He is remembered as a warm, loving soul who gave back to the community He was a comedian, actor and television host well-known and watched by millions of viewers worldwide. Perhaps less known, but far more important, was the warmth, care, compassion, and generosity he showed for the community in California and beyond. Over the […]
Respect and Love to our Fellow
Geula Message from Parshas Yisro with Rabbi Avrohom Yehuda Kievman, Dayan at Melbourne Beis Din, based on the teachings of The Rebbe
Young Professionals Dive Into A Brooklyn Shabbos
In the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, the Chabad community likes to call its neighborhood the “hospitality capital of the world.” This past weekend, the community lived up to this title by hosting hundreds of young Jewish professionals from around the world. Groups of young Jewish men and women accompanied their rabbis for a uniquely […]
Starr’s Yahrzeit Project
“I’m from the Woodstock generation, and I always had a passion for art that gets into your soul.” Starr Zarin is an artist living in Olney, Maryland, on the outskirts of Washington, D.C. Five years ago, she was selling handcrafted pieces of art at the local Farmer’s Market when Rabbi Bentzy Stolik walked by with […]
Wounded Warriors Bring Jewish Pride To Campus
For Jewish students on campus at Duke University, the “Israel conversation” often puts them on the receiving end of a whole lot of hate. This past semester, Rabbi Zalman Bluming, director of Chabad at Duke/UNC & Chabad at Durham/Chapel Hill, brought in two wounded Israeli soldiers to speak to the students. “Most students have no […]
Reb Michel Raskin, 92, Brooklyn Grocer Embodied Chassidic Values
Pillar of kindness fled tyranny in Soviet Russia, found material and spiritual prosperity in America Reb Michel Raskin, an unassuming pillar of kindness and hospitality who survived the ravages of Stalinist oppression and the horrors of World War II to become an iconic bridge between Chassidic life in Soviet Russia and America, passed away on […]
A Bridge Built In Buffalo
Fifty years of Chabad at SUNY Buffalo The year 1971 was a tumultuous one. Think Pentagon Papers. The 26th Amendment. The Vietnam War. Student uprisings and resistance rallies disrupted college campuses across the country. At the State University of New York at Buffalo, a few years before, a group of students protesting the war had […]
Tu B’Shevat: Where’s the Fruit?
Tu B’Shevat, the Jewish Arbor Day that falls this year on January 17, marks the traditional new year for trees. Celebrated annually on the 15th day of the Jewish month of Shevat, Tu B’Shevat is held in the season when the earliest-blooming trees in Israel emerge from winter’s hibernation and start to bud. Customarily the […]
Hostages Freed at Texas Congregation After 10-Hour Standoff
People around the world prayed and dedicated mitzvahs in the merit of those held Four hostages were freed and their captor killed at Congregation Beth Israel in Colleyville, Texas, after a raid by an FBI hostage rescue team ended a 10-hour standoff, which U.S. President Joe Biden called “an act of terror.” The hostage-taker—who was […]
Dr. Moshe Feldman, 80, a Personal Physician to the Rebbe
Kindly family doctor treated Brooklyn residents for decades He was a classic family doctor, in tune with every patient’s needs and quirks, and who took phone calls and made house visits at all hours of the night. And for many streaming through the cluttered offices of Dr. Moshe (Robert) Feldman, there was the added bonus […]