Archive for March, 2011

A failed Messiah? A Review of The Life and Afterlife of Rebbe Mendel Menachem Schneerson

Monday, March 28th, 2011

The Rebbe: The Life and Afterlife of Mendel Menachem Schneerson by Samuel Heilman and Menachem Friedman is the first non-hagiographic biography of the final leader of the Jewish Chabad Lubavitch sect. Over the course of forty years of leadership, he turned the tiny Russian sect into a global order whose trademark services, such as Chabad Houses in far-flung areas without a significant Jewish presence and nearly 1500 websites disseminating information on its brand of Judaism, are recognised and utilised by Jews of every creed.

Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson2 A failed Messiah? A Review of The Life and Afterlife of Rebbe Mendel Menachem Schneerson

The Rebbe at a Lag B'Omer parade

Lubavitchers are the Jewish guys in fedoras you see wandering around looking like they just walked out the 1950s, if not earlier. Chabad Lubavitch was born in the late 18th century by Shneur Zalman of Liadi, and takes its name from Lyubavichi, the Russian town where the group was based until the early 20th century. The Rebbe became leader of Lubavitch in 1951 after a slow-burning popularity competition with his brother-in-law and died after a stroke in 1992. By the time of his death, he had founded thousands of synagogues, schools, and Jewish institutions of learning. However, such phenomenal expansion cannot entirely hide the fact that the introspective atmosphere of Chabad Lubavitch and the Rebbe’s increasing fixation on the end of the world as we know it, resulted in a movement that acclaimed him as the Messiah in life, and after his inconvenient death, is torn between preserving his memory or awaiting his return.

 A failed Messiah? A Review of The Life and Afterlife of Rebbe Mendel Menachem Schneerson

The Rebbe's tomb next to that of his father-in-law, Rebbe Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn.

The Rebbe has generated a fabulous amount of controversy, and for good reason – being told that the spiritual leader you idolise and look to as a perfect example of manhood was actually largely uninterested in spiritual leadership and never even gained ordination as a rabbi can never go down well. But it nonetheless cannot be helped: over the course of a good two chapters, I don’t think it can really be disputed that the authors firmly establish that Mendel Menachem Schneerson’s primary motivation in life prior to his move to America in 1941 was not to become a Rebbe, but to become a mechanical engineer. Although correspondence with his father-in-law Rebbe Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn demonstrates that Mendel Menachem remained thoroughly committed to Hasidic Jewish practice as an individual, he nonetheless chose to spend much of his life outside Jewish communities, studying in institutions in Latvia, Berlin and Paris, forced to move from one place to another as Soviet and Nazi anti-Semitism closed in, leaving a trail of less-than-brilliant transcripts behind him as he was unable to obtain dispensation from attending classes or exams on Shabbat or Jewish festivals. The authors don’t make this point, but certainly I found it worthy of note that by the time the Rebbe finally graduated from a French technical college in 1937, he had been struggling his way through academia for over 15 years.

Spending 15 years on earning a degree implies a kind of tenacity that most of us can only admire. So much more, then, did I feel for the mechanical engineer that never was when the book swiftly goes on to describe the increasing influence of the Nazis and Mendel Menachem’s successful graduation being immediately buried under the urgency of having to flee Europe, and the discovery that in America, being a 39 year old immigrant unable to speak English and holding a hard-earned French degree that no American employer could understand meant that he had little chance of ever actually having the career he had spent so long working towards. Little wonder then, that he finally turned back to the community that welcomed him with open arms as the son-in-law of Rebbe Yosef Yitzchok with an extensive knowledge of Hasidic philosophy and customs. The authors make a link, however, between the Rebbe’s extensive engineering training and the methodical and rigorous manner in which he expanded his previously small and parochial sect. I suspect that that is probably justified.

Chabad shluchim A failed Messiah? A Review of The Life and Afterlife of Rebbe Mendel Menachem Schneerson

Up to 4000 emissaries of the Rebbe come together every year for an annual conference to discuss tactics (and take photos).

One thing that is substantially missing from this book is a sense of what Mendel Menachem’s personality was like. He is obviously lauded as a fatherly, insightful, brilliant scholar by his followers, but you get little sense in The Rebbe about what he actually enjoyed doing. Did he have spare time? How did he relax? Who did he talk to about his ministry who wasn’t his long deceased father-in-law? The Rebbe’s influences, as opposed to whom he influenced, is relatively unexplored.

