Queens, NY – Rabbi’s Biography Disturbs Followers

    163

     Samuel Heilman near the grave site of Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson.Queens, NY – Dressed in a white straw hat, tan chinos and a blue shirt, Samuel Heilman, the co-author of a new book about Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, stood at the rebbe’s grave site among scores of pilgrims — a vanguard of the thousands expected to visit on Tuesday, in the Jewish calendar the 16th anniversary of his death — who arrived at a Queens cemetery a few days early to commune with their beloved leader.

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    “It is very holy,” Mr. Heilman said outside the open-air mausoleum, or ohel, that contains the graves of the rebbe and his father-in-law and predecessor, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn. Hasidim believe that the spirit of a great sage remains after death, and many Lubavitchers think the rebbe is not only a sage, but also the messiah.

    The biography’s look at Schneerson’s personal life is already causing a stir in the continuing discussion about his legacy.

    Mr. Heilman pointed to a headstone facing the ohel that refers in Hebrew to the rebbe as “the Messiah of God.”

    “It’s etched in stone,” he said. Rabbi Schneerson, the seventh and at this point the last leader of the Chabad Lubavitchers, remains as powerful a presence in death as in life.

    Over the course of his more than 40 years as grand rebbe, he transformed this tiny Hasidic sect, with its headquarters in Brooklyn, into an influential global network of Jewish followers and emissaries and turned it into one of the most important religious movements within American Jewry. His life and philosophy are essential to understanding contemporary Jewish life.

    Mr. Heilman, a sociologist at Queens College, and Menachem Friedman, a professor emeritus at Bar-Ilan University in Israel, offer a view into his world in their new biography, “The Rebbe: The Life and Afterlife of Menachem Mendel Schneerson” (Princeton University Press). But they have provoked a growing chorus of complaints from people inside and outside Chabad with their characterization of the rebbe.

    Controversy is perhaps inevitable. “Any attempt to humanize the rebbe is going to provoke this reaction.” said Elliot R. Wolfson, a professor of Hebrew and Judaic studies at New York University and the author of “Open Secret: Postmessianic Messianism and the Mystical Revision.”

    What some early readers have found most disturbing is the authors’ description of the rebbe as a not especially pious young Hasid. They argue that Rabbi Schneerson’s initial dream was to be an engineer and that he mostly absented himself from Lubavitcher affairs before World War II, living in Berlin and Paris outside of a religious Hasidic community.

    Only after he escaped from Europe and arrived in the United States in 1941, when he was a childless refugee with little English and few job prospects, and millions of his people had been massacred did he see he himself as having a different mission, the book contends.

    Rabbi Schneerson was a man who “must be feeling desperate in his anxiety, loneliness, confusion and survivor guilt, whose prospects are unclear, looking for a way out, an answer from God,” the authors write.

    Sitting outside the ohel visitor center as a large brown tour bus pulled up, Mr. Heilman, a modern Orthodox Jew, spoke of his “profound respect” for the Lubavitchers but noted that his responsibility as a scholar was not simply to celebrate the rebbe’s accomplishments. “They just can’t accept that he transformed himself, that he was not always going to be the rebbe,” he said.

    Mr. Heilman and Mr. Friedman did not have access to Chabad’s private archives, though there is already a monumental amount of published material from and about the rebbe, with a new collection of 1,200 documents soon to be released. The scholars did speak with many movement members, some of whom are now critical of the biography.

    Rabbi Zalman Shmotkin, a Lubavitch spokesman who is thanked in the book, labeled their speculations “psychobabble” and disdained their attempt to put “themselves in the rebbe’s head while ignoring his deeply expressive correspondence and his scholarly approach.”

    Other critics take the authors to task for not relying more on published material. Steven I. Weiss, the head of news at the Jewish Channel, a cable television network, criticized the book for presenting what he called lurid details and ignoring a vast amount of “primary material which would frequently contradict its assertions.” He also chastised the authors for not noting outright that Mr. Friedman served as an expert witness against the rebbe during a lawsuit in the 1980s over ownership of the Chabad library. Mr. Heilman said, “We have no ax to grind.”

