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The Rebbe's Ten-Point Campaign for Jewish Awareness and
Observance "Mitzvah" means "commandment".
A mitzvah is one of the 613 Divine instructions to the Jew contained in the Torah.
The word also means "connection": a deed that connects the human being
who performs it with G-d, who commanded it.
Before
the Rebbe's "mitzvah campaign", the mitzvah
was a private deed, performed by the "religious"
Jew at home or in the synagogue. So it was only natural
that the Rebbe's mitzvah campaign, initiated in the
late 60s and early 70s, raised many an eyebrow: "Tefillin
on a hippie?" "What's the point of doing one
mitzvah on the way to lunch in a non-kosher restaurant?"
Mitzvot were then seen as the details that made up a
religious Jew's lifestyle - pointless when not part
of the whole package.
The Rebbe saw things differently. As
a connection between man and G-d, as a bridge between
Creator and creation, a mitzvah is a deed of cosmic
significance, a deed of infinite value unto itself.
Citing Maimonides, the Rebbe repeated time and again:
a single mitavah performed by a single person, could
be the deed that tips the scales and brings redemption
to the entire world and all of creation.
So the Rebbe issued
a call to every Jew: Even if you are not fully commited to a Torah life, do something.
Begin with a mitzvah-any mitzvah; its value will not be diminished by the fact
that there are others which you are not prepared to do. The
Rebbe also suggested ten possible "beginner's" mitzvot-precepts
which, because of their centrality to the Torah's guide to life, are ideally
suited for a first experience of the mitzvah connection. The
Ten Mitzvot 1. Love Your Fellow
"Loving your fellow as yourself," said the
great Jewish sage, Rabbi Akiva, "is a most basic
principle in the Torah". Reaching out to your fellow
Jew with patience, love, concern and unity is among
the greatest mitzvot a Jew can do.
2.
Education Every Jewish boy and girl should receive a Jewish education.
Teach your children everything you know about your faith, and provide them with
a quality Jewish education--you will be ensuring Jewish integrity, Jewish identity
and Jewish future. 3. Torah Study a portion
of Torah daily. Even a few lines contain the Infinite Wisdom and Will of G-d.
Click Here to find
a class in your area. You can also now do this online at www.chabad.org,
or over the phone with Tel-Torah by calling
020 8905 3770. 4. Tefillin Men (age 13 and up) are
encouraged to wear the Tefillin every morning excluding Shabbat and Festivals.
Tefillin are black leather boxes containing small parchment scrolls of selected
portions from the Torah, in which the fundamentals of the Jewish faith are inscribed.
See the Mezuzah & tefillin Section
of our site for more details. 5. Message on a Doorpost -
Mezuzah Every Jewish home should have a mezuzah on its doorposts. The
mezuzah contains the Shema, and a home with a Mezuzah is sanctified for G-d and
enjoys His protection. See the Mezuzah
& Tefillin Section of our site for more details. 6.
Tzedakah
Give charity daily. When you give to the needy, you
are serving as G-d's emissary to provide for His creatures.
The home is a classroom, and keeping a 'pushkah' (charity
box) in your home--and contributing a coin to it every
day--will teach you and your children the noble value
of regular giving.
7.
A home filled with holy books Furnish your home with as many holy books
as possible. At the very least, get a hold of a Chumash (Bible), Psalms, and a
Prayer Book. 8. Kashrut (the Jewish dietary laws)
Eating is one of the basics of life. Shouldn't it
be done with intelligence? For a healthy and sound soul,
eat only kosher foods, for when you eat differently,
your Judaism is not just metaphysical, but part and
parcel of your very being.
9.
Light Shabbat Candles Women and girls (age 3 and up) are encouraged to
light candles every Friday afternoon, 18 minutes before sunset, in honour of the
Shabbat, and before Festivals. 10. Observe Family Purity
The mitzvot of Family Purity allow you to make the
most of your marriage, bringing your and your spouse
to new, undiscovered depths of sacredness in your relationship.
To learn more about family purity, please see the "Marriage
Classes" section in our website, under "Social
Services".
To
learn more about any the above mitzvot, please contact your local
Chabad Centre or call our Head Office on 020
8800 0022. |