Like millions of his generation, the Rebbe was personally
touched by the Holocaust.
His younger brother, DovBer, was shot to death and thrown into a mass grave, as
were tens of thousands of other Jews in a series of massacres conducted by the
Germans shortly after their occupation of Dnepropetrovsk in fall of 1941. A
beloved grandmother and other family members were also killed. The Rebbe’s wife
lost her younger sister Sheina, who perished in Treblinka together with her
husband and their adoptive son.
In his writings and discussions on the subject, the Rebbe
rejected all theological explanations for the Holocaust. For what greater
conceit, and what greater heartlessness, can there be than to give a reason for
the death and torture of millions of innocent men, women and children? We can
only concede that there are things that lie beyond the finite ken of the human
mind. Echoing his father-in-law, the Rebbe would say: It is not my task to
justify G-d on this. Only G-d Himself can answer for what He allowed to happen,
and the only answer we will accept is the immediate and complete Redemption that
will forever banish evil from the face of the earth and bring to light the
intrinsic goodness and perfection of G-d’s creation.
To those who argued that the Holocaust
“disproves” the existence of G-d or His providence over our lives, the Rebbe
said: On the contrary--the Holocaust has decisively disproven any possible faith
in a human-based morality. For was it not the very people who epitomized
culture, scientific advance and philosophic morality who perpetrated the most
vile atrocities known to human history? If nothing else, the Holocaust has
taught us that a moral and civilized existence is possible only through belief
in and submission to a Higher Power.
The Rebbe also said: Our outrage, our incessant challenge
to G-d over what has occurred--this itself is a most powerful attestation to our
belief in Him and His goodness. Because if we did not, underneath it all,
possess this faith, what is it that we are outraged at? The blind workings of
fate? The random arrangement of quarks that make up the universe? It is only
because we believe in G-d, because we are convinced that there is
right and there is wrong and that right must, and ultimately will, triumph, that
we cry out, as Moses did: “Why, my G-d, have you done evil to Your
people?!”
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| The Sorpo Pinto, the ship the Rebbe and Rebbetzin arrived on from war-torn Europe |
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But the most important thing about the Holocaust to the
Rebbe was not how we do or do not understand it, nor, even, how we memorialize
its victims, but what we do about it. If we allow the pain and despair to
dishearten us from raising a new generation of Jews with a strong commitment to
their Jewishness, then Hilter’s “final solution” will be realized, G-d forbid.
But if we rebuild, if we raise a generation proud and secure in their
Jewishness, we will have triumphed.
This the Rebbe proceeded to do. Appointed by his
father-in-law to head the educational and social arms of Chabad, he set in
motion the programs which, over the next half-century, would herald the
renaissance of Jewish life in the post-holocaust world.