Chabad Lubavitch Official homepage for worldwide Chabad Lubavitch movement. Chabad Lubavitch is a philosophy, a movement, and an organization.
Chabad uses the internet to unite Jews throughout the world, to empower them with the knowledge of a 3,300 year old tradition, and foster a deeper connection to their faith. Chabad’s interactive websites transcends all boundaries, serving the religious and the non-observant, affiliated and no...
Footage of New York Jews appearing fromtunnels surrounding Chabad Lubavitch World Headquartersin Brooklyn, known as 770, quickly circulated online. Alongside the videos were countlessantisemitic theories, many of which referenced “sewer Jews,” according to the Anti-Defamation League. So, why were t...
Chabad Lubavitch Official homepage for worldwide Chabad Lubavitch movement. Chabad Lubavitch is a philosophy, a movement, and an organization.
Changing the Jewish Narrative Does Jewish life have a future in Belgrade? To Read The Full Magazine Story
Boruch Werdiger |October 20, 2024 Sukkot Chabad’s Mobile Sukkahs Share Jewish Pride and Joy The eight-day Festival of Sukkot begins this year at sundown on October 16 and concludes with Simchat Torah, on October 25. “Simchat Torah” —“The… ...
Chabad-Lubavitch provides comfort to Jewish officers, soldiers and their families stationed throughout the world and a means to maintain a spiritual connection to Judaism. In addition to distributing thousands of pocket sized Hebrew/English Psalm and prayer books for soldiers to find comfort during ...
Celebrations of the High Holy Days have new meaning this year for a Jewish organization that was, in effect, homeless because of the pandemic. Chabad of Northeast Portlandnow owns a building on Northeast Ninth Avenue that allowed the community to hold in-person services earlier this week for Ro...
During these trying days of the COVID-19 pandemic, Chabad-Lubavitch emissaries serving in 108 countries and thousands of communities around the world are doing their utmost to provide calm and support while following protocol to protect their own safety and the safety of their communities. ...
Not really. Consider what the Lubavitcher Rebbe wrote in a letter to a fellow who had decided to fast (in the usual sense) two days a week. That’s not okay, said the Rebbe. That is not the Chasidic way. When Chasidic philosophy lauds iskafya, the suppression of the animalistic instinc...