 |
|
 |
| |
 |
| The Rebbe’s binder with his handwritten notes, discovered following his passing in 1994 |
|
|
 |
|
 |
In the Rebbe's correspondence and his annotations to
Chassidic texts, there are occasional references to his reshimot--“journal”
or “notebooks.”
Three such notebooks came to light about a month after
the Rebbe's passing, when they were discovered in a drawer in his
desk.
The entries in these journals date between the years
1928, the year of the Rebbe's marriage, and 1950, the year of his
father-in-law's passing, which was followed by his assumption of the leadership
of the Chabad-Lubavitch movement. Throughout these years--which included his
evacuation from Berlin in 1933, his escape from Nazi-occupied Paris in 1941 and
his subsequent wanderings as a refugee in Vichy France and Fascist Spain--the
Rebbe kept these notebooks with him at all times, jotting down the scholarly and
sublime products of his phenomenal mind also in the most precarious of
circumstances. One entry, for example, is dated the evening before he boarded
the ship that was to rescue him from Nazi-occupied Europe in June of
1941.
Over the next five years, excepts from these notebook
were prepared for publication by a team of scholars, providing tens of thousands
of thirsting Chassidim with a weekly infusion of "new" teaching and insight from
the Rebbe
Aside from the tremendous scholastic and historical value
of these notes in their own right, they also provide a unique perspective on the
entire body of the Rebbe's teachings. Here one can find the seeds of many a
concept which the Rebbe subsequently developed in the decades to come and made
available in the 300,000 pages of transcribed talks, essays and letters that
issued from his lips and pen in the years 1950 to 1994.