Chabad mitzvah campaigns

Chabad mitzvah campaigns, or Mivtzo'im (Hebrew: מבצעים) refer to several campaigns launched by the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Menachem Mendel Schneerson. From 1967 to 1976, Schneerson said all Jews should observe ten basic "beginner's mitzvot" (commandments) .[1] In the years that followed there were campaigns for additional mitzvot as well.

The ten campaigns edit

  • Tefillin: Men (age 13 and up) are encouraged to wear the tefillin every morning excluding Shabbat (the sabbath, from late Friday afternoon to early Saturday evening) and festivals. Started in 1967.
  • Shabbat Candles: Women and girls (age 3 and up) are encouraged to light candles 18 minutes before sunset, on Friday afternoon to start the sabbath, and also to start festivals.
  • Mezuzah: Says that every Jewish home should have a mezuzah on its doorposts. Started in the year 1974.
  • Torah Study: Says to study a portion of Torah daily.
  • Tzedakah (Charity): Says to give charity daily.
  • Holy Books: Encouraged furnishing homes with as many holy books as possible. At a minimum, a Chumash (Judaism) (Torah with Haftarahs), the Psalms, and a Prayer Book.
  • Kosher dietary laws: Says to eat only kosher foods. Launched in 1975.
  • Love Your Fellow: Says that Rabbi Akiva's injunction to "Love your fellow as yourself" should be applied by Jews to fellow Jews and that this is among the greatest commandments a Jew can fulfill.
  • Education: Says that every Jewish child should receive a Jewish education.
  • Family Purity: Encourages observance of Jewish menstrual laws.

Seasonal campaigns edit

Additionally, Schneerson called for numerous other campaigns, some related to holidays:

Other year round campaigns edit

Others campaigns applied all year round:

  • the campaign for all Jews to study Chasidic philosophy;
  • the campaign[5] for all Jews to recite before morning prayer the phrase, "I hereby take upon myself to fulfill the positive [Mitzvah], 'Love your fellow as yourself,'"[6] and after prayer to recite the verse, "Indeed, the righteous will extol Your Name; the upright will dwell in Your presence."[7]
  • the campaigns in support of large families;
  • the campaign for a Moment of silence in public schools;
  • the campaign that every Jew (including and especially children) "purchase" a letter to be inscribed in a Torah scroll;
  • the campaign for all Jews to celebrate their Jewish birthdays with a festive gathering, and to undertake to increase in Torah, prayer, and good deeds in the coming year;[8]
  • the campaign for all Jews to study Torah on topics related to belief in the Moshiach and the Jewish redemption; and many more.
  • the campaign calling on every Jew to reach out to non-Jews to teach and encourage them to adopt the Noahide laws.[9]

History of Mitzvah Campaigns edit

Schneerson encapsulated his outreach activity in the slogan of "Uforatzto" (Heb. ופרצת) "you shall spread out." The origin of this phrase is in God's words to Ya'akov, "You shall spread out to the west, to the east, to the north, and to the south."[10] Schneerson would use it in a borrowed sense to refer to the global scale of the outreach activities that he was calling for.[11][12][13]

Schneerson's general outreach activity began already in the early years of leadership, but was accelerated with the call for encouraging these specific practices.[14][15]

Tefillin campaign edit

The first Mitzvah Campaign was the Tefillin campaign, an international campaign by Chabad Hasidim to influence all male Jews, regardless of their level of religious observance, to fulfill the mitzvah of Tefillin (phylacteries) daily. Schneerson announced this campaign two days before the outbreak of the Six-Day War, on June 3, 1967.[16][4][17] After the victory of the Six Day War and the seizure of the Western Wall, Schneerson intensified this call, and his Hasidim gave hundreds of thousands of Jews the opportunity to don tefillin, many for the first time.[18][16]

The campaign received some opposition at first. Over the course of that summer, some torah observant Jews raised halakhic questions about the propriety of the campaign. In the fall, Schneerson publicly addressed these issues at the farbrengen of parashat bereshit that year, later published in the rabbi's books of Likkutei Sichos.[19] Shortly afterward, the yearly conference of the heads of the World Agudath Israel took place, at which one of the speakers publicly criticized Schneerson and the tefillin campaign. Schneerson responded to this criticism at the farbrengen of parashat toledot that year.[16]

On one occasion Schneerson gave two reasons for his particular choice of campaign, saying, "The first reason is that there is a passage in the Talmudic tractate of Rosh Hashanah[20] which says that once a Jew wears Tefillin on his head—even one time in his life—he falls into a different category as a Jew." Secondly, "When a Jew in Miami sees pictures of Jews at the Western Wall wearing Tefillin, he gets an urge to put on Tefillin himself."[21]

Torah Study campaign edit

  • the Torah campaign, that all Jews: men, women, and children, engage in regular Torah study. Of this Schneerson said:

One should strive as much as possible, and more, to influence every single Jew, regardless of his location or circumstances, to designate a set time for Torah study. When one encounters a Jew in the street, one should ask him if he has already set a time for Torah study. If he has, one should influence him to increase further—ideally, by influencing him to become a teacher himself.[22]

