Tens of thousands of students have learned Mishne Torah online with Rabbi Yehoshua B. Gordon, pictured here with his daily class in Encino, Calif.

Worldwide Celebration: Completing the Mishneh Torah

In one of the country’s smallest Jewish communities—in a breathtakingly beautiful area known for its dude ranches and ski slopes—Rabbi Chaim Bruk recruited several men to be part of a worldwide task of learning MosesMaimonides’ landmark compendium of Jewish law, the Mishneh Torah.

“I shared with them that they had the opportunity to learn the whole Torah,” said Bruk, co-director of Chabad Lubavitch of Montana. “They persevered and made it through.”

In fact, the four men—the rabbi and three community members—committed to studying a chapter a day for three years to get through the oral and written Torah, all the mitzvot in detail, along with hundreds of thousands of Jewish men, women and children around the world who also chose to take on this monumental task.

“It does require the commitment and following through to complete task,” says Dr. Mick Lisfon, an obstetrician who attends the Chabad center in Bozeman, Mont. “I’m very glad I did it and completed it. I now see that I can go on to the next tasks at hand. It has encouraged me to continue my studies, and I’m very pleased with the amount I learned.”

This coming Sunday, Dec. 14, this small group of students in an isolated Jewish community will join tens of thousands of Jews around the world who will gather in groups small and large at their synagogues and community centers, as well as online, to celebrate the completion of learning the code and reflecting on its author.

People will have the opportunity to participate the “Global Online Siyum HaRambam,” (completion of the Mishneh Torah) which will be broadcast live by Jewish.TV, the multimedia portal of Judaism website Chabad.org, as well, beginning at 8 p.m. Eastern Time.

The 13th-century scholar and philosopher’s 14-volume work is the only collection of Jewish law that spans all of Jewish life, including those laws that only apply when the Temple in Jerusalem is standing.

When the Rebbe—Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory—first called for the near-annual study of Rabbi Moses Maimonides’ foundational 12th-century legal code known as the Mishneh Torah, he stressed the unity achieved by the entire Jewish people studying the same subject in Torah at the same time.

The Rebbe suggested three different study tracks: a three-chapter-a-day cycle that completes the 14-volume code in less than a year; a one-chapter cycle that completes the work in just less than three years; and for children and those whose backgrounds are not conducive to rigorous in-depth study, a daily examination of pertinent topics in Sefer Hamitzvot, a companion work of Maimonides’ that lists all of the 613 commandments in the Torah.

The emphasis on daily study mirrored theRambam’s own suggestions on how his work should be learned, but until the Rebbe’s innovation, most people studied the Mishneh Torah piecemeal.

This year’s siyum will represent the 11th completion of the Mishneh Torah by those studying a chapter a day, while scholars studying three chapters a day have completed the entire series a total of 33 times since the Rebbe first instituted the study cycle in 1984.

Over the years, digital and print resources have sprung up to make the Hebrew-language text readily available. For example, Rabbi Eliyahu Touger’s landmark translation of the entire Mishneh Torah (published by Moznaim) was put online in 2009 by Chabad.org, complementing the existing Hebrew texts and audio classes, and daily emails already offered by the site. Chayenu—a weekly Torah-content magazine—carries the one-chapter-a-day chapters of the week in both Hebrew and English as well.

In 2012, Rabbi Joshua B. Gordon began streaming live classes following the one-chapter-a-day track on Jewish.tv, and thousands of students worldwide joined him in that online study. Those archived classes are now available for individuals who will again begin either the one chapter a day or the three-chapters-a-day tracks on Monday.

Daily study of Sefer Hamitzvot led by Rabbi Mendel Kaplan is available on Jewish.tv as well. And Malka Touger’s Sefer Hamitzvot for Children can be studied with the kids on JewishKids.org.

‘A Real Commitment’

In addition to recognizing and celebrating the accomplishments of those who have studied over the past year, organizers say the celebrations also serve to attract more people to join the cycle.

Rabbi Baruch S. Davidson, who lives in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, N.Y., has been learning one chapter a day with a group of six men for more than four years now. They started in middle of the last cycle, so this is the first full, three-year cycle that they are completing.

“The group came about simply by a whim of inspiration one summer night 4½ years ago. It occurred to me that so many people really would like to take part in the Rebbe’s campaign for Rambam,” explains Davidson. “So I sent a text to a whole list of friends asking who would be interested in joining the class, and the response was very positive. We started the next evening and have been going strong ever since, Baruch Hashem.”

“It takes a real commitment,” adds Davidson, a longtime responder on the “Ask the Rabbi” team at Chabad.org; an associate rabbi at the Beach Minyan of Westhampton Beach, N.Y.; and a regular lecturer at locations throughout the New York area on a host of Jewish topics.

As it happens, on most days he also learns the chapter earlier with a phonechavruta, or study partner.

“I find that many of the questions that I had when studying it during the day are solved when I go through it in the evening with the group,” he says. “This is partly due to the additional feedback, which is always enriching, but in some sort of mystical way, I think it’s also credit to the extra effort that it takes to commit myself to the group.”

“Also, there is great discussion in Chassidic texts about the value of studying Torah in a communal setting, such as in a minyan of 10,” he continues. “First and foremost, I think that it serves as a Kiddush Hashem[sanctification of G‑d’s name] engaging in this daily study instituted by the Rebbe, so that others can see and then be inspired to join.”

‘A Tremendous Impact on Our Family’

Back in Montana, Lifson notes the impact that his three-year daily study of Mishneh Torah has had on his family.

Lisfon, along with his wife and son, moved from Baltimore to Montana seven years ago. They were attracted to the area’s outdoor sports, such as horseback riding and skiing. Soon after arriving, they found themselves in search of kosherchicken, which had been readily available on grocery shelves in Baltimore. That’s how he discovered Chabad and Rabbi Bruk, who coordinates a kosher-meat delivery once a quarter via an 18-wheeler semi-truck.

Completing the Maimonides cycle, he notes, has propelled him to continue in his Jewish learning, and Lisfon says his family has been increasing their Jewish observance ever since.

“We are very grateful that we have a Chabad House here,” he says. “Having the exposure has made a tremendous impact on our family. It nurtures our soul.”

At the recent International Conference of Chabad emissaries in New York: from left, Montana residents Stu Binenstock, Dr. Mick Lifson and Larry Pearson, with Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, chairman of Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, the educational arm of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. Lifson studied a chapter a day of Mishneh Torah, completing the cycle in three years.
At the recent International Conference of Chabad emissaries in New York: from left, Montana residents Stu Binenstock, Dr. Mick Lifson and Larry Pearson, with Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, chairman of Merkos L’Inyonei Chinuch, the educational arm of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. Lifson studied a chapter a day of Mishneh Torah, completing the cycle in three years.

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