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 Chabad Customs 
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Chabad Customs
  Kislev - 18, 19 and 20 Kislev - Rosh HaShanah for Chassidus
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- Chai Kislev:
    The eighteenth of Kislev marks the completion of the annual
    cycle of daily readings from the Tanya. [597]
 
- Yud-Tes-Chaf Kislev, the Festival of Liberation: [594]
    The 19th and 20th of Kislev are the Rosh HaShanah of
    Chassidus.
 
    The following is the festive greeting used on these two days:
    "A good Yom-Tov! May you be inscribed and sealed for a good
    year in the study of Chassidus and in the spiritual lifestyle
    of Chassidus." [598]
   
 
    The 19th of Kislev is the yahrzeit of our saintly master,
    R.  DovBer, the Maggid of Mezritch, who [as successor to the
    Baal Shem Tov] was the mentor of the second generation of the
    chassidic movement - from 5521 (1761) until his passing on
    the third day of the week of Parshas Vayeishev, Yud-Tes
    Kislev, 5533 (1772). His resting place is in Anipoli. [599]
 
    R. Shneur Zalman [of Liadi, author of the Tanya], known
    as the Alter Rebbe, founder and first leader of the Chabad
    chassidic movement from 5533 (1772) until [his passing on
    the 24th of Teves in] 5573 (1812), was released from his
    first imprisonment on the 19th of Kislev, late in the
    afternoon of the third day of the week of Parshas Vayeishev,
    5559 (1798).  [600]
    From a letter of the Alter Rebbe:
       "This indeed must be made known, that on the day which G-d
        made for us - on the 19th of Kislev; on the third day of
        the week (concerning which the Torah twice writes `It is
        good') [601]; on the yahrzeit of our holy master [the
        Maggid of Mezritch], whose soul reposes in Eden; - on
        that day, while I was reading the verse in the Book of
        Tehillim that begins, `He has redeemed my soul in peace,'
        [602] and before I began the following verse, I went
        forth in peace through the G-d of Peace." [603]
 
    The following statement, [handed down by the oral tradition
    of elder chassidim of that time,] was made by the Alter Rebbe
    in connection with Yud-Tes Kislev: [604]
 
     (First Version:)
        "This day will be fixed as an everlasting festival for
         Israel, a day on which the great Name of G-d will be
         exalted and hallowed.  The hearts of thousands of Jews
         will be aroused in repentance and the service of the
         heart (i.e., prayer), for this episode is engraved in
         the heart of the Israel of the World Above, and
         inscribed in the heart of Israel in This World."
 
    (Second Version:)
          "This day will be fixed as an everlasting festival for
           Israel, a day on which the great Name of G-d will be
           exalted and hallowed.  The hearts of thousands of Jews
           will be aroused in repentance and the service of the
           heart (i.e., prayer), for when this episode will be
           engraved in the heart of Yisrael Sava, [605] it will
           be inscribed in the heart of Israel in This World."
 
 
      From a letter of the Rebbe Rashab: [606]
           "Yud-Tes Kislev,...the festival on which `He redeemed
            our soul in peace,' and the light and vitality of our
            souls were given to us, is the New Year for Chassidus
            - which our saintly forebears, [the Rebbeim of their
            respective generations,] have bequeathed to us -
            i.e., the teachings of the Baal Shem Tov. [607]
            "[We read in the Machzor:] `This is the day which
             is the beginning of Your works.' [608]
 
             "[G-d's] true and ultimate motive for creating man
              upon earth is [His desire] that man cause the light
              of the innermost dimension of our holy Torah to be
              revealed.
 
              "On this day, that light is forthcoming in a
               general way for the entire year. On this day,
               therefore, it is our duty to awaken our hearts to
               an inward and elemental desire and yearning,
               within the very core of our hearts, that G-d
               illuminate our souls with the light of the
               innermost dimension of His Torah."
 
 
        "One ought to prepare oneself for the approach of the
         Rosh HaShanah of Chassidus in ways that recall the days
         of Selichos and the month of Elul." [609]
 
         "For a chassid, Yud-Tes Kislev is the day of his
          [spiritual] circumcision." [595]
  
     One does not say Tachanun on the 19th or 20th of Kislev, nor
     at the Minchah that precedes the 19th of Kislev.
     "It is customary for chassidim to immerse in a mikveh before
      Shacharis on the 19th of Kislev, in keeping with the
      practice handed down by the earliest chassidim in the name
      of the Baal Shem Tov - that with the approach of Shabbos
      and Yom-Tov, and on Shabbos and Yom-Tov mornings, one
      immerses in a mikveh.
 
