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Bidding Information
Lot #    11767
Auction End Date    9/20/2005 11:47:00 AM (mm/dd/yyyy)
          
Title Information
Title (English)    Kuntres bikur Chicago
Title (Hebrew)    קונטרס ביקור שיקאגא
Author    [Habad] R. Yosef Yitzhak Schneersohn
City    New York
Publisher    Kehot
Publication Date    1955
          
Collection Information
Independent Item    This listing is an independent item not part of any collection
          
Description Information
Physical
Description
   80 pp., 232:156 mm., nice margins, light age staining. A good copy bound in the original paper wrappers.
          
Detailed
Description
   This booklet, which is written in Yiddish with occasional Hebrew phrases, was published as part of the Otsar Ha-Hasidim series by Kehot, the official Lubavitch publishing house. It is a collection of talks and chasidic discourses from the "Previous" Rebbe`s (R. Yosef Yitzhak Schneersohn) visit to Chicago in 1942.

The author was the sixth rebbe of Chabad-Lubavitch. R. Yosef Yitzchak was the only son of R. Sholom DovBer, the fifth Rebbe. While still in his teens, the young Yosef Yitzchak served as the right hand of his father. Yosef Yitzchak's responsibilities included administrating the many civic and communal activities in which the Rebbe was involved. The young R. Yosef Yitzchak was a familiar figure in the receiving rooms of the government officials, ministers, and nobles of Moscow and Petersburg. In 5655 (1895) the young rabbi participated in the great conference of religious and lay leaders in Kovno, and again in the following year in Vilna. At times soft-spoken and with words coming from the heart, at times audacious and threatening, but always fearless and determined, he demanded the repeal of anti-Jewish decrees, the stopping of pogroms and the cessation of the government's program of forced "enlightenment" of traditional Jewish life.

On Elul 13, 5657 (1897), at the age of seventeen, R. Yosef Yitzchak married Nechamah Dina, daughter of R. Abraham Schneersohn and granddaughter of the Tzemach Tzedek, the third Chabad rebbe. During the week's celebrations that followed the wedding ceremony, R. Sholom Dovber announced the founding of Tomchei Tmimim, the Lubavitch yeshivah, and the following year appointed his son to be its executive director. It was there, in the hamlet of Lubavitch in pre-soviet White Russia, that R. Yosef Yitzchok trained the army of the faithful torchbearers who, under the impossible conditions of the decades to come, would literally give their lives to keep the flame of Jewish life ablaze throughout the Soviet Union.

Upon his father's passing in 1920, R. Yosef Yitzchak assumed the leadership of Russian Jewry just as Communism's all-out war on Jewish life was moving into high gear. His fight to preserve Judaism was characterized by his all-consuming mesirat nefesh - an unequivocally selfless devotion to the physical and spiritual needs of a fellow Jew and unshakable faith in what he stood for. He dispatched teachers and rabbis to the farthest reaches of the Soviet Empire, establishing a vast underground network of schools, mikvaot, and lifelines of material and spiritual support. Stalin's henchmen did everything in their power to stop him. In 1927 he was arrested, beaten, sentenced to death and exiled; but he stood his ground, and by force of international pressure he was finally allowed to leave the country. But in leaving the Soviet Union he left his emissaries and their infrastructure of Jewish life behind; these continued to function and thrive, preserving and even spreading the teachings of Torah and Chassidism. When the communist regime began to crumble in the late 1980s, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak's network of children's schools, outreach centers, and supply lines of kosher food and religious services simply moved out of cellars and attics into emptied Communist Party buildings.

Upon arriving in New York after his rescue from Nazi-occupied Warsaw in 1940, R.Yosef Yitzchak took on a no less formidable challenge: the frigid spiritual atmosphere of the western world. From his wheelchair, he rallied the Jewish young of America under the cry that "America is no different," that also in this bastion of materialism the timeless truths of Torah can take root and flourish. He established yeshivas and day schools, a publishing house for Jewish books, a social service organization and community support networks throughout the country. By the time of his passing in 1950 he had laid the foundation for the global renaissance of Torah-true and chassidic-flavored Jewish life, heralded by his son-in-law and successor, R. Menachem M. Schneerson.

          
Paragraph 2    ... שיחות ומאמרי ... ר' יוסף יצחק ... מליובאוויטש. יוצא לאור על ידי מערכת "אוצר החסידים". הוצאה שני'. יוצא לאור על ידי מערכת "אוצר החסידים". [בעריכת ר' מנחם מנדל שניאורסון].

הדפוס והתאריך הלועזי במעטפת. בראשי העמ': "קונטרס שיקאגא". "בקונטרס זה נכנסו שיחות ומאמרי ... אדמו"ר שנאמרו בקישור עם ביקורו ובעת ביקורו בעיר שיקאגא בחורף שנת ה'תש"ב ... בסוף הקונטרס מאמר אחד הרבנים בשיקאגא אודות הביקור ... באו גם בקונטרס זה מראי מקומות בשולי הגליון מאת המו"ל. כן הקדמנו בראשיתו יומן הנסיעה. מנחם שניאורסאהן". שני מאמרים בעברית ("בטח בהוי' ועשה טוב"; "שחורה אני ונאוה"), השאר ביידיש.

          
Reference
Description
   http://www.chabad.org/library/article.asp?AID=110174; CD-EPI 0316873
        
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Listing Classification
Period
20th Century:    Checked
  
Location
America-South America:    Checked
  
Subject
Hasidic:    Checked
  
Characteristic
Language:    Hebrew
  
Manuscript Type
  
Kind of Judaica