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Stories
Video | 7:24
A story with a living lesson
Once, in the middle of the night, one of the Mitteler Rebbeâs children fell out of bed. Entirely engrossed in his studies, he did not hear the childâs cries. However, his father, the Alter Rebbe, heard the cries, closed his Torah books, and went to comfort the child. The Alter Rebbe later said to his son: no matter how deeply immersed you are in holy pursuits, when a child cries you must hear it; you must stop what youâre doing and soothe their pain.
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Video | 7:38
It happened once on Shabbos that in the midst of prayer, the Alter Rebbe removed his Tallis and went to the edge of the town. There, he found a woman who had just given birth. The Alter Rebbe had sensed that she needed help...
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Video | 6:04
The Alter Rebbe would read the Torah in public. One year, he was away during the Torah
reading of Ki Savo, and his young son and future successor, Rabbi Dovber, heard someone else read the portion, which includes G-dâs severe rebuke of the Jewish people. The son became so distressed that he fainted, and weeks later it was still questionable whether heâd be able to fast on Yom Kippur. The chasidim later asked him: âIn previous years you didnât faint; what happened this year?â The boy responded, âWhen father reads it, I donât hear curses.â
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Video | 7:34
Once, after Rosh Hashanah prayers, the Alter Rebbe asked his son, the Mitteler Rebbe, âWith
what meditation did you pray this Rosh Hoshanah?â He replied, âWith the verse, âAll mankind
shall prostrate themselves before Youâ.â Then the Mitteler Rebbe asked his father, âWith what
meditation did you pray?â The Alter Rebbe responded, âI prayed with my lectern.â
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Video | 3:10
Rabbi Yehuda Leib Schapiro heard Rabbi J.B. Soloveitchik retell the story of the Alter Rebbeâs
attempt to visit the Vilna Gaon, as it had been passed down through his own family, all the
way back to the Gaonâs chief disciple.
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Video | 4:49
Detractors to chasidism still point to the Vilna Gaonâs opposition as the basis upon which they rely. But would the Vilna Gaon count himself among them today? (from a 1963 encounter)
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