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Chabad
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Chabad, also known as Lubavitch, Habad and Chabad-Lubavitch[2] (US: /xəˈbɑːd luˈbɑːvɪtʃ/; Hebrew: חב״ד לובביץּ׳; Yiddish: חב״ד ליובאוויטש), is a dynasty in Hasidic Judaism. Belonging to the Haredi (ultra-Orthodox) branch of Orthodox Judaism, it is one of the world's best-known Hasidic movements,[3] as well as one of the largest Jewish religious organizations. Unlike most Haredi groups, which are self-segregating, Chabad mainly operates in the wider world and caters to nonobservant Jews.
Founded in 1775[4] by Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi (1745–1812) in the city of Liozno in the Russian Empire, the name "Chabad" (חב״ד) is an acronym formed from the three Hebrew words—Chokmah, Binah, Da'at—for the first three sefirot of the kabbalistic Tree of Life after Keter: חכמה, בינה, דעת, "Wisdom, Understanding, and Knowledge"—which represent the intellectual and kabbalistic underpinnings of the movement.[5][6] The name Lubavitch derives from the town in which the now-dominant line of leaders resided from 1813 to 1915.[7][8] Other, non-Lubavitch scions of Chabad either disappeared or merged into the Lubavitch line. In the 1930s, the sixth Rebbe of Chabad, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, moved the center of the Chabad movement from Russia to Poland. After the outbreak of World War II, he moved the center of the movement to Brooklyn, New York, in the United States, where the Rebbe lived at 770 Eastern Parkway until the end of his life.
Between 1951 and 1992, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson transformed the movement into one of the most widespread Jewish movements in the world. Under his leadership, Chabad established a large network of institutions that seek to satisfy the religious, social and humanitarian needs of Jews across the world.[9] Chabad institutions provide outreach to unaffiliated Jews and humanitarian aid, as well as religious, cultural and educational activities. During his life and after his death, Schneerson has been believed by some of his followers to be the Messiah, with his own position on the matter debated among scholars. Messianic ideology in Chabad sparked controversy in various Jewish communities and it is still an unresolved matter. Following his death, no successor was appointed as a new central leader. The Rebbe was also known to have never visited Israel, for reasons which remain disputed among the Chabad community.
The global population of Chabad has been estimated to be 90,000–95,000 adherents as of 2018, accounting for 13% of the global Hasidic population.[1] However, up to one million Jews are estimated to attend Chabad services at least once a year.[10][11] In a 2020 study, the Pew Research Center found that 16% of American Jews participated in Chabad services or activities at least semi-regularly.[12]
History
[edit]The Chabad movement was established after the First Partition of Poland in the town of Liozno, Pskov Governorate, Russian Empire (now Liozna, Belarus), in 1775, by Shneur Zalman,[4] a student of Dov Ber of Mezeritch, the successor to Hasidism's founder, Rabbi Israel Baal Shem Tov. Rabbi Dovber Shneuri, the Second Rebbe, moved the movement to Lyubavichi (Yiddish: ליובאַװיטש, Lyubavitsh), in current-day Russia, in 1813.[7]
The movement was centered in Lyubavichi for a century until the fifth Rebbe, Rabbi Shalom Dovber left the village in 1915[8] and moved to the city of Rostov-on-Don. During the interwar period, following Bolshevik persecution, the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, under the Sixth Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak, was centered in Riga and then in Warsaw. The outbreak of World War II led the Sixth Rebbe to move to the United States. Since 1940,[4] the movement's center has been in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn.[13][14]


While the movement spawned a number of offshoot groups throughout its history, the Chabad-Lubavitch branch is the only one still active, making it the movement's main surviving line.[15] Historian Jonathan Sarna has characterized Chabad as having enjoyed the fastest rate of growth of any Jewish religious movement in the period 1946–2015.[16]
In the early 1900s, Chabad-Lubavitch legally incorporated itself under Agudas Chasidei Chabad ("Association of Chabad Hasidim").[citation needed]
In the 1980s, tensions arose between Chabad and Satmar Chasidim as a result of several assaults on Chabad Hasidim by Satmar Hasidim.[17][18][19]
Oppression and resurgence in Russia
[edit]The Chabad movement was subjected to governmental oppression in Russia. The Russian government, first under the Czar, later under the Bolsheviks, imprisoned all but one of the Chabad rebbes.[20][21] The Bolsheviks also imprisoned, exiled and executed a number of Chabad Hasidim.[22][23][24] During the Second World War, many Chabad Hasidim evacuated to the Uzbek cities of Samarkand and Tashkent where they established small centers of Hasidic life, while at the same time seeking ways to emigrate from Soviet Russia due to the government's suppression of religious life.[25] The reach of Chabad in Central Asia also included earlier efforts that took place in the 1920s.[26] Following the war, and well after the center of the Chabad movement moved to the United States, the movement remained active in Soviet Russia, aiding the local Jews known as Refuseniks who sought to learn more about Judaism.[27] And throughout the Soviet era, the Chabad movement maintained a secret network across the USSR.[28] Since the dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991, state persecution of Chabad ceased. The Chief Rabbi of Russia, Berel Lazar, a Chabad emissary, maintains warm relations with Russian President Vladimir Putin.[29] Lazar also received the Order of Friendship and Order "For Merit to the Fatherland" medals from him.[30]
Leadership
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The Chabad movement has been led by a succession of Hasidic rebbes. The main branch of the movement, Chabad-Lubavitch, has had seven rebbes:
- Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi (1745–1812), founded the Chabad movement in the town of Liozna. The Chabad movement began as a separate school of thought within the Hasidic movement, focusing of the spread of Hasidic mystical teachings using logical reasoning (creating a kind of Jewish "rational-mysticism").[31] Shneur Zalman's main work is the Tanya (or Sefer Shel Beinonim, "Book of the Average Man"). The Tanya is the central book of Chabad thought and is studied daily by followers of the Chabad movement. Shneur Zalman's other works include a collection of writings on Hasidic thought, and the Shulchan Aruch HaRav, a revised version of the code of Halakha, both of which are studied regularly by followers of Chabad. Shneur Zalman's successors went by last names such as "Schneuri" and "Schneersohn" (later "Schneerson"), signifying their descent from the movement's founder. He is commonly referred to as the "Old Rebbe" (Yiddish: אַלטער רבי, romanized: Alter Rebbe or Hebrew: אדמו״ר הזקן, romanized: Admur Hazoken).[32][33]
- Rabbi Dovber Schneuri (1773–1827), son of Rabbi Shneur Zalman, led the Chabad movement in the town of Lyubavichi (Lubavitch). His leadership was initially disputed by Rabbi Aaron Halevi of Stroselye, however, Rabbi Dovber was generally recognized as his father's rightful successor, and the movement's leader. Rabbi Dovber published a number of his writings on Hasidic thought, greatly expanding his father's work. He also published some of his father's writings. Many of Rabbi Dovber's works have been subsequently republished by the Chabad movement. He is commonly referred to as the Mitteler Rebbe (Yiddish: מיטעלער רבי 'Middle Rabbi', Hebrew: אדמו״ר האמצעי, romanized: Admur Ha'emtzoei).[34][35]
- Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn (1789–1866), a grandson of Rabbi Shneur Zalman and son-in-law of Rabbi Dovber. Following his attempt to persuade the Chabad movement to accept his brother-in-law or uncle as rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel assumed the title of rebbe of Chabad, also leading the movement from the town of Lyubavichi (Lubavitch). He published a number of his works on both Hasidic thought and Jewish law. Rabbi Menachem Mendel also published some of the works of his grandfather, Rabbi Shneur Zalman. He is commonly referred to as the Tzemach Tzedek after the title of his responsa.[36]
- Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn (1834–1882), was the seventh and youngest son of Rabbi Menachem Mendel. He assumed the title of rebbe in town of Lyubavichi (Lubavitch), while several of his brothers assumed the title of rebbe in other towns, forming Chabad groups of their own which existed for several decades. Years after his death, his teachings were published by the Chabad movement. He is commonly referred to as the Maharash, an acronym for Moreinu HaRav Shmuel ('our teacher, Rabbi Shmuel').[37][38]
- Rabbi Shalom Dovber Schneersohn (1860–1920), Shmuel's second son, succeeded his father as rebbe. Rabbi Shalom Dovber waited some time before officially accepting the title of rebbe, as not to offend his elder brother, Zalman Aaron. He established a yeshiva called Tomchei Temimim. During World War I, he moved to Rostov-on-Don. Many of his writings were published after his death, and are studied regularly in Chabad yeshivas. He is commonly referred to as the Rashab, an acronym for Rabbi Shalom Ber.[39]
- Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn (1880–1950), the only son of Sholom Dovber, succeeded his father as rebbe of Chabad. Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak was exiled from Russia, following an attempt by the Bolshevik government to have him executed.[40] He led the movement from Warsaw, Poland, until the start of World War II. After fleeing the Nazis, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak lived in Brooklyn, New York until his death. He established much of Chabad's current organizational structure, founding several of its central organizations as well as other Chabad institutions, both local and international. He published a number of his writings, as well as the works of his predecessors. He is commonly referred to as the Rayatz or the Frierdiker Rebbe ('Previous Rebbe').
- Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902–1994),[a] son-in-law of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak, and a great-grandson of the third Rebbe of Lubavitch, assumed the title of rebbe one year after his father-in-law's death. Rabbi Menachem Mendel greatly expanded Chabad's global network, establishing hundreds of new Chabad centers across the globe. He published many of his own works as well as the works of his predecessors. His teachings are studied regularly by followers of Chabad. He is commonly referred to as "the Lubavitcher Rebbe", or simply "the Rebbe". Even after his death, many continue to revere him as the leader of the Chabad movement.[34]
Influence
[edit]Chabad's influence among world Jewry has been far-reaching since World War II. Chabad pioneered the post-World War II Jewish outreach movement, which spread Judaism to many assimilated Jews worldwide, leading to a substantial number of baalei teshuva ("returnees" to Judaism). The very first Yeshiva/Rabbinical College for such baalei teshuva, Hadar Hatorah, was established by the Lubavitcher rebbe. It is reported that up to a million Jews attend Chabad services at least once a year.[11][41]
According to journalist Steven I. Weiss, Chabad's ideology has dramatically influenced non-Hasidic Jews' outreach practices.[42] Because of its outreach to all Jews, including those Jews who are quite alienated from religious Jewish traditions, Chabad has been described as the one Orthodox group which evokes great affection from large segments of American Jewry.[43]
Philosophy
[edit]Chabad Hasidic philosophy focuses on religious and spiritual concepts such as God, the soul, and the meaning of the Jewish commandments. Classical Judaic writings and Jewish mysticism, especially the Zohar and the Kabbalah of Rabbi Isaac Luria, are frequently cited in Chabad works. These texts are used both as sources of Chabad teachings and as material requiring interpretation by Chabad authors. Many of these teachings discuss what is commonly referred to as bringing "heaven down to earth", i.e. making the Earth a dwelling place for God. Chabad philosophy is rooted in the teachings of Rabbis Yisroel ben Eliezer, (the Baal Shem Tov, founder of Hasidism) and Dovber ben Avraham, the "Maggid of Mezritch" (Rabbi Yisroel's successor).[citation needed]
Rabbi Shneur Zalman's teachings, particularly in the Tanya, formed the basis of Chabad philosophy, as expanded by succeeding generations. Many Chabad activities today are understood as applications of Shneur Zalman's teachings.[citation needed]
Tanya
[edit]The Tanya (תניא) is a book by Rabbi Shneur Zalman first published in 1797. It is the first schematic treatment of Hasidic moral philosophy and its metaphysical foundations.[32]
According to the Tanya, the intellect consists of three interconnected processes: Chochma (wisdom), Bina (understanding), and Da'at (knowledge). While other branches of Hasidism primarily focused on the idea that "God desires the heart," Shneur Zalman argued that God also desires the mind, and he also argued that the mind is the "gateway" to the heart. With the Chabad philosophy, he elevated the mind above the heart, arguing that "understanding is the mother of fear and love for God".[44]
The Tanya has five sections. The original name of the first section is Sefer Shel Beinonim, the "Book of the Intermediates". It is also known as Likutei Amarim ("Collected Sayings"). Sefer Shel Beinonim analyzes the inner struggle of the individual and the path to resolution. Citing the biblical verse "the matter is very near to you, in your mouth, your heart, to do",[45] the philosophy is based on the notion that the human is not inherently evil; rather, every individual has an inner conflict that is characterized by two different inclinations, the good and the bad.[46]
Chabad often contrasted itself with what is termed the Chagat schools of Hasidism.[b] While all schools of Hasidism put a central focus on the emotions, Chagat saw emotions as a reaction to physical stimuli, such as dancing, singing, or beauty. Shneur Zalman, on the other hand, taught that the emotions must be led by the mind, and thus the focus of Chabad thought was to be Torah study and prayer rather than esotericism and song.[32] As a Talmudist, Shneur Zalman endeavored to place Kabbalah and Hasidism on a rational basis. In Tanya, he defines his approach as moach shalit al halev (Hebrew: מוח שליט על הלב, "the brain ruling the heart").[47]
Community
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An adherent of Chabad is called a Chabad Chasid (or Hasid) (Hebrew: חסיד חב"ד), a Lubavitcher (Yiddish: ליובאַוויטשער), a Chabadnik (Hebrew: חבדניק), or a Chabadsker (Yiddish: חבדסקער).[48] Chabad's adherents include both Hasidic followers, as well as non-Hasidim, who have joined Chabad synagogues and other Chabad-run institutions.[49]
Although the Chabad movement was founded and originally based in Eastern Europe, various Chabad communities span the globe, including Crown Heights, Brooklyn, and Kfar Chabad, Israel.[50][51] The movement has attracted a significant number of Sephardic adherents in the past several decades,[52] and some Chabad communities include both Ashkenazi and Sephardic Jews. For example, in Montreal, close to 25% of Chabad households include a Sephardi parent.[53][54]
According to sociologists studying contemporary Jewry, the Chabad movement fits into neither the standard category of Haredi nor that of modern Orthodox among Orthodox Jews. This is due in part to the existence of the number of Chabad supporters and affiliates who are not Orthodox (dubbed by some scholars as "non-Orthodox Hasidim"), the general lack of official recognition of political and religious distinctions within Judaism, and the open relationship with non-Orthodox Jews represented by the activism of Chabad emissaries.[49][55]
Population
[edit]In 2018, Marcin Wodziński conducted the first global estimate of worldwide Hasidism in the Historical Atlas of Hasidism. Using Chabad community directories, Wodziński estimated that Chabad included 16,000–17,000 households, or 90,000–95,000 individuals, representing 13% of the total Hasidic population and ranking Chabad as the second-largest Hasidic community behind the Satmar community.[1]
United States
[edit]
Estimates for Chabad and other Hasidic groups are often based on extrapolation from the limited information available in US census data for some of the areas where Hasidim live. A 2006 estimate was drawn from a study on the Montreal Chabad community (determining average household size), in conjunction with language and other select indicators from US census data, it is estimated that Chabad in the United States includes approximately 4,000 households, which contains between 22,000 and 25,000 people. In terms of Chabad's relation to other Hasidic groups, within the New York metropolitan area, Chabad in the New York area accounts for around 15% of the total New York Hasidic population. Chabad is estimated to have an annual growth of 3.6%:[56]
- Crown Heights – The Crown Heights Chabad community's estimated size is 12,000 to 16,000.[57] It was estimated that between 25% and 35% of Chabad Hasidim in Crown Heights speak Yiddish. This figure is significantly lower than other Hasidic groups and may be attributed to the addition of previously non-Hasidic Jews to the community. It was also estimated that over 20% of Chabad Hasidim in Crown Heights speak Hebrew or Russian.[56] The Crown Heights Chabad community has its own Beis Din (rabbinical court) and Crown Heights Jewish Community Council (CHJCC).
- Chabad hipsters – Beginning from the late 2000s through the 2010s, a minor trend of cross acculturation of Chabad Hasidim and contemporary hipster subculture appeared within the New York City Jewish community. According to The Jewish Daily Forward, a small number of members of the Chabad Hasidic community, mostly residing in Crown Heights, Brooklyn, appear to now have adopted various cultural affinities of the local hipster subculture. These members are referred to as Chabad hipsters or Hipster Hasidim.[58][59]
Israel
[edit]- Kfar Chabad – Kfar Chabad's population was placed at 6,489 in 2024; all of the residents of the town are believed to be Chabad adherents, with this number being based on figures published by the Israeli Census Bureau.[60] Other estimates place the community population at around 7,000.[57]
- Safed – The Chabad community in Safad (Tzfat) originated during the wave of Eastern European immigration to Palestine from 1777–1840. The Chabad community established synagogues and institutions in Safad. The early settlement declined by the 20th century but it was renewed following an initiative by the seventh rebbe in the early 1970s, which reestablished the Chabad community in the city.[61] Rabbi Yeshaya HaLevi Horowitz (1883–1978), a Safad-born direct descendant of Rabbi Yeshaya Horowitz, author of the Shnei Luchot HaBrit, served as the rabbi of the Chabad community in Safad from 1908 until his immigration to the U.S. during World War I.[62] Members of the Chabad community run a number of outreach efforts during the Jewish holidays. Activities include blowing the shofar for the elderly on Rosh Hashana, reading the Megilla for hospital patients on Purim and setting up a Sukka on the town's main street during the Sukkot holiday.[61]
- Nachlat Har Chabad in Kiryat Malakhi is home to 2800 residents, with institutions including a yeshiva and a girls' school.
