MyLife Chassidus Essay Contest Winners Announced

The winners of this year’s MyLife: Essay Contest were announced live during Sunday night’s special Yud Alef Nissan Edition of the MyLife: Chassidus Applied Webcast.

The 1st place winner of $10,000 was Nechama Dina Hendel, a young shlucha, who, together with her husband Rabbi Avraham Hendel, runs Chabad of Baka, Jerusalem. Chaim Heber, a shliach in Beer Sheva, won the 2nd place $3600 prize, Shaul Wolf of Brooklyn won the 3rd place $1K prize, and a bonus $1000 4th place went to Levi Liberow of Brooklyn.

The much anticipated announcement came after weeks of deliberations by a special panel of expert judges, who used a rigorous grading system to select the winners out of the hundreds of essays that were submitted in this year’s contest.

Hailing from all around the world, the contestants spanned a wide variety of ages and backgrounds, attesting to the broad reach of the MyLife: Chassidus Applied Essay Contest. Indeed the ages ranged from as young as 15 (with a 14-year-old submitting a fascinating essay, despite not qualifying), to as old as 85. Submissions arrived from the entire social spectrum, including rabbis, laymen, shluchim, educators, professors, yeshivah bochurim, seminary graduates and high school students.

Rabbi Simon Jacobson announced the winners during this Sunday night’s broadcast of the highly acclaimed MyLife: Chassidus Applied series. This week’s 112th episode of the popular series was a special Yud Alef Nissan edition, honoring as well the 150th yahrzeit of the Tzemech Tzedek on Yud Gimmel Nissan, which focused on discussing matters pertaining to the Rebbe and Chassidus.

Rabbi Jacobson explained that the auspicious day of Yud Alef Nissan is a most fitting time for the culmination of this amazing contest, driven by our collective quest to disseminate Chassidus. The MyLife: Chassidus Applied essay contest has proven to encourage hundreds of men and women to study and apply Chassidus to their, and our, personal lives. The contest has created an unprecedented surge and excitement in the core mission of the Rebbeim: hafotzas hamayonos chutzah. Surely the Rebbe is deriving much nachas from the study and the propagation of Chassidus that this contest has brought about.

Full list of winners:

$10,000 First Place Winner
Nechama Dina Hendel, 33, Jerusalem, Israel – Topic: Success Within Reach: Life Changing Chassidic Tools

$3,600 Second Place Winner
Chaim Heber, 33, Beer Sheva, Israel – Topic: אורות בכליםThe Secret to Healthy Relationships

$1,000 Third Place Winner
Shaul Wolf, 25, Brooklyn, NY – Topic: The Soul: A Source of Inherent Self Worth

Bonus $1,000 Fourth Place Winner
Levi Liberow, 26, Brooklyn, NY – Topic: The Man of Faith is Lonely No More – Loneliness: Fate or Destiny

Top 12 Finalists:

Sholom Ber Crombi, 30, Jerusalem, Israel – הבינוני – קבלה עצמית כדרך לריפוי הנפש בעידן” המודרני” “The Benoni – self-acceptance as a way of healing the soul in the modern era”

Menachem Mendel Fromer, 16, Haifa, Israel –”מחשבת ההיפוך החסידית” “Chassidic Thought Transformation”

Yeshaya Marantz, 32, Tzfat, Israel – שמחה – עקרון הוודאות שפורץ גדר” “Joy – The Principle of Certainty which Pierces Boundaries”

Rikkie Winner, 21, Brooklyn, NY – “Encountering You”

Mishael Almalem, 38, Jerusalem, Israel – “לדעת להקשיב – מהות תפקידו של המשפיע הנו “להקשיב על מנת לחבור למושפע ממקומו “Know how to listen: The Role of the Mashpia to listen and relate to the individual”

Eli Soble, 40, Brooklyn, NY – “The Method to Think Good So That It Will Truly Be Good”

Avremel Vogel, 24, Brooklyn, NY –  “A Chassidic Take On The Four Letter Word”

Shoshi Gutnick, 18, North Bondi, NSW, Australia – “Conquering ‘I Can’t’”

Rivka Ehrentrau, 60, Brooklyn, NY – “מזירת הנישואין למזור של אהבה ושלימות” “Marriage – A Platform for Love and Perfection”

Aryeh Gurewitz, 23, Lake Worth, FL – “Self-Control from the Essence of Your Soul”

Adam Zagoria-Moffet, 26, Oceanside, NY – “Receiver and Responder: Chassidus’ Chiddush on Care-Giving”

Hadassah Silberstein, 23, Brooklyn, NY – “What if I just don’t Care? Apathy: The Incurable Disease”

The MyLife: Chassidus Applied Essay Contest invited people of all ages from around the world to submit an original essay applying a concept or idea in Chassidus to solve a contemporary life issue or challenge. Although only a select number of essays could be chosen as winners, many more of the essays submitted were very impressive and moving, demonstrating how Chassidus provides, even for a secular person, powerful tools for personal transformation and how Chassidus addresses the most fundamental human needs, from the emotional to the psychological and the spiritual.

The Meaningful Life Center is now exploring ways how to channel the enthusiasm and momentum created by this contest into classes, programs and curricula to further the effort of applying Chassidus to life.

The MyLife Essay Contest Team is proud to showcase some of the amazing talent that has emerged through this year’s contest! Many of the essays will be reviewed and published over the coming weeks and months.

The MyLife: Chassidus Applied Essay Contest is a project of The Meaningful Life Center. MLC reports that there will be exciting new follow-ups to the Essay Contest. To stay tuned for announcements, and to find out about next year’s contest, subscribe to the MLC mailing list.