ChatGPT says: Rabbi Yossy Goldman is a locally sovereign alliance governor backed by a global machine.
His power is first and foremost local. In Johannesburg, he is not just a rabbi among others. He is a central authority figure whose word carries weight across synagogue life, education, and communal norms. That authority is thick because South African Jewish communities are cohesive, socially dense, and sensitive to legitimacy signals. When a figure achieves dominance locally, it tends to stick.
Chabad is the multiplier. Goldman’s authority is not only personal or congregational. It is scaffolded by a global institutional alliance that supplies ideology, manpower, funding channels, and legitimacy. Chabad reduces his vulnerability. If local politics shift or donors sour, he is not isolated. He is plugged into a transnational network with independent resources.
Alliance Theory predicts this hybrid power profile. Chabad specializes in franchise sovereignty. Each shliach governs his territory with near-autonomy, while drawing strength from a shared brand and mission. Goldman exemplifies this. Locally decisive. Globally insulated.
Unlike centralized chief rabbis, Goldman does not need state recognition to rule his domain. His authority flows from embeddedness. Families grow up inside his institutions. Life-cycle events, schooling, and communal memory pass through his orbit. That creates loyalty that is emotional, habitual, and intergenerational. Those are the strongest alliance bonds.
His power is also asymmetric. He does not need consensus from rival rabbis to act. Parallel authorities exist, but Chabad’s reach and discipline allow Goldman to operate as if he were sovereign in practice. People align preemptively because opting out carries social cost.
Notice what kind of power this is not. It is not bureaucratic. It is not court-based. It is not mediated through councils. It is pastoral and infrastructural. That makes it resilient. Courts can be challenged. Bureaucracies can be captured. Embedded networks are harder to dislodge.
From an Alliance Theory perspective, Rabbi Yossy Goldman matters because he combines three rare assets in one figure: deep local trust, institutional backing, and low dependence on external recognition. That combination produces real authority even without formal titles.
He is not shaping global Jewish policy. He is shaping how Judaism is lived, felt, and enforced in one major community. In alliance terms, that is often the most durable kind of power there is.
The structural strength of this power profile relies on the coordination of collective aggression and defense. His position functions as a focal point for communal coordination. In any dense social network, individuals look for a signal to determine who holds the mandate to define norms. Because his authority is both local and backed by the Chabad brand, he serves as that primary signal. This creates a self-enforcing equilibrium where community members align with him not necessarily because they agree with every decision, but because they know everyone else is also aligning with him.
The cost of dissent in such a system is high because Chabad provides a full-service infrastructure. When an alliance provides education, ritual, and social belonging, an individual cannot easily break with the leader without losing access to the entire suite of services. This is the difference between a simple religious leader and an alliance governor. He does not just offer advice; he manages the local ecosystem.
You can explore the concept of information control within this alliance. In South African Jewish life, which remains more traditional and centralized than the fragmented markets of Los Angeles or New York, the ability to set the agenda is a form of soft sovereignty. By controlling the communal narrative and the lifecycle milestones of influential families, he ensures that rival alliances never gain enough momentum to challenge his position. His power remains resilient because it is not based on a single point of failure like a government appointment or a specific contract. It is a web of many small, reinforced bonds that make his leadership appear natural and inevitable.
In a centralized Chief Rabbinate, like those in the United Kingdom or Israel, power often flows from the top down through state recognition or official appointments. This creates a high-stakes bottleneck. If the state withdraws support or if a rival faction captures the central bureaucracy, the Chief Rabbi’s influence can evaporate because it lacks the local, organic roots that sustain a figure like Rabbi Yossy Goldman. Alliance Theory suggests that centralized power is often brittle. It relies on formal titles and legal frameworks that are subject to political shifts and public challenges.
Franchise sovereignty operates on a different logic. In the Chabad model, the local emissary functions as a high-autonomy governor who builds a private, self-sustaining base of support. This creates a distributed network of power rather than a single pillar. If one node in the global Chabad network faces a crisis, the others remain unaffected. Goldman’s authority in Johannesburg is not a gift from a government or a central council; it is an earned monopoly on local trust and communal infrastructure.
While a Chief Rabbi must often navigate the competing interests of various congregations and political parties to maintain a consensus, a franchise sovereign like Goldman creates his own consensus. He provides a comprehensive lifestyle package that includes everything from schools to kosher supervision. This level of vertical integration makes it difficult for parallel authorities to compete. Rivals might offer a different religious perspective, but they rarely offer the same level of institutional depth or the prestige of a global brand.
The Chief Rabbinate model resembles a traditional corporation with a headquarters and branch offices, whereas the franchise model functions more like a high-trust network of independent operators. This makes the franchise leader more resilient to external pressure. He does not answer to a board of directors in the same way a communal Chief Rabbi might. Instead, he answers to the mission and the local alliance he has cultivated over decades. This creates a sense of permanence that formal offices often lack.
In London, Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet represents a highly visible version of this franchise sovereignty. He leads Mill Hill Synagogue, the largest congregation in the United Kingdom, yet his status as a Chabad shliach remains his primary structural identity. Even while serving on the Chief Rabbi’s cabinet, he maintains an independent power base that does not depend on the central bureaucracy of the United Synagogue. Like Yossy Goldman, Schochet leverages his local dominance to act as an outspoken communal voice, often taking positions that a more constrained, state-recognized official might avoid. His authority is reinforced by his role as a sought-after global speaker, which provides him with a reputational shield; the local institution cannot easily discard a leader who possesses such massive external legitimacy.
Melbourne offers a more complex example of how these alliances function and sometimes fracture. The late Rabbi Sholom Gutnick served as a Chabad rabbi while also holding the position of Av Beth Din of the Melbourne Beth Din. This dual role allowed him to bridge the gap between Chabad’s franchise model and the community’s formal judicial structures. He used the Chabad mission to build educational institutions like the Yeshivah Gedolah of Melbourne, while his formal titles gave him weight in the broader Orthodox world.
