Redemption, love, and hope can be deeply intertwined. One Friday night in February of 1992, I witnessed and felt all three attempting to spring eternal, as Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson knew his time was coming. 

The question of whether that time would precede the arrival of the Messiah or synchronize with it hovered over every Lubavitcher in the world that Sabbath eve. In the large synagogue at their headquarters, known by its address alone as “770,” I was led to the eastern front of the vast, packed hall and told to wait at the ark, where the handwritten Torah scrolls are held. 

Lubavitchers were used to waiting and waiting, anticipating and anticipating, hoping and praying. They wanted the Messiah – the final Redemption of the world – now, before the unspeakable – their leader’s death. And they meant it with every fiber of their being. 

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