    And Mr. Wolfson of N.Y.U. argued that bypassing the rebbe’s religious writings was a mistake. “There is no question that Menachem Mendel and his wife were spreading their wings” during their sojourn in Paris and Berlin, he said. But the diaries from those years show that he was also completely absorbed in Hasidic thought and Jewish learning. “The world he lived in was completely structured around his ideas,” he said.

    Mr. Heilman maintained that Lubavitcher accounts can’t be trusted because they are hagiographies and said that he and Mr. Friedman did not examine the rebbe’s extensive writings on scripture because they were interested in his personal history, not his scholarship.

    The American and Israeli professors are colleagues and friends who have independently studied the Lubavitchers for nearly 20 years. It was their wives, though, who suggested in 2007 that the two collaborate on a book while they were all vacationing together in Croatia.

    In Mr. Heilman’s eyes, the key to the movement’s success was Rabbi Schneerson’s global vision. He figured out how to permit younger followers to engage with the modern world while remaining true to their Hasidic beliefs. By becoming shluchim, or missionaries, they could spread Lubavitch practices, thereby hastening the arrival of the messiah and redemption.

    Rabbi Schneerson told his shluchim not to limit their efforts to the most religious but to every Jew. “They take everyone,” Mr. Heilman said.

    More books and biographies are on the way, insuring that the Talmudic-like debate about Rabbi Schneerson’s life will continue.


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    163 Comments
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    the author sounds like a troll
    the author sounds like a troll
    13 years ago

    bla bla bla…. there are so many trolls out there.

    ChelmiTe
    ChelmiTe
    13 years ago

    It seems that Mr.Heilman has some ax to grind. Too bad he didn’t invest his academic pursuits in something other then trying to uncover some imperfection in one of the most Universally Beloved
    Gedolim.
    Mr. Heilman’s does not represent anyone but himself.
    He most certainly does not represent me a Modern Orthodox CheLmiTe

    Nice, but....
    Nice, but....
    13 years ago

    Kol Hakovod to his book!. But I personally don`t like it. These things he says are all nice and maybe true, but still….

    Jacob
    Jacob
    13 years ago

    The fact that they are unable to open and learn one book of the Rebbe speaks volumes. The Lubavitcher Rebbe has over 200 works on Torah published to date. Anyone who ever learnt one talk know that this ludicrous.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Yea the rebbe was very into the bochrim going into the modern world. The bochirm do not go to college or have a formally english education in yeshiva.

    This guy is nuts, he can not compredend the concept of a rebbe/tzadik he obviously never learnt any of the rebbe teachings. The rebbe only used modern technology to spread out torah

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    I find that his profile of the rebbe’s earlier years, even with some of the warts included, make his life and memory even more significant. We have a tendency to make our gadolim larger than life when in reality, they too were not that much different than poishete yidden who had to deal with all the challenges life throws at us. The difference of course is their ability to rise above the rest of us and respond to these challenges in such a special way. Rav Schneerson, Z’tl, was first and foremeost a “poishiste yid” who created a legacy that is very understandable to poisite yiddin.

    The Rebbe's actions speak for themselves !
    The Rebbe's actions speak for themselves !
    13 years ago

    for years and years before and after the Rebbe’s passing, these self proclaimed experts on Lubavitch have come out of the woodwork. rarely has any be positive. what are they tryng to prove? if you cant say something good , dont say anything at all. you dont see chassidim writing books about non chassidic jews, do you? everybody just wants to be left alone !!!!!!!so whats gonna happen , chabadskes are gonna buy up all the boox to get themoff the market ? these two guys have too much time on their hands.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    the kever on the left , behind this man is the Rebbe’s mothers’. is the one on the right the Fredike Rebbe”s wife, mother or mother in law ?

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Beware, Rebbe-war has just erupted .

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    is this difrent from the book of the liozner rabbi (duetch). called “larger then life”?

    Baffeled VIN Reader
    Baffeled VIN Reader
    13 years ago

    After reading the book, I’m really surprised that Princeton University Press would publish a book that is so poorly researched–the footnotes point almost exclusively to secondary sources, agenda driven–seems the authors threw a dart and then struggled to draw a circle around it, and has questionable ethical issues with the regards to the research and authors–lack of disclosure in the preface of the book regarding the authors past history and possible gripes with the people they write about, ignoring mountains of data that would possibly unravel their thesis and cherry picking information and misrepresenting documentation to support it.