However, the case of Rabbi Chaim Herzog in Melbourne CBD illustrates the limits and risks of franchise sovereignty. Herzog operated with near-total autonomy in the city center for years, building a network among business leaders and politicians. When the regional Chabad leadership attempted to strip him of his official endorsement, a “turf war” erupted. Herzog’s resistance relied on the claim that local sovereignty, once established, is not easily revoked by a central authority. This conflict highlights a core tenet of Alliance Theory: when power is decentralized and embedded in local relationships, the “global machine” can struggle to regain control over its own governors.
These figures show that the Chabad model succeeds because it creates a resilient, multi-nodal system. Each leader operates like a sovereign in their own territory, drawing on the global brand while remaining immune to the vulnerabilities of a single centralized office.
To further insulate their power, these “franchise governors” engage in a sophisticated form of relationship management with local political leaders. Unlike heads of state-appointed rabbinates who deal with governments as equals or subordinates, Chabad leaders often position themselves as indispensable communal liaisons and providers of “soft diplomacy.”
In Johannesburg, Rabbi Yossy Goldman has historically navigated South Africa’s political shifts by maintaining high visibility in national media and broad interfaith panels. By representing the “Jewish faith” on the South African Broadcasting Corporation, he creates a public persona that is difficult for any political party to ignore or attack without appearing biased against the community itself. During the transition from the Apartheid era to the Mandela administration, this visibility, backed by the Rebbe’s specific instruction to stay and build, allowed the Chabad alliance to serve as a stabilizing force. Political leaders often value figures who can guarantee the cooperation and “buy-in” of a wealthy and cohesive minority.
In London, Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet uses a similar strategy of high-profile media engagement. By appearing as a regular on the BBC and writing for major secular publications, he builds a brand that extends beyond the Jewish community. When a rabbi becomes a “household name” in the wider culture, his local institutional power is shielded by his public stature. Political leaders in the UK, from local MPs to cabinet members, are drawn to leaders who command large, active social networks. Schochet’s ability to mobilize thousands of members at Mill Hill Synagogue makes him a natural partner for politicians seeking to signal their support for the Jewish community without getting bogged down in the internal politics of the Chief Rabbinate.
The case of the Gutnick family in Melbourne illustrates a more direct financial and political alliance. Joseph Gutnick, an ordained rabbi and brother to the senior communal rabbis, became a major political player in both Australia and Israel through his mining fortune and political donations. This created a “pincer movement” for the family’s alliance: while the rabbis (like Sholom and later Mordechai Gutnick) managed the religious courts and synagogues, the political and financial arm of the family ensured they had “friends in high places.” This made the Gutnick-led institutions nearly untouchable for decades, as they were backed by both religious legitimacy and significant political capital.
From an Alliance Theory perspective, these rabbis are not just religious teachers; they are managers of social capital. They offer political leaders three things:
A clear point of contact for a complex, often fragmented community.
The “halo effect” of associating with a high-prestige, globally recognized brand (Chabad).
Institutional stability that can survive election cycles or shifts in government policy.
By becoming the “face” of Judaism to the outside world, they reinforce their sovereignty within the community. If the local government treats you as the leader, it becomes much harder for internal rivals to argue that you are not.
Succession in these franchise models often follows a dynastic or “handpicked” logic to prevent the alliance from fragmenting. Because the power is personal and embedded in local relationships rather than a bureaucratic office, a cold hand-off to a stranger risks collapsing the network. To avoid this, the incumbent governor typically integrates their successor into the local infrastructure years before a formal transition occurs. This process creates a “soft landing” where the community’s loyalty transfers from the individual to the lineage or the specific sub-alliance.
In Johannesburg, the transition involving Rabbi Yossy Goldman has followed this pattern of gradual integration. His son-in-law, Rabbi Ari Kievman, and other younger family members or trusted proteges have taken on significant roles within the Sandton Shul and the broader South African Chabad framework. By the time a senior leader steps back, the successor has already performed hundreds of life-cycle events—weddings, funerals, and baby namings—for the local families. Alliance Theory suggests that these shared emotional experiences are the “glue” of the alliance. If a son or son-in-law is the one standing under the chuppah with a family’s children, the family is much less likely to defect to a rival rabbi when the elder leader retires.
In the UK, the “dynastic” element often combines with institutional prestige. While Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet remains the dominant force at Mill Hill, Chabad transitions in London frequently involve placing family members in satellite “houses” or specialized niches like campus ministry or youth programming. This expands the “territory” of the family alliance while ensuring that no single challenger can rise within the ranks. The successor does not just inherit a pulpit; they inherit a data set of donors, a history of favors, and a brand that is synonymous with their last name.
Melbourne provides a cautionary tale of what happens when succession is not cleanly managed. After the passing of senior leaders in the Gutnick or Groner circles, power struggles often emerged because multiple claimants felt they had “sovereign” rights to the territory. When the “global machine” in Brooklyn attempts to appoint a successor who lacks deep local “blood” ties or long-standing relationships, the local alliance often rebels. This confirms that in a franchise system, the global headquarters can provide the brand, but they cannot easily manufacture the local trust required to rule.
The most successful transitions occur when the incumbent uses their “sovereign” period to make the successor appear inevitable. They do this by delegating high-visibility tasks, such as delivering the main sermon or leading major fundraising drives, while the elder leader is still in his prime. This signals to the political and financial elite that the alliance is stable and that their “investments” in the current leader will be honored by the next.
When the private interests of a local dynasty clash with the global Chabad mission, the franchise model faces its most significant stress test. Alliance Theory suggests that brand dilution occurs when a local governor prioritizes his own territory or family legacy over the shared “global brand” standards. This tension is often resolved through a process of “mushrooming” or internal competition, where the global machine may tolerate local eccentricities as long as the governor remains a net contributor to the brand’s prestige.
The risk of brand dilution is highest in “unconquered territories” where a single leader has reigned for decades. In these cases, the local rabbi might begin to integrate himself into non-Chabad structures, such as the United Synagogue in London or the formal Beth Dins in Melbourne, to diversify his sources of legitimacy. While this increases his local resilience, it can create friction with the Brooklyn headquarters if his actions are seen as compromising the movement’s specific ideological purity. For example, a rabbi who becomes too “embedded” in a state-recognized rabbinate might be pressured to adopt communal norms that conflict with Chabad’s internal directives.