France
[edit]The Chabad community in France is estimated to be between 10,000 and 15,000. The majority of the Chabad community in France are the descendants of immigrants from North Africa (specifically Algeria, Morocco and Tunisia) during the 1960s.[57][63]
Canada
[edit]- Montreal – The estimated size of the Chabad community of Greater Montreal is 1,590. The estimate is taken from a 2003 community study.[64][65] The Chabad community in Montreal originated sometime before 1931. While early works on Canadian Jewry make little or no mention of early Hasidic life in Canada, later researchers have documented Chabad's accounts in Canada starting from the 1900s and 1910s. Steven Lapidus notes that there is mention of two Chabad congregations in a 1915 article in the Canadian Jewish Chronicle listing the delegates of the first Canadian Jewish Conference. One congregation is listed as Chabad of Toronto, and the other is simply listed as "Libavitzer Congregation". The sociologist William Shaffir has noted that some Chabad Hasidim and sympathizers did reside in Montreal before 1941 but does not elaborate further. Steven Lapidus notes that in a 1931 obituary published in Keneder Odler, a Canadian Yiddish newspaper, the deceased Rabbi Menashe Lavut is credited as the founder of Anshei Chabad in Montreal and the Nusach Ari synagogue. Thus the Chabad presence in Montreal predates 1931.[66]
United Arab Emirates
[edit]- Dubai – The Jewish Community Center of UAE has a synagogue and a Talmud Torah. 1,000 kosher chickens per week are provided to the community by local kosher shechita. The community is headed by Rabbi Levi Duchman.[67][68][69]

Customs and holidays
[edit]Customs
[edit]Chabad adherents follow Chabad traditions and prayer services based on Lurianic Kabbalah.[70] General Chabad customs, called minhagim (or minhagei Chabad), distinguish the movement from other Hasidic groups. Some of the main Chabad customs are minor practices performed on traditional Jewish holidays:
- Passover – It is customary in Chabad communities, on Passover, to limit contact of matzah (an unleavened bread eaten on Passover) with water. This custom is called gebrokts (Yiddish: געבראָכטס, lit. 'broken'). However, on the last day of Passover, it is customary to intentionally have matzah come in contact with water.[71]
- Chanukah – It is the custom of Chabad Hasidim to place the Chanukah menorah against the room's doorpost (and not on the windowsill).[72][73][74]
- Prayer – The founder of Chabad wrote a very specific liturgy for the daily and festival prayers based on the teachings of the Kabbalists, primarily the Arizal.
- The founder of Chabad also instituted various other halachic rulings, including the use of stainless steel knives for the slaughter of animals before human consumption, which are now universally accepted in all sects of Judaism.
Holidays
[edit]There are a number of days marked by the Chabad movement as special days. Major holidays include the dates of the release of the leaders of the movement, the rebbes of Chabad, from prison, others corresponded to the leaders' birthdays, anniversaries of death, and other life events.
The days marking the leaders' release, are celebrated by the Chabad movement as "Days of Liberation" (Hebrew: יום גאולה (Yom Geulah)). The most noted day is Yud Tes Kislev—the liberation of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of the Chabad movement. The day is also called the "New Year of Hasidism".[72]
The birthdays of several of the movement's leaders are celebrated each year including Chai Elul, the birthday of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, the founder of the Chabad movement,[75][76] and Yud Aleph Nissan, the birthday of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh rebbe of Chabad.[77]
The anniversaries of death, or yartzeit, of several of the movement's leaders are celebrated each year, include Yud Shvat, the yartzeit of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, the sixth rebbe of Chabad,[78] Gimmel Tammuz, the yartzeit of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh rebbe of Chabad,[78][79] and Chof Beis Shvat, the yartzeit of Chaya Mushka Schneerson, the wife of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson.[80]
Organizations
[edit]
Chabad's central organization representing the movement at large, Agudas Chasidei Chabad, is headed by Rabbi Abraham Shemtov. The educational, outreach and social services arms, Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch and Machneh Israel are headed by Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky, as well as the Chabad-Lubavitch publishing house, Kehot Publication Society.
Local Chabad centers and institutions are usually incorporated as separate legal entities.[81]
Institutions
[edit]As of 2020 there were over 3,500 Chabad centers in 100 countries.[82][83] The Chabad movement's online directory lists around 1,350 Chabad institutions. This number includes schools and other Chabad-affiliated establishments. The number of Chabad centers vary per country; the majority are in the United States and Israel. There are over 100 countries with a Chabad presence.
In total, according to its directory, Chabad maintains a presence in 950 cities around the world: 178 in Europe, 14 in Africa, 200 in Israel, 400 in North America, 38 in South America, and about 70 in Asia (excluding Israel, including Russia).[84]
By geographic region
[edit]Chabad presence varies from region to region. The continent with the highest concentration of Chabad centers is North America. The continent with the fewest centers is Africa.[85][86]

| Geographic location | Chabad institutions |
|---|---|
| North America | 2,894 |
| Europe | 1,133 |
| Asia | 615 |
| South America | 208 |
| Oceania | 67 |
| Africa | 55 |
| Total | 4,972 |
Chabad house
[edit]A Chabad house is a form of Jewish community center, primarily serving both educational and observance purposes.[87][failed verification] Often, until the community can support its own center, the Chabad house is located in the shaliach's home, with the living room being used as the "synagogue". Effort is made to provide an atmosphere in which the nonobservant will not feel intimidated by any perceived contrast between their lack of knowledge of Jewish practice and the advanced knowledge of some of the people they meet there.[88] The term "Chabad House" originated with the creation of the first such outreach center on the campus of UCLA by Rabbi Shlomo Cunin.[89] A key to the Chabad house was given to the Rebbe and he asked if that meant that the new house was his home. He was told yes and he replied, "My hand will be on the door of this house to keep it open twenty-four hours a day for young and old, men and women alike."[90]
Followers of Chabad can be seen attending to tefillin booths at the Western Wall and Ben Gurion International Airport as well as other public places and distributing Shabbat candles on Fridays. Chabad rabbis and their families are sent to various major cities around the globe, to teach college students, build day schools, and create youth camps. Many of these efforts are geared towards secular or less religious Jews. Additionally, unmarried rabbinical students spend weeks during the summer in locations that do not yet have a permanent Chabad presence, making housecalls, putting up mezuzot and teaching about Judaism. This is known as Merkos Shlichus.
Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson also initiated a Jewish children's movement, called Tzivos Hashem (lit. "Army [of] God"), for under bar/bat mitzvah-age children, to inspire them to increase in study of Torah and observance of mitzvot.
Rabbi Schneerson also encouraged the use of modern technology in outreach efforts such as Mitzva tanks, which are mobile homes that travel a city or country.[91] The Chabad website, chabad.org, a pioneer of Jewish religious outreach on the Internet, was started by Rabbi Yosef Y. Kazen and developed by Rabbi D. Zirkind. In 2023, it was reportedly the largest faith-based website, with 52 million unique visitors and 102,129 content pages covering all facets of Judaism.[92]
In June 1994, Rabbi Schneerson died with no successor. Since then, over two thousand couples have taken up communal leadership roles in outreach, bringing the estimated total number of "Shluchim" to over five thousand worldwide.[93][94]
In the 2008 Mumbai attacks, the local Chabad house was targeted.[95][96] The local Chabad emissaries, Rabbi Gavriel Holtzberg and his wife Rivka, and four other Jews were tortured and murdered by Islamic terrorists.[97] Chabad received condolences from around the world.[98][99]
Fundraising
[edit]Funds for activities of a Chabad center rely entirely on the local community. Chabad centers do not receive funding from Lubavitch headquarters. For the day-to-day operations, local emissaries do all the fundraising by themselves.
Chabad emissaries often solicit the support of local Jews.[100] Funds are used toward purchasing or renovating Chabad centers, synagogues and mikvahs.[101]
Activities
[edit]The Chabad movement has been involved in numerous activities in contemporary Jewish life. These activities include providing Jewish education to different age groups, outreach to non-affiliated Jews, publishing Jewish literature, and summer camps for children, among other activities.
Education
[edit]Chabad runs a number of educational institutions. Most are Jewish day schools; others offer secondary and adult education:
- The Chabad operates more than 1,000 schools, preschools and other educational institutions around the globe.[92]
- Day schools – In the United States, there are close to 300 day schools and supplementary schools run by Chabad.[102][103] The report findings of studies on Jewish day schools and supplementary Jewish education in the United States show that the student body currently enrolled in some 295 Chabad schools exceeds 20,750, although this figure includes Chabad Hasidic children as well as non-Chabad children.[103][104]
- Secondary schools – Chabad runs multiple secondary education institutions, most notable are Tomchei Tmimim for young men, and Bais Rivka for young women.
- Adult education – Chabad runs adult education programs including those organized by the Rohr Jewish Learning Institute[105][106] and the Jewish Learning Network.
Outreach activities
[edit]
Many of the movement's activities emphasize outreach activities. This is due to Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson encouraging his followers to reach out to other Jews.[107] Chabad outreach includes activities promoting the practice of Jewish commandments (Mitzvah campaigns), as well as other forms of Jewish outreach. Much of Chabad's outreach is performed by Chabad emissaries (see Shaliach (Chabad)). Most of the communities that Chabad emissaries reach out to are other Jewish communities, such as Reform Jews.[108]
Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, 6th leader of the Chabad-Lubavitch branch of Hasidic Judaism, and then his successor, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson were responsible for focusing Chabad's activities on outreach. Rabbi Schneerson was a pioneer in the field of Orthodox Judaism outreach (Kiruv).
Each sent out large numbers of rabbinic emissaries, known as "Shluchim", to settle in places across the world for outreach purposes. The centers that these Shluchim established were termed "Chabad houses".
Chabad has been active in reaching out to Jews through its synagogues, and various forms of more direct outreach efforts. The organization has been recognized as one of the leaders in using free holiday services to reach out across denominations.[109]
Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, had a core of dedicated Hasidim who maintained underground yeshivos and mikvehs, and provided shechitah and ritual circumcision services in the Soviet Union.
Mitzvah campaigns
[edit]The Rebbes of Chabad have issued the call to all Jews to attract non-observant Jews to adopt Orthodox Jewish observance, teaching that this activity is part of the process of bringing the Messiah. Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson issued a call to every Jew: "Even if you are not fully committed to a Torah life, do something. Begin with a mitzvah—any mitzvah—its value will not be diminished by the fact that there are others that you are not prepared to do".[110]
Schneerson also suggested ten specific mitzvot that he believed were ideally suited for the emissaries to introduce to non-observant Jews. These were called mivtzoim—meaning "campaigns" or "endeavors". These were lighting candles before Shabbat and the Jewish holidays by Jewish women, putting on tefillin, affixing a mezuzah, regular Torah study, giving tzedakah, purchasing Jewish books, observing kashrut (kosher), kindness to others, Jewish religious education, and observing the family purity laws.[citation needed]
In addition, Schneerson emphasized spreading awareness of preparing for and the coming of the moshiach, consistent with his philosophy. He wrote on the responsibility to reach out to teach every fellow Jew with love, and implored that all Jews believe in the imminent coming of the moshiach as explained by Maimonides. He argued that redemption was predicated on Jews doing good deeds, and that gentiles should be educated about the Noahide Laws.
Schneerson was emphatic about the need to encourage and provide strong education for every child, Jew and non-Jew alike. In honor of Schneerson's efforts in education the United States Congress has made Education and Sharing Day on the Rebbe's Hebrew birthday (11 Nissan).
Shluchim (Emissaries)
[edit]In 1950, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson urged Chabad to begin shlichus ("serving as an emissary [performing outreach]"). Since then, Chabad shluchim ("emissaries", sing. shliach) have moved all over the world to encourage non-observant Jews to adopt Jewish observance. They assist Jews with all their religious needs, as well as with physical assistance and spiritual guidance and teaching. The stated goal is to encourage Jews to learn more about their Jewish heritage and to practice Judaism.[111]
Thousands of rabbis, educators, ritual slaughterers, and ritual circumcisers have been trained and ordained to serve as shluchim. Typically, a young Lubavitch rabbi and his wife, in their early twenties, with one or two children, will move to a new location, and as they settle in will raise a large family who, as a family unit, will aim to fulfill their mandate of bringing Jewish people closer to Orthodox Judaism and encouraging gentiles to adhere to the Seven Laws of Noah.[111]
Shluchim operate Chabad Houses, Jewish day schools, and Jewish summer camps. As of 2021, there are over 6,500 Chabad shluchim families worldwide, operating over 3,500 institutions in over 110 countries.[112][113] Chabad runs the largest network of synagogues of any Jewish movement as of 2023.[114]
Mitzvah tank
[edit]
A mitzvah tank is a vehicle which is used as a portable "educational and outreach center" and a "mini-synagogue" (or a "minagogue") by Chabad members who are involved in outreach. Mitzvah tanks are commonly used for advancing the mitzvah campaigns. Mitzvah tanks have been commonplace on the streets of New York City since 1974.[115] Today, they are used all over the globe in countries where Chabad is active.
Campus outreach
[edit]In recent years, Chabad has greatly expanded its outreach on university and college campuses. The Chabad on Campus is active on dozens of campuses outside of the United States, some of which include Canada, Israel, UK, Austria, Germany, France, Holland, Hungary, Italy, Russia, Argentina, China and Australia.[92] Chabad Student Centers are active on over 950 campuses.[116][failed verification] Professor Alan Dershowitz has said "Chabad's presence on college campuses today is absolutely crucial," and "we cannot rest until Chabad is on every major college campus in the world."[117]
CTeen
[edit]The Chabad Teen Network (CTeen) is an international organization dedicated to educating Jewish youth about their heritage. It is the teen-focused arm of the Chabad movement operated by Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch. There are over 100,000 members worldwide[118] with 630 chapters across 44 countries.[119] CTeen is open to all Jewish teens, regardless of affiliation, and has been called "the fastest growing and most diverse Jewish youth organization in the world."[120]
The organization was launched in 2010,[121] and operates worldwide in cities such as Paris, Rio de Janeiro, Leeds, Munich, Buenos Aires and New York.[122] Its director is Rabbi Shimon Rivkin, and Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky serves as chairman.[123] Individual chapters and programs are managed by local directors.

CTeen runs a number of ongoing and annual programs, some of which include:
- CTeen International Shabbaton, an annual inspirational weekend that brings together thousands of teens from around the world. The program includes a traditional Shabbat experience in the heart of Hasidic Crown Heights, a Torah completion ceremony in Times Square, and the CTeen Choice Awards at Brooklyn's Pier 12. The weekend includes a Saturday night concert in Times Square with guest performances by singers such as Gad Elbaz, Yakov Shwekey and American Hasidic rapper Nissim Black.[120][124]
- CTeen XTREME, a summer travel camp where campers challenge themselves both physically and spiritually by partaking in extreme sports, observing a completely tech-free Shabbat, and keeping kosher on the road.[125]
- CTeen U, a college-accredited program where teens learn about Jewish philosophy, ethics and history. The program was launched in 2019 through a partnership with Yeshiva University.[126]
- Heritage Quest, educational travel programs that aim to deepen the connection of Jewish teens to their heritage through trips to Poland and Israel, offering teens the chance to explore their roots at the source.[127][128]
- Kosher Food Club, a co-curricular high school club operating in over fifty high schools throughout the United States that serves as a humanitarian initiative to promote healthy lifestyles, feed the homeless, and provide educational and hands-on experiences making traditional Jewish foods.[129][130]
- National Campus Office, coordinator of Chabad on Campus, a network of Jewish Student Centers on more than 230 university campuses worldwide (as of April 2016), as well as regional Chabad-Lubavitch centers at an additional 150 universities worldwide[131]
- Suicide Alert, workshops that equip teens to assist peers dealing with anxiety and depression resulting from the COVID-19 pandemic. The workshops have been organized by CTeen chapters in Florida, New Hampshire and New Jersey, among others, in partnership with the Gelt Charitable Foundation.[132][133]
Publishing
[edit]Chabad publishes and distributes Jewish religious literature. Under Kehot Publication Society, Chabad's main publishing house, Jewish literature has been translated into 12 different languages. Kehot regularly provides books at discounted prices, and hosts book-a-thons. Kehot commonly distributes books written or transcribed from the rebbes of Chabad, prominent chassidim and other authors who have written Jewish materials.[citation needed] Kehot is a division of Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, the movement's educational arm.[134]
More than any other Jewish movement, Chabad has used media as part of its religious, social, and political experience. Their latest leader, Menachem Mendel Schneerson, was the most video-documented Jewish leader in history.[135][page needed] The Chabad movement publishes a wealth of Jewish material on the internet. Chabad's main website Chabad.org, is one of the first Jewish websites[136] and the first and largest virtual congregation.[137][138] It serves not just its own members, but Jewish people worldwide in general.[139] Other popular Chabad community websites include asktherav.com, anash.org, CrownHeights.info, and the Hebrew site, COL.org.il.[140][141]
Social media influencers
[edit]Chabad-affiliated social media influencers include Miriam Ezagui and Yossi Farro. Farro wrapped tefillin for Lil Dicky, James Franco, and other public figures, at first by chance, then by seeking out well-known Jews and asking if they would meet with him to wrap tefillin.[142] Chabad influencers Daniel and Raizel Namdar started a "family-oriented channel aimed at breaking stereotypes about Jewish life".[143]
Summer camps
[edit]Chabad has set up an extensive network of camps around the world, most using the name Gan Israel, a name chosen by Schneerson although the first overnight camp was the girls division called Camp Emunah. There are 1,200 sites serving 210,000 children, most of whom do not come from Orthodox homes. Of these, 500 camps are in the United States.[144][145]
Political activities
[edit]Rabbi Schneerson involved himself in matters relating to the resolution of the Israeli-Arab conflict.[146] He maintained that as a matter of Jewish law,[147] any territorial concession on Israel's part would endanger the lives of all Jews in the Land of Israel and is therefore forbidden. He also insisted that even discussing the possibility of such concessions showed weakness, would encourage Arab attacks, and therefore endanger Jewish lives.[148]
In US domestic politics, Schneerson supported government involvement in education and welcomed the establishment of the United States Department of Education in 1980 yet insisted that part of a school's educational mission was to incorporate the values espoused in the Seven Laws of Noah. He called for the introduction of a moment of silence at the beginning of the school day, and for students to be encouraged to use this time for such improving thoughts or prayers as their parents might suggest.[149]
In 1981, Schneerson publicly called for the use of solar energy. Schneerson believed that the US could achieve energy independence by developing solar energy technologies. He argued that the dependence on foreign oil may lead to the country compromising on its principles.[150][151]
Library dispute with Russia
[edit]In 2013, US federal judge Royce Lamberth ruled in favor of Chabad lawyers who sought contempt sanctions on three Russian organizations to return the Schneersohn Library, 12,000 books belonging to Rabbi Yosef Schneersohn seized and nationalized by the Bolsheviks in 1917–18, to the Brooklyn Chabad Library.[30][152] Chabad Rabbi Berel Lazar, Russia's Chief Rabbi, reluctantly accepted Putin's request in moving the Schneerson Library to Moscow's Jewish Museum and Tolerance Center as a form of compromise, which was criticized by the Chabad Library.[30]
Controversies
[edit]Chabad's 200-year history has seen several movement-wide controversies. Two major leadership succession controversies occurred in the 19th century; one took place in the 1810s following the death of the movement's founder, the other occurred in the 1860s following the death of the third Rebbe. Two other minor offshoot groups were formed later in the movement's history. The movement's other major controversy is Chabad messianism, which began in the 1990s.
