentine Relief Commission for this purpose. “Thus far,” says Rabbi Krinsky, “the response has been good-but the need is great. The funds received do not even cover the basic necessities.”

To make matters worse, the status of Jewish children who lived in borderline conditions has been seriously aggravated by the crisis. Chabad-Lubavitch’s Yeladenu program is the country’s only Jewish foster care facility. Yeladenu now provides for more than 100 children, with another 305 on a waiting list. “We are simply waiting for funds to enable us to care for these children.”

According to social services statistics, since the country’s economy has fallen there has been a 40% rise in cases of children at risk of abandonment and abuse within the Jewish community alone. With the help of the Yitzkor Corcias Fundacion Internacional, a charitable foundation based in Europe, Chabad has expanded its Yeladenu program with the opening of two more facilities. “The Corcias Fundacion has been a steady source of financial support making it possible for us to expand our services so that we do not turn a single Jewish child away,” notes Rabbi Gruenblatt.

There is a real concern about the risk of losing Jewish children in this crisis. Brazilian real estate developer and Jewish philanthropist, Mr. Eli Horn, says it is imperative that the Jewish community appreciates the gravity of this risk. “If we do not reach to a Jewish child in need, we are in effect, turning them away at a time when they are most vulnerable. There is no knowing where this child may later end up, spiritually, as a result of this.”

Many of Argentina’s Jewish philanthropists have been hit hard in this crisis. Still, there is a valiant effort on the part of some to put their skills and resources to work to make a marked difference. Eduardo Elsztain, Chairman and CEO of IRSA, an Argentinian real-estate company with holdings that are publicly traded, is involved in the Yeladenu program says, “This is a time where our stamina and values are tested. We are all hurting; but we must choose to turn all our efforts to help our people.” Mr. Elsztain, a long-time supporter of the work of Chabad-Lubavitch in Argentina, who has become personally involved in helping Chabad-Lubavitch’s children’s relief efforts.

The Joint Distribution Committee, in conjunction with the Tzedaka Foundation, has recently allied itself with Chabad-Lubavitch in Argentina and will contribute to meet 20% of the demands in food packages and medicines provided by Chabad-Lubavitch through its 14 centers in Buenos Aires and cities of the provinces.

With the worsening crisis, many Jewish families have left Argentina altogether. Most often, those families leaving were vital members of the community, and their emigration is perceived as a loss to the community. “Their decision to leave is understandable, but we do feel the impact,” says Gruenblatt.

Still, even with the most liberal estimates of emigration, Argentina’s Jewish population will remain at around 180,000. With the continued help and support of the Jewish community in the United States, Argentina’s Jewish community expects to ride this crisis out. “We are living with hope and gratitude for all the help that is forthcoming,” he says, pointing out gratefully that various private and community funds in the United States have been responsive to the call to participate in these vital relief efforts.

“With every response of help, we are strengthened and feel very encouraged,” says Rabbi Gruenblatt. He describes the contribution of one anonymous donor in Europe, who provided crucial assistance for Chabad-Lubavitch’s food relief program. “We don’t know who this donor is, yet his assistance has proved to be of critical significance in feeding so many Jewish people.”

The average cost for a family of three, including shelter, utilities, food and medicines is $240 monthly. Contributions may be made to the Argentine Relief Commission, Machne Israel-Lubavitch at (718) 774-4000, or via the internet at www.lubavitch.com, or mailed to 770 Eastern Parkway, Brooklyn, NY 11213 . . .”

Jewish “Peace Corps” Begins Tour of Duty

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One hundred thirty rabbinical students will begin a summer tour of duty reaching out to Jewish communities worldwide. The students will visit small, isolated communities in places as remote as Vietnam, Surinam, Peru, and many others where only a handful of Jews make up the existing Jewish population.

Now in its 57th year, Merkos Shlichus, as the program is officially known, challenges Chabad-Lubavitch rabbinical students to apply their training out in the field while providing a vital service in locations where there is often no Jewish community infrastructure.

In an intensive 3-6 week stint, the students will become acquainted with their assigned communities, meet with its members and leaders, and evaluate their immediate needs. The students will come prepared to teach intensive courses in Jewish tradition, Talmud, kabbalah and the Jewish life cycle, adapting the program to the specific needs and interests of each respective community.