There’s also little hints which are not explored of the less pious side of the Rebbe – for example, the fact that he sued his own nephew over the ownership of the Chabad library, and then, when he won, declared a public holiday for all of his hasidim, which he named “Didan Notzach” or “Our Side Won”, strikes me as being just a little bit vindictive. When, in 1927, the authors are describing the arrest of the Previous Rebbe, Yosef Yitzchok, in Soviet Russia, they note very briefly that Mendel Menachem had been out with the Rebbe’s daughter alone until midnight, mainly to state that the hasidic accounts of the evening gloss over this detail. However, they do so as well. Add also to this the fact that Mendel Menachem and his fiancée dated for nearly six years before they married, and that he trimmed his beard even though the Previous Rebbe specifically demanded his hasidim wear their beards long. The authors draw from these facts an observation that the Rebbe wasn’t heavily involved with the hasidic movement for much of his life – I cannot help but draw from it a certain amount of disrespect and defiance for the people who supported him. The Rebbe’s education was entirely paid for by Rebbe Yosef Yitzchok from Chabad funds, and in return, he refused to wear traditional Hasidic dress to his own wedding reception, customarily an opportunity for the Rebbe to demonstrate his power and influence. Even the authors interpret a minor incident involving the serving of water at the reception to indicate that Rebbe Yosef Yitzchok was embarrassed by his new son-in-law. Perhaps it is difficult to infer attitudes from letters and diaries of the time, but nonetheless, there are some very interesting stories about the Rebbe which seem more significant than the authors are willing to grant space to.

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The Sixth Lubavitch Rebbe, Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn.

The book is evidently intended to dig up back history of the Rebbe that has long been glossed over by his followers, and contains very little information about his religious thought or writings. While I understand that for the sake of space, there is little point in dwelling on the Rebbe’s extensive output (even though much of his work remains unpublished, the published writings and transcripts still run to several tens of thousands of pages), as someone who has very little understanding of hasidic thought, it would’ve been nice if the authors had spent a little longer on explaining what exactly he got up to in his first two decades as Rebbe. This omission means that many questions arose for me in the reading that went unanswered, such as: Why did the Rebbe tell his emissaries to reach out to all Jews, but seemingly delivered all his discourses in Yiddish? How did he acquire enough knowledge of hasidic texts to be able to deliver hour long discourses several times a week for forty years when he never attended a yeshiva? When did he ever find time to write or prepare anything when he was being almost constantly sought out by his hasidim for advice?

It might seem that an inordinate amount of time is spent on his upbringing as opposed to his tenure, but this is actually in proportion to his life. Nonetheless the impact of the Rebbe as Rebbe as opposed to as Mendel Menachem Schneerson was significantly greater, but over 150 pages, I gained little insight into what he actually achieved outside of launching the Mitzvah and Moshiach campaigns. Rabbi Shmuley Boteach gives a brief outline in his Amazon review: “I watched the rebbe lead Lubavitch since I was 9 years old. It was a herculean undertaking with responsibilities that would boggle the mind. It meant keeping up with and responding to sacks of personal letters each week, overseeing a global empire of thousands of Chabad synagogues, schools, teaching colleges, orphanages, and drug rehabilitation centres, most of which the rebbe, through his emissaries, built. Each week he met in the middle of the night with individuals privately to discuss their most personal issues, giving a weekly (and sometimes twice weekly) public oration that lasted, on average, for four hours through which the rebbe gave masterful scholarly discourses without a single written note. Well into his 80s he stood on his feet every Sunday for hours giving thousands of visitors a dollar for tzedakah in order to meet them face to face and inspire them to do good acts.” The sheer size and complexity of the organisation is alluded to but rarely considered. This is a book on the Rebbe, not Chabad, so fair enough, but his involvement with it as it built up around him seems to go unmentioned in favour of his political activity, although surely the Chabad Houses around the world will last much longer.

 A failed Messiah? A Review of The Life and Afterlife of Rebbe Mendel Menachem Schneerson

The Rebbe's image on a poster in Israel.