    Did PUP do proper fact checking or did the author’s titles give them a free pass?

    danny
    danny
    13 years ago

    To say that the accounts of that time are hagiographies is completely pathetic. Assuming his followers do have an agenda and they cannot be relied on, what about the several first hand accounts of those in Paris and Berlin at that time, with no affiliation, who describe seeing the Rebbe learning the Talmud and various Chasidic texts during his lectures in the Sorbonne etc. A little time with primary sources (on which most history must be based for authenticity) and perhaps this arrogant man wouldn’t have authored such an irrelevant book based on hearsay, the majority of which being his!

    a hole
    a hole
    13 years ago

    These guys that wrtoe this book are A holes!! To say the least

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    This dunce knows nothing.

    “He also chastised the authors for not noting outright that Mr. Friedman served as an expert witness against the rebbe during a lawsuit in the 1980s over ownership of the Chabad library. Mr. Heilman said, “We have no ax to grind.”

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Mr. Heilman should do proper research for his project before publishing his book.
    it is full of blatant lies and apikorsis

    yankel
    yankel
    13 years ago

    ye i saw that book… the guy is a nudnik, disdaining from the facts and wants publicity.. noch a journalist mit a krume kupp.

    nonsense!
    nonsense!
    13 years ago

    How could he have written a “biography” without knowing even the first thing about the Lubavitcher Rebbe!
    Anyone that knows about the Rebbe knows that this is

    (by the way: it is unappropriated to just write the Lubavitcher Rebbe’s last name when referring to him)

    bigwheeel
    bigwheeel
    13 years ago

    I’m familiar with Mr. Hellman’s musings from other places where he expressed his opinions. He acts like the ultimate authority on Chassidim with a sort of self-satisfied detachment. Always referring to Chassidim as “They”, “Them”, etc. No one here, (or at least, I) cares bout Mr. Hell man’s religious affiliation, or the lack of it. But his scholarly approach is also very narrow-scoped. (btw: I haven’t read the book, yet.) I’m willing to bet that he H. hasn’t read the Biography of the previous Rebbe of Lubavitch, Rabbi Joseph Yitzchok zt”l. Or the part of where he was arrested by the communists. Had he read it, he would learn (for a change.) that he (R. MM) was very much beloved by the previous Rebbe and he considered him to be part of a special mission. Not to speak of the Rebbe’s (RMM) accomplishments in raising the Jewish consciousness and Spiritual level of Millions of Jews throughout the world. But H. (the sociologist   Queens College) is looking at this Rebbi’s life with detached cynicism. That’s why the writings of his ilk are worthless. Because they’re looking for negativity and disregard all mountain of good that the Rebbi of Lubavitch accomplished in a lifetime!!!

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    BH
    Trying to understand the Rebbe’s dreams at any point in his life is like trying to understand what a saint is thinking by judging his actions. According to that theory, the three saints that visited Avraham were hungry. While it was pretty obvious, by what he said and did, that he had no desire in being Rebbe, that just makes him larger than all of us, where we are very much status oriented.

    I dont blame Heilman, he views the Rebbe with his earthly eyes and that is all he has. Emunah is something that most scholarly people have a very hard time with, and lack. Emunas Chachamim is what is needed to understand that the Rebbe was in Hashems’s hands all the time and if being an engineer is what he wanted it was Hashem’s will, but at the same time, he was firmly attached to Hashem and wanted to spread his light at every given opportunity.

    The Rebbe’s highest priority was Moshiach and transforming the world with the light of Hashem.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    I don’t see anything suspicious or eye raising in how what these scholars have wrote. Followers of religious figures do not like outsiders writing biographies with non biased, non slanted angle. Followers always want to create an artificial image of a saintly genius and will not accept anything less than that.

    For example, there are many Lubavitch followers who get angry at any mention of the fact that the Rebbe studied at French universities wanting to pursue engineering. To them that part of his life diminishes his name as studying secular subjects is “controversial” or maybe even “scandalous” for a leader who was to be the “Messiah.”

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Considering that the Rebbe had a job as an Electrical Engineer in the Navy after he arrived in America, I would say that saying he had no job prospects is bunk.

