Menachem Mendel Schneerson
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Rabbi Menachem Mendel
Schneerson (April 18, 1902-June 12, 1994) was the last Rebbe of the Haredi
Jewish movement of Chabad Lubavitch. He was fifth in a direct
paternal line to the third Chabad Lubavitch Rebbe Rabbi Menachem Mendel (known as the Tzemach
Tzedek), his namesake.
In 1950, upon the death of his
predecessor, father-in-law, and cousin Rabbi Joseph Isaac (Yosef Yitzchok) Schneersohn,
known as the "Previous Rebbe" or Rebbe Rayat"z (an
acronym of his name), Rabbi Menachem Mendel assumed the leadership of the Chabad
sect of Hasidic Judaism. Their last names differed: The new
Rebbe spelled his name "Schneerson", without the "h" of his
predecessors' "Schneersohn". He was to lead the movement until his
death in 1994, greatly expanding its worldwide activities and founding a
network of institutions of Jewish study and outreach.
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Biography
Early
life
Born in Nikolaiev, Ukraine, he
received mostly private tuition. He was enrolled in the secular Yekaterinoslav
University for part-time study of mathematics at the age of 16. His father
Rabbi Levi Yitzchok Schneerson, a renowned kabbalist who
served as the Chief Rabbi of Yekaterinoslav (Dnepropetrovsk) from 1907-1939, was his primary
teacher. He intensively studied Talmud and Rabbinic literature, as well as the hasidic
view of Jewish mysticism and Kabbalah. He
married Chaya Mushka Schneerson in 1929 and went to live
in Berlin, Germany, and
study engineering
and philosophy
at one of its universities. Lubavitch publications state that he
received "degrees at Heidelberg", although this is
probably anecdotal. During his time in Berlin, he forged friendships with two other
young rabbis studying in Berlin: Joseph Soloveitchik and Yitzchok
Hutner.
France
In 1933 Rabbi Schneerson
moved to France.
According to histories authorized by Lubavitch, he studied at the Sorbonne in Paris, though
official school records are ambiguous on this matter. He learned to speak French
which he put to use in establishing his movement there after the war. The
Chabad movement in France attracted many Jews who immigrated there from Algeria, Morocco, and Tunisia.
America and leadership
In 1941 Rabbi Schneerson
escaped from France and joined his father-in-law Rabbi Joseph Isaac Schneersohn in the Crown
Heights section Brooklyn, New York. He spent some time working in the Brooklyn Navy
Yard. In 1942, his
father-in-law appointed him director of the movement's central organizations,
placing him at the helm of a budding Jewish educational and hasidic outreach
empire across the United States, Canada, Israel, and North
Africa.
His father-in-law passed away in 1950. His followers
immediately began pressuring Rabbi Schneerson, then known as the Rama"sh--an
acronym of his name, to succeed his father-in-law. At first he steadfastly
refused, saying that his father-in-law "lived on". In that
"vacuum", another candidate for leadership emerged: Rabbi Shemaryahu
Gurary, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok's elder son-in-law, married to his elder daughter.
Rabbi Gurary, known as the Rasha"g, failed to capture support
among the Hassidim, who continued pressuring Rabbi Schneerson to relent and
accept the position of Rebbe. On the first anniversary of his father-in-law's
passing, he finally relented and became Rebbe.
Rabbi Gurary became a devoted
follower; however, his son Barry resented what he perceived as Rabbi
Schneerson's "usurpation" of what he thought should have been his
father's position. Various intra-family disputes arose. For example, when
invaluable books and manuscripts from the Chabad library began to go missing,
Rabbi Schneerson's wife, Chaya Mushka, suspected her nephew Barry and ordered a
surveillance camera installed, which then confirmed her suspicions. This led to
a protracted battle in Federal Court over the library's ownership. Barry Gurary
claimed that the library was a family heirloom and as the previous Rebbe's sole
grandson, he claimed ownership of it. Rabbi Schneerson countered that the
library was the collective property of the Chabad movement. Barry's mother,
Hanna, sided with him, while his father remained staunchly devoted to Rabbi
Schneerson, leading to a deep rift in the Gurary family. On the fifth day of the
Hebrew month of Tevet
, the court handed down its decision--an overwhelming victory for Rabbi
Schneerson. His followers commemorate this day each year as Didan Natzach
a kind of "V-Day".