Paired in groups of two with individualized itineraries, the students travel with a library of Jewish books, tapes, videos and even Torah scrolls wherever necessary. In some communities, they will teach the basics of kosher, and arrange for the availability of kosher products. In others, they will teach community members how to establish a summer day camp for Jewish children. “It depends on the needs of each individual community,” Rabbi Nochum Goldshmidt, a rabbinical student who was in Spain last summer and will be visiting the Far East this season.

“This is a program that has seen incredible results over the years,” says Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky, at Lubavitch World Headquarters, as he addressed a conference of rabbinical students that convened last week. “Scores of Chabad-Lubavitch centers have opened as a result of these initial visits by our rabbinical students. And we cannot begin to estimate the numbers of Jewish people whose lives have been affected in a positive way, as a result of this program.”

Anonymous Donor Contributes $80,000 to Gainesville Mikveh

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He’s heard of those dream-come-true stories, but he never imagined he’d experience one himself.

Rabbi Berel Goldman, Chabad representative to Gainseville, Florida, closed on a 6,000 sq. foot property for a new Chabad center and mikveh facilities three weeks ago. “We were grateful to have bought the property,” says Rabbi Goldman. “But we had no money with which to begin building.”

This was going to be an upstream swim for him, he thought, as he began to consider various fundraising efforts. Rabbi Goldman is not afraid of hard work. But where to begin? “Where would that big break come from-just to get the ball rolling?” he asked.

He prayed hard.

One week later he received a phone call from an anonymous donor in New York City who asked if he needed to build a mikveh.

Within a week, Rabbi Goldman received a check for $80,000 towards the new mikveh.

“Here I am racking my brain trying to figure out how to generate funds,” he says, “when a fellow Jew in New York—someone I don’t know, but a G-dsend to be sure—is suddenly inspired to donate money towards a mikveh.”

Who said miracles don’t happen?

First Summer Educators’ Conference A Success

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Some 150 women educators serving in the Chabad-Lubavitch network of schools across the country participated in an intensive, two-day educators conference, organized by the Chinuch Office, under the auspices of Merkos L’Inyonei Chinuch, the educational arm of the Lubavitch movement.

The Conference, which took place at the Robert Treat Hotel in Newark, New Jersey, on July 8-10, engaged professionals in various fields of education and administration who presented sessions, seminars and workshops along three parallel tracks: pre-school, elementary and high school.

Participants came away with a range of ideas to implement in their respective educational settings. Mrs. Esther Tauby, education coordinator at Beth Tikvah Congregation’s preschool and Hebrew School in Richmond, British Columbia, was particularly impressed with the workshop on classroom management. Delivered by Dr. Nechie King, professor at Towson University in Maryland, Mrs. Tauby says that the workshop “provided me with some very practical ideas on efficient classroom management, ideas that I’m looking forward to applying in my own work.”

Dr. David Pelcovitz, a professor at NYU School of Medicine who has dealt with many children orphaned by the events of September 11, presented a session on dealing with children suffering from trauma and depression, and one on managing disruptive children in the classroom. Dr. Pelcovitz introduced some of the newest innovations in technology to aid children with special needs.

Addressing the participants, Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, chairman of Merkos L’Inyonei Chinuch, noted that in corresponding with Torah educators, the Rebbe, of righteous memory, always referred to their vocation as “sacred and divine.” Rabbi Krinsky further noted that “if there is any one word in the Lubavitch lexicon that encapsulates the life of a Chasid and his/her obligation, it is the word ‘chinuch’.” This, said Rabbi Krinsky, was ultimately what the Rebbe expected of every Chasid: “to act as a mechanech, an educator, of oneself and of others, to always make consistent progress in terms of their Jewish, spiritual growth.”

Participants were very appreciative of the workshop run by Mrs. Sara Rosenfeld, teacher at Beth Rivkah Ladies’ College in Melbourne Australia, in which she provided teachers with a thorough, sequential curriculum for teaching Chasidut from pre-school through high schools. This is a challenge unique to educators at Chabad schools, who strive to implement Chasidic concepts and a Chasidic sensibility even in early preschool age classes.

“This is only the beginning,” says Rabbi Nochem Kaplan, executive director of the Chinuch Office. “As the Rebbe always emphasized, it is the application of these important lessons that counts most, and we hope teachers will apply all that they have gained here to further the success of Jewish students across the globe.”””