    And considering all of the evidence they just ignored (they didn’t analyze it and reject it, they just ignored it), it really is an absurd waste of time.

    Oh, and what it says on the grave is “anointed one of G-d.” If they can’t even get the basic Hebrew right, they are kind of out of their depth.

    Babishka
    Member
    Babishka
    13 years ago

    “Mr. Heilman maintained that Lubavitcher accounts can’t be trusted because they are hagiographies and said that he and Mr. Friedman did not examine the rebbe’s extensive writings on scripture because they were interested in his personal history, not his scholarship.”

    So they admit that it is just a bunch of rechilus and lashon hara with utterly no redeeming qualities. Their research is of the same quality as the stupid blogs which claim that Obama has no birth certificate, or that Israel is committing apartheid and genocide.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    According to Rabbi Isser Zalman Weissberg, the young Rebbe-to-Be was in Berlin and Paris fulfilling the secret missions of the future Moshiach as prophesied by the Vilna Gaon. Ostensibly, he was “studying” at the University of Berlin and later at the Sorbonne (the quotations are due because he hardly attended class).

    He was spotted often by elder Chassidim there walking the streets, always gazing at a newspaper. Thing was, he gazed at the same worn, dated newspaper month after month. Found out and asked why, he answered: “In Paris, one does not look around.”

    What was he doing there? According to Rabbi Weissberg, he was battling the forces of Tumah, specifically two of the Three Completely Unclean Forces: Murder, in Berlin, and Licentiousness, in Paris. Just as the Vilna Gaon prophesied the future Moshiach will do.

    And he did this exactly as the Gaon says the future Moshiach will: v’hatzna’a leches . . . with complete (והצנע לכת עם ה’ אלקיך). No one knew who the Rebbe was and what in truth he was doing there. It appeared to be something other than what it was.

    Of all the Torah leaders of our generation, it was the Rebbe who came back for me. The Lubavitcher Rebbe saved my life.

    Dr. CLUE
    Dr. CLUE
    13 years ago

    All the years of Yochanan ben Zachai were one hundred twenty. The first forty were spent in business, the second, the second he learned, and the third forty he taught. Talmud Bavli R”H 31B:

    By this standard the Rebbi was ahead of the game.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Seperating the Rebbes “personal life” from his scholarly works, is like taking a picture of only half of someones body and calling it whole.

    Chabad Chossid
    Chabad Chossid
    13 years ago

    It should be noted that in fact as early as his birth it was was known that the Rebbe would be holy, it has been published regarding the correspondence and guidance from the Rebbe Rasha”b (the 5th Lubavitcher Rebbe) to the Rebbe’s father Rabbi Levi Yitztchak (also a descendent from the Tzemach Tzedek the 3rd Lubavitcher Rebbe) how the mother should give birth, including many details and ritual purifications in preparation for and throughout the early stages of the Rebbe’s life.

    On the day the Rebbe was born the Rebbe Rasha”b sent as many as 6 telegrams with instructions and guidance, something unheard at any other occasion.

    Craig B.
    Craig B.
    13 years ago

    I bought the book. Although I have not given it a read yet, I bought it knowing it may not be a full and accurate account. That said, any chance to learn more about RAbbi Schneerson should be a good experience. I am quite sure I can distinguish conjecture from fact. That the Chabad has not done Rabbi Schneerson justice with a true biography by now is a real shame! I hear bits and pieces of this man who the people in the “in group” speak so highly of, but I admit I do not feel I completely know him yet! So, yea, I’m going to read it with a grain of sand!

    Babishka
    Member
    Babishka
    13 years ago

    I am sure that Mr. Heilman was terribly disappointed he couldn’t find any really dirty, nasty gossip, the kind of shmutz that he was really looking for that sells books.

    Marvin
    Marvin
    13 years ago

    So much criticism from people who have not read the book.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Lets try to accept others’ characterizations of the rebbe as the views of someone who may not have the same beliefs as our own. What some characterize as factual errors are more in the nature of the “spin” we choose to put on the same historical events. You would probably get the same response if a chabad journalist were to compile his “objective” memoirs of the Satmer rebbe.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    As the book has just appeared, I wonder how many of the critics actually read it.