Rabbi Schneerson undertook to
intensify the outreach program of the movement, bringing in new followers from
all walks of life, and aggresively sought the expansion of the baal
teshuva movement. Other Orthodox
Jews were bothered by the fact that Lubavitch outreach efforts extended to
them as well as to non-affiliated Jews. The Satmar sect
attacked him for not sufficiently opposing Zionism, a
philosophy considered heretical by that group. The proximity of Crown
Heights to Satmar enclaves in Williamsburg, Brooklyn, and the
"conversion" of some prominent Satmar Hasidim to Chabad caused
friction, culminating in an incident in which a group of Lubavitchers
walking through the Satmar enclave in Williamsburg on their way to visit a
synagogue to spread Rabbi Schneerson's message were set upon and beaten by a
mob. Nonetheless, Rabbi Schneerson and Rabbi Joel
Teitelbaum, the Satmar Rebbe, held each other in high esteem.
Vision
Part of his vision was the
training of thousands of young Chabad rabbis and their
wives, who were sent all over the world by him as shluchim (Hebrew:
"emissaries") to further Jewish observance.
He oversaw the building of
schools, community centers, youth camps, college campus centers (known as
"Chabad houses"), and reached out to the most powerful Jewish lay
leaders and non-Jewish government leaders wherever they found themselves. The United States Congress and President
issue annual proclamations declaring that the Rebbe's birthday, usually a day
in March or April that co-incides
with his Hebrew calendar birth-date of 11 Nisan (a Hebrew
month), be observed as Education Day in the United States.
Rabbi Schneerson instituted a system of "mitzvah
campaigns" called mivtzoim; these encouraged Jews to be keep kosher, observe Shabbat, learn
more Torah, help
in writing a Torah scroll, taught women to observe the niddah laws of
Jewish family purity (laws pertaining to menstruation
and ritual immersion afterwards in a pool of water known as a mikveh),
accepting a belief in Moshiach (the Jewish Messiah). They went out to
street-corners, and rode in "mitzva tanks", mobile outreach centers,
encouraging Jews to increase their religious observance. He also launched a
campaign to promote observance of the Noahide
Laws among gentiles.
Rabbi Schneerson's activities
spread to many surprising parts of Judaism. Since the time of the Rebbe Shalom
Dovber, Chabad had been involved with the Sephardic
world. Rabbi Schneerson was revered by Rabbi Israel Abuchatzirah (known as Babba Sali),
Rabbi Meir Abuchatzirah, Rabbi Yitzchak Kaduri and Rabbi Mordechai Eliyahu (a former Chief Rabbi of Israel). The latter two often visited
him in New
York, while the others maintained a correspondence with him. In the late
1970s, Rabbi Schneerson joined with other organizations to orchestrate an
exodus of Jews from countries such as Iran, laying the
framework for Sephardic
Hasidim. There are currently several Sephardic Chabad congregations.
Scientists who called on him,
such as Herman Baranover, professor of physics at Ben-Gurion University in Beer-Sheva,
Israel, noted that he had a keen understanding of scientific issues. Baranover
himself, a Russian-Israeli authority on solar
energy, is an active member of the Lubavitch sect. He frequently turned to
Rabbi Schneerson for advice on his scientific research. According to the
billionaire mining magnate Joseph Gutnick of Australia, it
was Rabbi Schneerson who pointed out to him the precise geological points on a
map of Australia to commence mining for gold. He was also given
guidelines in his search for diamonds. Gutnick was subsequently appointed by Rabbi
Schneerson as his main representative to the Israeli government, and was
instrumental in the election of Benjamin Netanyahu as prime minister of Israel
in 1996.
Rabbi Schneerson rarely chose to
involve himself with questions of halakha
(Jewish law). Some notable exception were with regard to the use of electrical
appliances on the Sabbath,
sailing on Israeli
boats staffed by Jews, and halakhic dilemmas created when crossing the International Date Line. Responsa
literature on the subject reflect the great deference that prominent arbiters of halakha
showed Rabbi Schneerson.
He hardly ever left Crown
Heights, except for frequent lengthy visits to his father-in-law's
gravesite, the ohel ("tent"), in Queens. Upon the
death of his wife in 1988,
he further secluded himself, first in his home on President Street and after
the traditional year of mourning, moved into his study above the central
Lubavitch synagogue at 770 Eastern Parkway which is known as "770" -
"Lubavitch World Headquarters".