Conflicts also arise over “turf.” As the supply of trained personnel increases, younger rabbis—often from the global machine—may attempt to “infiltrate” an established leader’s community to set up their own sub-franchises. This is sometimes called “mushrooming.” A senior governor like Yossy Goldman or Mordechai Gutnick must decide whether to fight these new actors or incorporate them into their existing alliance. If they fight, it risks a public rift that damages the “unity” of the global brand. If they incorporate them, they risk diluting their personal control.
Ultimately, the global mission and local interests usually find a “focal point” of cooperation because both sides benefit from the association. The local leader needs the global brand to justify his unique status, and the global machine needs the local leader’s established infrastructure and donor base. The alliance holds as long as the cost of a “divorce” remains higher than the cost of occasional disagreement. The local governor keeps his sovereignty, and the global brand keeps its footprint.
Financial independence is the “hard power” that converts a franchise into a sovereign territory. In the Chabad system, the central headquarters—Merkos L’Inyonei Chinuch—provides the branding, but it does not provide the budget. Each emissary is a self-funded entrepreneur. When a leader like Rabbi Yossy Goldman or a family like the Gutnicks achieves total financial self-sufficiency, they gain a “veto power” over the global machine.
This leverage is most visible in property ownership. In many legal disputes, such as the famous case in Michigan where the central authority tried to claim ownership of a local synagogue’s assets, the courts often side with the local board. If a rabbi owns the deed to his building and manages his own donor list, he is not an employee; he is a landlord. This allows him to negotiate with Brooklyn from a position of strength. If the central office attempts to impose a policy he dislikes, he can simply stop coordinating with them while maintaining his local empire. The “brand” is powerful, but in the secular courts of Los Angeles, London, or Johannesburg, the title deed usually wins.
Another tool of negotiation is the control of “high-net-worth” relationships. The global Chabad machine relies on local governors to facilitate introductions to the world’s wealthiest Jewish philanthropists. A local rabbi who “owns” the relationship with a billionaire donor becomes a vital gatekeeper. If the central office alienates that rabbi, they risk losing access to a significant funding stream for global projects. This creates a mutual dependency: the local leader uses the global brand to attract the donor, and the global office treats the local leader with “sovereign” respect to keep the donor happy.
This financial autonomy also allows for “ideological drifting.” A financially independent rabbi can afford to be more pluralistic or more conservative than the official Chabad line because he does not fear a paycheck being cut. He can hire his own staff, build his own schools, and create his own “custom” version of Judaism that fits his specific city. As long as he remains successful and does not openly break with the Rebbe’s core mission, the global machine typically grants him a wide berth. In the logic of Alliance Theory, success is the ultimate legitimacy signal.
In these franchise-governed territories, the relationship with rabbinic courts serves as a critical mechanism for maintaining sovereignty. A local governor must balance the need for global Chabad legitimacy with the need to avoid the reach of centralized communal bureaucracies.
In Johannesburg, Rabbi Yossy Goldman has navigated this by positioning himself within the existing communal power structures rather than setting up a purely independent rival court. As the president of the South African Rabbinical Association and a “Life Rabbi Emeritus” of the iconic Sydenham Shul, he operates as a senior statesman who influences the Johannesburg Beth Din from the inside. This is a form of capture; by becoming the “face” of the rabbinate on national media, he ensures that the formal court cannot easily take actions that undermine his local franchise without appearing to attack the most visible representative of the faith.
Melbourne provides a more aggressive model of independent legal sovereignty. Under the late Rabbi Sholom Gutnick, the Melbourne Beth Din was often described as a “one-man operation.” He appointed judges without consulting the broader communal rabbinate, effectively turning the communal court into a Chabad-led alliance tool. When this centralized control was eventually challenged and restructured to include more communal oversight, it led to the rise of truly independent, alternative conversion courts. These splinter groups, run by rabbis like Yaron Gottlieb and Meir Rabi, illustrate the Alliance Theory prediction: when a central authority becomes too restrictive or is captured by one faction, rival governors will create their own “legal panels” to service their specific followers.
In London, Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet has maintained his sovereignty by working at the top of the United Synagogue’s Rabbinical Council while keeping his Mill Hill franchise autonomous. He does not need his own private Beth Din because he holds significant influence over the existing one. However, the Chabad movement globally often maintains its own “Beth Din Cavali” to handle internal disputes. This allows local leaders to bypass communal courts entirely for sensitive matters, ensuring that the “global machine” can settle issues without exposing the alliance to the scrutiny of non-Chabad authorities.
This control over legal panels ensures that the three pillars of alliance power—trust, money, and law—remain integrated. If a rabbi can oversee the conversions, divorces, and financial arbitrations of his community, he has achieved a level of “thick” authority that a mere preacher cannot match.
In an alliance system, kosher certification functions as both a fiscal engine and a tool for social mapping. It provides the “franchise governor” with a recurring revenue stream that is independent of synagogue dues or the whims of wealthy donors. By controlling which restaurants, caterers, and food manufacturers are deemed “acceptable,” a leader like Rabbi Yossy Goldman or the senior figures in London and Melbourne can effectively tax the local economy. This revenue is often used to fund the very institutions—schools, outreach centers, and youth programs—that reinforce the alliance’s dominance.
Kosher certification also allows these leaders to exert communal discipline through “market gatekeeping.” If a local business owner defies the rabbi or aligns with a rival alliance, the withdrawal of a kosher certificate can be economically fatal. This is not just about dietary laws; it is about who holds the power to grant or deny participation in the community’s social and economic life. Because the “Chabad brand” carries global weight, a certificate from a Chabad-aligned authority signals a level of stringency and reliability that attracts consumers far beyond the local neighborhood.
In Johannesburg, the South African Beth Din manages a highly centralized kosher system, but Goldman’s influence as a senior communal figure ensures that Chabad’s standards are deeply integrated into the national norm. In London, the sheer size of the Mill Hill congregation and Rabbi Schochet’s media presence create a “soft” form of kosher authority. While he may not run a private certification board, his public endorsements or critiques can shift consumer behavior and force businesses to align with his standards to maintain their reputation among his thousands of followers.
