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    THE LUBAVITCHER REBBES 30TH YAHRTZEIT THIS IS FOR YOUR LOVE

    Thirty years after the
    Lubavitcher Rebbe’s
    passing on 3 Tammuz,
    1994, I can still hear his
    wise, holy words —
    how he ignited the
    Divine spark in every
    Jew, viewing each of us
    as an ambassador of infinite love, light, hope,
    and truth. When you walked away from an
    encounter with the Rebbe, you forever cast
    away your sense of inner mediocrity.
    I was four years old when I entered the
    Lubavitcher Rebbe’s room, before the bar
    mitzvah of my older brother Boruch. The
    Rebbe asked me if I could share a story with
    him — “A story about Adam, Avraham, or
    Noach.” I was a shy boy, and I remained silent.
    He asked me a few times; when I didn’t
    respond, the Rebbe smiled and continued to
    converse with my parents.
    My brother still jokes with me: “You left that
    room, and haven’t stopped telling stories
    since…” Then he adds: “Maybe it’s because
    you were silent in that room, that you know
    how to tell a story…”
    Thirty years later, I still miss the Lubavitcher
    Rebbe. In my mind’s eye, I can see him
    walking home late Friday night, one hand in
    his coat pocket, to eat the Shabbos meal with
    his wife. The Rebbe walked alone — there
    were no gabbaim, and no entourage. He would
    greet every person, Jew and African American,
    cordially.
    During the 60 years of their marriage, from
    1928 to 1988, he ate most Shabbos meals
    exclusively with his wife, in the privacy of
    their own home. In a home devoid of children,
    perhaps this was the personal space he carved
    out for his life’s partner who gave up her
    husband for the Jewish people.
    I miss davening a Minchah with the Rebbe.
    To see his ernstkeit — the sincerity and yiras
    Shamayim when he davened — was enough to
    know forever that G-d is real. He barely
    swayed, nor did he maneuver his hands. He
    stood in one place, almost not moving a limb.
    But he was all deveikus. There was something
    about his face that still makes me cry: You can
    see in it all the pain and all the joy of the
    Jewish People.
    The Rebbe would sit by chazaras hashatz on
    a bench (used moments earlier by the yeshivah
    boys learning), facing the crowd, with his
    hand on his forehead, pointing in the siddur,
    following the chazzan word by word.
    And then for a few days, the Rebbe did not
    place his hand on his forehead. It was strange.
    Why would he change his custom of 40 years?
    A sensitive eye in the shul noticed that during
    the Minchah services of those days, there was
    a guest from Eretz Yisrael, someone whose
    body and face were badly deformed. He was
    also blind. It was hard to look at the person. It
    became clear that the Rebbe didn’t want
    anyone to think he was trying to avoid gazing
    at the disfigured individual.
    I miss the Rebbe’s Shabbos and Yom Tov
    farbrengens.

    How to describe a five-hour farbrengen with
    the Lubavitcher Rebbe? For some moments,
    you felt you were in the company of the Baal
    Shem Tov — as the Rebbe sang, danced, and
    spoke of the purity of every Jewish soul. But
    then, as he dedicated an hour to delve into a
    “chatzi shiur” or a Rambam in Pesulei
    Hamukdashin, you felt you were in the
    chamber of a world-class rosh yeshivah. And
    then he became the classic Chabad Rebbe, as
    he closed his eyes and presented a ma’amar of
    the Baal HaTanya on the secrets of Atzilus and
    the Sefiros. You thought you were done, when
    he would begin a siyum on Horayos, Bechoros,
    or Eiruvin, and you felt you were in the
    mechitzah of one of the great minds of the
    generation. As you could barely hold your
    breath, he shifted to his brilliant derech in
    analyzing a Rashi on the parshah.
    In between the talks, the singing was
    electrifying. He made sure to greet every one
    of the thousand people present with a personal
    l’chayim, often signaling a special gesture
    toward an individual sitting in the audience,
    and you knew that this Jew needed some
    chizuk.
    The song finished, and the Rebbe would
    present a deep explanation on a particular
    concept in hashkafah, halachah, or aggadah,
    and you observed the Rebbe’s unique approach
    to synthesize all streams of Torah into an
    integrated whole, where halachah, lomdus,
    machshavah, chassidus, science, psychology,
    and emotional healing all meshed into one
    whole. Then he would begin to discuss the
    contemporary situation of the Jewish world,
    and I knew he had his finger on the pulse of
    G-d’s People. Then, as the crown began to sing
    the Alter Rebbe’s niggun, his face changed.
    Suddenly I felt I was in the presence of a
    tzaddik, one of those rare souls planted from
    another world into ours, to remind us that
    heaven and earth are really one.
    He finished the fabrengen, the clock showed
    two a.m., and I stood there, silently, numb
    from ecstasy. My heartstrings were on fire, as
    I thanked Hashem for sending such a soul into
    the world.
    Rabbi YY Jacobson as a young boy, escorted
    to the Rebbe by his father Reb Gershon
    Jacobson. Twice, that shy little boy didn’t
    answer the Rebbe’s question
    ~~~~~~~
    Who was the Lubavitcher Rebbe? What was
    he all about? Why did he inspire such loyalty?
    Why, a quarter of a century after his passing,
    has his influence not ceased?
    I am not sure.
    Was it his mastery of Torah? The Rebbe
    knew every Rashi and Rashba in Shas, but also
    every line of the Arizal and the Vilna Gaon’s
    commentary on Zohar.
    Was it his global vision — how he taught
    people to take responsibility for the entire
    Jewish world?
    New Haven’s Rabbi Moshe Hecht, who had a
    gift of gab, was planning to travel on vacation
    to Israel. When he asked the Rebbe for a
    brachah before his trip, the Rebbe said to him:

    “I understand that there is an old age home in
    Hungary with some elderly Jews, and kosher
    meals there are not an option. Can you travel
    to Israel via Hungary and use your oratory
    skills to persuade the boss to give the Jewish
    residents an option for kosher?”
    Reb Moshe would quip, “It’s a bad idea to
    tell the Lubavitcher Rebbe you’re going on
    vacation…”
    Was it, perhaps, his kedushah? Here was a
    man who fasted regularly for 90 years, slept
    three hours a night, spent much of his day and
    night learning, and never uttered a word of
    rechilus or lashon hara.
    I still recall the Shabbos in the 1980s when
    Bob Dylan, one of the greatest icons of the
    hippie movement, attended a farbrengen. The
    Rebbe was notified earlier that he would be
    there, yet surprisingly, each time Dylan lifted
    his cup of wine to say l’chayim, he passed
    over him, as though Dylan wasn’t present.
    After Shabbos, the Rebbe was surprised to
    learn from one secretary that Dylan was
    present, as the Rebbe maintained that he didn’t
    notice him. One chassid picked up on the
    secret: Bob Dylan, whose original name is
    Shabsi Zisel Zimmerman, had at one point
    converted to Christianity, and never went to
    the mikveh after his return to his People.
    Could it be the Rebbe simply did not “see”
    him? That living in a halo of kedushah, the
    Rebbe’s eyes didn’t observe this person who
    willingly left the faith? And so they sent Dylan
    to the mikveh, and next Shabbos as Bob Dylan
    lifted his cup, the Rebbe immediately greeted
    him warmly.
    Was it his encyclopedic knowledge of the
    secular sciences, which allowed him to present
    the truth of Torah to countless academics and
    confused Jewish students? Was it, perhaps, the
    fact that he answered every single letter
    written to him, giving counsel to millions of
    Jews and even non-Jews, from every stripe?
    Or was it his all-night meetings for decades
    with every conceivable type of Jew, from
    Menachem Begin to the Rebbe of Toldos
    Aharon; from a Columbia University professor
    of Greek philosophy to the first-ever black
    congresswoman, Shirley Chisholm (whom he
    inspired at that meeting to create the food
    stamp program for hungry American families);
    from a Russian refugee to a broken Holocaust
    survivor?
    Or maybe it was his good-natured simplicity
    and self-effacing humor? Once on Simchas
    Torah, a Russian chassid, who was a bit tipsy,
    told the Rebbe: “Besides all your other
    qualities, we are so lucky to have such a
    beautiful and handsome rebbe!” The next day
    this fellow sobered up and went over to
    apologize. The Rebbe responded: “Why are
    you apologizing? Such a compliment I haven’t
    received in decades…”
    On Erev Yom Kippur, the Rebbe would stand
    at the door of his room and distribute honey
    cake with blessings for a sweet year to the
    chassidim. Once, among the thousands waiting
    in the fast-moving line, stood an elderly Jew
    named Zalman Teibel, escorted by a nurse