It was from "770" that
he directed his emissaries' work. He would hold court around the clock
involving himself in every detail of his far-flung movements' developments.
People making appointments to see him would be summoned at all hours of the
night. He did not sleep much. The highlight of his public role would be
displayed during special celebrations called farbrengens on Sabbaths, holy
days, and special days on the Chabad calendar when he would lead the packed
hall with long talks called maamorim or sichos, and with
songs called nigunim, that would last all night. They would often be
brodacast via satellite to Lubavitch branches all over the world.
Later
life
In 1977 he suffered a
massive heart attack while celebrating the hakafot
ceremony on Shmini Atzeret. Nonetheless, he insisted on
finishing the ceremony with the customary dancing. Despite the best efforts of
his doctors to convince him to change his mind, Rabbi Schneerson refused to be
hospitalized. This necessitated building a mini-hospital in "770."
Although he did not appear in public for several weeks, he continued to deliver
talks and discourses from his study via intercom. On Rosh
Chodesh Kislev , the first day of the Hebrew month of Kislev , he left
his study for the first time in over a month to go home. His followers
celebrate this day as a great holiday each year with a feast of thanksgiving to
God for his miraculous recovery.
In 1991, he faced an
anti-Semitic riot in his neighborhood of Crown Heights which became known as
the Crown Heights Riot of 1991. The riot began
when a car accompanying Rabbi Schneerson's motorcade returning from one of his
regular cemetery visits to his father-in-law's grave accidentally struck an African
American child who subsequently died. In the rioting, a young rabbinic
student was murdered, many Lubavitchers were badly beaten, and much property
was destroyed.
In 1992 he was felled by a
serious stroke
while at the grave of his father-in-law. The stroke left him unable to speak
and paralyzed on the right side of his body. Nonetheless, he continued to
respond daily to thousands of queries and requests for blessings from around
the world. His secretaries would read the letters to him and he would indicate
his response with head and hand motions.
Despite his deteriorating health,
he once again refused to leave "770" . Several months into his
illness, a small room with tinted glass windows with an attached balcony was
built overlooking the main synagogue. This allowed him to pray with his
followers, beginning with the Rosh
Hashana services and after services, to appear before them by either having
the window opened or by being carried onto the balcony.
During these appearances his
followers would chant , what would come to be a very controversial
"mantra" among the Lubavitchers : Yechi Adonenu Moreinu
v'Rabbeinu Melech Hamoshiach l'olam voed! - "Long live our Master our
Teacher and our Rabbi King Messiah forever and ever!"
When sung before him in has last
months, he evidently vigorously encouraged the singing by swaying to and fro
and swinging his hand, as he had done at the numerous farbrengens over
the years. From this the Lubavitchers "extrapolated" that he acceded
to their wish that he be the "Messiah". But that moment never
arrived, as he died unable to verbalize and say anything to confirm his
followers' longed-for dream that he be the actual long-promised Jewish Messiah.
Sucession
The Messiah question, combined
with a Chabad tradition that the Messiah would come after the seventh Rebbe,
probably complicated his sucession. A new Rebbe of Chabad was never instated.
As for the organisation's
activities, he was succeeded by Rabbi Chaim Yehuda Krinsky as chairman of the
three principal Chabad-Lubavitch unmbrella organizations: Merkos L'Inyonei
Chinuch, Machne Israel and the Kehot Publication
Society. Rabbi Avrohom Yitzchok Shemtov succeeded him as chairman of the Central
Comittee of Agudas Chasidei Chabad, the structure overseeing the above three
primary organizations. The Rebbe had held both these chairmanships during his
lifetime as leader of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement.
Political activities
United
States
Politicians of all stripes came
to see him, regardless of their party political affiliations. Be they Democrats or Republicans, they sought his
support. Generally, Lubavitch tends to support more conservative politicians
such as those who back school prayer, are anti-abortion, pro-Israel, and are generally
supportive of Bible
values, about which Rabbi Schneerson was publicly vocal. Aspirants for the job
of mayor, governor, congressman,
senator, in
the states of New York and New Jersey
would come calling and have their pictures with the rebbe published in
newspapers
with large Jewish readerships and voters. Towards the end of his life, thousands of ordinary
people would line up to receive a dollar bill from him personally, which was to
be donated to charity, and a quick blessing from him.
Following the death of his wife
in 1988 he withdrew
from some public functions and became generally more reclusive. In 1991, he stated that:
"I have done everything I can do to bring Moshiach, now I am
handing over to you (his followers) the keys to bring Moshiach."
