
Urgent Conference Addresses Recent Tragedies
An urgent conference was held last night to address the recent tragedies that have befallen the Chabad community in general and the family of Shluchim in particular over the past few months.
An urgent conference was held last night to address the recent tragedies that have befallen the Chabad community in general and the family of Shluchim in particular over the past few months.
The candles are lit; wine is being poured; the smell of fresh matzah wafts; freshly grated horseradish tickles the nose. It’s so easy to feel inspired at the Passover Seder. We experience the transcendent energy of G-d’s miracles as we tell the story of the Exodus from Egypt. Among family and friends, we get that taste of freedom and faith that we wait for all year.
A full page ad was featured in today’s print edition of the New York Times inviting every Jew, no matter where on earth he or she may be, to join the Rebbe’s Shluchim for the Pesach Seder.
From the Safer Haminhagim: Every day from Rosh Chodesh Nissan until the twelfth of the month, one reads the passage that describes the offering brought on that day by a particular Nasi, or tribal prince, for the dedication of the altar of the Mishkan. Yehi Ratzon in the Extended Article.
Tzemach Begun of Los Angeles sings a Niggun he composed in honor of the Rebbe’s birthday, with lyrics lifted from the Rebbe’s new Kapital – Tehilim 113.
Please take a moment and say a Kapital Tehillim for Rafael Meir ben Devorah, a 6-year-old boy who is critically ill, r”l.
CrownHeights.info and Lubavitch Archives present a unique photo of the Rebbe at the annual ‘Machne Yisroel Yechidus,’ in the late 1980s.
This Shabbos at the Besht, Rabbi Yossi Paltiel will lead a discussion on the topic – 113: The Rebbe’s New Kapital.
Most everyone is familiar with the term “Scapegoat.” Still, not everyone is aware of its legendary Biblical origins.
Hundreds of Bochurim, en route to locations around the world to lead Pesach Seders, gathered in Crown Heights last Motzai Shabbos Yom Iyun for the bochurim traveling to some 270 cities, many without any existing Jewish infrastructure.