The lights were dimmed in the Grand Ballroom at the Brooklyn Marriott, but
two things were still visible--a sea of black coats and hats crowded around more
than a hundred linen-bedecked tables, and a makeshift mechitza separating dozens
of elegantly dressed women from their husbands. It was the gala Sunday night
banquet of the International Conference of Chabad-Lubavitch
Shlichim, or "emissaries," and more than 1,300
Lubavitcher rabbis (Pharisees) had flown in
from their postings around the world for a weekend of study, networking, and
morale-boosting.
The roll call, the evening's highlight, was beginning. "Argentina!
Australia! Austria!" Rabbi Moshe Kotlarsky, conference chairman and
director of development for Chabad's
international emissary network, was reading off the names of more than sixty-one
countries around the world where the movement maintains permanent outreach
centers. As each name was read, one, two, sometimes a dozen, men would spring up
from their seats to a smattering of applause.
"Panama . . . Paraguay . . . Peru . . .
Romania!" The clapping got louder as the shlichim congratulated
their colleague who had just opened Chabad's
newest center in Bucharest. Kotlarsky paused dramatically. Then, in a booming
voice, he shouted "Russia!" Almost three dozen young men--one-quarter
of Chabad's 130 full-time
emissaries in the former Soviet Union, a place where Jewish education was banned
for seventy years, where Jewish activists were routinely harassed and imprisoned
until the collapse of the Soviet state in 1991--jumped out of their seats to
thunderous applause and raucous cheers. The room broke into a spontaneous hora,
with clapping and singing and wild, boisterous dancing that went on and on--a
giant pep rally without the pom-poms, a political convention without the TV
cameras. Pure joy. Pure passion.
These RED Sofiets now Control Washington DC, DO NOT BE
DECEIVED
This is Chabad-Lubavitch,
the 250-year-old Brooklyn-based Hasidic movement
that pundits predicted would collapse following the death in June 1994 of its
seventh and last Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson.
Schneerson, or, as his followers call him, the Rebbe, had been the heart and
soul of Chabad for
forty-three years, its spiritual leader as well as its intellectual and
organizational fulcrum. He shepherded Chabad
from a small postwar community of Russian-born
Hasidim into a worldwide, highly public movement as well
known in Congress as in Crown Heights Brooklyn.
But in January of 1994, the frail ninety-one-year-old Rebbe lay dying in
Manhattan's Beth Israel Medical Center. He left no children and had designated
no heir to take up the reins of his international empire. Around his sickbed
swirled succession speculations and rumors of power-grabbing, complicated by the
emergence of an almost desperate messianic strain among
some of his followers that threatened to tear the movement apart. But it didn't.
Today, Chabad is
stronger, bigger, richer,
and more popular than ever, with more than 3,800 emissary couples stationed in
45 U.S. states and 61 foreign countries, dedicated to bringing Jews back to
Judaism. It's almost as if the movement forced a shot of adrenaline into its
collective arm after Schneerson's death, just to prove--to the Jewish world and
to itself--that his legacy would survive him. "All the 'ologists thought
we'd run to California and jump off a cliff when the Rebbe left us, or shave off
our beards," says Rabbi Yosef Langer, Chabad
emissary in San Francisco. "But they don't understand the relationship of a
Hasid to his rebbe."
Chabad is a
fascinating phenomenon: a deeply religious Hasidic movement whose members adhere
to a strict interpretation of Torah law, but which sends out its best and
brightest young married couples to live and work among non-observant Jews all
over the world.