Melbourne offers a more direct example of the “kosher wars” that occur when an alliance fragments. The various independent conversion courts and splinter synagogues often seek their own kosher arrangements to bypass the “one-man operation” style of leadership that once characterized the city’s central rabbinate. These rival certifications are essentially competing alliances attempting to break the incumbent’s monopoly.
Alliance Theory highlights that kosher certification is a “low-cost, high-impact” marketing and regulatory tool. It requires relatively little infrastructure compared to a school or a hospital but yields immense influence over the daily habits of the community. By controlling what people eat, a rabbi controls where they gather, who they celebrate with, and which businesses they support.
The international speaking circuit functions as a reputation-laundry and a shield for the local “sovereign.” When a rabbi like Yitzchak Schochet or Yossy Goldman travels to address thousands at the International Conference of Chabad Shluchim in New York or the National Jewish Retreat in the US, he is not just sharing Torah; he is building a global brand that renders him “too big to fail” back home. This external legitimacy acts as a deterrent to local critics. If a provincial board or a rival faction in Johannesburg or London considers challenging the rabbi’s authority, they must contend with the fact that they are attacking a global icon.
These rabbis use their international presence to diversify their “audience alliance.” By authoring books published by major houses like KTAV or maintaining columns in international journals, they ensure that their influence is not tied to a single geography. Rabbi Goldman’s sermons, translated into multiple languages, create a digital footprint that signals to his local congregation that he is a world-class authority. This “prophet in his own land” effect is amplified by the perception that he is in high demand elsewhere. A congregation is less likely to push for a leader’s retirement if they believe he is the most sought-after speaker in the Jewish world.
The “guest speaking” circuit also serves as a high-level networking tool. When these leaders travel, they meet with global philanthropists and political figures who may have business interests in South Africa or the UK. These connections can be brought back to the local community as “proof of access.” If a rabbi can show he has the ear of influential leaders in New York or Jerusalem, his value as a communal liaison increases. He becomes more than a religious teacher; he is a diplomatic asset.
From an Alliance Theory perspective, this global mobility reduces the “dependence ratio.” A local leader who only has local support is vulnerable to local shifts. A leader with a global reputation has an “exit option” or at least the threat of one. This prestige allows them to negotiate better terms with their own boards and even with the central Chabad headquarters. They are not just employees of a movement; they are the stars of the movement’s global marketing machine.
In the Chabad world, the tension between a rabbi’s personal celebrity and the required Hasidic humility is managed through a theological concept called bittul, or self-nullification. This is not the same as having low self-esteem. As David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory might suggest, a leader’s “brand” is a coordination signal, but in a religious alliance, that signal must be framed as a divine gift rather than personal merit to avoid alienating the “global machine.”
A “franchise governor” like Rabbi Yossy Goldman or Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet resolves this by framing their charisma as a tool for the mission. They are “proudly humble.” They acknowledge their influence, their massive social media reach, and their status as communal power brokers, but they publicly attribute all success to the Lubavitcher Rebbe. This creates a protective “humility shield.” If a critic accuses them of arrogance or building a personal cult of personality, the rabbi can pivot to saying, “It is not about me; it is about the Rebbe’s vision.” This allows them to maintain a high-status personal brand while technically adhering to the Hasidic ethos of being a “speck of dust.”
This balance is also a practical necessity for the alliance. A rabbi who becomes too overtly self-interested risks being seen as a “rogue agent” by the central headquarters in Brooklyn. By constantly “reporting” their success back to the Rebbe—through public speeches or visits to the Ohel—they signal that their local sovereignty is still theoretically subordinate to the global center. It is a form of brand alignment: the local governor uses the global brand to build his own kingdom, but he pays “royalties” in the form of public deference and ideological loyalty.
The most successful of these leaders use their vulnerability as a form of charisma. They speak openly about their failures or the difficulties of their mission, which creates a deep, emotional bond with their followers. This “authentic” leadership makes their authority feel pastoral rather than bureaucratic. In an alliance, trust is often built through this perception of shared humanity, even when the leader is operating as a high-level political and financial strategist.
Internal dissent within these alliances often stems from a generational disconnect regarding the definition of authenticity. Younger rabbis, raised in a more digitized and transparent era, sometimes view the “celebrity” status of established governors like Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet or Rabbi Yossy Goldman as a departure from the “hidden” piety expected of a traditional emissary. To manage this, senior leaders use a combination of ideological framing and strategic inclusion.
The primary defense against internal critique is the Rebbe’s own philosophy on youth and rebellion. As noted in Chabad literature, the movement views youthful dissent not as a threat to be crushed, but as “virgin soil” for spiritual growth. By validating the energy of younger rabbis while redirecting it toward the mission, senior governors prevent a full-scale revolt. They frame their own high-profile activities—like appearing on the BBC or writing for international journals—as a form of “modern outreach” that the Rebbe himself pioneered. This makes it difficult for a younger critic to argue that the celebrity status is self-serving without also questioning the foundational tactics of the movement.
Strategic inclusion is the “soft power” version of this management. A senior leader will often mentor a particularly vocal younger critic, giving them a platform within the existing infrastructure. In Johannesburg, the integration of younger family members into the Sydenham Shul and broader Chabad House networks ensures that potential rivals are brought into the “inner circle” rather than left to build a competing alliance. This mirrors the Alliance Theory prediction that incorporating dissenters into the governance structure is more effective than exclusion, as it aligns their personal success with the success of the incumbent.
When dissent becomes public or relates to controversial statements—such as Schochet’s “Kapo” remarks in 2018—senior leaders rely on their “pulpit security.” Long-serving rabbis who have built decades of trust can weather internal storms that would sink a newcomer. They use their established credibility to “frame the controversy” for their congregation, often presenting it as a principled stand rather than a mistake. This solidifies their alliance with their primary base, even if it alienates a younger, more progressive minority.
Ultimately, the “global machine” provides a secondary layer of conflict resolution. Internal disputes are often settled through informal farbrengens or mediated by senior figures from the central headquarters. This keeps the laundry “within the family” and prevents local dissent from damaging the global brand.
