Rebbe Menachem Schneerson (The Rebbe)
Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson (1902-) was the Lubavitcher Rebbe who was known simply and lovingly as "the Rebbe."
More than 200 major volumes of the Rebbe's prolific writing and discourses have been published.
He worked on behalf of Soviet Jews. He established programs to reach out to those people unaffiliated Jews and intermarried Jews.
He has left us a legacy of thousands
of educational institutions, humanitarian projects and outreach centers the
world over. As it is impossible to gauge the scope of the Rebbe as a person,
so it is impossible to gauge the impact of his world wide achievements. Millions
are inclined to a better life of goodness and meaning, due to his counsel.
A. Pereymer has contributed the following information about the Lubavitcher
Rebbe: "The Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, known simply
and lovingly as "the Rebbe," has cast the warm glow of his sanctified
existence, his Solomonic wisdom, his vision for a world perfected, and his
sensitivity and love for humanity, over the lives of millions, to the farthest
reaches of the world. Through his inspired vision, the Rebbe endowed us with a passion for the good
and the G-dly, and the means to understand that the good and the G-dly are
inherent in our world and within each of us and in our everyday lives. It is a
vision that will inspire the world for generations to come. From his early years in Nikolaev, Russia, where he was born in 1902, the
Rebbe displayed a prodigious mind and a sensitivity to human suffering. Educated by private tutor as a child, and then at the University of Berlin
and the Sorbonne, the Rebbe exhibited an extraordinary breadth and depth of
knowledge, was gifted in the sciences, and had a remarkable fluency in many
languages. But it was in the Torah, the Talmud, in both the exoteric and esoteric realms
of Torah and Judaism, that the Rebbe's erudition and brilliance provided
fundamental and original insights to Jewish scholarship. Indeed, more than 200
major volumes of the Rebbe's prolific writing and discourses have already been
published; more are on the way. In all his talks, as well as in his innovative, worldwide ubiquitous mitzva
campaigns, one discerns a unifying system which binds the physical to the
spiritual, and empowers every individual to actualize their potential to impact
their immediate surroundings, their community, and ultimately, the world,
through their even small acts of kindness. The Rebbe engaged the greatest thinkers of our times and simplefolk with
equal intensity. It is truly impossible to gauge the scope of this great leader. He never took
a day off in 42 years. He rarely slept. He fasted most days while praying for
the hundreds of thousands of people who beseeched him to intervene on their
behalf. He also inspired us all with his incredible activism, devotion,
foresight and leadership. He always saw what others did not and did what others
saw not. Well before activities on behalf of Soviet Jews became a popular cause, the
Rebbe quietly and effectively worked to save lives. Well before the
demonstrations and sit-ins began to make news, the Rebbe had established a
clandestine network of Chasidim to supply money, food, clothing, and spiritual
support to the thousands of Jews suffocating physically and spiritually under
Communism's boot. While the prophets of doom talked of the vanishing Jew -- through
intermarriage and assimilation -- the Rebbe, in contrast, established bold and
daring programs to reach out to those people who otherwise would be lost to the
Jewish people. When others had given up, the Rebbe always discerned even a small ray of hope
and enlarged that hope so that everyone could share in it, and draw strength
from it. And as always, at every step, regardless of the idea or project, there were
voices of opposition to the Rebbe's movement toward a better, saner and more G-dly
world. Never inhibited by these voices, the Rebbe persisted, and prevailed. The Rebbe established and continues to establish a legacy of thousands of
educational institutions, humanitarian projects and outreach centers the world
over. As it is impossible to gauge the scope of the Rebbe as a person, so it is
impossible to gauge the impact of his world wide achievements. Millions are inclined to a better life of goodness and meaning, due to his
counsel. Who can tally the acts of kindness and charity inspired by the Rebbe's own
example, while he stood seven hours every Sunday, even into his ninth decade of
life, receiving people from all walks of life, from all over the world, handing
out dollar bills to men and women, young and old, Jews and gentiles, to be given
to charitable causes? Throughout this all, the Rebbe encouraged and continues to encourage us to
join him in his efforts. In this way, the Rebbe graced us with untold merits and
helped us realize the enormous potential for good that lies within each and
everyone of us. By sharing with us his vision, his hopes and his promise, and by making us
active participants in the perfection of G-d's world, the Rebbe has empowered us
in a way that every parent can only hope to empower his and her children. May his merits protect us. "
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