Chabad
Good morning Rabbi Michi,
Due to the fact that in recent months I have begun to seriously listen to your lessons on YouTube, and due to the fact that I am from the Chabad community, I have been looking in recent days to see if you have ever written about Chabad.
What I found are a number of questions about Chabad that were asked. What you wrote in general is that you have an appreciation for many of the actions that are done by Chabad and that they have many rights. However, you wrote that you have a problem with the madness of the "messianic" faction in Chabad that claims that the Rebbe is still alive, and especially you have a problem with the fact that in Chabad people pray to the Rebbe (I think you also added in one place that in Chabad there are additions in the prayer that are directed at praying to the Rebbe), which is actually idolatry. You added that you are concerned about joining a minyan with Chabad members for fear of idolatry, and therefore you prefer to pray individually rather than in a minyan with Chabad members.
It is precisely because I am really beginning to appreciate you that I want to write to you about this. Also, I am not writing these things on your website, because, judging by the nature of the responses I have found to the questions that have already been asked, I understand that my words will once again cause ugly responses full of unnecessary lies (my feeling is that there is some kind of "cult" around you that prides itself on blatant disdain for everything that they find irrational, without any substantive examination). I wanted to write to you to draw your attention to them in a substantive manner.
I was born to Chabad parents, grew up and studied my entire life in Chabad institutions (and also taught a little), most of my family is Chabad, including uncles and aunts.
Regarding the issue of the Messianic Jews claiming that the Rebbe is alive – I agree that it is indeed foolishness, but I think it is not a halakhic issue, as you also wrote (by the way, most of the Messianic Jews I know "drop out" of this issue in adulthood, and remain only with the issue of publishing the Rebbe's name as the Messiah).
Regarding the matter of praying to the Rebbe – I didn’t know how to respond to myself when I read your words. I have no other way to define it, but it is simply a fact that is incorrect in any way, shape or form, with no basis in reality. I have no idea where you got this “knowledge,” which is completely false. As I said, I grew up in Chabad since I was born, and I have never heard of such a thing before today.
I know of one addition to the blessing for food, which some have added and some still add for the Rebbe, and it is in the blessing for the good and the beneficent, among others "the Merciful": "The Merciful will bless our Lord, our Teacher and our Master" and some also add ".. the King of the Messiah." But with this addition it is clear that it is not a prayer for the Rebbe, but a prayer for God, the Almighty, to bless the Rebbe.
Yes, I remember that in the past there were a small number of people who did not even amount to a group, who called themselves "Alokists" and claimed that the Rebbe was God. But these were indeed idolaters, these were a very few (on the palm of a hand), who were considered so delusional and stupid that there was not even a need to fight against them. Moreover, as far as Chabad is concerned, they were never considered Chabadites within Chabad. I have not heard of them for years and I have never had the opportunity to meet them.
But what, I read among your other words on the subject that you are hesitating whether to believe anything that any Chabad member tells you because you are afraid that it will be merely apologetics. Of course, if you decide to read my words and dismiss them as a lie and an attempt to present things that are different from the true reality, there is nothing I can do.
As an additional small note, I will write to you that a large part of the fundamentals you have presented in your lessons on faith (on YouTube) are found explicitly and in detail in Chabad Torah in general and in the talks and sayings of the Lubavitcher Rebbe in particular. Sometimes these are passages in which you actually accuse Hasidism and Hasidim in the lessons of believing differently than you say (such as the "first floor" in fulfilling the commandment, which is to keep the commandments of God because they are the commandments of God and for no other reason, not even love of God).
I hope you will read what I have said with an open heart and a willing mind, as I wrote it.
Good Saturday,
לגלות עוד מהאתר הרב מיכאל אברהם
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