Printed fromJewishWestside.com
Contact
Home
About
Sign In
Chabad of the West Side
Contact Us
About
Us
Calendar of Events - July 2022 Chai Club - Monthly Giving Circle Coffee with Rabbi or Devora Work Lounge Saturday Night Community Havdalah
The Jewish Discovery
Center in Lakewood
JUDA 2025
‑ 2026
Shavuot
2026
Shabbat
Kits
Donate
About Search Contact
ב"ה
Life & Times
Read fascinating biographies, stories and encounters
Wisdom & Teachings
Study the Rebbe's teaching on countless topics
Multimedia
Browse the library of videos, audio recordings and photos
Impact
Are you inspired by the Rebbe? Continue his vision!

3 Tammuz - The Rebbe's Yahrtzeit

3 Tammuz marks 32 years since the passing of the Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson, of righteous memory.
3 Tammuz this year is Thursday, June 18, 2026.

Send a Prayer Petition to the Ohel · What to Do on Gimmel Tammuz · More Information and Resources

Recent Features
Mitzvah
What Is a Mitzvah?
The State of Being Connected
By Tzvi Freeman
The Previous Rebbe's Dangerous Speech in Moscow, 1927
The Previous Rebbe’s Dangerous Speech in Moscow, 1927
Celebrating 99 years since the miracle of 12 Tammuz.
Living Torah
On Jewish Leadership
On Jewish Leadership
The verse states: “He gave his own bread to the destitute.” The Talmud explains that this refers to Moses giving the Torah to the Jewish people. But every word of the verse is precise:
Living Torah
My Mother Spoke to the Rebbe on the Phone
My Mother Spoke to the Rebbe on the Phone
Her mother's warning would echo in her mind for years to come.
By Yitzy Idell

Mesirut nefesh -- Hebrew term for self abnegation -- means both "giving of life" and "giving of will." Self abnegation is not just the willingness to die for one's beliefs; it is the way in which one lives for them. It is the willingness to sacrifice one's "self" -- one's desires, one's preconceptions, one's most basic inclinations.
— The Lubavitcher Rebbe
עברית | Русский | Español | Français | Português | Italiano

Chabad of the West Side
4021 Harding Drive Westlake, OH 44145
216-973-1148

Powered by Chabad.org © 1993-2026 Privacy Policy