Yud Daled Kislev - The Rebbe & Reebbetzen get married!

Shavua Tov! I haven't written on the blog much these past few days, because Alec's parents are here for a week, so we try to get as much "quality time" as possible...

Tonight is Yud Daled Kislev, the anniversary of the wedding of the Rebbe and the Rebbetzen, and, being that i like weddings (and other romantic stuff :)) i decided to dedicate a post to this event...I found this article recounting that day, and i am always touched by the fact that the Rebbe's parents could not be present at the ceremony, but they organized a party and rejoicing in honor of their son in Yekatrinoslav, where they were forced to remain...

Enjoy!


Yud Daled Kislev: The Rebbes Marriage


In December of 1928, the Rebbe’s marriage to Rebbetzin Chaya Mushka, daughter of the then Lubavitcher Rebbe Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn, was held in Warsaw, Poland.

By then, word of Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak’s heroic struggle on behalf of Soviet Jewry was world renowned, and the high regard in which he was held was evidenced by the numerous rabbis, Rebbes and lay leaders of European Jewry, and the thousands of people from all walks of life, who honored him with their presence at his daughter’s wedding.

At the beginning of the wedding, the Rebbetzin’s father announced: 

“It is a tradition that the souls of the ancestors of the bride and groom come and participate in their wedding celebration… As my invitation to them, I will now deliver a maamar (discourse of Chassidic teaching) which includes teachings from our holy and righteous ancestors: the Alter Rebbe (Rabbi Schneur Zalman, the founder of Chabad Chassidism); Rabbi DovBer of Lubavitch; our great-grandfather (Rabbi Menachem Mendel of Lubavitch—the Rebbe’s namesake); our grandfather (Rabbi Shmuel of Lubavitch); and of my father, the bride’s grandfather (Rabbi Sholom DovBer). As our sages have said, ‘Whoever repeats a teaching should envision the author of the teaching standing before him.’”The bride Chaya Mushka Schneerson

Those who attended the wedding later recalled the palpable sense of holiness which permeated the room as Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak delivered the discourse.

Hundreds of miles away, another wedding celebration was being held that night. In the city of Yekatrinoslav, the Rebbe’s parents, harassed by the Soviet authorities for their efforts on behalf of Judaism, were denied permission to travel to Warsaw. (In 1939, the Rebbe’s father would be arrested, cruelly tortured, and banished to the gulag, where he died in 1944 of sickness and hardship.)

Prevented by a curtain of iron from attending the marriage of their first-born son, they were nevertheless determined to rejoice in his joy.

In a moving memoir, the Rebbe’s mother, Rebbetzin Chanah, described the wedding celebration held in their home, which lacked the physical presence of a groom and bride, yet was aflame with a joy as powerful as the pain in the groom’s parent’s hearts.



(from Days in Chabad)

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