
A Living Thing Carries Itself
by Dovid Zaklikowski for Hasidic Archives
One day in 1966, Rabbi Chaim Gutnick arrived in Montreal with a request for Rabbi Leib Kramer, the director of the Rabbinical College of Canada. The Rebbe had sent Rabbi Gutnick, a respected Australian rabbi and a leader in the Melbourne Chabad community, to ask Rabbi Kramer to choose six students to help him establish a beis midrash in the Australian city.
It was a new concept: the students would leave their own yeshivah in order to assist a smaller institution and a less established community far away in building a yeshivah. Ultimately, a group of older students from the Montreal and Newark Lubavitch yeshivahs went to assist in establishing the Melbourne yeshivah.
For the next decade, young men would take part in this mission, with the yeshivah sending shluchim to Melbourne for two year stints. It was a success. The American and Canadian students served as the foundation of the new institution and had a great influence on a generation of Australian students.
Before the fifth group was to return and a new group was being selected, the Rebbe wrote to the yeshivah that students would no longer be sent on his behalf. Borrowing a concept from Jewish law regarding carrying in the public domain, he wrote: “It has already reached the time that ‘a living thing carries itself.’”
This was devastating for the yeshivah. However, the Rebbe was saying that a yeshivah should be able to survive with local students and should no longer need to rely on support from abroad.
The community wrote to the Rebbe, explaining that the student shluchim strengthened not only the yeshivah but also had a profound impact on the entire Jewish community, something the younger students could not achieve on their own. The Rebbe then gave the green light for the central United Lubavitcher Yeshivoth to continue sending shluchim.
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