Timeline
1902: Childhood
1915: Learning
1916: World War I
1923: Soviet Jewry
1928: Marriage
1930's:
Torah & Science
1941:
Flight from Europe
1939-45: Holocaust & Rebuilding
1943:
Author & Teacher
1950: Leadership
1953:
Chassidic Feminism
1960: Technology
1963: Rebellion
1967: The Six Day War
1972: Retirement?
1974: Mitzvah Tanks
1977:
Illness & Challenge
1983: Mankind
1986:
"Sunday Dollars"
1988: Passing of Rebbetzin
1989: The End of the Cold War
1991:
Missiles & Miracles
3 Tammuz 1994: Transmission
1994: Discovery of the "Reshimot"
Today: The Goal
Library: History & Biography
 
The Man and the Century:
A Timeline Biography of the Lubavitcher Rebbe

1941: Fight from Europe

On June 14, 1940, the armies of Nazi Germany conquered Paris. A French General offered the Rebbe a residence in the countryside; but the Rebbe, comprehending the true significance of the Nazi occupation, declined the offer and fled Paris on one of the last trains to leave the city. After a perilous passage over the front lines of the occupation, the Rebbe and his wife arrived in Vichy, France.

They remained in Vichy for a few months, then relocated to Nice in Southern France where they stayed until their final escape from Europe. Throughout this time, the Rebbe’s father-in-law -- who had survived the bombing and occupation of Warsaw and had arrived in New York in March of 1940 -- conducted a vigorous campaign to rescue them and bring them to the haven of America.

The Rebbetzin would later recount that throughout their flight from the advancing Germans, the Rebbe retained his characteristic devotion to helping others, and to the observance of even the most minute details of Jewish law and custom. Also characteristically, the Rebbe found a way to focus on the positive aspect of every experience -- even that of a refugee, uprooted from his home and fleeing for his life (see letter excerpted at right).

On June 12, 1941, the Rebbe and Rebbetzin boarded the Sorpo Pinto in Lisbon, Portugal, the ship that would take them to the United States. On Monday, June 23 (28 Sivan on the Hebrew calendar), 10:30 A.M., the Rebbe and Rebbetzin arrived in New York.