Rabbi Menachem Mendel Gurevitch proudly stood for a group photo with his 10 sons-in-law after marrying off his youngest daughter last week.
Rabbi Menachem Mendel Gurevitch, Director of Yeshivas Tomchei Tmimim in Brunoy, France, celebrated the marriage of his youngest daughter last week.
Before Shabbos Sheva Brachos, it was a good opportunity to stand for a group photo with his 10 sons in law.
From left to right:
Rabbi Eliyahu Chaikin – Bridgetown, Barbados
Rabbi Avrohom Mann – Brooklyn, NY
Rabbi Hershy Drukman – S. Maur, France
Rabbi Yisroel Noach Lipskier – Queens, NY
Rabbi Levi Notik – Chicago, Illinois
Rabbi Menachem Mendel Gurevitch – Brunoy, France
Rabbi Shmuel Nemenov – Villeurbanne, France
Rabbi Shmuel Marazow – New York
Rabbi Mendel Jacobson – New York
Rabbi Shmuel Raskin – Holon, Israel
Rabbi Chaim Greisman – Stockholm, Sweden
Can I guess?
ReplyDeleteThey are all shluchim, spreading the gospel of the Rebbeh?
No Sons ?
ReplyDeleteShluchim or not they all need to get a real job and not just living in a fantasy land
ReplyDeleteYou go out of town and you can't live without the shluchim.
ReplyDeleteSome are just jealous.
ReplyDeleteThis gives the term "Schver" additional meaning
Ashrei chelko yiddishe nachas
ReplyDeleteJancsibacsi, and you need to get out of your filthy basement and check yourself into a mental hospital for the criminally insane,you MARMAROSHER UNGARISHER FERD
ReplyDeleteReally, Janscibacsi ? Wow... And what did YOU do to help other people in remote places all around the world ?
ReplyDeleteAnd how many mishnayos can you recite by heart ?
Great, another pack of religious predators hungry for other people's money (or worse). They never met a dollar that wasn't glatt kosher.
ReplyDeleteWe have the Lubavitcher Rebbe to thank for unleashing his plague of parasites upon Jews worldwide.
Six days shall you work-over your fellow Jew and take a fat buck, but on the seventh day you shall rest and only preach in the name of God that they should hand over their money.
Amazing post with lots of informative and useful and amazing content. Well written and done!! Thanks for sharing keep posting.
ReplyDeleteHow about a line up of the Daughters!
ReplyDeleteNachos. I’m not a Lubavitcher just a yid from Flatbush. With almost five million American Jews assimilating we could use a Lubavitcher a thousand times bigger. Like it or not we need more outreach to our going lost brothers.
ReplyDeleteFrum but normal ---Di behayme it take one MARMAROSHER UNGARISHER FERD to know another ungarisher ferd your maniacal behaviour wont get you anywere kenstech ofhangen of a hoyeher boim.
ReplyDeleteWow, they’re all Rabbis. All ten of them!
ReplyDeleteWhen everyone is a Rabbi, nobody is. Watering down that honorific with wall-to-wall Rabbis makes the designation pedestrian.
Anonymous 3:38,
ReplyDelete"I’m not a Lubavitcher just a yid from Flatbush. With almost five million American Jews assimilating we could use a Lubavitcher a thousand times bigger. Like it or not we need more outreach to our going lost brothers."
Like it or not, your beloved Lubavitchers are actually driving Jews away when those Jews get savvy to the scam, and when the truth comes out about their shliach (and the truth always comes out... sooner or later). Not sure what it's like in very Jewish NY, but here turnover is a given. And some leave with less respect for Judaism and Torah then they came in with. But when our shluchim say 'love your fellow Jew' they mean 'drop love bombs on wealthy Jews and call them your fellow.'
I wonder how many Jews Chabad will drive away before they officially become the new religion of Rebbe-anity.
Neo-Christians with a Torah. I think it's already been done before, just not with a haredi flavor and costume.
I think to title it "think you have it bad" is very derogatory to Chabad. Like having daughters is a curse. Look how fortunate he is by marrying his daughters off to religious men. How fortunate he is.
ReplyDeleteNo, Chabad is not perfect but other mosdos are not perfect either. They have done a lot of good.
Those who knock them, will certainly need them especially when you be stuck in a small town,when you have to say kaddish and all you have is Chabad. Then you will eat your words.
And have to say Oshamnu.
Daughters are as much of a blessing as sons. If G-d sends us a skewed gender balance on our tax returns, someone else has it skewed in the opposite direction. As a collective, it's all good.
ReplyDeleteAs far as shulchim or rabbis go, we need clergy. Despite the fact that the profession carries with it opportunities for abuse, anyone who practices a faith needs a community of fellow practitioners, as well as someone who is knowledgable in the faith. Yes, there are frauds and money grubbers out there, as well as purveyors of negativity in other ways. It is for this reason that I have changed doctors and changed rabbis. G-d dealt me my hand to play as well as possible. If a given rabbi can not respect my struggles, I go and find someone who can. My current rabbi is not only learned, but kind as well. I get more chizuk from his warm smile than a thousand drashot. It is for want of this human warmth that I left a prior congregation.
Lubavitch does great things. But I know of no religious group that does not have some bad apples. Every congregation needs to raise money, either from set dues or fund raising. I see no problem with that. If a rabbi makes you feel like you have a bar code on your @$$, go to another rabbi. What to do if you are in a one shul town and the rabbi is a lemon instead of an esrog? That's a tough one.
Abe: Wow, they’re all Rabbis. All ten of them!
ReplyDeleteWhen everyone is a Rabbi, nobody is. Watering down that honorific with wall-to-wall Rabbis makes the designation pedestrian.
Lubavitch is flooding the market with their cheap mass-produced "rabbis" (missionaries). Their last Rebbe wanted everyone to get semicha.
In some other circles, only better talmidim, or those going into rabbonus, or maybe chinuch, get it. Elsewhere it is even frowned upon.
Bottom line - Lubavitch semicha is like products made in China. Mass-produced, cheap, questionable quality.
ReplyDeleteI would like to be here again. Thank you!
ReplyDeleteThanks for the information your article brings.