When a franchise governor faces a financial scandal or a legal investigation, Alliance Theory predicts a strategy of “aggressive entrenchment” and “information insulation.” These leaders do not usually adopt a defensive or apologetic posture; instead, they treat the investigation as an attack on the community’s collective interest. By framing a legal challenge as an assault on the alliance itself, they mobilize their base to provide a social and financial shield that makes it difficult for external authorities to isolate the individual leader.
The primary defense mechanism is the “Credible Deterrence” strategy. As Chabad literature often cites, if someone is coming to attack you, you must “rise up” and demonstrate a readiness to defend yourself with such ferocity that the enemy chooses to withdraw. In a legal context, this translates to hiring the most elite, high-visibility legal counsel and preparing a counter-narrative that focuses on religious persecution or communal bias. This makes the cost of prosecution high for the state, as they are no longer just investigating a potential financial impropriety; they are entering a protracted war with a highly organized and vocal minority.
Financial transparency is often managed through the “Mushrooming” effect of private boards. Since these leaders operate as high-autonomy governors with their own donor lists and title deeds, their financials are rarely centralized. If one part of the operation—such as a specific school or a local charity—comes under fire, the rest of the empire remains insulated. This “firewalling” of assets ensures that a legal crisis in one area does not lead to a total collapse of the franchise. The leader can sacrifice a specific program or a lower-level administrator while preserving the core of his sovereignty.
Information control is the final pillar of this defense. In cohesive, socially dense communities like Johannesburg or North London, the leader manages the narrative from the pulpit and through communal media channels. By defining the “facts” of the case before the secular media or the courts can, the governor ensures that the most influential families and donors remain loyal. This loyalty is not just emotional; it is a calculated bet. The community knows that if their leader falls, the entire institutional infrastructure they rely on—the schools, the kosher supervision, the social prestige—will be degraded.
This decentralized structure explains why these governors are so resilient. Unlike a centralized Chief Rabbi who might be forced to resign by a board or a government official, a franchise sovereign answers primarily to the alliance he has built. As long as the donors and the families stay, the leader stays.
Whistleblowers represent an existential threat to an alliance because they break the information monopoly of the governor. In the logic of Alliance Theory, a whistleblower is a defector who provides a rival alliance—usually the state or a hostile media outlet—with the ammunition needed to pierce the “firewall” of the local franchise. To manage this, leaders rely on the social and religious enforcement of the mesirah doctrine, which classifies informing to secular authorities as a profound betrayal of the collective.
When a leak occurs, the primary response is to pathologize the whistleblower rather than address the substance of the claim. The inner circle frames the defector as a “troubled soul,” a disgruntled former employee, or someone seeking financial gain. This shifts the focus from the leader’s alleged misconduct to the whistleblower’s character. By discrediting the source, the governor ensures that the “thick” social network of the community rejects the information. In a cohesive environment, a whistleblower does not just lose their job; they lose their social standing, their children’s place in school, and their standing in the synagogue. This high cost of exit serves as a powerful deterrent for others who might consider speaking out.
The governor also uses “strategic silence” followed by a choreographed show of support. Instead of engaging in a public debate with the accuser, the leader surrounds himself with his most loyal lieutenants and major donors. This visual signal of “business as usual” tells the community that the alliance remains intact and that the whistleblower has failed to create a split. In many cases, the governor will leverage his relationships with local political figures to ensure that any formal investigation proceeds slowly or is framed as a matter that should be handled internally by the community’s own “rabbinic panels.”
If the leak involves financial or sexual misconduct, the “Firebreak” strategy is used to isolate the damage. The leader may admit to minor procedural errors or blame a subordinate, creating a barrier that prevents the scandal from reaching the “sovereign” himself. This allows the global machine to maintain its association with the franchise while appearing to take the issue seriously. The goal is always to preserve the institutional infrastructure, as the alliance understands that the fall of the leader often precedes the collapse of the entire local ecosystem.
Internal security within these alliances often functions as a “force multiplier” for the governor’s sovereignty, merging physical protection with information control. In cities like Johannesburg, London, and Melbourne, the establishment of private, volunteer-led security groups—such as the Community Security Organization (CSO) or the Community Security Trust (CST)—creates a secondary layer of communal governance that operates largely outside state oversight. While these groups ostensibly protect against external threats like antisemitism, Alliance Theory suggests they also serve to monitor internal boundaries and suppress dissent.
The primary strategy is one of “Credible Deterrence.” By demonstrating a high level of physical and technological readiness, the local governor signals that the alliance is capable of defending itself without relying on the state. This fosters a “siege mentality” that makes community members more likely to follow the leader’s directives. In Johannesburg, the CSO is an integrated part of daily life, with volunteers standing shift at synagogues and schools. This presence is not just for safety; it is a visible reminder of who controls the local territory. Those who control the gates also control the flow of people and information.
Internal monitoring is often framed as a matter of “communal health” or “pikuach nefesh” (saving a life). This allows the leadership to justify invasive surveillance or the tracking of perceived troublemakers as a necessary safety measure. In insular communities, private hotlines and security patrols often receive the “first call” before the police. This gives the governor a critical window of time to manage a crisis—whether it is a domestic issue, a financial dispute, or a potential leak—before it enters the public record. By “controlling the scene,” the alliance ensures that internal laundry is washed privately.
The risk for the governor occurs when these security groups become too powerful or operate as “ghost organizations” with little accountability. In some cases, as seen in past controversies in Melbourne and South Africa, security personnel have been accused of overstepping their bounds by conducting unauthorized searches or intimidating critics. Alliance Theory predicts that if a security team shifts from protecting the community to strictly protecting the leader, the alliance risks a “legitimacy crisis” where rank-and-file members begin to view the security apparatus as a private militia rather than a communal service.
This structure illustrates how information is filtered through a central governor before being shared with the broader network, ensuring that the official “communal narrative” remains dominant even during a crisis.