     "The elder chassidim of Chabad have received an oral
      tradition handed down by the earliest chassidim of the
      Alter Rebbe, that the celebration of Yud-Tes Kislev as a
      Yom-Tov is crucial to the manifestation of the joy of this
      day, which the Alter Rebbe drew down to this world by means
      of his own self-sacrifice for the sake of the customs of
      Chabad chassidim." [610]
 
     "This is a day for farbrengen and for resolving to set aside
      fixed times for the study of Torah in public, both its
      revealed planes (nigleh) and its hidden dimensions
      (Chassidus).  It is a day for the strengthening of the
      spiritual lifestyle of chassidim in a spirit of
      brotherliness." [611]
 
      The Rebbe Rashab used to make an appeal for charitable
      purposes during the farbrengen of Yud-Tes Kislev. [612]
 
  
       It is customary to distribute the tractates of the Talmud
       which various individuals undertake to study in the course
       of the coming year, in accordance with the letter of the
       Alter Rebbe, beginning Hocheiach Tochiach, that closes
       Kuntreis Acharon at the end of Tanya. (The tractates are
       commonly apportioned on Yud-Tes Kislev.) [613]
 
       The following is the relevant passage:
 
         "Complete the study of the entire Talmud every year and
          in every community, the tractates being apportioned by
          lot or by consent. In a city where there are numerous
          synagogues, each congregation should complete the
          Talmud. And if a congregation is too small to implement
          this, they should join forces with men of a larger one.
          This program shall be neither violated nor varied."
          Those who belong to a community which, for whatever
          reason, is `too small' to cope with the entire Talmud,
          customarily participate in the distribution of
          tractates that is arranged by the Machne Israel
          organization in the beis midrash of the Rebbe Shlita.
  
           On Yud-Tes Kislev one re-commences the annual cycle of
           daily readings in Tanya, as divided by the Rebbe
           Rayatz. [614]
 
     In the letter which he appended to his study guide he
     referred to "the readings in Likkutei Amarim - Tanya as
     apportioned for each day of the year, from the Rosh
     HaShanah of Chassidus, Yud-Tes Kislev, until next year's
     Yud-Tes Kislev.  (May it greet us and all our Jewish
     brethren with goodness and with blessing, both materially
     and spiritually.) " [615]
 
 
Extract from a letter of the Rebbe Shlita:
      "The practice has become widespread [616]  to hold the main
       farbrengen of Yud-Tes Kislev on the eve of the 20th,
       because the Alter Rebbe was released from prison on the
       19th at Minchah time, and for the following three hours he
       found himself in the home of an antagonist to Chassidism,
       where he suffered spiritual anguish. [617]
 
      "In many places, nevertheless, people gather for a
       farbrengen on the eve of the 19th as well - and may
       chassidic blessings light upon them.
 
      "In general, the farbrengens of any city are arranged in
       either of two ways:
 
	   
             -  they can be spread out in many locations, so
                 that people who would not travel far afield
                 should also participate; or
 
             -  all those interested can meet at one location,
               for `In a multitude of people is the King's
               glory.' [618]  Such a farbrengen should be steered
               by the venerable elders and the men of stature
               within the community.
 
	 
      "Abundant quantity or superior quality? [619] Their
       relative merits are the subject of a classic debate. [620]
       For comparable cases see: Shabbos 127a ; Megillah 3a (in
       Tosafos;  Avos 3:15, and see Peirush HaMishnayos there);
       Iggeres HaKodesh, Epistle 21; and other sources.  These
       are obviously not exact parallels to our case, but space
       does not permit further elaboration.
 
      "At any rate, I would recommend that on the first night,
       the eve of the 19th, farbrengens should be held in various
       places (where the following night's gathering should be
       announced), and the next evening all concerned should
       assemble in one place.
 
      "It goes without saying that what matters ultimately is
       that people should rouse themselves and `resolve to set
       aside fixed times for the study of Torah in public, both
       its revealed planes (nigleh) and its hidden dimensions
       (Chassidus), and strengthen the spiritual lifestyle of
        chassidim in a brotherly spirit.'" [621]
 
 Footnotes:
- (Back to text) [See p. 42 in the printed version on The Chitas Study
        Cycles.]
 
- (Back to text) A facsimile of the letter of the Rebbe Rashab that
        discusses Yud-Tes Kislev as the Rosh HaShanah of
        Chassidus is reproduced in Kuntreis U'Maayan (Heb.
        edition only), p. 17 [and translated below]; the
        background to its first appearance is described in an
        extract from the Diary of the Rebbe Rayatz, op.  cit.,
        pp. 15-18; the above-quoted festive greeting appears in
        HaYom Yom (p. 113), which also reproduces the text of the
        letter (p. 4).
 
