Last week we told you about the psak from a Bnei Brak Bais Din that only the "little rebbe" can use the name "sadiger"
Turns out that "Sadigura" is named after a city in Bukovina, Austria, now Ukraine. The town's goyim are going ballistic worried sick that this psak will affect them and they will not be able to use the name that they had for the city for hundreds of years, it seems that the Bais Din forgot about the city which presently has zero Jews living there. The goyim are thinking of naming the "little rebbe' their "chief rabbi" to enable them to keep the name. They really preferred the older brother from Yerushalyim, but if he cannot call himself "Sadigere Rebbe" it won't help them.
The "Sadigere Goyim" say that none of the Sadigere Rebbes going back 100 years ever stepped into the city!
Meanwhile in the town of Bobov in Poland, the Bobover Goyim still haven't decided whether to call themselves Bobov 48 or Bobov 45.
Both Bobover Rebbes were born in the USA.
No word yet if the Bobover and Sadigere Goyim will unite to fight both Bais Dins to have them stop using their "tumedike" names!
Halevai it would be funny in real life. This is worse than sad.
ReplyDeleteMy favourite is how the first three "Lubavitcher Rebbes" never set foot in Lubavitch. Biggest retcon in history.
ReplyDeleteWiki says BS "The movement was moved to Lyubavichi, (Yiddish: Lubavitch) now Russia, by the second Rebbe of Chabad, Rabbi Dovber Shneuri, in 1813.[6] The movement was centered in Lyubavichi for a century until the fifth Rebbe, Rabbi Shalom Dovber left the village in 1915[7] and moved to the city of Rostov-on-Don. During the interwar period, following Bolshevik persecution, the Chabad-Lubavitch movement, under the Sixth Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak, was centered in Riga and then in Warsaw. The outbreak of World War II led to the Sixth Rebbe to move to the United States. Since 1940,[13] the movement's center has been in the Crown Heights neighborhood of Brooklyn.[14][15]"
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