To Lead is to Follow – The New Within The Old

by Rabbi Yoseph Kahanov Jax, FL

The late Bobover Rebbe is said to have been sitting on an airplane in the late 1950s, next to the famous playwright Arthur Miller.

Upon observing the care and reverence with which the Bobover Rebbe was escorted through the airport and settled into his seat by his young protégés – how they kept checking on his well-being and doting over him – Miller turned to the Rebbe and asked: “Rabbi, how come when I, a pillar of secular knowledge, lecture at a university I am treated casually, and even with disrespect by the students, while you, a teacher of an archaic tradition, are treated with utmost reverence, almost as a beloved surrogate parent, by your followers?”

The Rebbe, purportedly, smiled and replied: “It is very simple, you, a secular scholar, teach your students that they are descendants of monkeys, so when they look at you, they see someone who is one generation closer to their primitive ape past, no wonder why they treat you that way.

I, on the other hand, teach my students that they are descendants of the awesome generation who stood at Sinai and witnessed the greatest Divine revelation in history, so they consider me one generation closer to that transformational face to face encounter with the Divine, is it a wonder that they respect me?”

– – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – – –
Mazal Tov's View More

Photos of the The Rebbe and the Shluchim

In honor of the Kinus Hashluchim CrownHeights.info and the Avner Institute would like to present two unique photos from the Machne Israel development fund 1989. This was an opportunity for the lay leaders of Chabad institutions around the world to meet with the Rebbe. At the conclusion of these meetings the Rebbe would deliver a special talk to the Shluchim and would bless for continued success in their Shlichus.

8 Sholom Zochors This Week!

Nosson and Rivky (nee Moss) Lang
Oihel Nosson, 580 Crown St [between Troy and Albany Ave]

Levi and Mira Martinez
Aliya, 525 E New York Ave [between Kingston and Brooklyn Ave]

Avremi and Bracha Mann
629 Montgomery St [between Brooklyn and Kingston Ave]

Mendy and Shaina Matusof
1505 President St [between Troy and Albany Ave]

Chanoch and Shainy Peysin
1548 President St Apt P [between Troy and Albany Ave]

Chaim and Esther Leah Vogel
825 Eastern Parkway [between Albany and Kingston Ave]

Shmuel and Chanie Pevzner
1359 Union St [between New York and Brooklyn Ave]

Shmuly and Elana (nee Dauer) Kornfeld (Burbank, CA)

Welcome Shabbat Dinner for BMC Seminary Girls

by Eva Itscovitch

With great excitement and much anticipation, community members of S. Agathe and many Montrealers gathered together on Friday evening, October 22nd to welcome the Seminary BMC girls to a new year of learning in our beautiful Laurentian mountains.

Video: First Smicha Ceremony in Canadian History!

On the chilly Friday afternoon of October 24th, 1945, nine Lubavitch students arrived in Montreal, Canada, from Shanghai, China. The young men had moved to town in order to strengthen the Jewish community under the direction of the previous Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Yossef Y. Schneerson.

Unity Program Launched for Girls

After a successful summer, Mrs. Nechama Laber, director of the Jewish Girls Retreat in Troy, NY, was faced with a dilemma. Fifty girls from a wide spectrum of Jewish backgrounds were departing from camp inspired and recharged, each returning to her own community. What could she do to continue the inspiration for these girls throughout the year? How could the innovative methods used at the retreat reach girls in many more communities?

6200 Brisim, 1000 Bar Mitzvahs and 700 Chuppa’s

In a procession, they where lead one by one from the hotel lobby of the Sheraton Parsippany hotel in Parsippany, NJ. Surrounded by family, friends and supporters of Chabad they merged onto the grand plaza where eleven wedding canopies awaited them. In the background one could hear the traditional moving and emotional nigguin of daled bavos being sung by all those present.