By Dovid Efune
This past weekend saw two mammoth Jewish gatherings take place. The first was the General Assembly for the Jewish Federations of North America, and the other was the International Convention of Chabad Emissaries. Whilst both are awe inspiring in their grandeur and both are focused on Jewish continuity, the Chabad movement continues to rapidly grow at a spanking pace and the Federations appear to be largely stagnant.
The Federations is a well oiled machine with an established infrastructure, smooth mechanisms and operational hierarchy. By contrast, although there are a number of supporting bodies, from an organizational perspective, Chabad in some ways appears as a haphazard band of ragtag rabbis independently operating without any authoritative organizational body, with no central CEO or board of directors and no endowment, trust fund or investment portfolio.
As opposed to the Federations, there are few, if any, studies, polls, or annual reports conducted within the Chabad movement, and none are able to quantify the precise number of its members. One would be hard pressed to find a flow chart or academic assessment of Chabad?s growth, although agreement is unanimous: Chabad is growing rapidly.
Chabad institutions have attracted some of the most sophisticated and advanced business and industry leaders as donors. At the concluding banquet of the conference this week the guests included the likes of Michael Steinhardt, Guma Aguiar, Lev Leviev, Eduardo Elsztain, Ronald Lauder and many others. Gennady Bogolubov delivered the keynote speech.
At first glance one may wonder why the informality doesn?t drive away savvy investors that are used to detailed reports, due diligence and rigorous accountability. The answer is simple; when one gives money to Chabad, one can rest assured that they will see the fruits of their contribution. Donating to Chabad embodies what has become known as true venture philanthropy or entrepreneurial idealism.
Of course any shrewd investor will appreciate the value of a deal, whatever package it is presented in, especially in today?s fast paced world where giants of industry demand immediate ROI. Chabad will deliver exactly that: instant tangible results. Donations are not swallowed up by antiquated mechanical financial infrastructures; there is no red tape, application processes, panels or mazes of bureaucracy. The Chabad institutions are focused on the immediacy of the task at hand, and are innately adverse to anything that will slow it down.
Additionally, donors can always rest assured that a donation to a Chabad establishment will support a Jewish cause. The Federations, by contrast, earmark large contributions for general humanitarian causes in the spirit of ?Tikkun Olam,? but with so many modern day Jewish challenges to contend with, many donors are making the statement that our own should come first.
Much of the donor interest in Chabad can be further crystallized by making a comparison to the Tea Party movement. The movement?s primary concerns include, but are not limited to, cutting back the size of government, reducing wasteful spending, reducing the national debt and adherence to an original interpretation of the United States Constitution.
Chabad?s primary concerns include cutting back the top-down, parochial mode of Jewish practice, maximizing the use of every philanthropic dollar, (there are no earmarks or pork barrel spending) lifting the pride and confidence of the Jewish people, and adherence to an original interpretation of Jewish law.
Chabad is a purist, entrepreneurial, visionary and versatile, completely action-oriented and results-driven organization. If you are an industrious venture philanthropist looking for immediate high returns, there is no better investment.
The author is the director of the Algemeiner Journal and the GJCF and can be e-mailed at defune@gjcf.com. Please visit www.gjcf.com for more information.
The reason big federation types are attracted to Chabad is ROI. They see a shliach all alone turning over a place, making yiddishkeit alive, with minimum $$ spent. A shliach in Russia showed me the difference between the NCSY operation in ukraine vs. shmulik kaminetzky. Chabad can do the same work for 10% of the cost. That’s what attracts businesspeople who see a good ROI for their charity $$$
Firstly,
Shluchim must keep books.. they must be able to say where the money went, what projects cost etc..
#2 I am a businessman and donate to about 5 shluchim regularly, as a lubavitcher my case is different..
1 I grew up with, 1 I went to high school with, 1 lives near me etc..
But shluchim forge bonds.. I was at the banquet last year, you are part of something big and great.. doing the rebbe’s work
You admire the shluchim, the self sacrifice they make..
Comparing Chabad to the Tea Party is very dangerous and could offend a lot of people, including some of non-orthodox jews chabad houses rely on for much funding. I don’t think the Tea Party would characterize itself in many ways that Chabad likes to characterize itself. Whatever you may think of tea partiers, nonjudgmental, warm, and nonvitriolic are probably not the first words that come to mind.
Very well said 🙂
The real secret to Chabad is the level of dedication a Chosid has. There are employees, friends, fans, groupies, but there is nothing compared to the dedication of a Chosid. One simple glimpse of this phenomenon is the USSR after it fell. The UJA and its sister orginazation the “joint” struggled to get its people to go out there while Chabad with Lev Leviavs help was sending people by the dozens. Some on two month stints some for a lifetime mission. The UJA (or lahvdil Or Semach, YU, etc.) just does not have that level of deidcation. I was out… Read more »
While i agree with some of the points written here and A for effort, the point about supporting only Jewish causes is only partially true as Chabad has many humanitarian causes that help Jews and lehavdil non-Jews. Secondly – the article makes it sound like Chabad is self-righteous and has no pork spending etc. the head office is confronted with the same issues that the Federation or other large institutions have: lots of money is flowing around and it’s not always well accounted for or properly spent. Smaller/local Chabad’s definitely do a much better job at handling individual donations but… Read more »
Wow! That’s The Chabad of Brentwood Spirit!
We Love The Hechts!
Yechi Chabad
THE REBBE SPOKE MANY TIMES HOW THERE SHOULD BE ACOUNTING, AND GOOD ACOUNTING, AND BY A CPA, THEN AT TIMES, THE REBBE GAVE TO THOSE MOSDOS. AIN DAN YECHIDI ELEH ECHAD.
A rabbi shipping way off, having trouble paying his rent or even buy food cant relate…
Who is the guy in the picture?
Thats Michael Helfant from Chabad of Brentwood, spent summer there, greatest shluchim
Wonderfully written. Brilliant.
chabad of brentwood rocks
giving your money to the Rebbe;s mosdos
IS THE BEST RETURN ON INVESTMENT!
excellent article!