Succession disputes and offshoot groups
[edit]A number of groups have split from the Chabad movement, forming their own Hasidic groups, and at times positioning themselves as possible successors of previous Chabad rebbes. Following the deaths of the first and third rebbes of Chabad, disputes arose over their succession.
Following the death of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, the first Chabad rebbe, a dispute over his succession led to a break within the movement. While the recognized successor was his oldest son, Rabbi Dovber Schneuri, a student of Rabbi Schneur Zalman, Rabbi Aaron HaLevi assumed the title of rebbe and led a number of followers from the town of Strashelye (forming the Strashelye dynasty). The new group had two rebbes, Rabbi Aaron and his son Rabbi Haim Rephael. The new group eventually disbanded following Rabbi Haim Rephael's death.[15][153] One of the main points the two rabbis disagreed on was the place of spiritual ecstasy in prayer. R' Aaron supported the idea while Rabbi Dovber emphasized genuine ecstasy can only be a result of meditative contemplation (hisbonenus). Rabbi Dovber published his arguments on the subject in a compilation titled Kuntres Hispa'alus ("Tract on Ecstasy").[154]
Following the death of the third Chabad rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn (the Tzemach Tzedek), a dispute over his succession led to the formation of several Chabad groups. While Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn was recognized as the heir to the Chabad-Lubavitch line, several of his brothers formed groups of their own in the towns of Kopys (forming the Kapust dynasty), Nezhin (forming the Niezhin dynasty), Lyady (forming the Liadi dynasty), and Ovruch (forming the Avrutch dynasty). The lifespan of these groups varied; Niezhin and Avrutch had one rebbe each, Liadi had three rebbes, and Kapust had four. Following the deaths of their last rebbes, these groups eventually disbanded.[155][156][157][158][159]
Two other minor offshoot groups were formed by Chabad Hasidim. The Malachim were formed as a quasi-Hasidic group. The group claims to recognize the teachings of the first four rebbes of Chabad, thus rivaling the later Chabad rebbes. The Malachim's first and only rebbe, Rabbi Chaim Avraham Dov Ber Levine haCohen (1859/1860–1938), also known as "The Malach" (lit. "the angel"), was a follower of the fourth and fifth rebbes of Chabad.[160][161][162] While Levine's son chose not to succeed him, the Malachim group continues to maintain a yeshiva and minyan in Williamsburg, Brooklyn.
Following the death of the seventh Chabad Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, an attempt by Shaul Shimon Deutsch to form a breakaway Chabad movement, with Deutsch as "Liozna Rebbe", failed to gain popular support.[163][164][165][166]
Chabad messianism
[edit]A few years prior to Schneerson's death, some members of the Chabad movement expressed their belief that Menachem Mendel Schneerson was the Messiah. Those subscribing to the beliefs have been termed meshichists (messianists). A typical statement of belief for Chabad messianists is the song and chant known as yechi adoneinu ("long live our master", Hebrew: יחי אדונינו).[167]
Since 1994, most Chabad followers continue to believe in Schneerson as the Jewish messiah.[168] Chabad messianists either believe Schneerson will be resurrected from the dead to be revealed as the messiah or profess the belief that Schneerson never died in the first place. The Chabad messianic phenomenon has been met mostly with public concerns or opposition by non-Chabad Jewish leaders[citation needed].
Israeli Officials
[edit]Itamar Ben Gvir and Yoav Gallant have been invited to Chabad's headquarters. According to Rabbi Motti Seligson, a spokesperson for Chabad, "Ben-Gvir was invited by some members of the community, but that the event was not officially sanctioned or organized by the synagogue’s leadership".[169] Anti-Israel protestors demonstrated outside the building, clashing with attendees, leading to six arrests.[170] A Brooklyn resident was reportedly "chased, kicked, spit at and pelted with objects" after a mob of Orthodox men mistook the mask-wearing woman for a protester against Ben Gvir's visit.[171] Ben-Gvir was also scheduled to attend an event at the Jewish Children's Museum in Brooklyn, an official Chabad institution, to foundraise for Chabad of Hebron, although the event was cancelled.[172][173] Chabad of Hebron serves "on a weekly basis, thousands of IDF Soldiers".[174][175] Ben Gvir's visit followed a visit by Gallant who has an arrest warrrant from the International Criminal Court.[176]
In the arts
[edit]Art
[edit]Chabad Hasidic artists Hendel Lieberman and Zalman Kleinman have painted a number of scenes depicting Chabad Hasidic culture, including religious ceremonies, study and prayer. Chabad artist Michoel Muchnik has painted scenes of the Mitzvah Campaigns.[135]: 156
Artist and shaliach Yitzchok Moully has adapted silkscreen techniques, bright colours and Jewish and Hasidic images to create a form of "Chasidic Pop Art".[177]
Music
[edit]Vocalists Avraham Fried and Benny Friedman have included recordings of traditional Chabad songs on their albums of contemporary Orthodox Jewish music. Bluegrass artist Andy Statman has also recorded Chabad spiritual melodies (niggunim).
Reggae artist Matisyahu has included portions of Chabad niggunim and lyrics with Chabad philosophical themes in some of his songs.
In 2022, an Israeli theatrical company produced a Chabad-themed musical HaChabadnikim which follows two young men from Kfar Chabad who go to live in Tel Aviv. The musical runs for 140 minutes.[178]
Literature
[edit]In the late 1930s, Dr Fishl Schneersohn, a psychiatrist, pedagogical theorist, and descendant of the founder of Chabad authored a Yiddish novel titled Chaim Gravitzer: The Tale of the Downfallen One from the World of Chabad. The novel explores the spiritual struggle of a Chabad Hasid who doubts his faith and finally finds peace in doing charitable work.[179]
Novelist Chaim Potok authored a work My Name is Asher Lev in which a Hasidic teen struggles between his artistic passions and the norms of the community. The "Ladover" community is a thinly veiled reference to the Lubavitcher community in Crown Heights.[180][181]
Chabad poet Zvi Yair has written poems on Chabad philosophical topics including Ratzo V'Shov (spiritual yearning).
The American Jewish writer and publisher, Clifford Meth, wrote a short science fiction story depicting the future followers of the "70th Rebbe" of Chabad and their outreach efforts on an alien planet called Tau Ceti IV. The story is told through the eyes of a young extraterrestrial yeshiva student.[182][183]
The American Jewish writer and publisher, Richard Horowitz, wrote a memoir, The Boys Yeshiva, describing his time teaching at a Chabad yeshiva in Los Angeles.[184]
Film and television
[edit]The Chabad-Lubavitch community has been the subject of a number of documentary films. These films include:
- Chassidism - the Joyful path to G-d : A 1966 documentary of Chabad Chassidim in Kfar Chabad, Israel. This film was directed and narrated by Koby Jaeger.
- The Spark – a 28-minute film, produced in 1974, providing an overview of the Lubavitch and Satmar of New York.[185] The film was directed by Mel Epstein.[186]
- The Return: A Hasidic Experience – a 1979 documentary film on Jews who joined the Chabad movement, directed by Yisrael Lifshutz and Barry Ralbag.[187][188][189][186]
- What Is a Jew? – a 1989 documentary on Chabad produced by the BBC for the series Everyman.
- King of Crown Heights – a 60-minute, 1993 film on Lubavitcher Hasidim by Columbia University student Roggerio Gabbai[185]
- Fires in the Mirror: Crown Heights, Brooklyn and Other Identities – a 1993 TV adaptation of the one-person play by Anna Deavere Smith. It explores the Black and Hasidic viewpoints of people connected directly and indirectly to the Crown Heights riots.[190] The adaptation was produced by PBS as part of its American Playhouse series.[191]
- The Return of Sarah's Daughters – a 1997 documentary film contrasting three Jewish women, one of whom joins Chabad.[192]
- Blacks and Jews – A 1997 documentary written and directed by Deborah Kaufman and Alan Snitow on the Crown Heights riot and other incidents involving intergroup conflict.[193]
- Welcome to the Waks Family – a 2003 documentary of a Chabad family in Australia.[194]
- Leaving the Fold – a 2008 documentary on young men and women who left the Hasidic Jewish community. The film was directed by Eric R. Scott and the stories featured include former Hasidic Jews living in the United States, Israel and Canada.[195][196] Featured in the film are two young men from a Chabad family in Montreal as well as a French Lubavitch rabbi.
- Gut Shabbes Vietnam – a 2008 documentary on a Chabad family in Vietnam. Written and directed by Ido and Yael Zand.[197]
- Shekinah Rising – a 70 min, 2013 documentary exploring the perspectives of the female students of a Chabad school in Montreal[198][199][200]
- Kathmandu – a 2012 television series aired on Israeli television based on the lives of the Chabad emissaries in Kathmandu, Nepal.[201]
- Project 2x1 – a 30 min, 2013 documentary on the Chabad Hasidim and West Indian residents of Crown Heights, using Google Glass in place of conventional camera techniques[202][203][204][205]
- The Rabbi Goes West – a 2019 documentary on a Chabad rabbi who moves to Montana.[206]
- Guns and Moses – a 2024 film produced by Salvador Litvak and Nina Litvak. The film portrays Rabbi Mo (Mark Feuerstein), a Chabad emissary, and his wife, Rebbetzin Hindy (Alona Tal), whose community is targeted by a white supremacist who shoots and kills a congregant. Rabbi Mo later trains in the use of firearms and seeks to find the killer. The film was released to Jewish film festivals in 2024.[207] The film's original title was Man in the Long Black Coat.[208]
Other television
[edit]- Religious America: Lubavitch – a 28-minute, 1974 PBS documentary series episode focusing on a day in the life of a Lubavitcher man.[185]
- Outback Rabbis – (2018) 50 min television segment by Australian TV network, SBS, covering the regional and rural Australia (RARA) program of Chabad. Directed by Danny Ben-Moshe. Featured on the SBS "Untold Australia" series.
Notable people
[edit]A
[edit]B
[edit]- Yaacov Behrman
- Yisroel Bernath
- Moshe Yehuda Blau
- Shmuley Boteach
- Yosef Yeshaya Braun
- Menachem Brod
- Shmuel Butman
C
[edit]E
[edit]F
[edit]G
[edit]- Gershon Mendel Garelik
- Yitzchak Ginsburgh
- Leib Groner
- Yitzchok Dovid Groner
- Shemaryahu Gurary
- Aharon Gurevich
- Chaim Gutnick
- Mordechai Gutnick
- Moshe Gutnick
H
[edit]- Abraham Hecht
- Hanoch Hecht
- Jacob J. Hecht
- Moshe Hecht
- Shea Hecht
- Yosef Heller
- Hirschy Zarchi
- Chaim Mordechai Aizik Hodakov
- Gavriel Holtzberg
J
[edit]K
[edit]L
[edit]M
[edit]- Jonathan Markovitch
- David Masinter
- Shmarya Yehuda Leib Medalia
- Shmuel Leib Medalia
- Meir Shlomo Yanovsky
- Nissan Mindel
- Zalman Moishe HaYitzchaki
O
[edit]P
[edit]R
[edit]S
[edit]- Mordechai Scheiner
- Isaac Schneersohn
- Schneour Zalman Schneersohn
- Levi Yitzchak Schneerson
- Ezra Schochet
- Jacob Immanuel Schochet
- Yitzchak Schochet
- Yaakov Schwei
- Zelig Sharfstein
- Abraham Shemtov
- Levi Shemtov
- Sholom Shuchat
- Eliyahu Simpson
- Adin Steinsaltz
T
[edit]W
[edit]Y
[edit]Z
[edit]See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]References
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- ^ Additional spellings include Lubawitz, and Jabad (in Spanish speaking countries)
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- ^ Dara Horn, June 13, 2014 "Rebbe of Rebbe's" Archived October 26, 2014, at the Wayback Machine The Wall Street Journal
- ^ "About Chabad-Lubavitch on". Chabad.org. Archived from the original on 2002-02-20. Retrieved 2010-05-12.
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The communists persecuted, chased and harassed the Rebbe and his operatives. [...] Through the years of communism, hundreds of Chassidic activists were executed. Thousands more were arrested and sent to Siberia for years of hard labor.
- ^ Rabbi Yehuda Ceitlin (November 30, 2012). "Chabadniks proud of 'criminal' past". Archived from the original on February 5, 2015. Retrieved February 5, 2015.
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- ^ Beizer, M. (2007). The Jews of struggle: the Jewish national movement in the USSR, 1967–1989.
- ^ Gitelman, Z. (2007). Do Jewish Schools Make a Difference in the Former Soviet Union?. East European Jewish Affairs, 37(3), 377–398.
- ^ Ben Sales (10 April 2017). "Politico says Chabad is Trump's partner in – something. Not so fast". Jewish Telegraphic Agency. Archived from the original on 3 May 2017. Retrieved 4 June 2017.
- ^ a b c Cnaan Lipshiz (5 June 2015). "Why Russian Chief Rabbi stands by Vladimir Putin". The Forward. Retrieved June 4, 2017.
- ^ Mindel, Nissan (1985). "Intro". The Philosophy of Chabad. Vol. 2. Brooklyn: Kehot Publication Society. ISBN 978-0826604170.
- ^ a b c The Encyclopedia of Hasidism, "Habad", Jonathan Sacks, pp. 161–164
- ^ Hasidism: The movement and its masters, Harry M. Rabinowicz, 1988, pp. 83–92, Jason Aronson, London ISBN 0-87668-998-5
- ^ a b Leadership in the Chabad movement, Avrum Erlich, Jason Aronson, 2000 ISBN 0-7657-6055-X
- ^ Hayom Yom, p. A10
- ^ Chanoch Glitzenshtein, Sefer Hatoldos Tzemach Tzedek
- ^ Hayom Yom, p. A14
- ^ "Sefer HaToldos Admur Maharash". Archived from the original on April 22, 2008. Retrieved March 8, 2008.
- ^ Hayom Yom, pp. 15–16
- ^ Encyclopedia of Hasidism, "Schneersohn, Joseph Isaac". Naftali Lowenthal. Aronson, London 1996. ISBN 1-56821-123-6
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- ^ Jewish Literacy, Telushkin, William Morrow 2001, p. 471
- ^ Tanya, Shneur Zalman of Liadi, Chapter 13.
- ^ Deuteronomy 30:14
- ^ The Encyclopedia of Hasidism, "Tanya", Jonathan Sacks, pp. 475–477 (15682–11236)
- ^ Tanya, ch. 12
- ^ Cohen, J. Simcha (December 28, 1999). How Does Jewish Law Work?. Jason Aronson. p. 329. ISBN 978-0-7657-6090-6. Retrieved September 4, 2009.
- ^ a b Liebman, Charles S. "Orthodoxy in American Jewish Life." The American Jewish Year Book (1965): 21–97.
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- ^ JTA (11 February 2016). "In all-Chabad Israeli village, Brooklyn meets country living". The Times of Israel. Archived from the original on 10 December 2020. Retrieved 5 October 2020.
- ^ Shokeid, Moshe (1988). Children of Circumstances: Israeli Emigrants in New York. Anthropology of Contemporary Issues. Ithaca: Cornell University Press. pp. 139–160. ISBN 978-0801420788.
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- ^ Shahar, Charles. "A Comprehensive Study of the Ultra Orthodox Community of Greater Montreal (2003)". Federation CJA (Montreal). 2003.
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Among the latter is the Jewish Learning Institute, the largest educational program for Jewish adults in the world (with the possible exception of the Daf Yomi enterprise), which currently enrolls over 66,000 teens and adults at some 850 sites around the world, each following a prescribed course of study according to a set timetable.
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... is currently the largest provider of adult Jewish learning. JLI's mission is to inspire Jewish learning worldwide and to transform Jewish life and the greater community through Torah study. Its goal is to create a global network of informed students connected by bonds of shared Jewish experience. JLI's holistic approach to Jewish study considers the impact of Jewish values on personal and interpersonal growth. (The authors of the book are Professor Ira Sheskin of Department of Geography and Regional Studies, The Jewish Demography Project, The Sue and Leonard Miller Center for Contemporary Judaic Studies, University of Miami, and Professor Arnold Dashefsky, Department of Sociology, The Center for Judaic Studies and Contemporary Jewish Life, University of Connecticut.)
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Sources
[edit]- Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1994). Hayom Yom. Kehot Publication Society. ISBN 978-0-8266-0669-3.
Further reading
[edit]- Schneerson, Menachem Mendel. On the Essence of Chasidus: A Chasidic Discourse by Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson of Chabad-Lubavitch. Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, 2003 (ISBN 0-8266-0466-8)
- Drake, Carolyn. "A Faith Grows in Brooklyn". National Geographic (February 2006).