Pastrami on Rye: New Deli Makes Keeping Kosher Popular

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What’s a kosher deli doing in the Mormon capital of the world? Salt Lake City’s new Kosher On The Go, with specials ranging from falafel and pita on Sundays to freshly baked Challah on Fridays, is making news in a city where keeping kosher can be very overwhelming.

“Until now we’ve had to cook everything from scratch,” says Rabbi Zippel, Chabad-Lubavitch representative to Salt Lake City. “Eating or ordering out was reserved for trips to Los Angeles,” the closest city with kosher restaurants—over an hour plane trip away.

The Zippels’ presence in Salt Lake City has brought about an increase in kashrut observances. Bite into this: Israel and Camille Lefler, owners of Kosher On The Go—Utah’s first kosher eatery ever—were not observant when they first settled in the city nearly twenty years ago. Now the Leflers are helping to make this great undertaking somewhat less daunting for their fellow Jews. Following their cue, a few local supermarkets recently opened kosher sections so that locals can be less dependent on the one monthly truckload of kosher products shipped in from L.A.

In addition to its local Jewish population, Salt Lake City attracts many tourists throughout the year: skiers from across the country are drawn to Utah in the winter, and the state’s famous national parks like Zion, Bryce, and Canyonlands are hot vacation attractions during the summer season. Ready-made kosher Shabbat take-out meals help accommodate such tourists and provide locals with an alternative to hours of pre- Shabbat cooking.

First Kosher Supermarket In Moscow

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In a dramatic development for Moscow’s Jewish community, a modern kosher supermarket opened near the Marina Roscha Synagogue and the Lubavitch Jewish Community Center.

The enormous complex is stocked with everything from soup to nuts. First time shoppers navigating through the aisles are wowed by the impressive selection of kosher food products imported from Israel. Kosher meats, poultry and a handsome selection of kosher wines; a pastry section featuring freshly baked breads and Challahs from the Marina Roscha kitchen; and a produce department featuring fresh fruits and vegetables and—the most popular in American-style supermarkets—ready made salads.

While shoppers are at it, they can also browse the Judaica section for the latest Jewish tapes and books, or for that mezuzah they still need for their front door.

“Our goal,” said Mr. Mordechai Weissberg, director of the Marina Roscha Jewish Community Center, “is to expand the kosher market to encourage as many Jews as possible to keep kosher in Russia.”

Camp Gan Israel Launches 37th Year

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With the start of the Chabad-Lubavitch Camp Gan Israel’s 2002 summer season this week, thousands of children around the world will participate in a day camp program that has become a “rite of passage” of sorts.

A phenomenon that has succeeded to blend a true American style camping experience of outdoor sports and activities with an authentically Jewish, spiritual environment, Camp Gan Israel—the standard bearer of quality Jewish camping—has become the popular choice for Jewish children and parents of all stripes. In a non-judgmental, embracing environment, children learn “applied Judaism.” The sports, the competitive games, the songs, the meals, and the cultural activities are themed around Jewish concepts and conducted in a uniquely Jewish spirit.

Enrollment at Camp Gan Israel of Morristown, New Jersey, topped the 500 mark this year. Reflecting an unusual diversity of children from across the entire spectrum, the campers bond in the course of an 8-week program, in a model of Jewish unity that serves as a turning point for many.

An outstanding program that includes a kiddie camp for ages 4-5; a separate boys and girls division for campers ages 6-12; and a division for 13 year olds, the camp has seen phenomenal growth in the short span of one decade. What began with 40 local children under Rabbi Moshe Herson of the Rabbinical College of America, has grown by word of mouth drawing children from all parts of northwest New Jersey, some who travel more than a 25-mile radius from areas that have Jewish camps within a much more convenient proximity. According to Chana Devora Solomon, who is co-director with her husband Rabbi Mendel Solomon, the camp’s success is due largely to the investment in choosing and training an outstanding staff. “Our counselors are not 9-4 employees. When the campers go home at the end of the day, our counselors get to work, sometimes till late in the evening.” More importantly,” adds Rabbi Solomon, “our counselors develop ties with our campers and their families that continue throughout the year. They email each other, go to counselors’ weddings, participate at graduations, and bonds that last a lifetime often develop.”