I wanted this book originally because the Rebbe remains endlessly fascinating to me. Willingly taking on a role that leaves you the absolute authority on spiritual, personal and business matters to hundreds of thousands of men and women who will devotedly go wherever you send them and do whatever you tell them to, must have a very corrupting influence on any man’s psyche. The increasing belief of the Rebbe in his later years that he was the Messiah poses a problem for the authors, who have clearly never been in such a position. They faithfully narrate the story of how the Rebbe, increasingly isolated and without advisors to give him perspective after the death of his wife, encouraged his followers to believe that he was the Messiah waiting to be unveiled and how he struggled to reconcile that position with his encroaching illness and mortality and the fact that the world was stubbornly not ending. But they do not, and cannot, tell me what on earth was going through the Rebbe’s mind – and that I am unlikely to find out.

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The flag for the Moshiach campaign designed to hasten the coming of the Messiah.

But I have learned much else besides, and enjoyed it, though other reviewers have not. I would recommend this book to anyone who would like to know more about such an influential figure in Orthodox Judaism today – more biographies are in the process of being written, but this is the first substantial one. Go read it! For those who are very interested in minutiae, you can also read a month long academic deathmatch regarding the book’s content between the authors and Chabad Rabbi Chaim Rapoport here.

Check out the book and its reviews on Amazon here:

And thank you very much to my flatmate Miles for buying me the book for my birthday!

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The 30 Day Song Challenge No. 21-30

Thursday, March 17th, 2011

So, the 30 Day Song Challenge is sweeping Facebook at the moment, and as with many of my friends, I spent a spare few hours pondering such existential questions as “But what song defines *me* as a person?” and “What does *guilt* really mean in this context?”. From this, the list below was produced. There’s more than 30 songs, I didn’t do it in thirty days, whether a Wii game counts as a song is rather dubious, but it was definitely a challenge. And here’s (what I consider to be) some ace music.

This article is in three parts, and the first part is here, and the second here.

day 21 – a song that you listen to when you’re happy

This makes me so happy. How can you listen to Poppi Holla by Chincane and not be even more happy?!

day 22 – a song that you listen to when you’re sad

When I am down, Cher lifts me up. This is a Song for the Lonely, don’t you know.

day 23 – a song that you want to play at your wedding

Voodoo Child by Rogue Trader. Because I did play it at my wedding, and it was awesome.

– http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WG2w1k1_BZ4

day 24 – a song that you want to play at your funeral

Linkin Park again, Leave Out All the Rest. See, they have a song for every eventuality! Sod off, music fascists.

day 25 – a song that makes you laugh

Being a Dickhead’s Cool is funny, mainly because I know so many people who are actually a “part time blogger with my own jewellery line, which is a mix of religious iconography, kinda with a Saved by the Bell vibe?” Lols.

– http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=lVmmYMwFj1I

day 26 – a song that you can play on an instrument

Dunno if the Nintendo Wii counts as an instrument, but in Rhythm Parade, the music only continues if you hit all the right buttons in sequence, so I guess it kinda counts. I LOVE marching bands, so this is really fun to do, if hard – took me six hours to get a perfect score on the Advanced level.

day 27 – a song that you wish you could play

I did in fact briefly download the sheet music to this song, but while A Thousand Miles by Vanessa Carlton is beautiful and mellifluous, I am dyslexic and never made it past my first term’s worth of piano lessons. A doomed dream, I think.

day 28 – a song that makes you feel guilty

This is Your Life, asks Switchfoot, are you who you want to be? NOOOOOOOOO, argh, must be more productive and useful as a human being. *guilt guilt guilt*

day 29 – a song from your childhood

When I was growing up, I listened to three things: Queen, Flanders and Swann, and the Joseph and the Technicolour Dreamcoat soundtrack. They were just the cassettes my mum had around at the time, so I ended up with a very odd childhood mainly filled with rock, folk music, and the odd tape about The Snowman that came with Tetley teabags. Hammer to Fall is one of Queen’s best.

day 30 – your favorite song at this time last year

My introduction to Lady Gaga’s Poker Face was as I was walking to a lecture and heard someone playing it very loudly in their car. It took some garbled half-sung rendering of it to a friend a few hours later to work out what the hell it was (being completely unable to identify the “Poker Face” of the song and mishearing it as “[indeterminate garbling] ger faith”) and then a new love with born.