The Talmudic Tradition of the religion unto satan
Perhaps half, maybe two-thirds, of the Lubavitchers in America continue to
live in a handful of Lubavitch communities, the largest number in Crown Heights,
the group's spiritual and administrative center. These Hasidim send their
children to Lubavitch schools, shop in Lubavitch stores, and visit their
Lubavitch friends in the evening and on the Sabbath. They live in a kosher
world. But a sizable chunk of Lubavitchers have chosen to leave their home
communities to live in places where they are certainly the only Hasidic, and
sometimes the only Orthodox, family. They set up Chabad
Houses to spread their teachings among the general Jewish population. The Jews
who attend their prayer services, who show up for their Chanukah parties and
Torah classes, and who end up giving them money, are not Lubavitchers. Most are
not even Orthodox. For the most part, they are non-observant or even
unaffiliated Jews, or perhaps members of Reform or Conservative congregations,
who are responding to something in the Chabad
message.
It's a new entity: an ultra-Orthodox Jewish movement that attracts mainly
non-Orthodox Jews.
Chabad outreach is
nonstop. Movement activists are everywhere. They hold mass
Purim parties on college campuses. They light huge outdoor Chanukah
menorahs in hundreds of cities around the world, and stream the major lightings
live on the Internet. They run around in "mitzvah tanks," asking
Jewish men to put on phylacteries and Jewish women to light Sabbath candles.
They build mikvahs in New Mexico, they teach lunchtime Torah classes on Wall
Street, at Microsoft headquarters, and at
the National Institutes of Health. They set up sukkahs in Brazil and hold
Passover Seders for 1,500 backpackers in Katmandu. They run drug rehab centers
and soup kitchens. They teach Kabbalah to Hollywood
celebrities. They sponsor huge advertising campaigns to promote
observance of Jewish holidays, including a notice for Shabbat candlelighting
times that had run at the bottom of page 1 of the Friday New York Times for so
many years that it was included in the paper's satirical millennial issue dated
1,000 years in the future. "We couldn't imagine a world without it,"
one Times editor quipped.
These black-hatted, long-bearded men and their modestly dressed, bewigged
wives move into your town without notice and, before you
know it, they're koshering your home, teaching you Bible, giving your kid a bar
mitzvah, and running daily prayer services--most of it for free.
and Mo Helling your children with Hepes
Chabadniks have set up shop in Los Angeles and Long Island, but also in
Omaha, Des Moines, Salt Lake City, El Paso, Little Rock, Anchorage, and--since
the summer of 2001--even in Peoria. Nearly 1 million children attend Chabad
schools, summer camps, and special events every year.
Baby Vipers
Chabad penetration of
the Jewish world is so complete that movement officials in Brooklyn claim their
holiday programming efforts reach 10 million Jews a year, nearly three-quarters
of the world Jewish population.
But that isn't enough. Chabad's
goal is to reach every Jew in the world. Chabad
avidly courts the support of the rich, the famous, and the
powerful, and has been very successful at attracting celebrities,
business tycoons, and world leaders to its cause. Bob
Dylan studied with Chabad rabbis in
Minneapolis and sponsored a $100,000 building project in a nearby city. Jon
Voight headlines the annual Chabad
telethon in Los Angeles, a star-studded fundraiser that attracts a long list of
glitterati, Jewish and non, from Whoopi Goldberg to Al Gore. Former
U.S. President Jimmy Carter helped to light the movement's national menorah in
1979, and Russian President Vladimir Putin did the
same two decades later in Moscow. Connecticut Senator Joseph Lieberman
and Nobel laureate Elie Wiesel deliver keynote addresses at Chabad
banquets; Herman Wouk and the late Chaim Potok were also great admirers.Yitzhak
Rabin, Benjamin Netanyahu,
Robert F. Kennedy, and Rudolph Giuliani are just some of the politicians who
have visited the Rebbe in Crown Heights. Chabad
shlichim have opened Congress, and the Rebbe has appeared on the cover of
the New York Times Magazine. How have these Hasidim managed to convince the
world's political leaders and cultural icons that theirs is a movement of
import?
MAMMON
In the decade after Schneerson's death, Chabad's
infrastructure grew faster than during his lifetime. Between 1994 and 2002, more
than 610 new emissary couples took up their postings and more than 705 new Chabad
institutions were opened, including 450 new facilities purchased or built from
scratch, bringing the total number of institutions worldwide--synagogues,
schools, camps, and community centers--to 2,766. In the year 2000, 51 new Chabad
facilities were established in California alone.