Emily Schwartz, 12, of Fairfax, Virginia, is now in her seventh year at Camp Gan Israel of Fairfax. “She would come home asking a lot of questions,” says her mother, Susan, recalling Emily’s first year at camp. The Schwartzs, who keep a kosher home, say that Emily’s experience at Gan Israel made Jewish life become mainstream for her. “Camp Gan Israel has helped Emily—who attends a public school—take pride in the Jewish values and traditions that are not necessarily shared by her peers,” her mother explains. Established by Rabbi Sholom Deitsch and his wife Chanie some 10 years ago, and directed for the last three years by Rabbi Newman, Camp Gan Israel plays a very dominant role year-round, in the lives of its campers. “Emily sees her life largely in terms of where she’s at within the Chabad camp,” Susan says.

The first Gan Israel day camp opened back in 1965, in Los Angeles. Rabbi Shlomo Cunin, director of Chabad-Lubavitch of the West Coast, started the camp with the help of Rabbi Avraham Levitansky and Mr. Zev Kurtzman, of blessed memory. “We began with 75 children, and for transportation, we purchased an Army Surplus bus for $100, which we painted a bright yellow,” recalls Rabbi Cunin.

Today, the state of California alone has some 40 Gan Israel day camps serving more than 10,000 Jewish children. “We have third-generation Gan Israel campers at our camps this summer,” says Rabbi Cunin. “They come because they love it. And this is where they learn-not behind a classroom desk, but through real day-to-day activities—how to live Jewishly, with all the warmth and enthusiasm that the Rebbe has instilled in Jewish education.”

The largest of Gan Israel camps on the West Coast, the Silver Camp Gan Israel Day Camp in Orange County, has more than 1,000 campers. “The vast majority of the campers come from non-affiliated homes,” says Rabbi Yitzchak Newman, the Chabad-Lubavitch representative to Orange County, Ca. “This becomes an invaluable opportunity to reach them in meaningful way that will have a lifelong impact on their Jewish identity.”

Sarah Benji, whose daughter, Ariella attends Camp Gan Israel in Brentwood, Ca, concurs. Of all the Jewish education her daughter has had, she says, her experience at Camp Gan Israel will stay with her forever. “I really believe that she is more Jewishly committed not only because of the knowledge she gained, but especially because of the passion and love for Judaism that she experienced during her memorable summers at Camp Gan Israel.”

News&Views

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July 26–Few overnight camp directors would have missed a small news item about a whopping $11.2 million grant to the Federation of Jewish Camps (FJC) last week.

The grant from the Jim Joseph Foundation will “provide financial incentives to Jewish pre-teens in target communities west of the Rockies to enroll for the first time in Jewish nonprofit overnight camps,” said the press statement on the FJC website.

Echoing a sentiment of so many who’ve known this intuitively, even before studies confirmed the long term benefits to Jewish continuity that come from a 24/7 Jewish immersion experience. Al Levitt,  Jim Joseph Foundation president, said, “Jewish camping is one of the keystones for connecting these youngsters to the Jewish community." 

The FJC mission statement and other information with illustrative graphs on the website, confirm its commitment to Jewish camping as an effective means of enhancing Jewish affiliation and Jewish identity.

With a constituency of over 130 non profit Jewish camps, the FJC, to its credit, is helping a lot of Jewish kids who might not otherwise afford it, the chance to spend a summer, or a few weeks of the summer at a Jewish camp.

When I clicked on “find a camp” I found an interesting menu offering me a choice of everything from “Lubavitch”—once again Chabad defies categorization—to  Orthodox, Modern Orthodox, Conservative, Reform, Reconstructionist, Secular, Cultural and more.

And then there was a choice of dietary preferences. This included Kosher, Kosher Availability, Kosher Style and Not Kosher.

Maybe this shouldn’t surprise, but then, if the FJC is doing what it does to “increase Jewish practice” among other Jewish identity-building points, it behooves a miminal standard that would require, at the very least, that camps serve only kosher food to be eligible for FJC support.

 No?


JERUSALEM IN BERLIN: PAST, PRESENT, POST

July 25–In an interesting architectural improvisation, a precise replica of Jerusalem’s Western Wall is coming to Berlin’s 12,000-member Jewish community. The replica, 100 square meters of imported Jerusalem stone, will be installed in the city’s new $8.2 million Jewish community center.

According to Rabbi Yehuda Teichtal, Chabad representative to Berlin and executive director of the center, the architecture is a reflection of the center’s philosophy that looks to the future while building upon a long tradition.