Method edit

Schneerson would refer to these outreach activities as "the ten Mitzvah Campaigns." He emphasised their importance, saying:

In practical terms, each Jew must proceed in Torah and Mitzvos, the channels for his growth being the Ten Mivtzoim, beginning with oneself, and then spreading forth Torah and Jewishness to the fullest extent of his influence ... As stated on the cover page of “Tanya” — “this service is not far removed from you, in the heavens or across the sea, but rather close to you and within your potential, with your mouth and heart, and able to be accomplished in deed”. And as our Sages emphasized, “deed is the most essential.[23]

Furthermore, he stressed a joyful approach to outreach:

The Mivtzoim should be spread with joy. Just as we fulfill the Mitzvos with joy, so too, must we try to share that joy with others... However, we realize that “serve God with joy,” is a fundamental Torah principle.[24] All our efforts in the Miztzoim must be carried out with joy. This joy, in turn will bring greater success to the Mivtzoim. Our inner joy will light up our faces, and light up our approach toward another Jew. And then, the joy will break down barriers, including the barriers of the person whom we are trying to influence. The happiness will bring us to a complete unity, without any separations.[2]

He also stressed warmth and friendliness:

When he starts to speak with another Jew he might think that the way to bring him to complete fulfillment of the Mitzvos is to show him a sour face, and to let him know that he is unhappy to have to deal with him. We must realize that such actions are contrary to the relations that must exist between one Jew and another. “Love your neighbor as yourself” is a fundamental principle of Torah, as the Talmud[25] declares: “the fulfillment of this Mitzvah is the entire Torah and the others are merely an explanation.”[2]

He taught that the Jewish education and love your fellow Jew campaigns are all-encompassing campaigns, of which all the other campaigns are a subset.[26]

References edit

  1. ^ Mitzva campaigns chabad.org
  2. ^ a b c Public Address of Vayeishev, 5740 Archived May 16, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  3. ^ Medina, Jennifer (December 18, 2009). "With Tin Menorahs, an Outreach to Promote Faith". The New York Times. New York. Retrieved 30 December 2009.
  4. ^ a b A Six-Day War Inspiration: Forty Years Later, And Still Binding Archived 2007-06-30 at the Wayback Machine (www.lubavitch.com)
  5. ^ Prayers For Our Times Archived September 3, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  6. ^ Arizal, beg. of Shaar HaKavanos; Pri Etz Chayim Shaar Olam Ha’asiyah, ch. 1.
  7. ^ Psalms, 140:13
  8. ^ See A birthday: Cause for celebration.
  9. ^ Likutei Sichot, Vol. 25, p. 192
  10. ^ Genesis, 28:14
  11. ^ "Finding Comfort Following Tragedy - Two New Nachamus". 16 April 2010. Retrieved Oct 1, 2014.
  12. ^ "Bernikow JCC to offer 6-week Holocaust course". 16 April 2010. Retrieved Oct 1, 2014.
  13. ^ "NEVER AGAIN: Survivors stress importance of remembering, and never repeating, the Holocaust". Retrieved Oct 1, 2014.
  14. ^ "Beyond Never Again: New Course to Explore Modern Lessons from the Holocaust, April 28th". Retrieved Oct 1, 2014.
  15. ^ "Staten Island Yom Hashoah services recall those lost in Holocaust". 9 April 2010. Retrieved Oct 1, 2014.
  16. ^ a b c Levine, Rabbi Sholom Dovber (2009). Treasures From the Chabad Library (in Hebrew and English). Daniel Goldberg. Brooklyn, New York: Library of Agudas Chasidei Chabad and Kehot Publication Society. pp. 22–23, פח. ISBN 978-0-8266-0657-0.
  17. ^ Collier, Bernard L. (May 27, 1968). "Hassidic Jews Confront Hippies to Press a Joyous Occasion". The New York Times. New York. p. 49.
  18. ^ Schapiro, Leo (November 25, 1967). "Lubavitchers Push Tefillin Campaign". Boston Globe. Since the Six Day War in June which resulted in the annexation of East Jerusalem as part of Israel, more than 400,000 members of the Jewish faith are estimated to have observed the commandment to wear Phylacteries--tefillin In Hebrew--at the city's Western, formerly known as the "Wailing" Wall.
  19. ^ Schneerson, Menahem mendel. Likkutei Sichos (in Hebrew). Vol. 6. Kehot Publication Society. pp. 271–275. ISBN 0-8266-5724-9.
  20. ^ 17a
  21. ^ Why Tefillin? - First Person
  22. ^ Hitva’aduyot 5745, Vol. 1, pp. 461-2
  23. ^ Public Address of Emor, 5738 Archived May 16, 2007, at the Wayback Machine
  24. ^ "Asheville's JLI to offer 'Welcome to Hollywood' course for teens". Retrieved Oct 1, 2014.
  25. ^ Shabbos 31a
  26. ^ Public address of 13 Tammuz, 5742

External links edit