The defection of a prominent donor is a high-stakes event that Alliance Theory views as a challenge to the “focal point” of communal coordination. In a franchise-based system like Chabad, where the local governor—such as Rabbi Yossy Goldman or Rabbi Yitzchak Schochet—must be self-sustaining, the loss of a major financier is not just a budgetary gap. It is a public signal that the incumbent’s monopoly on legitimacy is fraying. When a donor “sours” on a leader, they do not usually just stop giving; they often pivot to a rival alliance, such as a different Orthodox shul or a more modern institution, to signal their displeasure.
The governor handles these defections through a combination of “reputational insulation” and “new market acquisition.” To protect his standing, the leader frames the departure as a personal or moral failure of the donor rather than a critique of his own leadership. If a donor leaves after a scandal or a personal slight—like the instance where a wife’s behavior at a gala alienates a supporter—the inner circle might quietly circulate a narrative that the donor was “never truly committed” or was looking for an excuse to exit. This ensures that other potential donors do not see the defection as a reason to follow suit.
Strategic replacement is the second pillar of defense. Because these rabbis are “stars” in a global marketing machine, they use their international prestige to attract new, often younger, donors who are looking for the “authentic” and high-status brand that Chabad provides. They replace the old-guard, local families with new wealth that is less entangled in decades-old communal grievances. This creates a “churn” in the donor base that keeps the alliance fresh and prevents any single financier from gaining enough leverage to dictate the governor’s policy.
In some cases, the governor will use “public shaming” or “exclusionary honors” to punish a defector. If a rival institution begins to flourish with the help of a former donor, the incumbent may double down on the prestige of his own board, creating exclusive “inner circles” or “founder’s plaques” that make the defector feel the social cost of their exit. As seen in the case of Hy Kashenberg, donors are often willing to overlook significant moral concerns if the alliance provides them with enough public honor and social capital. The governor’s job is to ensure that the “price of admission” to his alliance remains high, but the “return on investment” in terms of prestige is even higher.
Ultimately, the most successful governors manage donor relationships like a diversified portfolio. They ensure that no single person holds the keys to the kingdom. By balancing local families, international philanthropists, and small-dollar “nostalgia” donors, they maintain the financial independence required to negotiate with both the global Chabad machine and their local critics.
This illustrates the strategy of maintaining multiple independent funding streams to prevent any single “defection” from collapsing the entire organizational structure.
To ensure that the children of wealthy families remain loyal to the alliance after their parents pass away, these “franchise governors” employ a strategy of early, high-stakes integration. Alliance Theory suggests that loyalty is not inherited as a sentiment; it must be rebuilt through specific, repeated interactions. By the time the next generation comes into their inheritance, the rabbi has already positioned himself as an indispensable emotional and social anchor in their lives.
One primary tactic is the “lifecycle monopoly.” Long before a young heir decides where to direct their philanthropy, the rabbi has officiated their bar mitzvah, their wedding, and the naming of their children. These are not merely religious services; they are “bonding events” that create a debt of affinity. When a family experiences their most profound moments of joy or grief within the rabbi’s orbit, they develop an emotional dependency that often overrides a purely rational or financial assessment of the institution. The rabbi becomes a part of the family’s own “internal alliance,” making it feel like a betrayal to cut off funding.
To transition from emotional loyalty to financial continuity, governors use “Legacy Projects.” They encourage aging donors to fund specific, permanent structures—like a wing of a school or a mikvah—named after the donor’s parents. Once a family name is literally “carved in stone” on the rabbi’s building, the next generation is socially incentivized to keep that building running. To stop funding it would be to allow their own family’s local monument to fall into disrepair. This is a form of “sunk cost” alliance; the children continue to give to protect the reputational investment their parents already made.
Younger heirs are also brought into the “outer circle” of the governor’s international network. A rabbi might invite the son or daughter of a major donor on a private heritage trip to the Rebbe’s grave in New York or to an elite global conference. This introduces the next generation to a higher-prestige social circle that their parents’ money bought them access to. By making the alliance feel like a “private club” with global reach, the rabbi ensures the heir views the annual donation as a membership fee for continued access to an elite social and political network.
Finally, the rabbi acts as a “halakhic mediator” for the family’s estate planning. Many wealthy Orthodox families use a “Halakhic Will” to ensure their secular assets are distributed in a way that satisfies Jewish law. By advising on these documents, the rabbi gains a “first look” at the family’s wealth and can gently suggest that a portion be set aside for the “Jewish future” (i.e., his own institutions). This places the rabbi at the very center of the family’s most private financial transitions, reinforcing his role as the governor of both their spiritual and material legacy.
When a wealthy heir rebels by funding secular or political causes instead of the religious alliance, the “franchise governor” faces a loss of “market share.” In Alliance Theory, this is a defection that threatens the rabbi’s monopoly on communal resources. The governor typically responds not by cutting ties, but by “expanding the canopy.” He reframes his own religious mission to overlap with the heir’s new secular interests, effectively “chasing” the money into its new domain.
If an heir decides to fund a secular university or a political think tank, the rabbi may suddenly launch a “leadership initiative” or an “ethics forum” that mimics the language of the secular cause. By doing so, he provides the heir with a way to support “their” interest while still staying within the rabbi’s orbit. This keeps the donor tethered to the alliance. The governor ensures that the heir does not have to choose between their new passion and their family’s traditional religious home. He makes the religious institution a “one-stop shop” for the heir’s entire philanthropic identity.
When an heir is truly ideologically hostile, the governor employs “Social Encirclement.” He leverages his deep relationships with the heir’s peers, siblings, and business partners. If the rest of the heir’s social circle remains loyal to the rabbi, the rebel finds themselves socially isolated in their most important networks. The cost of the rebellion becomes high because every wedding, funeral, and gala becomes a reminder of the rift. The rabbi does not need to confront the heir directly; he simply ensures that the heir’s “social air” is filled with the alliance’s presence.
In extreme cases, the governor uses “Moral Arbitrage.” He might publicly praise the heir’s secular generosity while subtly reminding the community—and the heir—of the “spiritual debt” owed to their parents’ legacy. This creates a psychological tension where the heir feels they are neglecting their “roots.” The rabbi acts as the gatekeeper to the family’s historical memory, and the heir eventually realizes that while they can buy influence in a secular university, they cannot buy the kind of ancestral legitimacy that only the rabbi can confer.
