By Yonit Tanenbaum for Chabad.org

At times, people waited as much as two hours to spend as little as two minutes beside the resting place of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory.

An estimated 50,000 people flocked to the resting place of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory, over the 24-hour period marking the 15th anniversary of his passing.

Visitors from around the world waited as much as two hours June 25 to spend as little as two minutes beside the Rebbe’s resting place at the Old Montefiore Cemetery in Cambria Heights, N.Y. Over the course of the day, they took stock of their lives, immersed themselves in Torah study and derived inspiration from the Rebbe’s call to strengthen Judaism and reach every single Jew, wherever he or she may be found.

Waiting in Line: Visitors to Rebbe’s Resting Place Reflect on His Life and Message

By Yonit Tanenbaum for Chabad.org

At times, people waited as much as two hours to spend as little as two minutes beside the resting place of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory.

An estimated 50,000 people flocked to the resting place of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory, over the 24-hour period marking the 15th anniversary of his passing.

Visitors from around the world waited as much as two hours June 25 to spend as little as two minutes beside the Rebbe’s resting place at the Old Montefiore Cemetery in Cambria Heights, N.Y. Over the course of the day, they took stock of their lives, immersed themselves in Torah study and derived inspiration from the Rebbe’s call to strengthen Judaism and reach every single Jew, wherever he or she may be found.

“It reminds me of when the Rebbe gave out dollars,” said Rabbi Zalman Tiechtel, co-director of the Chabad-Lubavitch center serving the University of Kansas and the Capital District, comparing the experience of waiting in line last week to the thousands of people who would file by the Rebbe on Sundays in the late 1980s and early 90s, when he distributed dollars to give to charity.

At midnight, Moran Davidovich, a 24-year-old Israeli native, arrived at the cemetery after driving from her home in New Jersey. At that hour, the wait in line was only a half hour.

“My sister in Israel asked me to come and pray for her to get married,” she explained. “And I will pray that everyone should have good health.”

Davidovich and others emphasized that they were also using the opportunity to increase in their observance of Judaism and performance of good deeds.

Lauren Rubin, a 20-year-old from S. Diego, said that she is religious today because of the Rebbe.

“Chabad of S. Diego, at its Camp Gan Israel, was my first affiliation with Lubavitch,” she said. “My connection continues to be strong.”

Leah Chikashvili, 44, a marketer originally from the Eastern European republic of Georgia, had a similar outlook.

“Although I am not so religious, I am a Chabanik,” she said. “I am the Rebbe’s follower for 21 years.”

When Chikashvili first came to New York in 1988, her husband’s friend brought the couple to the Rebbe one Sunday. “After that, we went almost every week.

“My family was invited to attend the Rebbe’s 90th birthday [recognition] in 1992 at the White House,” she recalled. “My cousin was close to him because my cousin was a cancer survivor due to the Rebbe’s blessing.”

“I was here for the funeral,” said Benny Nechemia, 55, a real estate broker from Jerusalem. “I first came to the Rebbe for dollars. During a Chasidic gathering at Lubavitch World Headquarters in 1990, I was inspired.

Article continued at Chabad.org – Unique Leadership