Teichtal’s observation, and the idea of replicating a remnant wall from ancient Jewish times in an otherwise sleek structure with a blue glass window, calls to mind the post-modern architectural philosophy of liminality, associated with transitional spaces.

The new center’s design is the work of the highly regarded Russian-born, German architect Sergei Tchoban who designed the Berlin Aquadom, one of the world’s most unusual aquariums near Alexander Platz.

The center, already being used,  will be formally dedicated at a ceremony on September 2nd.


JEWISH LIVING COMES TO CANCUN

July 24–It’s not the first time that Chabad representatives are setting up home in the vacation villages of the world. But it’s always a curious juxtaposition, so Cancun’s Jewish community of 200 is embracing the new Chabad representatives to this island resort on the northeastern coast of the Yucatán Peninsula, with sunny delight.
"We're very excited," the president of Cancun's Jewish community, Samuel Rovero, said in a press release issued by Chabad. "We truly believe that it is better for the community to have a spiritual and religious authority." 
Cancun’s local Jewish population is small—numbering only about 200, but the resort town sees thousands of Jewish vacationers annually.
Rabbi Mendel and Rachel Druk, who arrived three weeks ago with their baby girl, will address the needs of both. The young couple is exploring their new environment, hitting the malls to introduce themselves and invite people to their new home.
They’ve set up a website, www.jewishcancun.com where visitors and locals will learn about the programs and services, including those for the high holidays, that Chabad will offer.


REMEMBERING

July 23–It wasn’t until my first Tisha b’Av in Jerusalem two years ago, that this day of fasting and mourning morphed from a 24 hour endurance test sans food or drink, to a day of compelling personal relevance. To someone who has observed Tisha b’Av all her life, this came as a surprising discovery.

But that was the infamous summer of the withdrawal from Gush Katif . . . To so many of us, the destruction happening before our eyes was hardly a matter of old history.

The day-to-day situation in Israel makes Tisha b'Av matter deeply to a wide cross section of Jews. The physical site of the Temple can readily be pointed to, making its destruction and everything represented by the dissolution of the Jewish Commonwealth, much closer to real life experience. And the politics makes the precariousness of Jewish sovereignty an immediate concern to Israel's Jews, many of whom are still reeling from the trauma and self-inflicted wounds of the summer of 2005.

What of Jews in the Diaspora? Diaspora Jewry is a fact  and a direct consequence of the  destruction. Yet Tisha b’Av outside of Israel seems more removed, compared with the way it is experienced by Israeli Jews—many thousands of whom made their way to the Western Wall on the eve of Tisha b'Av, where Eicha, Lamentations and the dirges of Tisha b’Av known as Kinot were read.

Outside of Israel, the day does not seem to hold quite the same emotional intensity. And yet, in the course of the last week, I counted email after email coming from different Chabad centers across the U.S. and other countries, informing readers of their Tisha b’Av community-wide events.

A curious thing, really. There are no joyful symbols, no child-friendly rituals associated with this commemorative day. Chabad Shluchim cannot pitch Tisha b’Av as an opportunity for families to get together and discover the joy of Judaism.

But at one Chabad center after another, people came. They came and took comfort in the company of fellow Jews for a tragedy that precedes the individual memory of any one of us, yet is somehow, ineluctably registered in our collective consciousness.


NUMBERS COUNT

July 22–In an interesting news item published by the University of Manchester, a recent study finds that the ultra-Orthodox Jewish population will constitute a majority of Jews by the year 2050.

The study looked at population growth in the United Kingdom, with similar patterns confirmed for Israel and the United States, showing that every 20 years, the ultra-Orthodox population doubles in size.

That’s not enough, though, to turn the almost negative growth rate of the Jewish population around, any time soon. For that to happen, larger families may well need to start showing up among a much wider Jewish demographic. Maybe that’s why the Lubavitcher Rebbe granted so many the blessing of children, and encouraged the desire for large families.

Jewish continuity, he insisted, depended on Jewish children first.

But the concern is broader yet. From a Jewish perspective, ensuring positive human population growth is a moral imperative. “Be fruitful and multiply” is the particular mitzvah given to the Jewish people.  But the Torah applies the mitzvah to populate the earth with human life, to humankind at large. 

