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Chabad-Lubavitch
has found a way to give a rare opportunity to the Jew
who is unaware, to the Jew who never knew his origin
or what it might mean to him, to practice Torah and
Mitzvot in first-hand, personal experience.
The Mobile Chabad Center, commonly known
as the Mitzvah Tank, is Chabads device in reaching
the unreachable. In it, the visitor - who will have
just come off the street, on his way home from work
or on a local errand can put on Tefilin, say
the Shema and pick up some easy-read Jewish literature,
all in the pleasant, relaxed environment of the Mitzvah
Tank.
Another use of the Mobile Chabad Centre
is in youth work. In districts that are popular to youth,
where there might often be drug abuse and wild drinking,
the Mitzvah Tank functions as an island of peace and
normality. Teenagers come inside just to chat to the
Rabbi, in order to gain another, more wholesome perspective,
and (as if just by the way) sometimes to ask for real
advice.
At the right season, a common sight in
London is the Succah Mobile. This is exactly what it
sounds like: a mobile Succah. Some are on back of a
truck, others on a mere set of wheels, but their mission
is the same: to give the Jewish man or woman the opportunity
to eat inside a Succah and to shake the Lulav and Etrog,
Mitzvot which may not have been practiced since childhood
years, or indeed ever.
The Mobile Centre achieves something
special. The meeting of a Jew with G-d, somewhere on
a busy highway. A Mitzva on the spot, for people on
the go
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