    who held him up. Reb Zalman was an old
    Russian chassid, almost 90, who had no
    children, suffered from Alzheimer’s, and was
    living in the Aishel Avraham nursing home in
    Williamsburg. The Rebbe knew him well —
    decades earlier he had brought to Chabad the
    famous song “Ana Avda” (from the tefillah
    preceding the Torah reading). But now, Reb
    Zalman didn’t recognize the Rebbe or anyone
    else. The Rebbe tried to connect with him, but
    to no avail. Alzheimer’s had overtaken his
    conscious brain.
    Suddenly, the Rebbe, standing at the door of
    his office, started to sing the song that Reb
    Zalman composed decades earlier — “Ana
    ana avda, avda d’Kudsha Berich Hu…” The
    Rebbe had a beautiful voice, a combination of
    sweetness and depth, and when he sang, your
    heart would melt. The entire line stopped, and
    thousands of people were left waiting, as the
    Rebbe sang the entire song to this old man. As
    the Rebbe was in the middle of the song,
    Zalman Teibel suddenly awoke from his
    slumber. He recognized he was in the presence
    of his Rebbe — and broke out in the sweetest
    smile. They both gazed at each other with so
    much love, as the Rebbe showered him with
    blessings, and Reb Zalman, for a few moments,
    was uplifted from the abyss of Alzheimer’s to
    the Rebbe’s loving embrace.
    I still recall that moment on Simchas Torah,
    when East Flatbush’s renowned Rabbi J.J.
    Hecht arrived at “770” in the middle of the
    hakafos, after he finished dancing in his own
    shul. As the Rebbe saw him, the Rebbe threw
    him a kiss coupled with a colossal smile. I
    never saw the Rebbe perform such a gesture,
    certainly not in the presence of nine thousand
    people on Simchas Torah. I knew there was
    more to the story.
    That year, Rabbi Hecht passed away. I
    thought that perhaps the Rebbe felt this was
    their last Simchas Torah together and he was
    bidding him farewell. But then Rabbi Hecht’s
    daughter told me that her father, while walking
    from East Flatbush to the hakafos, shared with
    her a dream he had hours earlier during his

    Yom Tov nap that very afternoon. In his
    dream he asked the Rebbe for permission to
    give him a kiss (something chassidim usually
    do not do), and indeed he went over to the
    Rebbe and gave him a gigantic kiss. Rabbi
    Hecht awoke from his dream and then went to
    shul for Minchah-Maariv. But that very night,
    as he entered “770” for hakafos, the Rebbe
    returned the kiss…
    Little YY Jacobson with his father, Reb
    Gershon Jacobson, at a Lag B’Omer parade in
    1976. “I knew the Rebbe had his finger on the
    pulse of G-d’s people.”
    ~~~~~~~~
    It was the “doctrine of oneness” the Rebbe
    constantly taught that touched me most.
    I’ll never forget the moment. It was in the
    middle of a Shabbos afternoon farbrengen in
    the early ’80s. In the middle of a long,
    complex explanation on a Rashi on the
    parshah, the Rebbe paused and searched the
    crowd. His eyes rested on a child. The Rebbe
    pointed his finger at the boy and asked him in
    Yiddish: “Fun vannet veist du az es iz doh a
    velt — how do you know that there is a
    world?”
    Time stood still as the Rebbe’s eyes bore
    into the child. The shy boy did not answer the
    Rebbe’s question, but the Rebbe continued,
    answering his own question: “So the child
    answers, because the Torah says ‘Bereishis
    bara Elokim es haShamayim ve’es ha’aretz
    — In the beginning G-d created heaven and
    earth.’ ” That’s how I know the universe
    exists.
    That boy was me. For the second time in my
    life, I didn’t answer the Rebbe’s question. But
    I did listen to his answer.
    This was the crux of his teachings: that the
    Divine is everywhere. There is no person, no

    moment, no experience, devoid of the all-
    pervasive oneness of the Ribbono shel Olam.