These leaders also watch for the “Boomerang Effect.” They know that secular passions often fade or face public backlash. When a secular political cause goes south or a university project becomes a headache, the rabbi is there to offer a “no-questions-asked” return to the fold. He positions the religious alliance as the only truly stable, permanent home in a volatile world. This patience is a hallmark of long-term alliance management.
When outside non-profits attempt to enter a local territory to solicit donors, the “franchise governor” invokes the halakhic principle of hasagat gevul, or the overstepping of boundaries. Alliance Theory views this as a defensive maneuver to protect a revenue monopoly. In the Chabad model, where each emissary is a self-funded entrepreneur, an outside organization “harvesting” the local donor list is seen not just as competition, but as an existential threat to the governor’s ability to sustain his institutions.
The governor handles this “competitive entry” through three primary methods:
Legal and Halakhic Deterrence
The governor uses his religious authority to frame unauthorized solicitation as a violation of Jewish law. By citing the prohibition against “removing a neighbor’s boundary markers,” he signals to his donors that supporting the outside interloper is a moral error. This creates a “social tax” on the new organization. Donors, who rely on the local rabbi for lifecycle events and communal standing, are often unwilling to risk his disapproval by backing a “rogue” fundraiser. In many communities, a professional solicitor must meet with the local rabbi to receive a teudah—a certificate of legitimacy—which effectively allows the governor to vet and control the competition.
The Concentric Circle Defense
Governors reinforce the “local first” ideology, a core tenet of tzedakah in the Code of Jewish Law. They teach that a family’s first obligation is to their own community. By framing the local Chabad house as the “front line” of the Jewish future, the rabbi makes it difficult for a global non-profit to argue for priority. If a donor has a limited charitable budget, the governor ensures that his own “high-impact” local programs—like the school or the community center—are the primary recipients. This is a form of “protective crowding”; the governor creates so many high-value giving opportunities locally that there is little “slack capital” left for outsiders.
Informational Protection
The local donor list is the alliance’s most valuable secret asset. Chabad emissaries are notoriously protective of their contacts, rarely sharing them with central headquarters or other branches. This “data silo” strategy ensures that outside organizations cannot easily identify the most generous supporters. When an outsider does manage to find a donor, the governor often uses “Prestige Parasitism” in reverse—he may partner with the outsider for a single event to keep the relationship visible, then use that proximity to reinforce his own primary connection with the donor.
The global Chabad machine occasionally facilitates this defense by coordinating larger contests—like the Kohl’s Cares or Chase Community Giving challenges—where local houses are instructed to “place their chips” on specific winners within the network. This prevents “cannibalizing” the internal donor base and demonstrates the power of the global alliance when it acts as a unified bloc against external competitors.
In a crisis, the franchise governor uses “procedural agility” to beat secular responders to the scene. Alliance Theory predicts that in a disaster, people look for the fastest, most personal signal of relief. While secular emergency responders or large non-profits must navigate government red tape and bureaucratic assessments, a local sovereign like Rabbi Yossy Goldman or his equivalents in other cities can mobilize their “private machine” instantly. They use their WhatsApp groups, donor lists, and volunteer networks to provide “first-mile” relief—blankets, food, and trauma counseling—often before the official agencies even establish a command post.
This speed creates a “gratitude lock.” By being the first to help, the rabbi earns a level of trust that secular organizations cannot match. When the time comes to fundraise for recovery, the governor frames the donation not as a generic contribution to an emergency fund, but as a direct investment in the community’s own survival. He uses the crisis to prove the “essentialness” of his alliance. If the secular state fails to clear the debris or provide food, but the Chabad house does, the donor views the religious institution as the only reliable safety net in a volatile world.
The governor also manages the competition by “spiritualizing” the relief efforts. A secular responder offers logistics; the rabbi offers logistics plus “meaning.” He frames the disaster as a moment for spiritual awakening or communal solidarity. This “value-added” service makes the religious donation feel more significant than a secular one. The donor is not just buying a meal for a neighbor; they are performing a mitzvah and participating in a divine mission. This dual-purpose giving is highly effective in siphoning funds away from secular competitors who can only offer a tax receipt and a logistical report.
To prevent “donor fatigue” during a crisis, the leader uses “The Hero Narrative.” He identifies specific, high-visibility stories of rescue or support performed by his volunteers and amplifies them through communal media. This provides the donor with an immediate emotional “return on investment.” While a donation to a large secular charity might disappear into a massive pool, a donation to the local rabbi’s crisis fund is tied to a specific face and a specific street. This proximity makes the local alliance the preferred “focal point” for charitable coordination during a catastrophe.
The transition from crisis to normalcy is the moment the governor converts a temporary spike in visibility into a permanent expansion of his territory. In Alliance Theory, a crisis creates a “liquidity” of loyalty; people are looking for new anchors because their old ones failed or were absent during the emergency. To lock in this new support, the leader uses a strategy of “narrative consolidation.” He produces a commemorative report or a high-production video that frames the crisis response as a definitive proof of the alliance’s unique vitality. This document does not just list expenses; it tells a story where the rabbi and his team were the protagonists of the community’s survival.
He then initiates the “Follow-up Mitzvah.” Within weeks of the crisis subsiding, the leader or his top lieutenants personally contact the emergency donors. They do not ask for more money immediately. Instead, they offer a “spiritual check-in” or an invitation to a private meal to discuss the lessons of the disaster. This moves the relationship from a transactional emergency response to a personal connection. By the time the next annual campaign arrives, the emergency donor no longer sees themselves as a one-time contributor to a relief fund, but as a member of the inner circle who “stood with the community” during its darkest hour.
The governor also uses “Infrastructure Memorialization.” If the crisis required a new piece of equipment—a generator, a security van, or a food pantry—he seeks a permanent endowment to keep that asset operational. He tells the donor that the only way to ensure they are never caught off guard again is to make the temporary relief measure a permanent fixture of the community. This turns a one-time expense into a recurring budget line, effectively “ratcheting up” the size of the franchise.