    Daniel M
    Daniel M
    13 years ago

    There are so many errors in this theory:
    1. I f there Rebbe was so well educated (especially for a religious Jew) why would he have any difficulty finding a job?
    2. Indeed he did find a job in the navy!
    3. He was the most learned son-in-law of the most famous Russian Rabbi, the Previous Lubavitcher Rebbe. Maybe he felt responsibility to become Rebbe so as to further his father-in-laws cause.
    4. Throughout France and Berlin, he was religious. He has a beard before the war! Maybe the Rebbe’s humility should come to mind!!!! He shunned overt leadership as much as possible. That is not to say he did not embrace it fully when necessary for the public.
    5. I definitely agree that the Rebbe’s vision of Shluchim was hugely successful and unique to the Religious world. I think the Rebbe believed in the religious and Jew and not one over the other as some do.

    a tzidreiter!!!
    a tzidreiter!!!
    13 years ago

    Is this guy out of his mind?? Starting with a Rebbe so holy on his Yartzeit???? He must have fallen on his head as a child, to start with a neshama like this one,, I have rachmonus on him,,,,

    Pashuteh Yid
    Pashuteh Yid
    13 years ago

    If the Rebbe wanted to be an engineer, does that mean he was not pious? Everybody has their own role in life, and as long as he is honest and lshem shomayim, whatever his profession is fine.

    Moshe Rabbeinu wanted to be a shepherd until the RBSH asked him to be the leader. Even then, he adamantly didn’t want to, and fought with the RBSH. Does that mean he was not pious? The whole premise of this article is wrong.

    The Rebbe wrote more than 100 sefarim, both in nigleh and nistar concepts, and was an amazing moser nefesh for the klal hardly sleeping, and living in total pashtus. His lomdus in many sugyas is unbelievable. One doesn’t get that depth by accident. He was from the greatest of the great, and I am not a Lubavitcher.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    I did read the book. and much of chabad accounts as well. for the most part he doesn’t say anything historically new. all he says is that the Rebbe did….. (for the most part he does have all sorts of erroneous things in the book, clearly showing that it wasn’t researched well). The main problem with the book is that he decides a why. How could anyone crawl into anyone’s head and decide the reason why they did certain things. its pure theory!!! all the more so if you wan’t to crawl into a persons heads for reasons, there are two ways to do that, see the outcome that they came to and study the way they thought.

    they didn’t do either as the Rebbes outcome was that he became one of the Greatest leaders of the generation and through him countless jews came closer to Hashem, and B his thoughts from his whole life time including the time spent in paris and berlin are clearly permeated with Torah and Yiras shomayim as clearly seen from his notes, and from first accounts of that time (which they ignored.)

    מהפך פשטא
    מהפך פשטא
    13 years ago

    Small wonder that someone would write a book like this, appearing around פרשת קרח where Korach challenges the uniqueness and holiness of Moshe Rabeinu. It is well known that the Rebbe had almost no teeth, (and yet was able to enunciate with exceptional clarity). But what happened to his teeth? Rabbi Yitzchok Hutner ZT”L stated (in the years when he was still close to the Rebbe) that as young man in Paris and Berlin, the Rebbe fasted day after day, which caused his teeth to fall out. As the Gemara states in תלמוד בבלי מסכת חגיגה דף כב עמוד ב
    כל ימיו הושחרו שיניו מפני תעניותיו.

    To the Chasidim I say, don’t be bothered with the appearance of this book. Moshe Rabeinu too was accused by some in his time of the worst sins: see: Kidushin 33b.

    And Moshe Rabeinu needs no vindication!

    Tanna Kamma
    Tanna Kamma
    13 years ago

    Heilman was on Zev Brenner talk-show, when asked why he didn’t look through the rebbe’s ‘reshimos’ which contains his writings from the ‘non-chassidic’ years, he wasn’t even aware they were published!!

    When challenged on his assertion that the Rebbe didn’t attend the local synagogues in Berlin by a documentary from an eyewitness acct. that he davened at a particular shul, he again responded that he was unaware of it.

    So much for this genius’s theories!

    Chossid
    Chossid
    13 years ago

    I am not a Lubavitcher chossid and only saw him once, when I got a dollar bill on a Sunday.
    However I have listened to many of his recorded divrei torah and, as I travel a lot to the far East, avail myself of the services prodided by his followers, in fact , as they themselves say, his sh’lichim.
    Anybody who can say what he said and do what he did cannot be anything but an Ish Kodoish.
    Zechusoi Yogen Oleinu.