    There is no alien Jew, no alien community, no
    alien region on planet Earth, and no discovery
    in physics, where you can’t find the infinite
    Truth of Hashem.
    Nor is there a situation that is irredeemable,
    an experience that is hopeless.
    There was a young man suffering from
    compulsions toward a deviant lifestyle. In
    utter despair, he penned a heart-wrenching
    letter to the Lubavitcher Rebbe. The Rebbe
    responded with a three-page correspondence.
    One point startled me.
    The Rebbe told this boy that he does not
    know why he must endure this profound
    challenge — it’s surely one of the mysteries
    of Divine providence. But then he added this:
    “Sometimes, a person possesses an incredible
    inner light that can change the world. There is
    no way for this person to discover that secret
    power within himself and call it his own,
    without being compelled to overcome a major
    life challenge.”
    Some might have looked at this young man
    and felt disdain; others might have felt
    empathy. But it was the Rebbe, the teacher of
    oneness, who saw his crisis as an opportunity.
    There was no tragedy here, there was a
    catalyst for this person to touch infinity. He

    was not a victim of an unfortunate condition;
    he was a Divine ambassador sent to places
    most people are not sent to, because his
    potential was of a different magnitude.
    Once, on the afternoon of Hoshana Rabbah,
    the Rebbe was handing out the traditional
    “lekach,” honey cake, in his succah, and
    people were lined up to receive a piece of
    cake and a blessing. Standing in line was a
    young fellow, dressed hippie-style, in sloppy
    jeans and sporting an unkempt bush of hair.
    Standing behind him was a distinguished rosh
    yeshivah, a sincere Satmar chassid.
    As the unkempt fellow approached, the
    Rebbe asked him, “Where are you going to be
    for the Simchas Torah hakafos?”
    The man answered, “I have no plans to be
    anywhere for hakafos.”
    “It would be my great honor and privilege,”
    the Rebbe replied to this secular Jew, “if you
    would attend hakafos with me in the
    synagogue and we can dance together with so
    many other Jews.”
    The fellow thanked the Rebbe for his
    invitation but remained noncommittal. “I’ll
    think about it,” he said, and walked away.
    As the Satmar chassid approached the
    Rebbe, the Rebbe gave him a piece of lekach
    and then, out of the blue, said to him:
    “Do you learn Yismach Moshe?”
    Now, asking a Satmar chassid if he learns
    Yismach Moshe (authored by the founder of
    the Satmar dynasty, Rabbi Moshe Teitelbaum
    of Ujhel, Hungary) is like asking a Brisker if
    he learns the Griz, or asking a Chabadnik if he
    learns Tanya.
    “Of course,” the rosh yeshivah answered.
    “Do you remember the story the Yismach
    Moshe writes in his book Tefillah L’Moshe?”
    The man did not remember. So the Rebbe
    shared with him the story, which the Yismach
    Moshe heard from his teacher, the holy Seer
    of Lublin.
    Reb Itzikel of Drobitch, the father of Reb
    Yechiel Michel of Zlotchov, the renowned
    disciple of the Baal Shem Tov, was asked by
    Rashi: Why is there such a commotion On
    High about the greatness of your son? How
    did Reb Michel merit such praise?
    Reb Itzikel replied that his son studies Torah
    day and night for the sake of Heaven. “But
    aren’t there others who do the same?” Rashi
    questioned. “There is something singular
    about the pleasure your son gives to Hashem.
    What is it?”
    “My son fasts and deprives his body of
    worldly pleasures,” replied Reb Itzikel. But
    again, Rashi maintained there were others
    who did the same.
    “My son gives away huge sums of money to
    the poor.” Rashi was still unsatisfied. There
    are others who also distribute excessive
    tzedakah.
    Finally, Reb Itzikel replied with three words
    from the prophet Malachi: “V’rabim heishiv
    mi’avon — My son, Reb Michel Zlotchover,
    has returned many from the path of sin to their
    Father in Heaven.”
    When Rashi heard this response, he was
    finally satisfied.

