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Weekly
Chasidic Story#1468
(5786-19) 8 Shevat 5786 (Jan.26, 2026)
"A Rebbe's Bold
Answer to a Senior Priest"
Two young Jewish men stood
waiting on the platform. Instinctively, Rabbi Y. Schneersohn called them into
his carriage; in it he hoped to shield them from serious danger.
Why This Week? The
3rd of the Jewish month of tbe Jewish month of Sh'vat, [2026: Wednesday, January
28, 2026]
Story in PDF
format for more convenient printing
A Rebbe's Bold Answer to a Senior Priest
He sat quietly,
shoulders hunched, trying to disappear into his seat. The steady rhythm of the
train's wheels echoed through the carriage, masking the tension beneath his
calm exterior. Around him, passengers chatted casually - unaware, or perhaps
indifferent, to the silent fear that gripped him.
It was 5673 (1913),
in the waning days of the Tsarist regime. The "Black Hundreds," violent
gangs supported by the government, had carried out brutal pogroms in Jewish
communities. Though the great pogroms had mostly subsided, danger still lingered
in the air for any Jew traveling through the land. Reports were whispered -
of passengers attacked, of being thrown out the windows of speeding trains,
simply because they were Jews. Even in moments that seemed peaceful, the threat
remained.
Rabbi Yitzchak
Schneersohn, the rabbi on behalf of the city of Chernigov and a descendant of
the Chabad-Lubavitch dynasty, was no stranger to these threats. Though respected
by the authorities for his modern education and sophistication demeanor, he
knew that every train journey held hidden dangers, even for him. He pulled up
the collar of his coat and whispered a prayer under his breath - a quiet plea
for protection as the train surged forward relentlessly.
He had no choice
but to take this journey - he had been invited to the imperial capital for a
grand celebration marking 300 years of Romanov rule. About four thousand people
had been invited to take part in the celebrations. They were chosen from the
elite of Russian society: senior officials, public figures, mayors, military
and police commanders, and prominent religious and cultural leaders
and
he, a token of tolerance in a time of tension. Among the grandeur, Rabbi Schneersohn
remained alert. He knew well how quickly honor could turn to hatred - how easily
respect could give way to violence.
When the train
stopped at Vitebsk, two young men stood waiting on the platform, clearly Jewish
in appearance. Instinctively, Rabbi Schneersohn called them into his carriage,
which was considered one for distinguished passengers; in it he hoped to shield
them from potential danger.
He was surprised
when he instantly recognized one of them: the young Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak
Schneersohn - only twenty-three years old, but already marked with an appearance
of refinement and intelligence (he would later become the sixth Lubavitcher
Rebbe, known as the Rebbe Rayatz). The second was Rabbi Mendel Chein,
a devoted chasid who served as the rabbi of the city of Nezhin (who was murdered
five years later by vicious gang members, may G-d avenge his blood). The two
were not traveling to the imperial celebrations but to another city, yet by
Divine Providence they had boarded the same train, on which many of the celebration's
invitees were traveling.
Their dignified
bearing did not go unnoticed. A senior Christian clergyman, also en route to
the Petersburg celebrations, took a sharp interest. He began debating them,
challenging the truth of Judaism and defending Christianity. But the Rebbe-to-be
and Rabbi Chein stood their ground. Calmly, respectfully, with grace and wisdom,
they refuted all his claims. The Rebbe cited textual evidence, exposing the
falsifications in the "New Testament" and the distorted interpretations
Christians tried to impose on verses from the Hebrew Bible. He spoke the truth
with clarity and conviction. The priest, once confident, began to falter, and
before long, found himself without answers.
But then, refusing
to remain silent for that would be akin to admitting defeat, he faced the three
Jews and, raising his voice in anger, accused them: "Why did you kill
our messiah?!"
The entire carriage
fell silent. The blood drained from the Chernigov Rabbi's face. For generations,
that accusation had been a prelude to bloodshed. Who knows what would happen
now? Fearing the worst, he lowered his eyes and prepared for what might follow.
But Rabbi Yosef
Yitzchak did not flinch. He remained seated, calm and composed, his expression
resolute. He looked the priest straight in the eye and replied firmly:
"In those
days, the world was honest. Sin and impurity could not be concealed. That man
was a traitor and he received the punishment he deserved."
The words rang
out, clear and unapologetic. Every passenger heard them. No one moved. No one
spoke. Even the priest sat in stunned silence.
At the next station,
the two Lubavitcher rabbis disembarked. Rabbi Yitzchak Schneersohn watched them
go, still shaken - and yet in awe. The train rolled on.
The priest sat
lost in thought and remained silent for a long time. Then he turned to Rabbi
Schneersohn. Quietly, almost humbly, he said:
"That young
man - religious and scholarly - he is an honest person. The kind of soul who
lived in ancient times, but is almost impossible to find today. Only a man of
unwavering conviction could answer like that. He is a true Jew - for death and
for life!"
The Rabbi was
astounded. He had never imagined that the future Rebbe's direct and daring answer
would arouse such deep admiration in the heart of the priest.
Years passed.
In 1929, Rabbi Yitzchak Schneersohn once again encountered Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak
Schneersohn, now the Lubavitcher Rebbe, this time in Paris. As they spoke, he
recalled once more that moment on the train and how deeply it had moved him.
He had shared the story with Zionist leaders like Ussishkin, Weizmann, and Sokolov,
and they too had been struck by the power of it - by the courage, the dignity
and the spiritual strength of a then young chasid, who stood up for truth without
fear.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Source: Freely adapted by Yerachmiel Tilles from a [relatively literal]
basic AI translation of a report in Sichat HaShavua #1671 (Jan. 11, 2019), based
on a telling of Rabbi Schneersohn of Chernigov and a letter of the Rebbe Rayatz.
Why This Week? The
10th of the Jewish month of Sh'vat [2026: Tues. night-Wed.] is the yahrzeit
of the 6th Lubavitcher Rebbe, who passed on in 1950, and the anniversary of
the official ascension of his son-in-law to be the 7th Rebbe exactly one year
later.
Biographic note:
Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn [12 Tammuz 5640 - 10 Shvat 5710
(June 1880-Jan. 1950], known as the Rebbe Rayatz, was the 6th
Lubavitcher Rebbe, from 1920 to 1950. He established a network of Jewish educational
institutions and Chassidim that was the single most significant factor for the
preservation of Judaism during the dread reign of the communist Soviets. In
1940 he moved to the USA, established Chabad world-wide headquarters in Brooklyn
and launched the global campaign to renew and spread Judaism in all languages
and in every corner of the world, the campaign continued and expanded so remarkably
successfully by his son-in-law and successor, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson.
P.S. A possible lesson
to take from this story from an anonymous source:
The world doesn't always
reward quiet faith. It doesn't always praise those who live with conviction.
But truth has its own power - a light that pierces through silence, a courage
that awakens even the hearts of those who once opposed it.
That day on the train, the Rebbe didn't speak to win. He didn't answer to impress.
He answered because he believed - and strong belief like that, clear and unwavering,
changes people.
It's not always the volume of our voice that speaks loudest. Sometimes, it's
the stillness of our soul.
Yerachmiel
Tilles is co-founder and associate director of Ascent-of-Safed, and chief editor
of this website (and of KabbalaOnline.org). He has hundreds of published stories
to his credit, and many have been translated into other languages. He tells
them live at Ascent nearly every Saturday night.
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