- Ehrlich, Avrum M. Leadership in the Chabad Movement: A Critical Evaluation of Habad Leadership, History, and Succession, Jason Aronson, 2000. (ISBN 0-7657-6055-X)
- Feldman, Jan L. Lubavitchers as Citizens: A Paradox of Liberal Democracy, Cornell University Press, 2003 (ISBN 0-8014-4073-4)
- Fishkoff, Sue. The Rebbe's Army: Inside the World of Chabad-Lubavitch, Schocken, 2003 (ISBN 0-8052-4189-2)
- Heilman, Samuel and Menachem Friedman. The Rebbe: The Life and Afterlife of Menachem Mendel Schneerson (Princeton University Press; 2010) 400 pages
- Hoffman, Edward. Despite All Odds: The Story of Lubavitch. Simon & Schuster, 1991 (ISBN 0-671-67703-9)
- Jacobson, Simon. Toward a Meaningful Life: The Wisdom of the Rebbe, William Morrow, 2002 (ISBN 0-06-051190-7)
- Katz, Maya Balakirsky, "Trademarks of Faith: Chabad and Chanukah in America", Modern Judaism, 29,2 (2009), 239–267.
- Challenge: An Encounter with Lubavitch-Chabad, Lubavitch Foundation of Great Britain, 1973. ISBN 0-8266-0491-9.
- Miller, Chaim. Turning Judaism Outward: A Biography of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson the Seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe. Kol Menachem, 2014.
- Mindel, Nissan. The Philosophy of Chabad. Chabad Research Center, 1973 (ISBN 082660417X)
- Oberlander, Boruch and Elkanah Shmotkin. Early Years: The Formative Years of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, as Told by Documents and Archival Data, Kehot Publication Society. 2016. (ISBN 978-1-932349-04-7).
- Steinzaltz, Adin Even Israel. My Rebbe. Koren Publishers, 2014.
- Tannenbaum, Michal and Hagit Cohen. 2018. "Language Educational Policy in the Service of Group Identity: The Habad case". Language Policy Volume 17, Issue 3, pp 319–342.
- Telushkin, Joseph. Rebbe: The Life and Teachings of Menachem M. Shneerson, the Most Influential Rabbi in Modern History. Harperwave, 2014.
- Weiss, Steven I. (January 20, 2006). "Orthodox Rethinking Campus Outreach" Archived 2007-05-05 at the Wayback Machine. The Jewish Daily Forward.
Early community histories of Chabad produced by members or former members of the Chabad community include Toldot Amudei HaChabad (Konigsberg, 1876) by Michael Levi Rodkinson and Beit Rebbe (Berdichev, 1902) by Hayim Meir Heilman.
- Tworek, W. (2017). Lubavitch Hasidism. Oxford Bibliographies.
- Karlinsky, N. (2007). The Dawn of Hasidic—Haredi Historiography. Modern Judaism-A Journal of Jewish Ideas and Experience, 27(1), 20-46.
- Assaf, D. (2010). Untold Tales of the Hasidim: Crisis & Discontent in the History of Hasidism. UPNE.
External links
[edit]Chabad
View on GrokipediaChabad-Lubavitch is a Hasidic Jewish movement founded in the late 18th century by Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi (1745–1812), who established its distinctive intellectual approach to Chassidic philosophy, emphasizing rational analysis of mystical concepts as detailed in his seminal work, the Tanya.[1][2] Originating in the town of Liozna within the Russian Empire, Chabad derives its name from the Hebrew acronyms for the Kabbalistic sefirot of Chochmah (wisdom), Binah (understanding), and Da'at (knowledge), reflecting its core focus on contemplative study alongside emotional devotion.[2] Under the leadership of its seventh Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902–1994), who assumed leadership in 1951 following the passing of his father-in-law, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, Chabad transformed from a relatively insular group into a global outreach organization, dispatching thousands of emissary couples (shluchim) to establish institutions promoting Torah study, prayer, and mitzvah observance among Jews worldwide.[3][4] This expansion, driven by Schneerson's directives for proactive engagement rather than passive waiting for redemption, resulted in the creation of over 5,000 Chabad centers across more than 100 countries by the early 21st century, making it one of the largest and most influential Jewish movements today.[4][5] Chabad's defining achievements include its role in Jewish revival post-Holocaust, operating educational networks like Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch and providing humanitarian aid through entities such as Colel Chabad, while controversies persist around messianic beliefs held by a significant faction, who maintain that Schneerson remains the awaited Messiah despite his death, leading to internal divisions and criticism from other Orthodox Jewish leaders for deviating from traditional eschatology.[6][7][8]
History
Founding by Shneur Zalman of Liadi
Shneur Zalman of Liadi, born on September 4, 1745 (18 Elul 5505), in the town of Liozna in the Russian Empire (present-day Belarus), demonstrated exceptional Torah scholarship from a young age, studying under local rabbis and earning recognition as a prodigy by age 12.[2] He initially aligned with traditional Lithuanian rabbinic scholarship but grew dissatisfied with its intellectualism lacking spiritual depth, prompting him at age 20 in 1765 to travel to Mezritch to study under Rabbi Dovber, the Maggid of Mezritch, successor to the Baal Shem Tov and central figure in early Hasidism.[2] [1] Following the Maggid's death in 1772, Shneur Zalman returned to Liozna, where he began attracting and leading a group of Hasidim, establishing a distinct approach that emphasized intellectual comprehension of mystical concepts over purely emotive devotion characteristic of other Hasidic groups.[2] [9] By the mid-1780s, he had formalized leadership of this faction in White Russia, systematically organizing communal prayer, study, and charitable activities, which laid the groundwork for Chabad Hasidism—named as an acronym for chochmah (wisdom), binah (understanding), and da'at (knowledge), reflecting its focus on contemplative internalization of Kabbalistic ideas.[9] This intellectual framework distinguished Chabad from contemporaneous Hasidic branches, positioning it as a synthesis accessible to the scholarly elite while aiming to elevate the average Jew through reasoned spiritual practice.[1] In 1796, Shneur Zalman authored and disseminated Sefer Shel Beinonim (commonly known as the Tanya), a foundational text that articulated Chabad's philosophical core, blending Lurianic Kabbalah with rational inquiry to guide personal divine service (avodah) via mental faculties.[2] The work's underground circulation amid opposition from Mitnagdic (non-Hasidic) rabbis solidified Chabad's identity, prompting Russian authorities to investigate Shneur Zalman for suspected separatism in 1798; his release from prison on December 10, 1798 (19 Kislev 5559), marked a pivotal affirmation of the movement's legitimacy.[1] By the early 1800s, under his guidance from Liozna—later shifting due to conflicts—Chabad had developed structured emissaries (shluchim) and yeshivot, embedding it as a resilient branch of Hasidism amid imperial scrutiny and internal Jewish polemics.[10]Expansion and Challenges in the Russian Empire
Following the death of Shneur Zalman of Liadi in 1812, his son Dovber Schneuri assumed leadership of the Chabad movement and relocated its center from Liadi to Lubavitch in 1813, facilitating further dissemination of Chabad teachings across the Pale of Settlement in the Russian Empire. Under Dovber's guidance until 1827, Chabad Hasidism gained adherents in regions of present-day Belarus and Ukraine, emphasizing intellectual study of Kabbalah alongside Hasidic devotion, which distinguished it from other Hasidic groups and attracted followers disillusioned with strict Litvak rationalism.[11] The movement expanded significantly under Menachem Mendel Schneersohn, known as the Tzemach Tzedek (1789–1866), who succeeded in 1827 as the third rebbe and grandson of Shneur Zalman; by the mid-19th century, Chabad had become one of the largest Hasidic dynasties in the Russian Empire, with thousands of followers spread across the Pale, supported by networks of emissaries, yeshivas, and communal aid efforts that included promoting Jewish agriculture to counter economic restrictions.[11][12] The Tzemach Tzedek's voluminous writings and legal interventions further solidified Chabad's influence, as he authored responsa on halakhic matters and encouraged self-sufficiency amid imperial quotas limiting Jewish residence and occupations.[11] Chabad faced persistent opposition from Mitnagdim, non-Hasidic Orthodox Jews led by figures like the Vilna Gaon, who issued excommunications against Hasidim starting in the 1770s, viewing their ecstatic prayer and rebbe-centric devotion as deviations from traditional Talmudic study; these conflicts persisted into the 19th century, with Mitnagdim accusing Chabad of antinomianism despite its emphasis on rational mysticism, though occasional dialogues, such as rabbinical assemblies, highlighted shared piety.[13][11] Russian imperial policies posed severe external challenges, including Shneur Zalman's two imprisonments on charges of treason—first in 1798 for alleged subversive activities related to Hasidic networks and fund collection for Palestinian Jews, from which he was released on 19 Kislev after interrogation in St. Petersburg, and again in 1800 amid continued suspicions of disloyalty.[14] Under Tsar Nicholas I from 1825, the cantonist decrees conscripted over 30,000 Jewish boys aged 12–25 for 25-year military service aimed at forced assimilation, prompting the Tzemach Tzedek to petition authorities and organize ransom efforts to mitigate the impact on Hasidic communities.[15] In 1843, at a government-mandated rabbinical conference in St. Petersburg, Chabad representatives, aligned with the Tzemach Tzedek, resisted mandates for secular education in Jewish schools, prioritizing traditional Torah study over state reforms perceived as assimilationist.[15] Despite these pressures, Chabad's leadership adeptly navigated imperial bureaucracy, with the Tzemach Tzedek securing land grants for Jewish farming colonies and exemptions from certain taxes, enabling sustained growth and institutional resilience within the confined Pale until the late 19th century.[12][11]Soviet Oppression and Underground Survival
Following the Bolshevik Revolution of 1917, the Soviet regime under Lenin and later Stalin implemented aggressive anti-religious policies aimed at eradicating traditional Judaism as part of broader state atheism, closing synagogues, banning Hebrew education, and prohibiting ritual slaughter and circumcision.[16] Chabad Hasidim, led by Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn (1880–1950), the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, mounted organized resistance by establishing clandestine networks to sustain Jewish observance, including secret printing presses for religious texts, underground minyans, and smuggling of matzah and siddurim across borders.[17] These efforts directly challenged Soviet decrees, such as the 1918 separation of church and state and the 1929 laws collectivizing religious property, prompting intensified GPU (later NKVD) surveillance and raids on Chabad-affiliated homes and yeshivas.[18] Rabbi Schneersohn's activities escalated tensions; from his base in Lubavitch (until 1920) and later Moscow, he directed over 100 underground cheders (Jewish elementary schools) and yeshivas teaching Torah and Talmud in defiance of the 1920s educational monopolies imposed by the People's Commissariat of Enlightenment.[19] On June 14, 1927, he was arrested in Leningrad by the OGPU on charges of counter-revolutionary agitation and anti-Soviet propaganda for allegedly fostering "illegal" religious institutions that undermined proletarian ideology.[20] Interrogated and tortured, he refused to disclose networks or recant, leading to a death sentence on July 7, 1927, which was commuted to exile following international protests from figures including U.S. President Calvin Coolidge and British Prime Minister Stanley Baldwin.[16] Released on July 12–13 (12–13 Tammuz in the Jewish calendar), he was expelled from the USSR, relocating first to Riga, Latvia, from where he continued coordinating underground operations via couriers.[20] Post-exile, Chabad's Soviet remnants persisted through decentralized cells, particularly in Uzbekistan and Central Asia, where Rabbi Schneersohn's emissaries like Rabbi Lev Shapiro established hidden yeshivas in Samarkand during the 1930s–1940s, educating hundreds of boys in Talmudic study amid famine and purges.[21] Chassidim employed evasion tactics, such as feigning illnesses or using fabricated work excuses to observe Shabbat without factory labor, and buried Torah scrolls in forests to evade confiscation during the Great Purge (1936–1938), which claimed lives of key figures including Rabbi Schneersohn's aides.[22] By 1941, Stalin's temporary wartime thaw allowed limited synagogue reopenings, but underground networks endured, smuggling refugees and preserving texts; estimates suggest thousands of Chabad-affiliated Jews risked execution to maintain circumcision and bar mitzvahs in secret.[23] These survival mechanisms ensured Chabad's continuity despite the regime's execution of over 20 million, including disproportionate Jewish religious leaders, with remnants emerging post-1945 to reconnect with the Rebbe in exile.[24]Post-World War II Resettlement and Growth in the West
Following the escape of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, from Nazi-occupied Warsaw, he arrived in New York Harbor aboard the SS Drottningholm on March 19, 1940 (9 Adar II, 5700), marking the relocation of Chabad's leadership to the United States.[25] Accompanied by a small group of family members and followers, he immediately began efforts to reestablish Chabad institutions amid the ongoing European crisis, purchasing property at 770 Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn's Crown Heights neighborhood as the new headquarters.[26] This site became the symbolic and operational center for Chabad's American operations, hosting study sessions, prayer services, and administrative activities despite limited resources and the distractions of World War II.[27] Postwar resettlement accelerated as Holocaust survivors and displaced persons, including Chabad adherents from Eastern Europe and Soviet territories, immigrated to the U.S. under eased immigration policies for refugees between 1947 and 1953. Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak directed the founding of key educational bodies, such as Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch in 1943, to support Jewish day schools and youth programs across American cities, aiming to preserve Hasidic traditions among the resettling community.[28] By the late 1940s, Chabad had established a core presence in Brooklyn, with small synagogues, yeshivas, and welfare initiatives serving an estimated few hundred families, many of whom had endured underground survival in Europe or the Soviet Union.[29] The death of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak on January 28, 1950 (10 Shevat, 5710), prompted a leadership transition, with his son-in-law, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, who had arrived in New York in summer 1941, assuming formal direction on January 17, 1951, through a traditional Chassidic discourse.[30] Initial growth under this period emphasized consolidation in the U.S. and Western Europe, with emissaries dispatched to support Jewish communities in cities like Paris and London by the mid-1950s, laying groundwork for broader outreach.[31] This resettlement phase transformed Chabad from a decimated Eastern European movement into a stable Western base, with institutions numbering in the dozens by decade's end, focused on education and communal support rather than expansive proselytizing.[32]Era of Menachem Mendel Schneerson and Global Outreach
Menachem Mendel Schneerson assumed leadership of Chabad-Lubavitch as the seventh Rebbe on Shevat 10, 1951, following the death of his father-in-law, Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, in 1950.[33] At the time, the movement consisted of a small number of institutions primarily in the United States and Israel, having survived Soviet oppression and World War II disruptions. Schneerson shifted Chabad's focus toward systematic global outreach, dispatching emissaries known as shluchim to establish permanent presences in distant locations, emphasizing direct engagement with Jews of all observance levels to encourage Torah study and mitzvah performance.[3] Under Schneerson's direction, the number of shluchim grew significantly; by the time of his death on June 12, 1994, approximately 1,500 emissary families operated around 1,325 Chabad institutions worldwide.[34] These emissaries, often young couples, were sent to university campuses, major cities, and remote areas across over 50 countries, establishing Chabad Houses that provided educational programs, synagogue services, and social support. The first formalized Chabad House opened in the 1960s, with rapid proliferation in the 1970s, including pioneering locations in California and expanding to Europe, Asia, Africa, and South America.[3] This decentralized model relied on local fundraising and community building, fostering self-sustaining growth without central funding mandates. Schneerson initiated several targeted outreach campaigns to promote specific Jewish practices, beginning with the tefillin campaign in 1967 ahead of the Six-Day War, which encouraged men to don tefillin daily.[35] Between 1967 and 1976, he launched ten such mitzvah campaigns, covering practices like mezuzah affixing, candle lighting for Shabbat and holidays, and Torah study, aiming to instill incremental observance through personal encounters. Additional innovations included mitzvah tanks—mobile outreach vehicles deploying rabbis to public spaces starting in 1974—and public Hanukkah menorah lightings, first held in 1974 at the Liberty Bell in Philadelphia, which by the 1980s numbered in the thousands globally.[36] Educational expansion formed a core pillar, with Schneerson founding Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch in the 1940s (expanded under his leadership) to support schools and youth programs, reaching hundreds of thousands of children by the 1990s through summer camps, day schools, and adult study classes. He declared 5738 (1977–1978) as a year dedicated to education, urging intensified efforts amid declining Jewish literacy. Publications via Kehot disseminated Chabad texts in multiple languages, while outreach extended to isolated communities, including Soviet Jewry via underground networks and post-perestroika institutions. Schneerson's personal correspondence and audiences with thousands guided shluchim, resulting in Chabad's presence in over 1,000 locales by 1994, a marked increase from the pre-1951 era.[3]Developments Since 1994 Including Post-October 7 Surge
Following the death of Menachem Mendel Schneerson on June 12, 1994, Chabad-Lubavitch transitioned to a decentralized structure without a central Rebbe, relying on a network of shluchim (emissaries) to sustain and expand operations.[37] In 1994, approximately 1,100 shluchim families operated in 40 countries; by 2024, this had grown to over 5,000 shluchim families managing more than 3,500 institutions across 100 countries and territories.[34][38][39] This expansion included the establishment of 248 mikvahs, 451 preschools, and 507 CTeen chapters, among other programs, reflecting sustained momentum in outreach despite predictions of decline.[34] The absence of a successor amplified ongoing messianic expectations centered on Schneerson, with a significant faction within Chabad maintaining that he remains the Messiah, either spiritually alive or destined for resurrection, despite his physical death.[7] This belief, which intensified in the years leading to 1994, has led to internal schisms, including disputes over synagogue expansions at 770 Eastern Parkway and public expressions like graffiti declaring "The Rebbe lives."[40] Chabad leadership has sought to minimize these views to maintain broader Jewish acceptance, but surveys and observers indicate they persist among a substantial portion of adherents, contributing to factional tensions without derailing overall institutional growth.[41][8] The October 7, 2023, Hamas attacks on Israel prompted a notable surge in engagement with Chabad worldwide, positioning it as a key hub for Jewish resilience amid rising antisemitism. A 2025 Jewish Federations of North America survey found that 44% of Chabad participants reported deeper involvement in Jewish life since the attacks, the highest among denominations, driven by campus houses offering security and spiritual support to students facing hostility.[42] Over 100 Chabad rabbis convened in May 2025 to address the influx of Israeli expatriates, launching targeted outreach to integrate tens of thousands fleeing post-attack instability.[43] This period also saw increased Chabad-led initiatives, such as memorials and resolutions for Jewish renewal, reinforcing its role in fostering communal solidarity.[44][45]Philosophy and Theology
Core Principles of Chabad Hasidism
