Imrei Binah is a work by Rabbi Dovber Schneuri, the second Rebbe of the Chabad Hasidic movement. Imrei Binah is considered to be one of the most profound texts in Chabad philosophy.[ New Edition of Imrei Bina, Made Possible by a Gift from Mouli Cohen, Inspires Scholars of Chassidism and Mystics World Wide. Vocus. prweb.com. July 22, 2009. Accessed April 7, 2014.][ Donor Prints New Imrei Bina. COLlive.com. July 22, 2009. Accessed April 7, 2014.][
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The central themes discussed in Imrei Binah are the Hasidic explanations for the commandment of the Shema and Tefillin.[Schneuri, Dovber. Imrei Binah: Introduction . ChabadLibrary.org. Accessed April 7, 2014.]
Background
Imrei Binah was originally written for the Chassid Yekusiel Liepler, a student of Rabbi Dovber.[Schneersohn, Shalom Doveber. Kuntres Umayan. Kehot Publication Society. Accessed April 7, 2014.][Dalfin, Chaim. The Seven Chabad-Lubavitch Rebbes. Jason Aronson. (1998): p. 32.]
Teachings
Study in Lubavitch
The Chassid Rabbi Yisroel Jacobson recalled that Imrei Binah was studied in the first Tomchei Tmimim yeshiva founded by the fifth Chabad Rebbe, Rabbi Sholom Dovber Schneersohn, in the town of Lubavitch. The mashpia, Rabbi Shilem Kuratin, convinced the older students at the yeshiva to study Imrei Binah, which they did for twelve hours a day. The younger students, Jacobson included, resisted Kuratin and chose to study the works of the fifth Rebbe instead.[Jacobson, Yisroel. "Eating Snow: A Typical Night in Lubavitch." A Chassidishe Derher. (2012): p. 2. Accessed July 12, 2014.]
Publishing
Imrei Binah was initially published in Kapust and was later republished by Kehot Publication Society in Brooklyn, New York. The Opening Gateway (Petach HaShaar) is available in English under the title "The Gateway To Understanding" at truekabbalah.com
External links