A Man Apart

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The Talmud (Sanhedrin 58a) relates that when Rabbi Eliezer became critically ill and close to death, he took his two arms, folded them across his heart, and said to his disciples: "Woe is you. My two arms are like two scrolls of the Torah that are rolled and closed up. Much Torah I learned and much Torah I taught: much Torah I learned, and I did not absorb from my teachers even as much as a dog could lick from the sea. Much Torah I taught, and what my students absorbed from me was but as the drop of ink the quill takes from the ink well."

I begin with this story because of my feeling of utter inadequacy in trying to convey who and what the Lubavitcher Rebbe was, and what he meant for me. I would not be the Jewish woman I am today were it not for him. Yet all that I learned from the Lubavitcher Rebbe and everything I could say about him are only like those few small drops of water which convey nothing of the vastness and power and life of the sea. Yet water gives life, and even a few drops can revive a thirsty person. The Rebbe's life was dedicated to reviving the Jewish people, to giving them life and connecting them to the source of life — to G-d and Torah.

None of us, I think, can ever really grasp or describe his true great­ness; he was another order of human being. On the one hand his life was entirely given over to the Jewish people; he was intimately involved in the lives of hundreds of thousands of people who spoke and wrote to him for guidance about their most personal problems; yet he was also a man apart. I can only relate here a few personal stories of my con­nection to him in the hope that from these few fragments, the greater whole might be glimpsed.

I grew up in suburban Chicago in the 1950s, a typical third­-generation assimilated American. Like many of my generation, I fled from Sunday School and the Temple to which my family belonged, and could see nothing true or compelling in what seemed to be the hollow rituals that most of the congregants hardly understood. Being Jewish in that milieu was a vaguely uncomfortable and perplexing experience, but not any obstacle to full immersion in the non-Jewish culture which surrounded us and swept us along with it.

What power took me out of the deep galut [exile] in which I lived –not just geographically, but intellectually, spiritually, and emotionally? Of course, the Torah promises that ultimately each and every Jew will be returned from exile and redeemed. But it was the Lubavitcher Rebbe who could not wait placidly for that redemption, who reached out to every Jew wherever she or he was found, to the furthest corner of the globe. Among other reasons, this was — I believe — because the Rebbe felt the pain of every Jew and of the Jewish people in every second of galut. And because the Rebbe also saw the sparks of the divine everywhere, waiting to be uncovered.

And so, eventually, the Rebbe reached me, and helped take me out of my exile too. In the late 1960s, when many of my generation rebelled in extreme ways, the Rebbe understood us; he sensed that our restlessness came from a spiritual discontent. Instead of chastising us, he sent us his best Chasidim to found Chabad Houses, to teach us, to live with us, to love us. I think that was what was really behind the development under the Rebbe's leadership of the extraordinary international network of Chabad institutions from Hong Kong to Paris to Katmandu. He felt our pain, he intuited our yearning. And he saw us not just as products of late twentieth-century America, but under the light of Jewish eternity. We were princes and prophets and sages; each Jew was royalty; each Jew was precious; each Jew was the emissary and reflection of G-d in the world.

Perhaps that is what is meant when Jewish sources speak of the soul of a tzaddik (righteous, holy person) as an all-inclusive soul: the Rebbe had a soul that intuited and was connected to the pain and joy and greatness of the soul of every Jew. And that was what he taught his Chasidim. He made of each Chasid a "rebbe," made each Chasid feel that responsibility and love for every Jew, made each Chasid reach out be­yond him or herself, made each Jew sense her or his own greatness, her or his holiness. Those who were forgotten by everyone else, he re­membered. He sent his emissaries to find and comfort and strengthen Jews in small forsaken towns from Alaska to Australia. To those who were abandoned by everyone else, he reached out — to drug addicts, prisoners, cult members.

I first encountered him through his emissaries at the Chabad House at the State University of New York at Buffalo, where I was attending graduate school. I then spent six months living in the Lubavitch cen­ter in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, in close proximity to the Rebbe. By the time I came to Crown Heights in 1976, private audiences with the Rebbe had become very restricted. When he had been younger, he would meet with people all through the night. In my time, he was in his late seventies and would meet with people "only" until midnight or one in the morning. I never had an extended private audience with him, but I had many small encounters, and received answers to the letters I wrote, and comments about essays I published.