Chabad Hasidism, established by Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi (1745–1812), emphasizes an intellectual framework for spiritual devotion, encapsulated in its name as an acronym for chochmah (wisdom), binah (understanding), and da'at (knowledge), which represent faculties for rationally grasping divine truths.[46] This approach integrates Kabbalistic mysticism with analytical inquiry, enabling practitioners to comprehend abstract concepts through structured contemplation rather than relying solely on ecstatic emotion, as in some other Hasidic traditions.[47] A foundational principle is the inherent divinity of the Jewish soul, described as "a literal part of God above," which binds every Jew intrinsically to the divine and renders Chabad teachings a universal inheritance accessible via intellectual study, not limited to scholarly elites or mystical elites.[46] Rabbi Shneur Zalman taught that true avodah (divine service) proceeds from mental contemplation of God's absolute unity and omnipresence, which naturally engenders love and awe in the heart, subordinating emotion to intellect in a hierarchical progression: "the mind rules the heart."[46][47] Chabad philosophy posits the physical world as a realm containing concealed "sparks of holiness" embedded in material objects, which must be redeemed through mitzvot that repurpose everyday elements—such as leather for tefillin or grain for matzah—to reveal their divine essence and elevate them spiritually.[48] This aligns with the ultimate purpose of creation as dirah b'tachtonim, establishing a "dwelling place" for God in the lower realms by dominating matter with spirit, wherein the Godly soul triumphs over the animal soul in perpetual internal struggle, transforming mundane actions into holy deeds.[48] The inner Torah revealed in Chabad thus fuses rational analysis with emotional commitment to achieve this revelation of G-dliness in both personal and cosmic dimensions.[47]The Tanya: Synthesis of Kabbalah and Rational Inquiry
The Tanya, formally titled Likkutei Amarim ("Collection of Sayings"), was composed by Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi between 1796 and 1797 and first published anonymously in 1797 in the town of Kopust.[49] Written as the foundational philosophical text of Chabad Hasidism, it systematically elucidates the movement's core doctrines by integrating the esoteric mysticism of Kabbalah with a structured, rational analytical method derived from Talmudic and medieval Jewish philosophical traditions, such as those of Maimonides.[50] This approach addresses existential questions about the human soul, divine unity, and spiritual service, presenting them not as abstract revelations but as intellectually accessible principles for personal transformation.[51] Central to the Tanya's synthesis is its emphasis on the intellect—embodied in the sefirot of chochmah (wisdom), binah (understanding), and da'at (knowledge), from which Chabad derives its name—as the primary vehicle for internalizing Kabbalistic truths.[46] Rabbi Shneur Zalman posits that true devotion (avodah) begins with contemplative comprehension of God's infinitude and the mechanics of creation, drawing on Kabbalah's depiction of divine emanation while subjecting it to logical scrutiny to resolve apparent contradictions between unity and multiplicity in the divine essence.[52] This rational inquiry counters potential antinomies in mystical thought, such as the paradox of evil's origin, by framing them within a dualistic model of the nefesh elokit (divine soul) and nefesh behemit (animal soul), where intellectual mastery enables the former to subdue the latter without relying solely on emotional fervor.[53] In contrast to contemporaneous Hasidic groups, which often prioritized spontaneous ecstatic attachment (devekut) through joyful enthusiasm and storytelling, the Tanya advocates a deliberate, mind-led path to mysticism, refining Kabbalistic concepts into a psychological framework accessible to the average observant Jew—the beinoni (intermediate person) who achieves virtue through ongoing rational vigilance rather than prophetic elevation.[54] This intellectual rigor, influenced by earlier rationalists like Maimonides, positions Chabad as a philosophically investigative strain within Hasidism, enabling broader dissemination of Kabbalah's depths while guarding against misinterpretation through unexamined fervor.[55] The text's five parts, with the first (Likkutei Amarim) forming the philosophical core, culminate in practical exhortations for daily application, underscoring that rational synthesis yields not mere theory but actionable spiritual discipline.[53] Over sixty editions have appeared since its inception, reflecting its enduring role in Chabad's educational curriculum.[56]Balance of Intellectualism, Mysticism, and Practical Application
Chabad Hasidism integrates intellectual rigor with mystical insight, positing that profound comprehension of esoteric doctrines precedes and engenders authentic spiritual emotion and ethical conduct. Unlike contemporaneous Hasidic groups that emphasized emotive fervor—such as through ecstatic prayer or unmediated awe—Chabad, acronymic for chochmah (wisdom), binah (understanding), and da'at (knowledge), prioritizes contemplative analysis to internalize Kabbalistic principles.[57] This approach, articulated by founder Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi (1745–1812), counters critiques of mysticism as irrational by subjecting it to logical scrutiny, thereby democratizing access to divine wisdom for the intellectually inclined Jew.[58] Central to this synthesis is the Tanya (authored 1796), Rabbi Shneur Zalman's seminal text, which explicates Kabbalistic ontology—such as the duality of the divine and animal souls—through philosophical exposition blending Lurianic Kabbalah with rationalist elements akin to medieval Jewish thought.[59] The work argues that intellectual meditation (hisbonenus) on God's unity and the soul's essence transforms abstract knowledge into heartfelt devotion, avoiding superficial emotionalism.[60] This method ensures mysticism is not esoteric obscurity but a structured ascent, where reason demystifies phenomena like evil as illusory concealment of divine light, fostering resilience amid material challenges.[61] In practical application, this balance manifests as avodah—purposeful divine service—wherein studied insights elevate routine mitzvot (commandments) from rote observance to transformative acts refining the self and world. Chabad teachings hold that intellectual grasp enables kavanah (intention), directing emotions toward ethical deeds like charity or Torah study, which in turn reveal latent godliness in physicality.[62] Subsequent rebbes, building on this foundation, extended it to communal outreach, viewing global dissemination of these principles as a redemptive imperative grounded in verified Torah imperatives rather than charismatic impulse alone.[63] Thus, Chabad eschews imbalance, insisting that uncomprehended mysticism devolves to sentimentality, while intellect devoid of application remains sterile abstraction.Views on Divine Providence and Human Potential
In Chabad philosophy, divine providence, known as hashgacha pratit, posits that God exercises continuous, particular oversight over every aspect of creation, including individual human events and seemingly random occurrences, as an interactive dynamic between the Creator and the created world.[64] This concept, rooted in the teachings of the Baal Shem Tov and elaborated by Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi, rejects notions of coincidence or impersonal causality, asserting instead that all phenomena serve a purposeful divine intent, often discernible through Torah study and introspection.[65] Chabad texts emphasize that this providence extends to the minutest details, such as a fallen leaf or personal trials, enabling individuals to perceive and align with God's will amid apparent chaos.[66] Human potential in Chabad thought is intrinsically linked to this providence, viewing every Jew as possessing a nefesh elokit—a divine soul that is literally "a part of God above" with faculties rooted in divine intellect, emotions, and will. Outlined in the Tanya, Rabbi Shneur Zalman's foundational 1796 work, this soul coexists with an animal soul derived from the klipot (spiritual husks), creating an internal battle that humans resolve through intellectual contemplation (it'aruta di-l'ba from above) and practical mitzvot, elevating base desires and revealing inherent divinity. The beinoni—an attainable state for all—exemplifies this potential, where the divine soul dominates without eradicating the animal soul, transforming personal effort into cosmic repair (tikkun).[67] Chabad teachings frame human agency as a collaborative partnership with divine providence, where individuals actively draw down God's presence into the material world, fulfilling the mandate to make "a dwelling place for God in the lower realms" through Torah observance and ethical refinement rather than passive acceptance.[68] This elevates human role from mere recipient to co-creator, with unlimited potential realized via avodah (divine service) that refines the world's concealed divine sparks, as synthesized in Chabad Chassidus.[69] Such views underscore empirical self-observation and causal chains traceable to divine origin, countering deterministic philosophies by affirming free will's role in actualizing providence.[70]Leadership
The Lineage of Seven Rebbes
The Chabad-Lubavitch Hasidic dynasty consists of seven successive Rebbes, beginning with its founder in the late 18th century and continuing until 1994. Each leader, drawn from the Schneersohn family lineage, advanced the movement's intellectual framework rooted in Kabbalah and rational philosophy, while navigating geopolitical challenges from Russian imperial rule to Soviet persecution and eventual global dispersion. This paternal succession emphasized esoteric teachings, communal organization, and outreach, with the Rebbes serving as spiritual authorities whose discourses (ma'amarim) and responsa shaped Chabad's distinct approach within Hasidism.[71][72] The first Rebbe, Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi (1745–1812), known as the Alter Rebbe, established Chabad in 1772 by synthesizing Lurianic Kabbalah with philosophical inquiry in his seminal work, Tanya (first published 1796), which elucidates the inner dimensions of Torah and the soul's divine spark. Imprisoned briefly in 1798 by Russian authorities on suspicion of subversive activities, he authored foundational texts like Shulchan Aruch HaRav and disseminated Chabad's emphasis on intellectual contemplation of God over emotional fervor alone. His efforts laid the groundwork for Chabad's rational-mystical theology, attracting followers in Belarus and Ukraine despite opposition from Mitnaggedim.[73][74] Succeeding him was his son, Rabbi Dovber Schneuri (1773–1827), the Mitteler Rebbe, who relocated the movement's center to Lubavitch in 1813, fostering expansion through voluminous writings on Kabbalah and Chassidic meditation. Under his leadership from 1812, Chabad grew amid Napoleonic wars and serfdom, with emphasis on disseminating the Alter Rebbe's teachings via printed editions and establishing structured study circles. He authored over 50 works, including exegetical commentaries, solidifying Chabad's scholarly reputation.[71][73] The third Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn (1789–1866), the Tzemach Tzedek, grandson of the Alter Rebbe, assumed leadership in 1827 and became a prolific halakhic authority, issuing thousands of responsa on civil and ritual law. He opposed Tsarist conscription of Jewish youth in the 1840s, advocating exemptions that preserved community cohesion, and supported economic initiatives like artisan guilds amid industrialization. His 150 published volumes integrated Chassidic mysticism with practical jurisprudence, enhancing Chabad's influence in Russian Jewish affairs until his death.[71][74] Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn (1834–1882), the Rebbe Maharash and son of the Tzemach Tzedek, led from 1866, pioneering extensive travel to remote Jewish communities in Russia and Eastern Europe to revive observance. Known for innovative interpretations of Kabbalah, he emphasized "lowly paths" in divine service—practical actions over lofty contemplation—and authored discourses later compiled in Imrei Binah. His brief tenure focused on internal consolidation amid growing antisemitism.[71][73] The fifth Rebbe, Rabbi Sholom Dovber Schneersohn (1860–1920), the Rebbe Rashab and son of the Maharash, directed Chabad from 1882, founding the Tomchei Tmimim yeshiva network in 1897 to train elite scholars in Chassidic thought. He warned against Bolshevik threats post-1905 Revolution, relocating assets, and produced systematic ma'amarim on Chabad's philosophical system, including Torah Or. Facing World War I disruptions, he maintained underground activities.[71][74] Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn (1880–1950), the Rebbe Rayatz and son of the Rashab, inherited leadership in 1920 amid Russian Civil War chaos, enduring arrests by Soviet authorities in 1927 for underground religious networks before exile to Poland in 1928. He established educational and relief institutions in Riga and Warsaw, smuggling texts and emissaries, and fled Nazi-occupied Europe in 1940 to arrive in New York in 1941, where he revitalized Chabad post-Holocaust. His memoirs detail resistance efforts.[71][73] The seventh Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902–1994), son-in-law of the Rayatz, succeeded in 1951, transforming Chabad into a global outreach movement with over 5,000 emissary families by 1994. Educated in Berlin and Sorbonne, he emphasized practical mitzvot campaigns, public menorah lightings, and education via institutions like Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, while authoring thousands of letters and discourses on messianic themes. His tenure saw exponential institutional growth despite no biological successor.[71][74]Pivotal Role and Innovations of Menachem Mendel Schneerson
Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902–1994) became the seventh Rebbe of Chabad-Lubavitch on January 17, 1951, following the death of his father-in-law and predecessor, Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, on June 12, 1950.[33] Assuming leadership at a time when the movement had been severely diminished by the Holocaust and World War II, with only a few hundred adherents in the United States, Schneerson redirected Chabad toward aggressive global outreach, emphasizing personal responsibility for disseminating Jewish observance and education.[3] His tenure, spanning over four decades until his death on June 12, 1994, marked a shift from insular Hasidism to a proactive missionary model, establishing Chabad as one of the largest Jewish organizations worldwide.[75] A core innovation was the systematic deployment of shluchim, or emissary couples, to establish permanent Chabad centers in underserved Jewish communities. Schneerson began sending these representatives immediately upon taking leadership, initially to North American university campuses and cities, with the first Chabad House opening at the University of California, Berkeley, in 1952.[75] By the 1970s and 1980s, this network expanded to over 100 countries, including remote and non-traditional locations, fostering self-sustaining institutions focused on education, synagogue services, and welfare. Under his guidance, Chabad grew to operate thousands of such centers, schools, and programs by 1994, a scale achieved through directives for annual expansion and personal matching of shluchim to posts.[75] [3] Schneerson introduced the mivtzoim, or mitzvah campaigns, starting in 1967 amid the Six-Day War, launching ten targeted initiatives between 1967 and 1976 to promote specific observances such as tefillin, mezuzah, Shabbat candles, and Torah study.[76] These campaigns operationalized outreach by training emissaries to engage Jews publicly in performing mitzvot, often on the spot, transforming abstract encouragement into measurable actions. In 1974, he pioneered mitzvah tanks—mobile vans equipped for on-street rituals like tefillin wrapping—which became iconic vehicles for urban proselytizing and spread to dozens of cities.[77] Complementing these were institutional expansions, including the growth of Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch for youth education and Kehot Publication Society for disseminating Chabad texts, both formalized in the 1940s but vastly scaled under his direction to produce millions of volumes.[3] His approach integrated Chabad's intellectual-mystical tradition with pragmatic activism, insisting on data-driven feedback from shluchim via weekly reports and farbrengens (gatherings) to refine strategies. Schneerson's personal involvement—receiving thousands of letters weekly and dispensing individualized advice—centralized decision-making while decentralizing operations, enabling rapid adaptation to local needs without diluting core theology. This model not only revived Chabad demographically but embedded it in diverse settings, from Soviet Jewry rescue efforts in the 1970s to campus programs countering 1960s assimilation.[75] The resultant network's resilience post-1994 underscores the durability of his innovations in sustaining growth amid the absence of a successor.[3]Absence of Successor and Decentralized Authority Post-1994
Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe, died on June 12, 1994, at the age of 92, leaving Chabad-Lubavitch without a designated successor, as he had no children and had not groomed or appointed an heir during his tenure.[3][78][79] This absence marked a departure from the prior six generations of Chabad leadership, each transitioning via familial succession within the Schneersohn-Schneerson lineage.[7] In response, authority decentralized across Chabad's central institutions, including Agudas Chasidei Chabad as the umbrella body, Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch for educational outreach, and Machneh Israel for social services, all operating from committees rather than a singular figurehead.[37][80] These entities coordinate global activities, managing finances, emissary assignments, and public initiatives from the movement's headquarters at 770 Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn, New York.[81] Local shluchim (emissaries), numbering over 5,000 couples by the 2020s, exercise substantial operational independence in establishing and running institutions, guided primarily by the Rebbe's pre-1994 directives, letters, and recorded talks rather than ongoing charismatic leadership.[37][80] This structure has sustained Chabad's expansion, with emissaries founding over 3,500 institutions worldwide by 2014, despite the transformative challenge of operating without a living Rebbe.[80] However, the absence of centralized authority has not been without tensions; a minority faction adheres to messianic beliefs positing Schneerson as the awaited Messiah, either viewing his death as illusory or anticipating his revelation, which obviates the need for succession in their interpretation.[7] Mainstream operations, conversely, emphasize pragmatic continuity through institutional frameworks and the Rebbe's enduring teachings, avoiding formal endorsement of such views in official capacities.[7][37]Global Presence and Demographics
Estimated Adherents and Engagement Statistics
Chabad-Lubavitch maintains a core community of Hasidic adherents estimated at 90,000 to 95,000 individuals worldwide, primarily residing in strictly observant enclaves such as Brooklyn's Crown Heights and Kfar Chabad in Israel, as of recent scholarly assessments.[82][39] This figure represents committed followers adhering to Chabad's distinctive customs and theology, distinct from broader Jewish populations engaged through outreach efforts. Independent estimates place full-time members lower, around 30,000 to 50,000, with an additional 200,000 participating sporadically in events without formal affiliation.[83] Engagement extends significantly beyond core adherents via the shluchim (emissary) network, which as of 2023 comprises approximately 4,900 families operating over 3,500 institutions across 100 countries and territories.[38] These include Chabad Houses, schools, and synagogues serving as hubs for education, holidays, and social services, attracting millions annually; for instance, Chabad.org recorded 54 million unique visitors in 2020 alone, reflecting digital outreach amplified during the COVID-19 pandemic.[39] In the United States, Chabad congregations have expanded by 199% since 2001, now comprising a substantial portion of synagogue growth, with surveys indicating 16% of American Jews (roughly 1.2 million individuals, based on a 7.5 million Jewish population) participating in Chabad activities often or sometimes.[84][85] Recent data highlight surges in engagement, particularly post-October 7, 2023, with Jewish Federations of North America surveys noting Chabad's disproportionate increase in participation compared to other denominations, attributed to its accessible, non-judgmental programming.[42] Broader metrics suggest up to 30% of Jews attending Chabad events yearly, with nearly 40% of those engaging regularly or semi-regularly, underscoring the movement's role in reaching unaffiliated or secular Jews through initiatives like campus centers (now numbering in the hundreds) and public menorah lightings.[86] These statistics, drawn from organizational reports and surveys, emphasize Chabad's emphasis on influence over formal membership counts, though core adherence remains a fraction of global Jewry.[38][85]Primary Communities in the United States