    Q
    Q
    13 years ago

    This entire thread seems absurd. Isn’t there a paper trail of where he studied and when/if he graduated?

    If he was an electrical engineer for the navy he had to have produced a diploma or other documentation to get the job.

    Just get the papers together, post them on line and end this stupidity once and for all.

    As of now I’ve seen nothing written here to get the rebbe-detractors to shut up.

    Can’t someone just put up the documentation to put them in their pitiful place?

    With the diploma available on line these shmendriks will have to scamper on home.

    shlomo zalman
    shlomo zalman
    13 years ago

    If indeed these two authors misrepresented the Rebbe’s early life, shame on them. But indirect blame for this can be laid to two phenomena. One, the frum world’s inability and/or unwillingness to write a biography of any godol that actually tells the truth. Two, the tragic presentation of the Rebbe as the Moshiach, or even as a candidate to be moshiach. As a result, others step into the vacuum and write a book that many claim is a distortion of truth. Let’s see the frum world put out some truth and then these academic biographies will lessen in value.

    Q
    Q
    13 years ago

    This entire thread seems absurd. Isn’t there a paper trail of where he studied and when/if he graduated?

    If he was an electrical engineer for the navy he had to have produced a diploma or other documentation to get the job.

    Just get the papers together, post them on line and end this stupidity once and for all.

    As of now I’ve seen nothing written here to get the rebbe-detractors to shut up.

    Can’t someone just put up the documentation to put them in their pitiful place?

    With the diploma available on line these shmendriks will have to scamper on home.

    truth
    truth
    13 years ago

    Why even discuss the details of this book that Heilman put out? He is a well known hater and distorter of anything with an Orthodox connection and is totally discredited.

    Marvin Schick and Yaakov Menken have already given the lie to any claim to legitimacy that he might claim.

    History
    History
    13 years ago

    Very sad, The Rebbe’s wife, Chaya Mushka, was a real Rachmonus. For a full year she was begging the Rebbe, not to accept the Nissius, so as not to offend her older sister, to whom she was extremely close.
    When the Rebbe did accept, she lost contact with her only sister; their close relationship was over. She was left with no family, no friends, and no children. She lead a lonely, isolated life.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    To #87 :

    What outright falsehood! Until 1987, in the Seforim case, she had a very good relationship with her sister Chana. The Rebbetzin, the Tzadeikes Chaya Mushka was the paradigm of tznius. She had many friends as well. Eishes Chover KeChover!

    Meni in Netanya
    Meni in Netanya
    13 years ago

    Heilman & Friedman join company with Wolfson & David Berger at YU as bizarre critics of the Rebbe. As the late & great Talmid Chocham & sociologist Dr. Gershon Kranzler said, critics of the Lubavitcher Rebbe are either truly ignorant or jealous (or let us add or both)!

    yankee
    yankee
    13 years ago

    To say that the Rebbe had few job prospects, shows this man’s ignorance. When the Rebbe arrived in the U.S , we was approached by the U.S. Navy research dept. department and offered a job as an engineer. The Rebbe worked in the Brooklyn Navy Yard and received a medal for his contribution to the U.S Navy.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    Let’s stop focusing so much of our attention on rebbes, rabbis, roshei yeshiva and the like. Let’s focus on ourselves, our families, our friends and community and stop being so distracted with this stuff.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    I am no fan of Lubavitch, especially the Meshichisten, but I would be very reluctant to trust anything that Dr. Heilman has written. i have a few professional credentials myself, and I’ve read most of the books Dr. Heilman published up until around 1995. The man definitely has issues with being an Orthodox Jew. His writing showed that he was very ambivalent both about Orthodox tradition and his fellow Orthodox Jews, and he pretty much said as much in the prefaces to several of his books.

    As I said, I’m no fan of Lubavitch, but I wouldn’t trust Dr. Heilman any further than I would trust someone trying to prove that R’ Schneerson is going to come back as Moshiach. Both have agendas.

    Anonymous
    Anonymous
    13 years ago

    tionship with sister was good until seforim story