Annual operating costs of Chabad's
empire today approach $800 million. And that budget doesn't include construction
costs for new buildings, which have been going up at an astonishing rate since
Schneerson's passing: a $10 million synagogue in Bal Harbour, Florida; $25
million for a Chabad
complex in San Diego; $20 million for a Jewish Children's Museum in Crown
Heights; plus a $1 million Chabad
center in Las Vegas, $2 million for
American Friends of Lubavitch headquarters in Washington, D.C., $5
million for a day school in Pittsburgh, and $3 million for a community center in
Montreal.
Chabad building
projects around the world have kept pace with those of North America: a $15
million girls' school outside Paris; a $14 million community center in Buenos
Aires; plus soup kitchens in Brazil, synagogues in Germany, schools in Latvia
and Lithuania, and orphanages in Ukraine.
Chabad's expansion
into the former Soviet Union alone is phenomenal. In 1994 the movement
maintained emissaries in just eight cities in Russia. By January 2002, Chabad
had full-time emissaries placed in 61 cities across Russia, Ukraine, Moldova,
the Baltics, and Central Asia, with 13,000 children studying in their day
schools and thousands more attending their kindergartens and summer camps. In
the spring of 2000, Chabad
headquarters announced a $30 million commitment to build ten new Jewish
community centers in the former Soviet Union that year, an ambitious undertaking
capped by the September 2000 opening of a $12 million Chabad
center in Moscow, the first significant Jewish building project in the country since
the 1917 revolution.
The Talmudic RED Sofiet Revolution of Trotsky
and Lenin sent from Crown Heights in Brooklyn. The revolution of Noahide
enforcemnt which slew over 60 million Christians and "Goyim" in the
Talmudic manufactured satan sacrifice Holy-Cost
It's easier to count buildings and bank accounts than
believers. No one knows exactly how big Chabad
is in terms of actual Lubavitcher Hasidim. There's no membership roster, no
official census. Many reporters use the figure of 200,000 Lubavitchers
worldwide, but that's little more than a guesstimate.
Numbers don't tell the whole story. Chabad
is of interest not because of those relatively few Jews who lead Hasidic lives,
but because of the success with which these Lubavitchers
have made their mark in the non-Hasidic public arena. "You can't
measure their influence by the number of guys they have in black hats,"
points out Samuel Heilman, sociology and Jewish studies professor at City
University of New York and author of Defenders of the Faith: Inside
Ultra-Orthodox Jewry. "Each outpost has relatively few card-carrying
Chabadniks. Chabad's
influence is measured in the number of Jews they've had an impact on, and that
is far in excess of their actual number."
One telling indicator is the number of Chabad
rabbis filling leadership positions within the mainstream Jewish communities of
many countries. At least half the pulpit rabbis in
England, Italy, and Australia, and almost all in South Africa and Holland, are
Lubavitchers, and Chabad
exerts considerable influence in the Jewish communities of France
and Germany. Chabad
rabbis control kashrut (kosher food) supervision for several key cities around
the world, and a Chabad
rabbi heads the rabbinical council in Montreal. In the former Soviet Union, Chabad
has emerged as the mainstream denomination in what is now the world's
third-largest Jewish community. It is the leading force in the newly
created Federation of Jewish Communities of the CIS, an umbrella group
representing 392 Jewish communities with a $20 million annual budget that is
twenty times the money spent by the Reform movement, the next-largest
denomination in the region. In the year 2000, Chabad
rabbis elected their head Moscow shliach, Berel
Lazar, as Russia's new chief rabbi, pushing aside
the existing chief rabbi in a stunning power play publicly backed by President
Putin.