The primary Chabad community in the United States is located in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn, New York City, which functions as the global headquarters of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement at 770 Eastern Parkway.[87] This area concentrates the largest population of Chabad Hasidim, with 21,000 Jewish adults and 14,000 Jewish children residing in 13,000 households as of the 2011 UJA-Federation of New York community study, encompassing a total of 41,000 individuals in Jewish households.[88] Approximately 70% of Jewish adults in Crown Heights identify as Orthodox, reflecting the Hasidic orientation dominated by Chabad customs, institutions, and leadership legacy.[88] Crown Heights supports extensive communal infrastructure, including yeshivas, synagogues, mikvehs, and kosher facilities, fostering high religious engagement: 64% of households belong to synagogues, and 83% of families with school-age children enroll at least one child in Jewish day schools.[88] The neighborhood's Jewish population exhibits strong communal ties, with 89% of adults feeling connected to the local Jewish community and 92% considering Jewish identity very or somewhat important.[88] Demographic characteristics include a young average adult age of 35, 48% marriage rate among adults, and 25% foreign-born, underscoring a vibrant, growing Hasidic enclave.[88] Beyond Crown Heights, Chabad communities in the US are typically smaller and emissary-driven, lacking the centralized density of the Brooklyn core; examples include clusters in Los Angeles, California, with multiple centers serving dispersed families, though precise population data remains limited due to the movement's outreach model.[89] Other notable presences exist in cities like Las Vegas, Nevada, where non-Crown Heights Chabad households form sizable local groups independent of the primary hub.[90] These secondary communities prioritize shluchim (emissaries) establishing Chabad Houses and institutions tailored to regional Jewish needs rather than large-scale residential enclaves.[91]Presence in Israel and the Middle East
Chabad-Lubavitch operates over 250 centers throughout Israel, encompassing synagogues, educational institutions, and outreach facilities that serve both core adherents and the wider Jewish populace. These centers facilitate daily prayer services, Torah study, and communal events, with many rabbis completing advanced training in Israeli yeshivot before deployment as shluchim elsewhere. Kfar Chabad, a moshav settlement founded on 21 Iyar 5709 (May 3, 1949) by the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, functions as a primary hub for Chabad activities, including yeshivas, vocational training programs, and a replica of the movement's Brooklyn headquarters at 770 Eastern Parkway; initially established to support post-World War II immigrants from Soviet Russia, it emphasizes the dissemination of Chabad teachings (hafatzas hama'ayanos) while integrating agricultural and industrial enterprises.[92][93][94] Chabad's footprint extends to other Israeli locales, including urban centers like Jerusalem, Tel Aviv, and Safed, where institutions such as schools under the Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch umbrella educate thousands of students annually in Hasidic thought, Hebrew studies, and practical observance. The movement's influence in Israel also manifests through public campaigns, such as menorah lightings during Hanukkah and support for soldiers, reflecting directives from the seventh Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, to engage all Jews irrespective of observance level. Despite occasional tensions with state secularism or rival Orthodox groups, Chabad's decentralized structure enables robust local operations, bolstered by native-born chasidim and returning shluchim families.[95] In the broader Middle East beyond Israel, Chabad's presence remains nascent and geopolitically constrained, with historical activities confined to pockets of Jewish communities in countries like Turkey. Post-2020 Abraham Accords, expansion accelerated in Gulf states; Chabad dispatched Rabbi Levi Duchman as its first permanent emissary to the United Arab Emirates in October 2020, establishing centers in Dubai and Abu Dhabi to provide kosher services, holiday programs, and education for expatriate Jews numbering around 2,000. Outreach in Bahrain and potential sites in other normalizing nations follows suit, aiming to foster Jewish life amid diplomatic thawing, though incidents like the November 2024 abduction and murder of UAE-based Chabad operative Rabbi Zvi Kogan underscore persistent security risks from antisemitic actors.[96][97]Expansion in Europe, Canada, and Emerging Regions
Chabad's presence in Europe expanded significantly after the fall of the Soviet Union in 1991, transitioning from underground operations to overt institutional growth. In Russia, Rabbi Berel Lazar established a network of over 200 centers by the early 2000s, supported by government relations and serving revived Jewish communities. The continent-wide effort, coordinated via the Brussels-based Rabbinical Center of Europe founded in 1993, now includes institutions across more than 30 countries, with notable concentrations in the United Kingdom (over 50 centers), France, and Germany. This outreach addresses assimilation and secularism among Europe's estimated 1.4 million Jews, emphasizing public menorah lightings and educational programs.[98] In the United Kingdom, the first permanent Chabad House opened in London in 1967 under Rabbi Bentzi Sudakevich, evolving into a hub for campus and city-center activities that now span dozens of locations. France's Chabad network, active since the 1950s, grew to counter rising antisemitism, with Rabbi Yitzchok Dovid Groner leading expansions in Paris and beyond during the 1980s and 1990s. Eastern Europe saw rapid post-communist revival, including in Ukraine and Poland, where shluchim restored synagogues and schools dormant since World War II. By 2022, Chabad reported dispatching over 120 new emissary couples annually worldwide, many bolstering European outposts amid demographic shifts.[84] Canada hosts one of Chabad's earliest and most robust North American footprints outside the U.S., with the first center established in Montreal in the 1940s under Rabbi Hirsch Wilansky, followed by Toronto's outpost in 1974 led by Rabbi Zalman Grossbaum. As of 2018, Chabad operates in 51 Canadian communities, including 39 in Quebec and 21 in Ontario, encompassing synagogues, schools, and campus programs serving diverse Jewish populations from urban hubs like Vancouver to remote areas. Recent developments include a new center in Collingwood, Ontario, slated for full operation by late 2025, reflecting sustained inward migration of shluchim and adaptation to local needs such as Hebrew schools and holiday services. This network supports Canada's approximately 400,000 Jews, with growth tied to Schneerson's directives for universal outreach.[99][100][101] Emerging regions, including parts of Asia, Africa, and Latin America, represent Chabad's frontier expansions since the 1970s, targeting small or isolated Jewish pockets with minimal prior infrastructure. In Asia, shluchim operate in over a dozen countries such as India (Mumbai's Nariman House, established 1980s), Thailand (Bangkok since 1995), and the Philippines, providing kosher facilities and festivals for backpackers and expatriates. Africa's network spans nations like South Africa (Johannesburg hub since 1950s), Nigeria, and Morocco, with recent conferences uniting emissaries from 40 countries to coordinate aid and education amid instability. Latin America's growth includes Brazil (São Paulo center from 1957) and Argentina, where over 100 institutions serve Sephardic and Ashkenazi communities, often filling voids left by economic challenges. These outposts, numbering in the hundreds globally for non-traditional areas, prioritize mitzvah campaigns and emergency support, exemplified by responses to events like the 2008 Mumbai attacks.[102][103][104]Metrics of Growth: Institutions and Shluchim Networks
Chabad-Lubavitch operates more than 3,500 institutions globally, encompassing Chabad Houses as multifunctional synagogues and community hubs, educational facilities, and social service centers, all coordinated through its emissary network.[38] These establishments are sustained by over 6,000 full-time shluchim families, with approximately 2,500 stationed in the United States, facilitating outreach in over 100 countries and territories.[28] The institutional portfolio includes over 1,000 schools and preschools worldwide, alongside specialized programs such as campus centers numbering 284 permanent locations serving 500 universities across dozens of countries.[38] The shluchim network, comprising rabbi-couples trained at Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch institutions and dispatched for lifelong missions, has demonstrated exponential expansion since the 1990s. In 1994, following the passing of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, Chabad maintained around 1,325 institutions; by 2019, this figure had more than doubled amid continued proliferation.[34] Shluchim numbers grew from roughly 3,500 in 2000 to over 5,000 by the mid-2020s, with recent annual deployments averaging 120 new couples—equivalent to one every three days as of 2022.[39][84] This pace reflects a 236 percent increase in emissaries since 1994, driven by decentralized fundraising and familial recruitment patterns where children of existing shluchim often assume new posts.[105] Growth metrics underscore Chabad's institutional density in underserved areas, with the network claiming the largest synagogue footprint of any Jewish denomination in North America, exceeding 1,000 centers as of 2018.[99] Campus-specific expansion has been pronounced, from the first permanent university Chabad House at UCLA in 1969 to over 200 in the U.S. by 2024, often outpacing other Jewish groups in student engagement.[39][106] Quantitative tracking by Chabad's central bodies emphasizes not only establishment counts but also program reach, such as educational enrollment and event attendance, though independent verification of self-reported figures remains limited due to the movement's opaque internal data practices.[107]Customs and Practices
Distinctive Liturgical and Daily Observances
Chabad adherents follow Nusach Ari, a distinctive prayer liturgy codified by Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi in his 1803 siddur, drawing from the kabbalistic traditions of Rabbi Isaac Luria (the Arizal) while adapting them for broad accessibility across Jewish tribes and omitting complex meditative intentions (kavanot) to prioritize halachic precision and grammatical accuracy.[108] This rite blends elements from Ashkenazic and Sephardic customs, serving as a "thirteenth gate" (Shaar HaKollel) open to all, and has been reprinted in editions such as Siddur Tehillat Hashem since 1918.[108] A hallmark of Chabad prayer is the custom among men to don two pairs of tefillin simultaneously during morning services— one following the order of Rashi and the other of Rabbeinu Tam—reflecting kabbalistic imperatives to fulfill both rabbinic opinions at once, as emphasized by the Arizal and prevalent in chassidic practice.[109] This differs from the single-pair norm in many Orthodox communities and underscores Chabad's commitment to comprehensive mitzvah observance. Daily personal observances include the Chitas study cycle, instituted by Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn in 1943, comprising fixed portions of Chumash with Rashi's commentary, Tehillim (Psalms), and Tanya to foster intellectual and spiritual discipline.[110] Chabad emphasizes three daily prayers (Shacharit, Mincha, and Maariv) infused with chassidic philosophy, prioritizing deveikut (attachment to the Divine) over rote recitation. Communal observances feature the farbrengen, an inspirational gathering typically held weekly after Shabbat services, involving Torah discourses, chassidic melodies, and lechayim toasts to bond participants and disseminate teachings, as practiced under Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson until 1992.[111] These sessions, often transcribed and distributed globally, integrate liturgy with practical chassidic application rather than serving as formal prayer.[111]Holiday Customs and Communal Celebrations
Chabad-Lubavitch observes the major Jewish holidays with adherence to halachic requirements augmented by Chassidic emphases on intellectual contemplation, mystical insight, and exuberant joy. Distinctive practices include farbrengens—communal gatherings featuring Torah expositions, wordless niggunim (melodies), and l'chaim toasts—which frequently accompany holiday observances to foster spiritual elevation and unity. These events, rooted in the movement's tradition, transform standard rituals into opportunities for collective inspiration and outreach to unaffiliated Jews.[111][112] During Hanukkah, Chabad emphasizes public menorah lightings in prominent civic spaces, a custom initiated by Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson in the 1970s to publicize the miracle of the cruse of oil. This outreach effort has expanded to approximately 15,000 annual displays worldwide, drawing millions of participants and dignitaries, including events like the National Menorah lighting in Washington, D.C., often attended by U.S. presidents. Private home lightings follow the custom of kindling shortly after sunset, accompanied by blessings, Hallel prayers, and foods fried in oil such as sufganiyot and latkes.[113][114][115] Lag BaOmer, marking the yahrzeit of Rabbi Shimon bar Yochai and the purported cessation of a plague among Rabbi Akiva's students, features bonfires symbolizing the illumination of the Zohar, the foundational Kabbalistic text revealed by bar Yochai. Chabad communities host parades, particularly children's processions with toy bows and arrows referencing historical customs, picnics, and festive gatherings that underscore themes of Jewish unity and mysticism. In Crown Heights, these celebrations draw thousands for dancing, singing, and communal meals, continuing traditions established during Schneerson's leadership.[116][117] Purim observances highlight radical joy through megillah readings, gift baskets (mishloach manot), gifts to the poor (matanot la'evyonim), and a festive seudah, often with costumes and plays. Chabad extends these via outreach campaigns, distributing food and encouraging participation among non-observant Jews. Simchat Torah concludes Sukkot with hakafot—circuits of the synagogue carrying Torah scrolls amid prolonged dancing and singing, reflecting Chabad's focus on Torah as a source of unbridled simcha. For Passover, seders incorporate the Haggadah with Chassidic interpretations, emphasizing four cups of wine, matzah, and maror to recount the Exodus.[118] Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur follow standard High Holiday liturgy with shofar blasts, tashlich, and atonement prayers, but Chabad services feature extended Chassidic discourses on teshuvah (repentance) and divine unity. Sukkot involves dwelling in sukkahs and waving the lulav and etrog, with Chabad promoting these mitzvot publicly to draw participants. Shavuot commemorates the giving of the Torah with all-night study sessions (Tikkun Leil Shavuot), dairy meals, and synagogue decorations with greenery, aligning with customs to evoke Mount Sinai's floral abundance.[119][120]Organizational Framework
Central Bodies: Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch and Machneh Israel
Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, established in 1942 by Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, serves as the central educational division of Chabad-Lubavitch, focusing on the dissemination of Jewish education and Chabad philosophy to youth worldwide.[121] It coordinates programs such as schools, summer camps, and publications through subsidiaries like Kehot Publication Society, which produces texts in multiple languages to promote Torah study and Hasidic teachings. The organization emphasizes strengthening Jewish identity among children and adolescents via initiatives like Mesibos Shabbos gatherings and educational materials distributed globally.[122] Machneh Israel, founded in May 1941 by the same Lubavitcher leader shortly after his arrival in the United States, functions as the social services and outreach arm targeting adults, aiming to foster Jewish continuity and community support.[123] Its efforts include providing resources to Jewish institutions, spiritual guidance for soldiers, and adult study societies, with Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson appointed as head in 1942.[124] In 1984, the Machneh Israel Development Fund was created under Schneerson's direction to finance Chabad's expansion, serving as a key philanthropic vehicle for sustaining emissary networks and humanitarian aid.[125] These bodies operate in tandem, with Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch prioritizing youth education and Machneh Israel addressing adult needs, together forming the administrative core for Chabad's international activities from their base at 770 Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn.[122] Both have sustained operations amid post-World War II Jewish diaspora challenges, expanding to support thousands of Chabad centers by coordinating funding, training, and materials without reliance on government subsidies.[126]Chabad Houses as Local Hubs
Chabad Houses operate as decentralized community centers directed by Chabad-Lubavitch emissaries (shluchim), serving as focal points for religious, educational, and social services tailored to local Jewish populations regardless of observance level.[127] These hubs typically begin in the homes of shluchim couples and expand into dedicated facilities, offering daily prayer services, Torah study sessions, and classes on Jewish philosophy and customs for adults and children.[127] They emphasize hospitality, providing Shabbat and holiday meals to locals and travelers, public celebrations such as Passover seders and Hanukkah menorah lightings, and support for life-cycle events like brit milah and bar mitzvahs. In addition to spiritual and educational programming, Chabad Houses deliver practical outreach, including counseling for personal challenges, kosher meal provision, and assistance during crises or holidays in areas lacking other Jewish infrastructure.[129] This inclusive approach draws from the biblical model of Abraham and Sarah's tent, open on all sides to welcome guests, aiming to ignite latent Jewish identity and encourage mitzvah observance without prerequisites.[127] Emissaries adapt activities to community demographics, such as campus-focused programs near universities or family-oriented events in suburbs, while coordinating with central Chabad bodies for resources and guidance.[130] The establishment of Chabad Houses accelerated under Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson's leadership, with a notable 1972 directive urging shluchim to found centers in cities, suburbs, and campuses worldwide to broaden outreach.[127] By the early 21st century, this model supported over 3,500 institutions operated by approximately 4,900 emissary families across more than 100 countries, enabling sustained presence in remote locales like small towns or emerging regions.[38] These hubs contribute to Chabad's growth by fostering self-sustaining communities that integrate newcomers into ongoing Jewish practice.[38]Fundraising and Resource Allocation Strategies
Chabad's fundraising model emphasizes local autonomy, with shluchim (emissaries) responsible for raising funds within their communities to support operations, including Chabad houses, educational programs, and outreach initiatives. Each center relies exclusively on contributions from individuals, foundations, and corporations in its locality, without mandatory dues or assessments imposed by central headquarters.[131] Funds procured remain entirely local unless donors designate them for specific global projects, fostering an entrepreneurial approach that aligns resource needs with community engagement.[131] Strategies include personal solicitation, event-based appeals, and modern digital tools such as online donation platforms, virtual tzedakah boxes, and text-to-give campaigns to facilitate accessible giving. Shluchim prepare detailed portfolios outlining budgets and projects to attract donors, often diversifying income streams to mitigate reliance on single supporters and sustain growth amid economic fluctuations. Capital campaigns for infrastructure, such as building expansions, have raised over $100 million across U.S. centers in the 19 months preceding October 2021, demonstrating resilience even during the COVID-19 pandemic.[132][133] Resource allocation prioritizes operational sustainability and expansion, directing the majority of local funds toward salaries, program delivery, facility maintenance, and community services like Shabbat meals and holiday events. Central entities, such as Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, manage separate donations for educational materials, publishing, and shluchim training, distributing grants—recently increased from $300,000 to $400,000 per recipient—to support emissary initiatives worldwide. This structure ensures targeted investment in outreach and institutional development, with minimal central oversight to encourage initiative at the grassroots level.[134]
Outreach and Educational Initiatives
Shluchim Emissary Deployment and Impact