A final campaign was started to bring the messianic age through acts of
"goodness and kindness" and massive advertising in the mass media
such as many full-page ads in the New
York Times urging everyone to contribute toward the messiah's imminent
arrival.
Rabbi Schneerson paid close
attention to, and rejoiced in, the fall of communism in Eastern
Europe starting in 1989.
Under the Bolsheviks
his father-in-law had been imprisoned and tortured and had his massive
collection of writings confiscated, and the movement banned on pain of exile to
Siberia. Once
the Iron
Curtain fell, he wasted no time in flooding the former Soviet
Union with hundreds of new shluchim. During the Desert
Storm war against Iraq
in 1990-1991, messianic fever
ran high as Rabbi Schneerson interpreted events in the light of Torah and midrash,
declaring that: "Moshiach is already here, all we need to do is
to open our eyes to see him."(SOURCE????)
Israel
Rabbi Schneerson never visited
the State of Israel, where he had many admirers and
critics. One of Israel's presidents, Zalman
Shazar, was a religiously observant person of Lubavitch ancestry and his
visits to Schneerson were reunions of sorts. Prime
Minister Menachem Begin and later Benjamin Netanyahu also paid visits and sought
advice. In the elections that brought Yitzhak
Shamir to power, Rabbi Schneerson publicly cajoled his followers and the Orthodox
members in the Knesset
to vote against the Labor
aligment leading to articles in Time and Newsweek and many newspapers and TV
programs.
During the Six Day War
in 1967 and the Yom
Kippur War of 1973,
he called in public for the Israel Defence Forces to capture Damascus in Syria and Cairo in Egypt. He was
vehemently opposed to any withdrawals by Israel's armies from captured
territories, and was against any concessions to the Palestinians.
He lobbied Israeli politicians to legislate on Who is a Jew to declare that "only one who is
born of a Jewish mother or converted according to halakha (Jewish biblical
religious law) is Jewish". This caused a furor in the United States where
Jewish philanthropies cut off their financial support of Lubavitch since most
of their members were connected with Reform and Conservative Judaism .
Controversial legacy
Meshichist
representation
Hasidism has been charged by
other Orthodox Jews with creating a cult of personality since its inception. These
charges resurfaced with greater intensity as Rabbi Schneerson's influence
increased. His followers had an extremely high level of devotion to him; they
believed that he was infallible, and many proclaimed that he was the messiah. They
believed implicitly in his vision, that he had supernatural powers of insight,
"prophecy", and powers to change the world. Behind closed doors many
other Orthodox Jews began to call Lubavitch a cult.
Rabbi Schneerson's death was a
major event in Orthodox Judaism. Many of Chabad's opponents were unsure
of what would become of the movement without its head. Some Chabad Hasidim were
thrown into shock and disbelief. Others were disillusioned. Yet others
proclaimed that it barely mattered. Those that were accustomed to
"believing" that he was the "Messiah", postulated that
another "step" in the drama of Messianic redemption had been played
out, and that their leader would soon return to redeem the world.
During the funeral procession
many Chabad Hasidim cried, but some danced in joy at what they believed was the
signal of the "messianic age", which they stated would certainly
appear within a "few hours", if not a "few days". Hours and
days passed and nothing happened. Many of his followers are still waiting for
him to appear. As the number of Chabad Hasidim is difficult to estimate, and no
formal surveys have ever been conducted, it is virtually impossible to guess
how people reacted in the long run.
Some Hasidim openly declared that
Rabbi Schneerson had not, in fact, "died" at all; some saying that he
had "shed his mortal body" or that he was "in hiding",
waiting for an appropriate time to "reveal himself", in keeping with
some of Schneerson's interpretations of Kabbalah (Jewish mysticism) that he
articulated after the passing of Rabbi Joseph Isaac Schneersohn.
This has caused a small part of
the Jewish community to renew their denouncements of Chabad as being outside
the pale of Judaism
altogether. A few Orthodox rabbis, especially those associated with Lithuanian
Judaism teach that Chabad is effectively becoming a new "religion",
similar in its development to Christianity.
The Lubavitch however, continue to lead a very strict Orthodox life-styles
adhering to their strict application of the Shulkhan
Arukh (code of law) and halakha. Opposition has not stymied the
Lubavitchers; it has hardened their resolve to fulfil their rebbe's mission of
ushering in the "messianic age".