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The 30 Day Song Challenge No. 11-20

Wednesday, March 16th, 2011

So, the 30 Day Song Challenge is sweeping Facebook at the moment, and as with many of my friends, I spent a spare few hours pondering such existential questions as “But what song defines *me* as a person?” and “What does *guilt* really mean in this context?”. From this, the list below was produced. There’s more than 30 songs, I didn’t do it in thirty days, whether a Wii game counts as a song is rather dubious, but it was definitely a challenge. And here’s (what I consider to be) some ace music.

This article is in three parts, and the third part will be published tomorrow. The first part is here.

day 11 – a song from your favorite band

Linkin Park seems to be one of the few bands it is acceptable for me to say I like, which I am relieved by, given they are the only band who I have loved every album from. Here’s Somewhere I Belong.

day 12 – a song from a band you hate

I hate Metallica for their attitude to copyright, but The Memory Remains is nonetheless a good track. As long as it’s live. The music video with the scary woman with the organ is really disconcerting.

day 13 – a song that is a guilty pleasure

Tune.

day 14 – a song that no one would expect you to love

Back before Youtube, when I used Yahoo Launch Music Player for my “Yahoo music experience”, I ended listening to a hell of a lot of country. Pretty much every American has heard of Toby Keith, but he’s almost entirely unknown outside of the US. Nights I Can’t Remember, Friends I’ll Never Forget is pretty typical.

day 15 – a song that describes you

It’s always phenomenally hard to think of anything that sums you up as an individual, let alone a song which was never intended to have anything to do with you. Gone by Switchfoot, however, is about getting on and doing something with your life because breath you take is a breath closer to the day you die (that the something you’re supposed to be doing is accepting Jesus into your heart is something we will set aside briefly). And as the thought that I am going to die before I get anything done is my primary motivation in life, I thought this song probably fitted best.

day 16 – a song that you used to love but now hate

It’s biphobic, but dammit, I Kissed a Girl by Katy Perry is catchy. Took a while to get out of my head.

day 17 – a song that you hear often on the radio

For a track that came out two years ago, Photograph by Nickleback is a remarkably resilient song.

day 18 – a song that you wish you heard on the radio

I did hear Slam by Pendulum, once, on the radio. The DJ was taking requests and it was a very odd day. Should totally play it more though.

day 19 – a song from your favorite album

Linkin Park again. You know why? Cos they’re awesome. And Breaking the Habit is the best track on Meteora.

day 20 – a song that you listen to when you’re angry

I went through this period when I listened to Rooftops by Lost Prophets and I Hate Everything About You by Three Days Grace very loudly whenever I was angry. The wall of sound was surprisingly effective as calming you down. As of last August however, when I listened to Let You Go by Chase and Status about 30 times in a row in a day, this has definitely taken over as my “ARGH!!” song of choice.



Tune in tomorrow for songs 21-30.

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The 30 Day Song Challenge No. 1-10

Tuesday, March 15th, 2011

So, the 30 Day Song Challenge is sweeping Facebook at the moment, and as with many of my friends, I spent a spare few hours pondering such existential questions as “But what song defines *me* as a person?” and “What does *guilt* really mean in this context?”. From this, the list below was produced. There’s more than 30 songs, I didn’t do it in thirty days, whether a Wii game counts as a song is rather dubious, but it was definitely a challenge. And here’s (what I consider to be) some ace music.

This article is in three parts, and the second part will be published tomorrow.

day 01 – your favorite song

It was a cold, clear night in Bradford when I first heard DJ Tiesto’s remix of Adagio for Strings by Barber. And I kinda hated it for bastardising what I considered to be a truly epic game soundtrack. Then I went and listened to it again a few days later and got obsessed. Since then I have listened to it hundreds of times and it just doesn’t get old.

day 02 – your least favorite song

I hate Travis’ Why Does It Always Rain On Me sufficiently that I refused to listen to it when trying to find a Youtube recording. Apologies therefore, if you get rickrolled. Setting aside the fact that the lyrics are nonsensical and the lead singer couldn’t sound more bored if he tried, the last sentence of the chorus missing off the final “me” drives me in a mental open loop of absolute craziness every time. JUST SAY ME.

day 03 – a song that makes you happy

Yay, it’s a really nice happy song about how much the singer loves his family. Yay.

day 04 – a song that makes you sad

Martina McBride has a very beautiful voice, and some powerful lyrics to an equally powerful video about domestic violence and child abuse. It makes me miserable every time I watch though, so I try not to do it very often.

day 05 – a song that reminds you of someone

Sam O’Connor. 2009. Vodka. Nuff said.