The Chabad shluchim program, directed by Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson from the mid-20th century, deploys rabbinical couples as lifelong emissaries to establish Jewish outreach centers worldwide, prioritizing locations with sparse religious infrastructure despite Jewish populations.[38] These emissaries, often young families, commit indefinitely to their posts, operating under the central guidance of Chabad's New York headquarters while adapting to local needs.[135] As of 2024, over 5,000 shluchim families serve in more than 100 countries, managing approximately 3,500 institutions including Chabad Houses, synagogues, schools, and camps.[136] Annual growth includes dispatching around 120 new couples, equivalent to one every three days as of 2022, with expansions into remote areas such as Kigali, Rwanda, and doubling efforts in cities like Phoenix and London.[84] Deployment emphasizes underserved Jewish communities, from urban centers to isolated outposts, fostering self-sustaining networks that extend Chabad's influence beyond traditional Orthodox strongholds.[137] The impact manifests in measurable institutional expansion and heightened Jewish engagement. In the United States, Chabad synagogues increased 199% from 346 in 2001 to 1,036 by 2021, comprising the largest single network of Jewish congregations.[138] Globally, shluchim efforts correlate with surges in participation; a 2025 survey found 44% of Chabad-affiliated Jews reporting deeper connections post-2023 events, outpacing other denominations, with 30% attending activities annually.[139] On campuses, over 100,000 students engaged in Chabad programs in 2024, reflecting resilience amid rising antisemitism.[44] These outcomes stem from shluchim's focus on practical outreach—such as public menorah lightings and one-on-one mitzvah encouragement—yielding sustained communal revival without reliance on assimilationist trends.[140]Mitzvah Campaigns and Public Awareness Efforts
Chabad's mitzvah campaigns, initiated by Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson in the late 1960s, aimed to encourage Jewish observance of specific commandments amid rising assimilation rates following the Holocaust and Six-Day War. These efforts focused on ten foundational mitzvot, including lighting Shabbat candles, donning tefillin, affixing mezuzot, studying Torah, giving tzedakah, maintaining kashrut, filling homes with Jewish books, performing mitzvot for education and chinuch, observing family purity laws, and promoting love for fellow Jews.[141][76] By 1976, these campaigns expanded to include broader observances, with Chabad emissaries directly approaching individuals in public spaces to facilitate immediate performance of mitzvot such as tefillin wrapping or candle distribution.[141] To amplify outreach, Chabad launched mitzvah tanks in 1974, mobile vans equipped as portable centers for education and mitzvah fulfillment, deployed in high-traffic areas like streets, airports, and malls to counter assimilation through visible, on-the-spot engagement.[77] Schneerson described these vehicles as "tanks against assimilation," emphasizing their role in generating public "holy ruckus" to awaken Jewish identity.[142] The tanks facilitated thousands of mitzvah interactions annually, with examples including daily cavalcades in New York City where passersby were invited to participate in prayers or receive ritual items.[143] Public awareness efforts extended these campaigns by integrating media, literature, and street-level interactions to highlight Jewish practices and combat spiritual disconnection, particularly among secular Jews.[144] Chabad's strategy emphasized direct, non-coercive invitations like "Are you Jewish?" to spark interest, leading to sustained involvement in observance and education programs.[145] These initiatives have been credited with revitalizing Jewish engagement worldwide, though their impact relies on self-reported Chabad metrics rather than independent longitudinal studies.[146]
Campus Outreach and Youth Programs Including CTeen
Chabad's campus outreach, known as Chabad on Campus, was initiated in the early 1950s under the leadership of Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, who directed emissaries to engage Jewish students at universities, building on earlier efforts from the 1940s and 1950s by the previous Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn.[147][148] These programs provide social, educational, and spiritual activities, functioning as a "home away from home" for students regardless of observance level, with offerings such as Shabbat meals, classes, holiday events, and counseling.[149][150] By 2022, the number of Chabad centers on college campuses had significantly expanded since 2000, attracting students from diverse Jewish backgrounds through non-judgmental environments that emphasize intellectual and communal engagement.[106] The network has grown to support over 950 locations worldwide, with notable expansions including 33 new centers established in 2014 across the United States, Canada, South America, and other regions, and 14 additional U.S. centers opened in 2017 targeting both large urban campuses and smaller suburban institutions.[151][152][153] Programs adapt to various campus types, including commuter schools, where emissaries innovate to involve transient students in Jewish life through targeted events and outreach.[154] Independent studies have documented the long-term impact, showing sustained Jewish involvement among participants post-graduation due to the programs' focus on personal growth and identity reinforcement.[148] Complementing campus efforts, CTeen—the Chabad Teen Network—targets high school-aged Jewish youth from all backgrounds, fostering leadership, self-confidence, and Jewish pride through interactive programs that blend fun, friendship, humanitarian service, mitzvah observance, and Torah study.[155][156] Activities include weekly high school clubs with kosher meals, community service projects like feeding the homeless, Shabbat dinners, educational discussions, and trips to Jewish sites, often culminating in hands-on experiences such as New York visits for broader exposure.[157][158][159] CTeen extends into preparatory youth initiatives like CTeen U, a collaboration with Yeshiva University offering college-accredited courses on Judaism accessible to high school students without prior knowledge, enabling up to 12 credits over three years alongside Jewish studies and general academics.[160] These efforts bridge pre-college youth engagement with university programs, emphasizing practical skills and communal building to counteract assimilation trends among younger demographics.[161]Educational Institutions and Summer Camps
Chabad-Lubavitch's educational network, administered by Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, encompasses day schools, preschools, yeshivas, and supplementary programs worldwide, emphasizing the integration of Torah study with secular subjects to instill Jewish values and literacy.[162] This organization supports over 1,000 such institutions globally, serving children from diverse Jewish backgrounds.[38] In North America, more than 200 preschools and day schools operate under Chabad auspices, while internationally, the tally exceeds 630 schools.[163] Yeshivas, including advanced programs like yeshiva gedolah for post-high school students, form a core component, with directories listing dozens in English-speaking regions alone.[164] Recent expansions include over 700 Hebrew schools opening in fall 2023 with updated curricula focused on Jewish identity.[165] Complementing formal schooling, Chabad's summer camps, led by the Gan Israel network, offer intensive, experiential Jewish education during vacation periods, blending recreation with religious instruction for children of all observance levels. Founded in 1956 with an initial camp hosting 92 boys in New York, Gan Israel has grown into the world's largest Jewish camping system.[166] By the early 2000s, annual enrollment surpassed 100,000 campers across North America, Europe, Australia, and other regions, with individual sites like those in Florida dating to 1963.[167] [168] Camps emphasize activities such as Torah classes, Shabbat observance, and outdoor pursuits, drawing participants from secular to Orthodox families to promote long-term Jewish engagement.[169] Post-COVID recovery has seen enrollment rebound, with some locations doubling pre-pandemic figures, as in Great Neck, New York, hosting 800 children in 2022.[170]Publishing, Media, and Digital Engagement
Kehot Publication Society, established in 1941 by Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, serves as Chabad-Lubavitch's primary publishing division, alongside Merkos Publications.[171] This entity produces educational and religious texts in Hebrew, Yiddish, English, Russian, Spanish, French, and other languages, encompassing Chasidic works, Jewish holidays, laws, customs, and lifecycle events.[172] As the world's largest publisher of Jewish literature, Kehot disseminates Torah study materials globally, supporting Chabad's outreach by providing resources to emissaries and communities.[172] Chabad's media efforts center on Jewish Educational Media (JEM), which produces documentaries, films, and video content focused on the life and teachings of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh Rebbe.[173] Notable productions include the documentary Armed, detailing the Rebbe's Tefillin campaign, and shorter films like Miracles, which explores daily miracles and historical events such as the Soviet suppression of Judaism.[173] [174] Chabad.org hosts an extensive video library covering Jewish themes, traditions, holidays, Torah classes, and inspirational shorts, including content for children on parshah and holidays.[175] [176] Digital engagement forms a core of Chabad's outreach, with Chabad.org operating as the largest faith-based website, attracting 52 million unique visitors annually and maintaining 102,129 content pages on Judaism.[38] The platform reaches over 43 million visitors yearly, with nearly 500,000 email subscribers, facilitating global access to rabbinic guidance and educational resources.[177] Chabad employs a dual digital strategy: external proselytization to unaffiliated Jews via social media and websites, and internal fortification of community ties through restricted platforms for members.[178] Innovations include a 2022 virtual Chabad center in the metaverse, marking the first Jewish outpost in such digital realms, and a content management system powering online presences for nearly 1,500 Chabad centers since 2002.[179] [180] This infrastructure supports emissary deployment by enabling localized digital hubs alongside physical ones.[180]Political and Civic Engagement
Advocacy for Jewish Causes and Anti-Assimilation Efforts
Chabad-Lubavitch has prioritized anti-assimilation initiatives as a central mission, viewing the preservation of Jewish identity through religious observance and education as essential to counter secular trends and intermarriage. Under Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, who led the movement from 1951 until his death in 1994, these efforts intensified, with the Rebbe framing assimilation as a spiritual threat requiring proactive outreach rather than passive acceptance.[181] [146] For instance, Chabad emissaries have operated for over 60 years to encourage Jewish children in public schools to transfer to Jewish day schools, aiming to instill Torah study and mitzvot observance as bulwarks against cultural dilution.[182] In response to rising assimilation rates, particularly in the post-World War II era, Schneerson advocated for universal Jewish education as the primary antidote, arguing that ignorance of heritage directly fueled erosion of faith. He initiated campaigns to expand yeshivas and summer programs, reaching unaffiliated Jews worldwide through Chabad Houses, which by the 1990s numbered over 1,000 globally and focused on reintegrating secular individuals via personalized encouragement of rituals like tefillin wrapping and Shabbat observance.[183] These efforts were grounded in the belief that active promotion of Jewish practice—rather than mere protest against external pressures—would foster resilience, a strategy Schneerson contrasted with historical escapes from persecution that inadvertently accelerated acculturation.[184] Advocacy for Jewish causes has included sustained campaigns for Soviet Jewry, where Chabad played a pivotal role in both covert rescue operations and diplomatic pressure starting in the early 20th century. Previous Lubavitcher Rebbes, such as Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, faced Soviet persecution for promoting Jewish education, leading to underground networks that preserved religious life amid suppression.[185] By the 1960s, Menachem Mendel Schneerson directed quiet diplomacy and emissary deployments, influencing U.S. policy through figures like Rabbi Abraham Shemtov, who lobbied White House officials in the 1980s to prioritize Jewish emigration from the USSR.[186] These initiatives contributed to the release of thousands, culminating in post-1991 expansions where Chabad established operations in 84 former Soviet cities to rebuild communities devastated by decades of enforced atheism.[187] Chabad's approach to broader Jewish advocacy emphasizes "pro-Semitism"—publicly demonstrating Judaism's positive contributions—over reactive anti-antisemitism measures, as Schneerson contended that highlighting Jewish ethical and spiritual value would preempt hostility. This manifested in efforts like nationwide menorah lightings and educational drives, which by the 1970s engaged millions annually to affirm Jewish visibility in pluralistic societies.[188] Such strategies aligned with historical Chabad responses to crises, including World War II refugee aid via a 1945 Paris relief office, underscoring a consistent pattern of causal intervention to sustain Jewish continuity amid existential threats.[189]Diplomatic Relations and Government Interactions
Chabad-Lubavitch has maintained ongoing interactions with United States presidents since the 1960s, often centered on moral guidance, Jewish education, and international Jewish advocacy. The Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, corresponded with multiple presidents, including Ronald Reagan, with whom he shared a deep relationship involving letters on ethical leadership and policy matters.[190] Annual proclamations for Education and Sharing Day, U.S.A., established in 1978 by President Jimmy Carter and continued by successors, honor the Rebbe's birthday and emphasize values of education and character development drawn from his teachings.[191] Delegations of Chabad rabbis have met with presidents including Barack Obama in 2015 and Donald Trump in multiple instances, such as Oval Office visits to commemorate holidays and discuss communal issues.[192][193] During the Cold War, Chabad played a pivotal role in advocating for Soviet Jewry, with the Rebbe directing quiet diplomacy and covert activities to support imprisoned rabbis and promote Jewish emigration. The Rebbe urged Israeli officials to balance public protests with behind-the-scenes efforts, influencing operations that aided spiritual and material sustenance for Jews under Soviet suppression.[194] In the U.S., Chabad emissaries lobbied White House officials in the 1980s to pressure the Soviet regime for releases, contributing to broader movements that facilitated the exodus of over a million Jews following the USSR's collapse in 1991.[186][195] Post-Soviet, Chabad established a dominant presence in Russia under Chief Rabbi Berel Lazar, appointed in 2000 with state recognition and known for close ties to President Vladimir Putin. Lazar, often termed "Putin's rabbi," has met Putin repeatedly, including in February 2025 to discuss Jewish community work and societal contributions, with Putin expressing thanks for Chabad's role in fostering interfaith relations and discouraging antisemitism.[196][197] These relations have yielded benefits like official discouragement of antisemitism and support for Chabad institutions, though they drew criticism from other Jewish groups over perceived coziness with authoritarian figures.[198] In 2023, Putin dismissed a security official who labeled Chabad a "supremacist cult," signaling high-level protection.[199] In Israel, Chabad's government interactions reflect practical support despite theological reservations about Zionism, including fundraising for soldiers and meetings with leaders. The Rebbe influenced diplomats like Joseph Ciechanover, who advanced Israeli interests in the U.S. informed by Chabad guidance.[200] Recent developments include alliances with figures like National Security Minister Itamar Ben-Gvir, formalized in 2025 agreements recognizing Chabad's global work and committing government resolutions to support its initiatives.[201] Chabad maintains extensive outreach to Israeli military personnel and civilians, balancing non-partisan educational efforts with advocacy against assimilation.[202]Key Disputes: Russian Library Conflict and Others
The Schneerson Collection, a library of approximately 12,000 rare books, thousands of manuscripts, and archival documents belonging to Chabad-Lubavitch leaders Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn and Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, was seized by Soviet authorities primarily between 1915 and the 1930s, with portions held in Russian state institutions such as the Russian State Library and the Russian State Military Archive.[203][204] Chabad-Lubavitch filed suit against the Russian Federation in the U.S. District Court for the District of Columbia in 2004 under the Foreign Sovereign Immunities Act, asserting ownership and seeking repatriation on the grounds that the materials were personal property expropriated without compensation.[205] In 2010, the court ruled in Chabad's favor, declaring Russia had no valid claim and ordering the collection's return, a decision upheld on appeal in 2012 despite Russia's arguments of sovereign immunity and cultural heritage status.[206][207] Russia refused compliance, prompting U.S. courts to impose escalating contempt sanctions, including a 2013 order to deposit $50,000 daily into a court fund (later waived) and a 2015 judgment of $44 million in fines for non-compliance, which Russia dismissed as lacking jurisdiction.[208][209] The dispute intensified bilateral tensions, with Russia banning loans of its cultural artifacts to U.S. institutions since 2011 and digitizing portions of the collection for online access in 2017 without granting physical repatriation.[204][208] In August 2024, the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit overturned prior enforcement mechanisms, ruling that the expropriation exception under the FSIA did not apply to the library's archival components, effectively halting U.S. judicial leverage while leaving the underlying ownership claim intact.[206][207] Chabad maintains the collection's religious and historical significance to the movement, rejecting Russia's portrayal of it as national patrimony acquired through state actions against Jewish institutions.[210] Beyond the library conflict, Chabad has faced disputes with European Jewish communal bodies over its close ties to governments perceived as authoritarian, particularly in Eastern Europe. In Hungary, Chabad-affiliated Unified Hungarian Jewish Community (EMIH) has been accused by rival Orthodox groups of engineering a "hostile takeover" of local institutions through financial bailouts and electoral maneuvers, culminating in a 2024 Supreme Court case challenging EMIH's dominance despite government favoritism under Prime Minister Viktor Orbán.[211][212] Similar frictions arose in 2017 when established Jewish leaders in countries like Hungary and Lithuania criticized Chabad rabbis for prioritizing state alliances—such as with Orbán or Lithuania's nationalists—over broader communal consensus, arguing it undermined unified advocacy on issues like Holocaust restitution.[213] In the UK, a Chabad center in North East London and Essex faced a 2025 Charities Commission warning for fundraising in October 2023 that inadvertently supported Israeli Defense Forces personnel, violating prohibitions on charities aiding foreign militaries, though Chabad contested the scope without disputing the regulatory breach.[214][215] These episodes highlight Chabad's strategy of direct governmental engagement, which has yielded operational freedoms but provoked intra-Jewish rivalries and regulatory scrutiny.[213]Controversies
Succession Crises and Formation of Offshoot Groups
