204
immigration to the Land of Israel, must have had an impact on Rashaz.
146
During the
years preceding his ascent to leadership, Rashaz was responsible for maintaining a
network of fundraisers for the hasidic settlement in the Land of Israel.
147
After his
emergence as an independent Hasidic leader, this network was used to spread and
enforce his hasidic doctrine and lifestyle.
148
Hence it comes as no surprise that in
Rashaz’s Hasidism, so much attention is paid to the spirituality of middle-class,
independent, and relatively well-educated householders and businessmen; these
people had constituted the core of Rashaz’s successful fundraising network, and
when he became a rebbe in his own right, they formed the core of his hasidic
community. The implications of Rashaz’s transition from chief regional fundraiser
for the hasidic settlement in the Land of Israel to full-fledged hasidic leader still
await thorough research. It seems reasonable to assume that emphasis on the spiritual
efforts of businessmen and householders was closely related to this transition.
Rashaz’s teachings have reverberated in the traditions of all subsequent
Habad leaders. It is thus plausible that Rashaz’s re-evaluation of Torah study at set
times laid the conceptual basis for the rejection of the so-called “
kolel
-culture” by
the seventh leader of Habad-Lubavitch, R. Menahem Mendel Schneerson.
149
The
relation between the conceptual and the historical contexts of Torah study in
twentieth-century Habad demands further investigation.
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