- (Back to text) HaYom Yom, p. 4. On his life-work see: HaTamim, Issues
        2 and 4-8; Sefer HaSichos 5703, p. 155ff.; Likkutei
        Dibburim (according to the Index); Beis Rebbe, p. 61ff.;
        and elsewhere. [For a biography in English, see: R. Jacob
        Immanuel Schochet, The Great Maggid (Kehot, N.Y., 1974).]
 
- (Back to text) HaYom Yom, p. 4. See Megillas Yud-Tes Kislev; the sichos
        of the Rebbe Rashab in Toras Shalom; the sichos of the
        Rebbe Rayatz and of the Rebbe Shlita on the occasion of
        each year's Yud-Tes Kislev; Kuntreis Limud HaChassidus,
        ch.  6ff.; Beis Rebbe, Part I; Sefer HaMaasar VehaGeulah;
        and other sources, [including, in English: The Arrest and
        Liberation of Rabbi Shneur Zalman of Liadi (Kehot, N.Y.,
        1964), a translation by R. Jacob Immanuel Schochet of
        the Hebrew original by R. Avraham Chanoch Glitzenstein;
        R. Nissan Mindel, Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi (Kehot,
        N.Y., 1971)].
 
- (Back to text) [Cf. Rashi on Bereishis 1:7.]
 
- (Back to text) [Tehillim 55:19.]
 
- (Back to text) HaYom Yom, p. 4.
 
- (Back to text) Reproduced at the beginning of Megillas Yud-Tes Kislev.
        [For the historical background to this statement see
        Likkutei Dibburim (and likewise in English translation),
        Vol. I, ch. 2a, sec. 9, and footnotes there.]
 
- (Back to text) A gloss in Megillas Yud-Tes Kislev notes that the Alter
        Rebbe was accustomed to using the word Sava (lit., an
        elder, or sage) to describe baalei mochin and baalei
        de'ah, in the spirit of the expression [paraphrasing the
        Zohar], [`Israel of the World Above' and Yisrael Sava.
 
- (Back to text) [See footnote 598, above.]
 
- (Back to text) This sentence is quoted and expounded at length in
        Likkutei Sichos, Vol. IV, p. 1252.
 
- (Back to text) [This phrase is borrowed from the Mussaf prayers of
        Rosh HaShanah; Machzor, p. 135.] See the maamar beginning
        Zeh HaYom, 5710 (in Sefer HaMaamarim 5710).
 
- (Back to text) From a sichah of Yud-Tes Kislev, 5707 (Sefer HaMaamarim
        5711, p. 145).
 
- (Back to text) Sefer HaSichos 5702, p. 19.
 
- (Back to text) [From the letter of the Rebbe Rayatz that appears at the beginning of the booklet entitled Yud-Tes Kislev.]
 
- (Back to text) Sefer HaSichos: Toras Shalom, p. 243.
 
- (Back to text) From the year 5663 (1902) onwards, because of lack of
        time on Yud-Tes Kislev, the distribution of the tractates
        [in the original: chalukas HaShas] in Lubavitch was
        carried out on the 24th of Teves, the yahrzeit of the
        Alter Rebbe.
        In 5713 (1952), fifty years later, the Rebbe Shlita
        restored the custom in various places to its original
        date, Yud-Tes Kislev.
 
- (Back to text) HaYom Yom, p. 4. [See also p. 42 in the above section
        on The Chitas Study Cycles.]
 
- (Back to text) Foreword to the daily study guide entitled Moreh Shiur
        [which appears as the first appendix to all current
        editions of the Tanya, as published by Otzar
        HaChassidim]. [See also its English translation (Kehot,
        London, 5735).]
 
- (Back to text) See the sichos of Yud-Tes Kislev, 5692 and 5693.  (Note
        of the Rebbe Shlita.)
 
- (Back to text) [See Likkutei Dibburim (and likewise in English
        translation), Vol. I, ch. 2a, sec. 20; and R. Nissan
        Mindel, Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, pp. 182-183.]
 
- (Back to text) [Mishlei 14:28.]
 
- (Back to text) This is also related to the difference between the two
        phrases, (`How manifold are Your works!' - Tehillim
        104:24) and (`How great are Your works!' - ibid., 92:6);
        this is discussed in the second maamar beginning Vaeira
        in Torah Or, p. 56b. Another example of such contrasts:
        (`intense lights') vs. (`capacious vessels'); this is
        discussed in the maamar beginning Matzah Zu, 5667. (Note
        of the Rebbe Shlita.)
 
- (Back to text) See Lekach Tov by Rabbi Y. Engel, Klal 15. (Note of
        the Rebbe Shlita.)
 
- (Back to text) These concluding words are quoted from the letter of
        the Rebbe Rayatz that appears at the beginning of the
        booklet entitled Yud-Tes Kislev. (Note of the Rebbe
        Shlita.)
 
 
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