    The Satmar chassid was flabbergasted. The
    Rebbe understood that, coming from his
    insulated background, it was difficult for this
    chassid to appreciate why the Rebbe would
    display such closeness to a secular hippie. So
    the Rebbe shared with him this story from the
    founder of Satmar.
    The rosh yeshivah responded to the Rebbe:
    “Ich hob git farshtanen.” (In other words, “I
    got it.”)
    A postscript to the story. A friend shared
    with me that during the Rebbe’s electrifying
    hakafos, he encountered the young hippie
    dancing away with an old chassid. Apparently,
    he couldn’t resist the Rebbe’s invitation after
    all…
    Together with the Rebbe at a funeral —
    Rabbi Jacobson is the bochur on the Rebbe’s
    left. “His words still guide me in moments of
    confusion.”
    ~~~~~~
    There are two types of great people. Those
    who, when you come away from meeting
    them, have you under the spell of their
    magnitude; and those who, when you come
    away from them, have you under the spell of
    your own magnitude. They see in you not
    who you are, but who you can be. They don’t
    create followers, they create leaders.
    The influence of such people changes you
    forever.
    The Lubavitcher Rebbe looked at every
    person he came in contact with and saw the
    “echad” in them, their alignment with the
    Oneness of all reality, as he once said about
    the Pesach Seder: “Echad chacham, echad
    rasha, echad tam…” — in each type there is
    the “echad” you need to discover. In the
    Rebbe’s mind, you were far bigger than you
    could ever imagine: You were an ambassador
    of infinite love, light, hope, and truth. When
    you walked away from an encounter with
    him, you forever cast away your sense of
    inner mediocrity.
    Today, so many years later, as I sit in my
    office facing young people who were betrayed
    and abused by adults in their lives they
    thought they could trust; these youths often
    feel their souls have been snuffed out of them
    and they are doomed. The words I heard from
    my Rebbe empower me to not even doubt for
    a moment that they can rebuild and rediscover
    their inner, unshattered core.
    As I stand in front of massive crowds the
    world over, sometimes numbering in the
    thousands, I sometimes doubt myself and my
    own abilities, as many of us do. It is so easy to
    surrender to the gravity of our own inner
    demons and struggles. But then in my mind’s

    eye, I can hear the Rebbe singing to a 90-year-
    old senile man “Ana avda d’Kudsha Berich

    Hu.” It empowers man, to redefine himself as
    an ambassador of truth, love, healing, and
    redemption. I am not a struggling genetic
    random mutation on the dust of one of the
    trillions of galaxies; I am not a victim to my
    shabby circumstances. I am, at every moment,
    a conduit for the Divine, and I, like you, can
    change the world.
    I’m often asked to reach out to teenagers

    struggling emotionally. Conventional wisdom
    tells me to say, “I’m too busy.” I can back up
    the claim with solid evidence. But then I
    remember when I was a struggling teenager
    myself, walking on Eastern Parkway at three
    a.m. (the hour when many a teenager comes
    to life). At that quiet hour, not a single car
    passed by on that usually busy street. The
    world was asleep. But I could see the light in
    the Rebbe’s room flickering. I saw this night
    after night after night. I knew there was a Jew
    sitting in this room who could not sleep
    because Mashiach had not yet come, because
    there was still much brokenness in the world.
    There was a sense of urgency he implanted in
    all of us.
    And when I remember, I immediately know
    the right thing to do.
    ~~~~~
    It was Sunday, February 1, 1992. The
    Lubavitcher Rebbe stood for approximately
    six hours at his center in Brooklyn, distributing
    dollars, counsel, and blessings to thousands. I
    was one of many who went to receive a dollar
    from the Rebbe that Sunday, the last time he
    would distribute dollars for charity.
    It was 5:55 p.m. Right in front of me, a
    father held his daughter, she seemed to be five
    or six years old, and the family was obviously
    secular. As the Rebbe gave her a blessing and
    a dollar to give to charity, the cute little girl
    looked him in the eyes and said, “Lubavitcher
    Rebbe, I love you!”
    The Rebbe’s secretaries standing nearby
    were naturally taken aback, but the Rebbe’s
    face lit up, his heartwarming smile filled the
    room. I will never forget the moment: The
    Rebbe, 89 years old, exhausted from standing,
    listening and speaking for so many hours, was
    glowing.
    The Rebbe said to her: “Thank you very
    much.” As the little girl was about to move
    on, the Rebbe gave her a second dollar and
    said, “This is for your love.”
    Those were the last words I ever heard from
    my Rebbe.
    Twenty-four hours later, while standing in
    prayer at the resting place of his father-in-law,
    the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe known as the
    Rayatz, he suffered a stroke, which left him
    partially paralyzed and unable to speak. Two
    years later, he returned his soul to its Maker.
    But two-and-a-half decades later I can, in
    my imagination, still hear the words
    resonating from his saintly mouth. They guide
    me at moments of confusion, and they help
    me find inner resources I didn’t know existed.
    The love lives on.
    (Originally featured in Mishpacha, Issue
    767)