John Barrowman is a meanie and won’t let me embed his music videos. :(

day 06 – a song that reminds you of somewhere

In October 2006, I was sitting in my step-dad’s car waiting to go to my admissions interview at the University of Cambridge. An extremely bad quality rendition of Fallout Boy’s This Ain’t a Scene crackled down the radio, but I got the point. Unfortunately I couldn’t explain the motivations behind 19th century spiritual movements adequately, and I ended up at the University of Manchester instead. But I got a great song and a hell of a life of activism instead of studying, so I guess it worked out.

day 07 – a song that reminds you of a certain event

I cannot go into detail about what event made the Lloyds TSB Dubstep Remix significant to me, though you may be able to guess from the genre, but suffice to say it was a very odd evening. Definitely at its best played at 5am with bass speakers in student halls though.

day 08 – a song that you know all the words to

Dating back to the days when I was obsessed with Bowling for Soup and they hadn’t deteriorated after A Hangover You Don’t Deserve, Girl All the Bad Guys Want is (along with the Gas Man Cometh by Flanders and Swann) the only track that I can remember the entire lyrics, tune, and musical breaks to.

day 09 – a song that you can dance to

Brighton, 2008, Legends, Bradford LGBT Big Gay Roadtrip. We got Low. :D

day 10 – a song that makes you fall asleep

I assume that by this is mean “a song you can fall asleep to”, but My World by Avril Lavigne does actually have the power to send me to sleep. By sheer historical accident, but one which I would imagine many would find intensely ironic, I happened to buy Avril Lavigne’s Let Go album at the same time as having a massive bout of insomnia. As the type of music fan that tends to play the same music over and over again for a month before moving onto something else, it became a habit to play all the way through as I was trying to fall asleep. Several weeks of Pavlovian training later, I now cannot listen to any song on the album with suddenly feeling very sleepy…

Tune in tomorrow for songs 11-20.

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A New Phase for the Student Movement is Starting

Monday, March 14th, 2011

Newly published from myself on Manchester Mule:

The student movement against fees and cuts has been a pretty big fail by our stated goals so far. Tuition fees have tripled, our teaching budgets are still being cut by 80 percent, and I don’t think anyone outside the student bubble even noticed the day the Commons voted to stop thousands of 16 year olds from getting to school now they won’t be receiving their Educational Maintenance Allowance. And much of the Daily Mail readership now thinks that students are scrounging, racist, violent thugs. The student movement hasn’t had a great campaign to date.

Or have we? Let’s look at these statistics.

Read More.

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UMSU Exec Election Results 2011

Friday, March 11th, 2011

Final rounds only.

Non-Sabb Officers

Life Sciences Faculty Officer:

Luke Newton: 1310
RON: 282

Humanities Faculty Officer:

Nick Pringle: 1112
Ben Green: 298
Ionut Luzinschi: 215
RON: 151

EPS Faculty Officer:

Ghalia Albarazi: 927
Cory Bernard: 889
Dean Phythian: 286

Medical Faculty Officer:

Markus Arnold: 661
Simon Gupta: 392
Rashad Roufi: 171

International Students’ Officer:

Sahibzada Yousaf: 882
Zain Iqbal: 714
RON: 256

Postgraduate Officer:

Sarah Kerton: 1273
RON: 385

Sabbatical Officers

Campaigns Officer:

Amanda: 3112

Student Activities:

Amaya: 1467
Rhona: 1413

Student Direct Officer:

Nick Renaud-Komiya: 1232
Adam Farnell: 1161

Academic Affairs:

Mo Saqib: 2071
Alex Bush: 970
Jon Ridge: 676

Welfare Officer:

Hannah Paterson: 2267
Aidan Nolan: 1090

Women’s Officer:

Sylvia Barnett: 894
Carly Jan: 874

Communications Officer:

Jeremy Buck: 2112
Tabz O’Brien Butcher: 1196

General Secretary:

Lette Newton: 1511
Andrew Speke: 1144

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