Following the death of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe, on June 12, 1994, at Beth Israel Medical Center in Manhattan, Chabad-Lubavitch encountered a profound leadership vacuum, as Schneerson had neither named a successor nor produced heirs.[7] Prior successions within the movement had followed familial lines, with Schneerson himself assuming the role in 1951 after the passing of his father-in-law, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, amid initial reluctance but eventual broad acceptance.[80] The absence of a designated eighth Rebbe post-1994 shifted authority to decentralized executive committees managing global institutions, emissaries, and finances, rather than a singular charismatic figure issuing directives.[37] This structure has sustained operational continuity, with the number of Chabad emissaries expanding from approximately 1,200 in 1994 to over 5,000 by 2023, guided by recordings and writings of Schneerson.[34] The succession impasse intensified latent messianic fervor cultivated during Schneerson's later years, particularly after his 1992 stroke, when some followers interpreted his survival and pronouncements as signaling imminent redemption.[7] A majority of adherents accepted the physical burial at the Old Montefiore Cemetery in Queens but maintained belief in his messianic identity, anticipating resurrection to fulfill prophecies such as ingathering exiles and rebuilding the Temple.[7] A smaller, more intransigent faction rejected the finality of death, asserting Schneerson's ongoing presence at 770 Eastern Parkway through reenactments of his routines or bibliomantic practices using his letters.[7] These doctrinal rifts, critiqued externally as veering toward heresy by figures like Rabbi David Berger in his 1998 analysis of Chabad texts, prompted internal delineations between "anti-messianists" prioritizing institutional pragmatism and "meshichistim" advocating overt promotion of Schneerson as Moshiach.[7] Such divisions manifested in factional autonomy rather than outright schisms, with meshichistim establishing parallel prayer spaces, such as the Bais Moshiach synagogue in certain locales, to accommodate intensified messianic liturgy excluded from mainstream venues.[216] Extreme subsets, including the Tzfatim—a cohort of yeshiva students from Safed, Israel—have pursued aggressive expansions at 770 Eastern Parkway, including unauthorized tunneling in 2024, framing these as fulfillments of Schneerson's expansionist visions amid disputes over interpretive primacy.[217] Despite persistent tensions, including public signage decrying the "two decades too long" without redemption, Chabad's core organizations have enforced a de facto policy marginalizing radical expressions to preserve outreach efficacy, averting fragmentation into discrete denominations.[37][216]Messianism: Doctrinal Claims, Internal Divisions, and External Critiques
Chabad messianism centers on the belief that Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh Lubavitcher Rebbe who led the movement from 1951 until his death on June 12, 1994, fulfills the criteria for the Jewish Messiah (Moshiach). Adherents interpret his teachings, particularly from the early 1990s, as indicating his messianic identity, including statements urging followers to hasten redemption through mitzvot and public declarations of faith in the imminent arrival of Moshiach. Schneerson emphasized the seventh generation's role in completing the messianic process but avoided explicit self-identification as the Messiah, instead providing interpretive "hints" such as references to biblical verses and his own writings that followers later cited as proof. Radical variants include denial of his physical death—positing concealment or imminent resurrection—and the slogan "Yechi Adoneinu" ("Long live our Master"), chanted since 1990 to affirm his eternal life and kingship.[7][40][218] These doctrines derive from Schneerson's escalation of messianic rhetoric in the 1980s and 1990s, framing Chabad's global outreach as a mechanism to "force the end" of exile by accumulating merits for redemption, rooted in Lurianic Kabbalah and prior rebbes' writings. However, such claims extend traditional Jewish messianism by applying personal elevation of the rebbe beyond historical precedents in Hasidism, where leaders were seen as potential but not definitive messiahs. Official Chabad publications maintain that belief in Moshiach remains obligatory but do not endorse Schneerson's post-mortem messiahship, instead portraying his legacy as preparatory for the era.[219][220] Internally, Chabad divides between mainstream anti-messianists, who uphold Schneerson's death and reject ongoing messianic claims as detrimental to the movement's credibility, and messianists, who persist in proclaiming him as Moshiach despite lacking institutional support. Leadership, via bodies like Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, has issued statements denouncing extreme expressions such as death denial, viewing them as fringe and harmful to outreach, yet messianist views reportedly permeate a significant portion—possibly a vocal minority or more, per scholarly estimates—of rank-and-file hasidim, evidenced by widespread "Yechi" signage in Crown Heights and some emissary communities. Subtle factions exist, with some messianists accepting the death but awaiting resurrection, while others spiritualize his presence; no formal schism has occurred, but tensions manifest in disputes over publications and synagogue practices. Observers note that while official channels suppress public messianism to preserve unity, private adherence remains common, complicating enforcement.[8][221][40] External critiques from Orthodox Judaism, articulated by figures like Rabbi David Berger in his 1995 book The Rebbe, the Messiah, and the Scandal of Orthodox Indifference, condemn Chabad messianism as heretical, arguing it violates core tenets by deifying a deceased leader and resembling non-Jewish messianic cults through resurrection expectations and eternal-life assertions. Berger, an Orthodox scholar, contends that such beliefs exceed permissible Hasidic veneration, potentially constituting idolatry, and criticizes broader Orthodox silence as enabling the spread. Other rabbinic bodies, including elements of Agudath Israel, have issued rulings against messianist publications and practices, viewing them as divisive and antithetical to normative halakha, which requires a living, Davidic-descended Moshiach to fulfill prophecies like Temple rebuilding. These objections highlight Chabad's deviation from consensus on messianic identification post-failure, drawing parallels to historical false messiahs like Shabbatai Tzvi, though Chabad's institutional resilience mitigates outright excommunication.[222][223] Labels such as "supremacist cult" or "doomsday cult" applied to Chabad-Lubavitch appear primarily in fringe, antisemitic, or conspiracy-oriented sources and have been condemned by mainstream Jewish organizations, including the World Jewish Congress, as antisemitic characterizations.[224][225]Internal Conflicts: The 2024 Tunnel Incident at 770
On January 8, 2024, a physical altercation erupted at the Chabad-Lubavitch headquarters at 770 Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn's Crown Heights neighborhood when construction workers attempted to fill an unauthorized underground tunnel discovered beneath the synagogue.[226] The tunnel, approximately 60 feet long and 8 feet wide, had been secretly excavated by a group of young Hasidic students, primarily from Israel, connecting the main synagogue to adjacent buildings owned by the organization.[227] These individuals resisted the repair efforts by breaking through interior walls and synagogue paneling, leading to clashes with police who arrested nine people on charges including criminal mischief, trespassing, and obstructing governmental administration.[228] The tunnel's construction stemmed from a long-standing internal dispute over expanding the overcrowded 770 facility, which serves as the symbolic global center of Chabad-Lubavitch.[229] Mainstream Chabad leadership had pursued legal above-ground expansion plans for decades, but a fringe faction of students, influenced by radical interpretations of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson's teachings, opted for unauthorized subterranean digging to accelerate what they viewed as fulfillment of the late Rebbe's vision for a larger headquarters.[230] This group, often associated with stronger messianic beliefs that Schneerson remains the Messiah despite his 1994 death—a view rejected by most Chabad adherents—had occupied parts of adjacent properties and initiated the excavation without permits or structural reinforcements.[231] [232] The incident exposed deeper fractures within Chabad between established authorities and youthful extremists who prioritize eschatological imperatives over institutional protocols.[229] Chabad officials, including Rabbi Motti Seligson, publicly denounced the actions as vandalism by a "group of extremist students" unaffiliated with the movement's broader mission, emphasizing that the tunnel compromised the site's safety and sanctity.[233] The New York City Department of Buildings responded by issuing vacate orders for two unstable buildings above the tunnel, citing risks of collapse due to inadequate shoring and soil removal.[234] Legal proceedings followed, with thirteen defendants—mostly Israeli citizens—initially pleading not guilty in April 2024 to charges related to the melee and property damage.[235] By January 2025, six had pleaded guilty to lesser charges, reflecting ongoing efforts to resolve the case amid continued tensions over property control at 770.[236] The event, while not representative of Chabad's mainstream, underscored persistent challenges in managing fringe messianist elements that challenge leadership authority through unilateral actions.[231]Legal and Community Disputes Including Zoning and Draft Evasion Cases
Chabad institutions have frequently encountered zoning restrictions from local authorities seeking to limit expansions of synagogues, yeshivas, and community centers, often invoking the federal Religious Land Use and Institutionalized Persons Act (RLUIPA) of 2000 to challenge denials as discriminatory against religious assemblies.[237] In July 2022, Chabad of Atlantic Beach filed a federal lawsuit against village officials after zoning variances were denied for property use as a house of worship; the court ruled in Chabad's favor, leading to a November 2023 settlement that prompted the Board of Zoning Appeals to approve the variances in August 2025. Similarly, in September 2024, Harvard Chabad sued the Cambridge Board of Zoning Appeal, alleging religious discrimination in rejecting a special permit for a facility upgrade; the city settled in June 2025 for $540,000 and adopted zoning changes favorable to Chabad.[238] [239] Other notable zoning conflicts include a 2008 New Jersey appellate case where Chabad of Randolph contested township enforcement against operating a property as a Jewish community center without proper zoning approval, highlighting tensions over accessory uses like classes and events.[240] In Hawaii, Chabad Jewish Center of the Big Island sued county officials in 2024 over permit denials for religious programming, asserting RLUIPA violations.[241] Chabad of Nova pursued summary judgment in Florida against Cooper City for similar land-use barriers under RLUIPA.[242] These cases reflect a pattern where local zoning boards cite concerns like traffic and neighborhood character, but courts often side with Chabad, mandating accommodations for religious practice.[243] Regarding draft evasion, Chabad yeshiva students in Israel have faced enforcement amid broader ultra-Orthodox exemption debates, particularly after the Supreme Court's June 2024 ruling invalidating blanket deferments for seminary students.[244] In October 2025, following the expiration of a special Israel Defense Forces (IDF) arrangement allowing overseas study deferments, multiple Chabad kvutza (group study) students were arrested at Ben-Gurion Airport upon returning from programs at 770 Eastern Parkway in Brooklyn for failing to report for induction.[245] [246] Chabad-IDF negotiations collapsed in August 2025 over yeshiva enlistment quotas, despite Chabad's prior status as the largest haredi group participating, with over 1,000 soldiers enlisted under earlier frameworks.[247] Isolated prior incidents include a 2018 case where a Chabad woman from Netanya served two weeks in military prison for evasion after rejecting induction.[248] These disputes underscore Chabad's relatively higher enlistment rates compared to other haredi sects, yet ongoing reliance on deferments for full-time Torah study, clashing with IDF recruitment drives amid wartime needs.[247]Cultural and Intellectual Contributions
Influence on Jewish Arts, Music, and Literature
Chabad Hasidism has profoundly shaped Jewish music through its emphasis on niggunim, wordless melodies that serve as vehicles for spiritual elevation and communal bonding during prayer and gatherings.[249] These tunes, often monophonic and composed or adapted by successive Chabad Rebbes such as Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, transcend linguistic barriers to connect the soul directly to divine realms, fostering emotional release and mystical introspection.[250] Chabad niggunim have influenced broader Jewish musical expressions, inspiring adaptations in contemporary genres like rock, where Hasidic tunes provide raw emotional depth drawn from Chasidic life.[251] In Jewish literature, Chabad's cornerstone text, the Tanya (authored by Rabbi Schneur Zalman in 1796), systematizes Hasidic philosophy by integrating Kabbalistic mysticism with rational inquiry, addressing the nature of the divine soul, evil inclination, and Torah observance for intellectual seekers.[56][252] As the foundational "Written Torah of Chassidism," it has disseminated Chabad thought globally, encouraging personal spiritual transformation and influencing non-Chabad Hasidic and broader Jewish explorations of inner divinity and ethical struggle.[253][254] Subsequent Rebbes' writings, including letters and discourses, extend this legacy, promoting widespread study that counters assimilation by intellectualizing mystical devotion.[255] Chabad has also impacted Jewish visual arts by pioneering the veneration of Rebbe portraits as dynastic symbols, beginning in the 1880s with images of founders like Rabbi Schneur Zalman and Rabbi Menahem Mendel Schneerson, which blend photographic realism with symbolic iconography to reinforce communal identity.[256] Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the seventh Rebbe, actively promoted Jewish artistic creation, rejecting prohibitions on visual expression and viewing creativity as a divine endowment for mitzvah-inspired works that embed Jewish motifs within diverse cultural styles.[257][258] This approach has fostered a robust visual tradition in Chabad institutions, including illustrated texts and symbolic designs, contributing to a modern Jewish aesthetic that integrates Hasidic ideology with accessible imagery.[259]Broader Impact on Jewish Revival and Countering Secular Trends
Chabad-Lubavitch's global outreach network, comprising over 5,000 institutions in more than 100 countries, has played a pivotal role in revitalizing Jewish observance amid rising secularization and assimilation rates among diaspora Jews. Emissaries (shluchim) establish local centers offering accessible entry points to Jewish practice, such as public menorah lightings, Shabbat meals, and educational classes, which engage unaffiliated individuals without requiring prior commitment. This model counters secular trends by emphasizing personal mitzvah performance over denominational affiliation, fostering incremental spiritual reconnection. Independent studies underscore Chabad's measurable impact on Jewish engagement. A 2021 report found that 38% of American Jews have interacted with Chabad programs, with 40% of participants active on a regular or semi-regular basis, highlighting its penetration into secular demographics.[260] The Hertog Foundation's analysis of campus Chabad involvement revealed sustained post-college effects, including heightened Jewish attitudes and behaviors across observance spectrums, with participants from Reform backgrounds showing a 113% increase in overall engagement compared to non-participants.[261][148] Post-October 7, 2023, Jewish Federations of North America surveys documented a disproportionate surge in Chabad connections relative to other streams, with approximately 30% of Jews attending Chabad events annually and nearly 40% of attendees participating regularly. This growth persists despite broader assimilation pressures, as Chabad's non-judgmental, service-oriented approach—evident in initiatives like mitzvah tanks and holiday campaigns—builds community resilience and reverses disaffiliation.[139][86] Such efforts have energized dormant Jewish life in locales facing demographic decline, as seen in European communities where Chabad centers have bolstered participation amid shrinking populations.[262]Notable Individuals
Foundational and Historical Figures
Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi (1745–1812), known as the Alter Rebbe, founded Chabad Hasidism as a distinct branch of Hasidic Judaism, emphasizing an intellectual and philosophical approach to mysticism through the acronym Chabad (chochmah, binah, da'at—wisdom, understanding, knowledge).[2] Born in Liozna, in the Pale of Settlement, he studied under Rabbi Dovber of Mezritch, the primary successor to the Baal Shem Tov, and authored the Tanya (1796), a seminal text systematizing Hasidic thought with Kabbalistic and rational elements.[2] Schneur Zalman also compiled the Shulchan Aruch HaRav, a legal code integrating Ashkenazi and Sephardi customs, and faced imprisonment twice by Russian authorities in 1798 and 1800 on suspicions of sedition due to his leadership in Jewish communities.[2] The Chabad dynasty continued through Schneur Zalman's descendants, establishing a line of seven rebbes who led the movement from its origins in Liozna and Lubavitch (Lyubavichi, Russia) until its relocation following World War II. His son, Rabbi Dovber Schneuri (1773–1827), the Mitteler Rebbe, succeeded him in 1812, expanding Chabad's scholarly focus by authoring works like Imrei Binah on prayer and Kabbalah, and relocating the court to Lubavitch in 1813 amid regional instability.[71] Dovber's tenure saw Chabad grow amid opposition from Mitnaggedim, traditionalist opponents of Hasidism, though he emphasized reconciliation through Torah study.[71] The third rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneersohn (1789–1866), the Tzemach Tzedek, grandson of Schneur Zalman, assumed leadership in 1827 after internal divisions; he authored over 100 volumes on Halakha, Kabbalah, and Hasidism, including responsa defending Jewish rights under Tsarist rule, and corresponded with Tsar Nicholas I on communal issues, amassing 10,000 families under Chabad influence by his death.[71] His son, Rabbi Shmuel Schneersohn (1834–1882), the Maharash, the fourth rebbe from 1866, focused on esoteric teachings and established Chabad centers across Russia despite governmental restrictions.[71] Rabbi Sholom Dovber Schneersohn (1860–1920), the Rashab and fifth rebbe since 1882, systematized Chabad philosophy in his Torah Or and founded the Tomchei Temimim yeshiva network in 1897 to train emissaries amid rising secularism and pogroms, relocating to Rostov-on-Don during World War I.[71] His son-in-law, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn (1880–1950), the Frierdiker Rebbe and sixth leader from 1920, resisted Bolshevik persecution, establishing underground networks in the Soviet Union until his 1927 arrest and exile; he resettled Chabad in Riga, then Poland, and finally the United States in 1940, preserving the movement through printing and education amid the Holocaust.[71] The seventh rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902–1994), son-in-law of Yosef Yitzchak, succeeded in 1951 after leading organizational efforts from 1940, transforming Chabad into a global network of over 5,000 institutions by emphasizing outreach (shluchim) and public campaigns for mitzvot observance.[3]Contemporary Leaders and Emissaries
Following the death of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson on June 12, 1994, Chabad-Lubavitch transitioned to a decentralized structure without a singular rebbe, vesting authority in administrative committees and a vast network of shluchim (emissaries) who execute the movement's outreach mandate.[37] Central coordination occurs through entities like Merkos L'Inyonei Chinuch, the educational arm responsible for yeshivas, publications, and emissary training, chaired by Rabbi Yehuda Krinsky since the 1980s.[263] Complementary bodies, such as Agudas Chassidei Chabad and Machneh Israel, manage communal welfare and legal affairs, ensuring continuity of the Rebbe's directives on global Jewish revitalization.[28] This model emphasizes collective responsibility among rabbis and lay leaders, avoiding hierarchical succession disputes evident in other Hasidic groups.[264] The shluchim system forms the operational core, with over 6,000 emissary families dispatched to more than 100 countries by 2024, establishing Chabad Houses that offer synagogue services, kosher facilities, and educational programs tailored to local Jewish populations.[265] Emissaries, often young couples selected after rigorous training at institutions like the Rabbinical College of America in Morristown, New Jersey, operate semi-autonomously while adhering to Chabad's core texts and practices.[266] Annual gatherings, such as the International Conference of Chabad-Lubavitch Emissaries (Kinus Hashluchim), facilitate strategy-sharing and reinforcement of doctrine, drawing thousands to Brooklyn's 770 Eastern Parkway headquarters.[267] Notable administrative figures include Rabbi Avraham Shemtov, chairman of Agudas Chassidei Chabad and national director of American Friends of Lubavitch, who leads U.S.-focused initiatives and delegations to political leaders.[193] Rabbi Levi Shemtov, his son and executive vice president, maintains influence in Washington, D.C., as a liaison to U.S. policymakers on Jewish concerns.[268] Among field emissaries, Rabbi Berel Lazar stands out as Russia's Chief Rabbi since 2000, overseeing 200 communities amid post-Soviet revival efforts and fostering state relations.[269] Rabbi Shmuel Kaplan, a senior Merkos representative and Maryland emissary, coordinates regional expansions and institutional ties.[270] These leaders exemplify Chabad's emphasis on pragmatic adaptation, with shluchim collectively advancing education for over 100,000 students annually through schools and camps.[271]References
- https://www.chabad.com/programs/[outreach](/page/Outreach)