Everyone speaks about the Rebbe's eyes, the depth and penetration of his gaze. In his presence one felt immediately purer, truer, closer to G-d. One knew what mattered and what was important in life. When my mother came to visit me in Brooklyn, perturbed about my affiliation with this group of Chasidim, I took her to the alcove by the Rebbe's office on the day she was to leave. People who were going on a trip would stand there and as the Rebbe would emerge to pray the afternoon prayer with the yeshiva students, he would give blessings to the travelers. He turned and looked at my mother and said softly in Yiddish in his mellifluous voice: fohr gezunterheit ("travel in good health"). All of a sudden my mother was crying, tears streaming down her face. " I don't know why I am crying," she said. "I'm not sad." Something in his glance and voice had penetrated to the depths of her soul.

Another friend came with me to one of the Rebbe's special gatherings for women — a secular, radical feminist. She passed closely by the Rebbe, and tears, too, came into her eyes, from some, unknown depth. "He looks like what I imagine Moses must have looked like," she said.

When I first came to study in Crown Heights, I struggled very hard with the issues of Judaism and feminism. To work these conflicts out, I wrote an article called "The Jewish Woman — Three Steps Behind?" and gave it to the editor of one of the Lubavitch women's magazines called Di Yiddishe Heim ("The Jewish Home"), which was a modest Yiddish/­English publication. Before the article was published, I had occasion to write to the Rebbe for a blessing for a sick uncle. The Rebbe would receive — and personally read and answer — around four hundred letters a day. And probably equally as many telephone calls with questions and requests for blessings would come in each day from around the world. How, I wondered, did he find time and energy for all this, especially amidst all his other responsibilities?

The Rebbe's secretary called me back to read me the response the Rebbe had written on my letter: the Rebbe promised to say a special prayer for my uncle, and then the Rebbe added the words, "I enjoyed your article in the forthcoming Yiddishe Heim" I was surprised; how did the Rebbe know about an article which had not even been published? The editor told me that the Rebbe had such a deep desire to support the efforts of Lubavitch women, that he personally took the time to read and make his own notes and corrections on all the manuscripts for this journal. I subsequently wrote several articles for the magazine, and as a favor, the editor gave me back my typescripts with the Rebbe's notes and corrections.

As an English professor who has taught college writing, I was amazed at the Rebbe's editing of my English. (He read and spoke many languages fluently.) He not only deepened the Torah concepts, he took out excess words, amended punctuation, spelling, and syntax, with careful attention to each detail. I wish I would give the same attention to correcting my own students' papers as he did to my manuscripts.

The Rebbe spoke often of the greatness of the Jewish woman; he held special gatherings to address them; he advocated depth and breadth in their Torah study; he sent them on missions around the world; he initiated several campaigns to encourage Jewish women to perform the special mitzvot pertaining to them. He created a stir in the Jewish world when he urged all women, even those who were not married, and all girls over the age of three, to light Sabbath candles.

As a woman engaged in intellectual and academic work, I received the greatest encouragement from the Rebbe — blessings to continue my Ph.D. in English, advice about possible dissertation topics, advice about how to negotiate the politics within the University. (The Rebbe himself had attended the Sorbonne and University of Berlin.) I sensed that he wanted me to employ to the full all my intellectual capacities, and all the secular knowledge I attained from my Ivy League education — to "elevate" all this and use it in the service of Torah and Yiddishkeit.

From the Rebbe's own personal example, I learned that there was nothing in the world a Jew need fear; that every place and every action and every moment called for a Jew to bring G-dliness into the world; and that no obstacle could ultimately stand in the face of a Jew's will to do so. That to be a Jew was the highest calling, a privilege and immense responsibility. Growing up in suburban Chicago in the 1950s and 1960s, we Jews had kept a low profile. From the Rebbe, I learned not to be ashamed, not to be afraid — that the world, in fact, was yearning for the light of Torah.