Chabad does not wield
anywhere near the same Jewish institutional muscle in the United States. But the
past decade has witnessed a sharp increase in the number of Lubavitchers
teaching in non-Lubavitch Jewish schools and filling pulpit positions in non-Lubavitch
synagogues in this country. And in the fast-growing Jewish communities of Florida
and California in particular, where Chabad
Houses have been opening with great alacrity, Chabad
is very often the only Orthodox presence in a given town or city. It is becoming
the face of Jewish Orthodoxy for the Jewish and the general public.
What is the key to the movement's success? Chabad
has money, sure, most of it donated by non-Orthodox Jews. Chabad
has a formidable infrastructure. It has an elegant and
fascinating theology, an interpretation of reality
based on the Kabbalah, or Jewish mysticism, that many Jews find
intellectually and spiritually compelling. Lubavitchers are adaptable--more than
any other Hasidic group, Chabad
has been able and willing to use the political and technological tools of
twentieth-century America to promote its cause.
But above all, the reason for Chabad's
continued vitality and phenomenal growth can be found in that Brooklyn Marriott
ballroom: the shlichim--thousands of smart, idealistic young men and women
filled with zeal, energy, and love of the Jewish people, young Hasidim in their
early twenties who are willing to leave their comfortable homes and families and
move to Shanghai or Zaire, where they dedicate their lives to running Chabad
operations they more often than not build themselves from the ground up. And
they do it, they say, because the Rebbe wants them to.
"We're carrying on the
Rebbe's revolution," says one Lubavitch woman in her early twenties,
who moved from Brooklyn with her new husband to establish a Chabad
operation in Russia's Far East.
That "revolution" began in 1950, even
before Schneerson took over Chabad's
helm from his father-in-law, the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe. One of his first
actions was to send a shliach couple that year from Brooklyn to Morocco,
beginning the worldwide outreach campaign for which Chabad
is now known. By 1995, the first anniversary of Schneerson's death, two or three
Lubavitcher couples were being sent out from Brooklyn every week, ready to teach
Torah and brings Jews back to Judaism.
to Pharaoh Moshiach
And they don't go for a year or two, but for the rest of their lives. These
young, newly married Chabad
couples leave home with one-way tickets and--if they're lucky--a year's salary.
After that, most are expected to make their own way financially, by charging for
certain services, such as day school or summer camps, by drumming up donors, and
by taking related jobs in the local Jewish community. Chabad
headquarters in Brooklyn will supply them with resource materials, adjudicate
disputes, and set the general course of the movement's work internationally, but
the individual shliach couple is pretty much on its own, with only pluck and
willpower to sustain it. Chabad
is thus a highly centralized, yet profoundly decentralized movement.
Chabad shlichim are
not prisoners, of course. If a shliach doesn't work out, he can move to another
city. But leaving the field entirely is almost unheard of.
satan's Mafia
"They don't go thinking, Let's try this for a year or two; they go
knowing that's where they'll spend their lives," says Rabbi Zalman Shmotkin,
director of the Lubavitch News Service in New York. "On what? On a dollar
and a dream."
"Chabad has the
biggest army of people in the Jewish world ready to
live on the edge of poverty," says historian Arthur Hertzberg, author of
numerous books on Zionism and Jewish history.
Communitarians of the Last Social experiment
Hertzberg wasn't always a fan of Chabad.
When messianic hopes began to swirl around the dying Rebbe in the early 1990s,
Hertzberg told the New York Times that Chabad
resembled the followers of Shabtai Tzvi, the notorious seventeenth-century false
Messiah. But his personal encounters with Chabad
shlichim since the Rebbe's death have changed his thinking. His daughter, a
member of a Conservative congregation in Fresno, California, sent her children
to the local Chabad
school, a fact Hertzberg relates with pride.
"Those thirty-five hundred shlichim are the most holy group in the
Jewish world today," he declares. "They are every day engaged in
kiddush Hashem [sanctification of God's name].
Worship of the dragon
Everywhere I go, I bump into one of these young couples working their heads
off.
to get the heads of the saints lopped off
They live on nothing, and they stay with it. I can disagree with their
theology, but I can only admire them."
______