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On Our Minds & Hearts

On Our Minds and Hearts

My Rebbe

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This upcoming Tuesday marks 20 years since the passing of our beloved Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn, may his merit protect us. 

As this milestone anniversary nears, books are being filled (including by Jewish literary giants Steinsaltz and Telushkin) conferences are being held, and documentaries are being released,  all which attempt to decipher and understand what made the Rebbe the Rebbe. 

The Zohar states that a tzadik's influence is greater after his passing than in his own lifetime. Today, twenty years after the Rebbe's passing,  this axiomatic statement is borne out as the Rebbe's inspiration continues to bring light to the Jewish people all over the world...be it in Bangkok or Berlin, Helsinki or Houston, Melbourne or  Mexico, Vancouver or Vietnam. Like Maimonides, he was once in a millennium scholar and leader whose influence continues to widen and reverberate.

But for me, the Rebbe is simply my Rebbe, my teacher. As I teenager, I could sense keenly his love for humanity, and his concern for every human being. I felt empowered by his deep respect for the Jewish woman and the importance of her vital role in Jewish continuity. I was awed by his selflessness, his courage in challenging the status-quo, and his strength is standing up for Jewish values. As a teenager, I connected to his faith in the youth, his calls for action, and his belief in the destiny of the Jewish people.

But as I write all of this, I recall a video of  a person's encounter with the Rebbe that I had seen a while back:

 A New York city councilman, visiting the Rebbe, was impressed that the Rebbe recalled in precise detail a conversation  that had taken place between the two of them some 19 years earlier, where the Rebbe had asked him to advocate on behalf of Jewish education. "You're amazing!" the councilman exclaimed to the Rebbe.  "to remember that; it's nineteen years ago. Nineteen years!" To which the Rebbe responded with a beaming smile: "and what will be the benefit for the community that I am amazing?" The councilman laughed, as he understood the Rebbe's point. He pledged to do more for Jewish education. 

So, as the books are written, the seminars held, the memorials celebrated, I hear the Rebbe's words in my mind: What will benefit  the Jewish community if I am amazing?

Rabbi Adin Steinsaltz says that the Rebbe did not leave a legacy, he left marching orders. Meaning, that in true fashion of what the Rebbe would have wanted, we honour this spiritual giant, not by remembering, but by doing more on behalf of the Jewish people and to benefit all humanity. 

To this end, we pledge to re-double our efforts on behalf of unaffiliated youth. We invite you to reach out to your circle of friends and make a difference in their lives. Invite the lonely to your table, share shabbat with a friend who doesn't celebrate, fill your home with Jewish books. Do a Mitzvah that you find hard. 

Let's honour the Rebbe with action. Let's honour the Rebbe by making a difference for ourselves and for those around us. 

Mothers of Royalty

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Our hearts and minds are consumed with the welfare of the  three teenage students who have been kidnapped in Israel. We witness, yet again,  the self-sacrifice of the Israeli soldiers, the determination of the Israeli government and the unity of our people in face of crisis. But above all, what touches me the most, and what has taken Israel by storm,  is the sheer faith and strength of the mothers. The mothers of the kidnapped boys.
 
Confronted as they are with a parent's worst nightmare, they could easily be forgiven if they lash out with anger and despair. Rage and grief is expected under these horrific circumstances. Yet, through their pain and sorrow, these incredible women have come forward with grace, dignity and supreme strength. Their message is one of gratitude (gratitude!)  faith and prayer. (see here)
 
Indeed, they have set the tone for  Israel entire and the Jewish people world wide.
 
The crowning strength of the Jewish people has always been its  women: the Aishet Chayil - the Yiddishe Mamma.  Our sages' axiomatic statement, that in the merit of the righteous women we were redeemed from Egypt, and that in their merit we will be redeemed again, is true today as ever. From time immemorial, it was she, the Jewish woman who has ensured Jewish continuity and faith.  Not with fanfare,  but with quiet yet determined strength. Prime Ministers, rabbis and leaders of all stripes have sought to comfort and give guidance in this crisis, but none of the above come even close to the influence and impact of the mothers of Naftali, Gilad and Eyal.  
 
The strength of the Yiddishe Mamma. 
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