In an article for Di Yiddishe Heim which I based on one of the Rebbe's talks, I compared the truths found in secular philosophy and science to those of Torah. The Rebbe had discussed the ways in which secular forms of knowledge are all limited; yet these very limitations also give a person a sense of satisfaction because one can grasp a body of secular knowledge; "master a field." Torah, however, is unlimited and infinite, and I wrote the sentence: "Thus one can never contain Torah, master it." In editing this manuscript, the Rebbe amended the sentence to read: "Thus one can never contain all the content of even one dvar (sentence of) Torah, master it." Yet if there was a master of Torah in our generation, it was also surely the Rebbe. I remember standing at farbrengens, the public gatherings the Rebbe would hold. The large synagogue in Brooklyn would be packed with a thousand or more people. If it were a weekday, the Rebbe would start to speak at around 9 p.m. and often give several sichot or "talks," each lasting about forty minutes. Without any notes, he would speak into the early hours of the morning, for five or more hours, citing liberally from memory the whole corpus of Jewish literature — Bible, midrash, Talmud, the classic commentaries, Kabbalah, Jewish law, Chasidic philosophy. He would discuss the needs of the Jewish people, the political situation in Israel, and in between talks, the Chasidim would sing and drink "l'chaim."

When he spoke Torah, it was not just another lecture, a flow of words; there was something magnetic about the Rebbe's presence. Each talk was complex but beautifully structured and full of startling insights. There are now about forty volumes of these edited talks. And scores more volumes of his letters. Yet indeed, in that emendation he made to my sentence, one also sees his great humility: "One can never contain the content of even a sentence of Torah."

There was a regality and elegance about the Rebbe, and yet there was also his great humility. In the few years before he became ill, when he was into his nineties, he would stand in the alcove by his office every Sunday to speak for a few moments personally and face-to-face with anyone who wanted to see him, and give out dollars to each person to be given for charity. How could a ninety-year-old man stand on his feet for hours and hours without taking a moment's rest, or a drink? And how could he focus so intently and exclusively on each and every person who came through the line of thousands of people which stretched for blocks outside his office? I heard that when he had been urged to sit during these long sessions, he responded by asking how he could sit when people were coming to him with their problems and needs and pains?

And despite the crush of the crowds, and the pressure of all his responsibilities, the Rebbe never seemed to be in a hurry. But he also never wasted a moment; every movement of his body was exact and yet fluid — like a maestro conducting a symphony. There was a com­bination of intense energy and intense calm about him. Watching and listening to the Rebbe at his public gatherings, time and space dis­solved. I would catch myself and think, "I am standing in the midst of some of the worst slums of New York City; how can it be that in this 'heart of darkness' there is so much light?" I said to a friend once, "It is so paradoxical to find this great tzaddik in the midst of all the violence and squalor and despair of this broken down part of Brooklyn." And my friend responded, "And where else do you think you would find him; where else does he belong — the Plaza Hotel?"

The Rebbe refused to abandon Crown Heights as the neighborhood changed. It was consistent with his refusal to abandon any Jew, to leave anybody behind. And it was consistent with his refusal to give in to fear. It was also consistent with the principle of mesirat nefesh, self­ sacrifice for love of the Jewish people that he embodied and that he taught his followers.

And it was an affirmation of one of the great principles of Chasidic philosophy that "every descent is for the purpose of an ascent"… that from overcoming the darkness ultimately comes the greatest light. As the Rebbe often said, we live in an era of "doubled and redoubled" dark­ness — that is, a darkness so deep we do not even know it is darkness anymore. He was the light in that darkness … and he remains so even after his passing.

The Talmud at the end of tractate Brakhot says that "There is no rest for tzaddikim, neither in this world nor in the next world" for "they go from strength to strength." Even in the next world, they strive and reach ever higher levels. In 1950, in the days and months just after his father-in-law, the previous Lubavitcher Rebbe, passed away, the Rebbe gave many moving talks about the meaning of what had occurred. He cited the statement of the Zohar, the pre-eminent work of Jewish mys­ticism, that "when the tzaddik departs he is to be found in all worlds more than in his lifetime" (III:7Ib). In Chassidic philosophy, the life of a tzaddik is not viewed as a physical life, but a spiritual life consisting of faith, awe and love. And after his passing, his soul is no longer bound by the limitations of a physical body, but is connected to the world in new and different ways. The Rebbe also explained why he did not use the conventional expression zekher tzaddik l'vracha ("of blessed mem­ory") about his father-in-law after the latter's passing: the activation of memory is relevant to distant matters about which there is a danger of forgetting; but in relation to his father-in-law, the previous Rebbe, who was still close and still connected, there could be no forgetting at all, and therefore there was no need to invoke memory.

There is no forgetting the Lubavitcher Rebbe. The Zohar affirms that the tzaddikim shield the world, and after their death even more so than during their life. I am sure that even now, after his departure, the Rebbe continues to shield the world, and to yearn and work for its redemption.