The controversy is aggravated by
the fact that the charges come from a long standing opposition to Chabad and
Hasidism. During his lifetime, his main critic in the Orthodox
"Lithuanian" yeshiva haredi world in Israel, was their own paramount
leader, Rabbi Elazar Shach. He was Rabbi Schneerson's fiercest
critic, continuously denounced Lubavitch as "heretics" and their
leader as misguided or worse. However other Hasidic heads , the prominent
hasidic rebbes in Israel such as those of Ger, Vizhnitz, Belz, never said
anything in public against Rabbi Schneerson, viewing him as part of the world
of chasidus - hasidism.
Another major proponent of the
opposition to Chabad is Professor David Berger, a Modern Orthodox Rabbi and professor of
history at the City College of New York . Berger gained
prominence for his fierce opposition to Chabad, advocating ostracism of
prominent Rabbis affiliated with the movement and boycotts. He has been behind
efforts to bring about condemnations, and has written books on the subject.
Berger specialized in earlier false messsianic movements in Judaism, has
written essays and a book proporting to show that many followers of the late Lubavitch
Rebbe revere him not just as Messiah, but literally as "God" .
However Professor Berger's book has met with rebuttals and criticism from
within and outside Chabad (see e.g. Dalfin).
There is also a continuing battle
within Chabad Lubavitch over the legacy of Rabbi Schneerson. As few are willing
to discuss their private views, there is little that can be truly known about
what is mainstream in Chabad views, but such a high profile movement can be
studied given its gigantic output of religious and political materials.
His Weltanschauung
A controversial belief among
Hasidim first appeared in the Tanya mentioning that every Jew is endowed with a "spark
of holiness" that is from the Creator. Based on the teachings of Rabbi Isaac Luria,
the Baal
Shem Tov and the Ohr ha-Chaim, Rabbi Shneur
Zalman taught in the name of the Zohar that "He
who breathed life into man, breathed from Himself." He taught that the
"Holy One Blessed Be He, Torah, and the people of Israel are one."
This would explain Rabbi Schneerson's belief in reaching out to every Jew no
matter where.
Hasidism taught that a person
became a vehicle (merkava in Hebrew) for the deity when he performed a
mitzvah. The Tsadik,
being the "righteous" Leader, or "Rebbe", was a human who
performed only that which was commanded, was constantly such a vehicle.
The views of Rabbi Schneur
Zalman were adopted and expounded upon by various leaders of Hasidism
including Rabbi Elimelekh of Lizhensk. Rabbi Schneerson, in
the year after the passing of his father-in-law, termed these beliefs into the
concept of atzmut v'mahut melubash b'guf - "essence and Being
constricted into a body". Quoting his late father-in-law, Rabbi Schneerson
taught that a Rebbe is literally Atzmus unget'n in a guf (Yiddish:)
"the essence, of God, clothed/incarnated in a human body" (Likutei
Sichos II:510-511). While the term received little attention at the time,
it was later used to shock those who have no exposure to these sources.
His writings and collected
discourses have been published in many languages.
Time
Line
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Preceded by: |
No successor |
External
links
Writings available online:
- Chabad.org (http://www.chabad.org/)
- Sichos B'Laha"k (http://www.lahak.org/)
- Otzar 770 (http://www.otzar770.com/)
- Sichos in English (http://www.sichosinenglish.org/)
Chabad sites (see also Chabad
Lubavitch):
- Chabad Lubavitch Global Network (http://www.chabad.org/centers)
- Site for Rebbe Schneerson (http://www.therebbe.org/)
- Hundreds of videos of Rebbe Schneerson
(http://www.chabad.org/multimedia/)
- Rebbe's Resting Place
(http://www.chabad.org/generic.asp?AID=36247)
- A Biography of
Ideas (http://www.chabad.org/therebbe/home.asp?AID=61863)
Messianic Chabad sites
- Chabad.net (http://www.chabad.net)
- Lubavitch networks (http://www.Lubavitchnetworks.org)
Historical sites:
- Proclamation
of Education and Sharing Day 2002 by President George W.Bush also
honoring the 100th birthdate of Rabbi Schneerson (http://www.whitehouse.gov/news/releases/2002/03/20020325-4.html)
- Numerous
proclamations by President Reagan citing work of Rabbi Schneerson and
promotion of the Seven Noahide Laws (http://www.chabad.org/library/article.asp?AID=142535/)
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