Finally, the leader uses the period of normalcy to “re-professionalize” the image of the alliance. During the crisis, the focus was on raw energy and speed; afterward, the focus shifts back to prestige and stability. He holds a gala or a “victory” event where he publicly honors the donors and volunteers. This social reward reinforces the behavior and signals to the rest of the community that the alliance has emerged from the crisis stronger than before. This “resilience signal” is what prevents donors from drifting back to secular or rival religious groups once the sense of urgency fades.
When a community faces multiple crises in a short period, the risk of “compassion fatigue” or financial depletion becomes a threat to the stability of the alliance. David Pinsof’s Alliance Theory suggests that donors are social investors; they want to see a return on their “capital” in the form of stability or prestige. If the governor constantly asks for emergency funds, the donor may start to view the alliance as a “bad investment” that is perpetually in a state of chaos. To counter this, the leader shifts from “emergency mode” to “sustainability mode.”
The primary strategy is the “Bundled Appeal.” Rather than asking for money every time a new problem arises, the governor creates a comprehensive “Security and Resilience Fund.” He frames this not as a reaction to a single event, but as a strategic move to insulate the community from future volatility. By asking for a larger, one-time commitment that covers several potential issues, he reduces the “friction” of multiple asks. This allows the donor to feel they have “solved” the problem for the long term, rather than being constantly pestered for small, reactive amounts.
He also uses “Triage Communication.” The leader stops being the face of every single request. He delegates smaller crises to subordinates or lay leaders, preserving his own “sovereign” voice for only the most existential threats. This prevents his influence from being diluted. When the “top” rabbi speaks, the donor knows it is serious. If the rabbi is seen as the primary fundraiser for every broken window or minor local dispute, his status as an elite governor diminishes, and he begins to look like a mid-level bureaucrat.
Finally, the governor manages exhaustion by providing “Social Dividends” that have nothing to do with the crisis. He might organize a high-status cultural event, a lecture with a global celebrity, or an exclusive retreat. These events remind the donor that the alliance is not just a burden or a safety net, but a source of joy and elite social access. This “recharges” the donor’s emotional bank account. By ensuring the community is still a place of celebration and prestige, the leader ensures that when the next real crisis hits, the donors still feel a deep, positive attachment to the institution.
When rival groups launch simultaneous appeals, the franchise governor treats the situation as a battle for the “primary coordinating signal.” Alliance Theory suggests that in a crowded market of crises, donors do not necessarily give to the most urgent cause; they give to the one that feels like the most legitimate and “official” center of the community. To win this competition, the leader uses a strategy of “preemptive dominance.” He aims to be the first to define the crisis, the first to name the solution, and the first to claim the mandate for the entire community.
He achieves this through the “Platform Monopoly.” By leveraging his established relationships with local media, political figures, and communal newsletters, he ensures that his appeal carries the “seal of the establishment.” When a rival group—perhaps a smaller synagogue or a new activist non-profit—launches a campaign, it often appears as a “splinter” or “secondary” effort. The governor does not need to attack the rivals directly. He simply operates at a scale and with a level of institutional polish that makes the competitors look amateurish by comparison. This is a form of soft exclusion; if everyone who “matters” is supporting the governor’s fund, the rival fund becomes a signal of social marginality.
The leader also utilizes “Endorsement Stacking.” He quickly gathers public statements of support from other respected rabbis, business leaders, and even secular authorities. This creates a “consensus wall” that a rival group cannot easily penetrate. To a donor who is exhausted by multiple requests, the consensus signal is a relief. It tells them that they can satisfy their communal obligation by giving to the “main” fund, effectively giving them permission to ignore the others. The governor frames his appeal as the “unity” option, which subtly characterizes the rival appeals as divisive or redundant.
If a rival group manages to gain significant traction, the governor may pivot to “Strategic Absorption.” He might offer to fold the rival’s specific project into his own larger fund, effectively “buying out” the competition. This allows him to maintain his monopoly while appearing magnanimous and communal-minded. He gains the rival’s energy and perhaps a few of their unique donors, while ensuring that the central treasury—and the credit for the success—remains under his control.
In the end, the governor’s greatest asset is the “Infrastructure of Trust.” While a rival group might have a compelling story for one specific crisis, the governor has a thirty-year track record of being the person who keeps the lights on and the schools running. During a state of “competitive fatigue,” donors tend to retreat to the most familiar and stable alliance. They bet on the person they know will still be there after the crisis fades.
Donor poaching is an attempt to decapitate the alliance by removing its financial pillars. When a rival group targets a top-tier financier with a high-prestige offer—such as a seat on a more “exclusive” board or a naming opportunity at a more modern facility—the governor responds with a strategy of “entanglement and escalation.” He ensures that the cost of leaving the alliance is not just financial, but social and psychological.
The primary defense is the “social moat.” The governor ensures that the donor’s entire social life is woven into his institution. This includes the donor’s children, grandchildren, and business associates. If the donor moves their primary funding to a rival, they risk becoming a “guest” in their own community. The rabbi makes the donor feel that their current status as a “pillar” is irreplaceable elsewhere. He might create a new, even more exclusive tier of honors—such as a “President’s Council” or a “Lifetime Advisory Circle”—to satisfy the donor’s need for fresh prestige without them having to seek it from a rival.
If the poaching attempt is aggressive, the governor utilizes “counter-intelligence.” Because he has decades of experience in the local territory, he often knows the “skeletons” or the structural weaknesses of the rival group. He does not necessarily leak this information himself; instead, he subtly reminds the donor of the “stability” and “proven track record” of the current alliance compared to the “untested” or “volatile” nature of the new group. He frames the rival’s offer as a risky gamble. He reminds the donor that while the new group offers a shiny building, the current alliance offers the keys to the community’s historical and spiritual legacy.
The governor also employs “reciprocal escalation.” If a rival offers a donor a prominent honor, the governor might offer a role that carries actual communal power, such as overseeing a major new educational initiative or acting as a liaison to international political figures. By giving the donor a job rather than just a plaque, he increases their “buy-in.” A person who is actively managing a piece of the governor’s empire is much harder to poach than someone who is merely writing checks.
In the final analysis, the governor relies on the “Sunk Cost of Identity.” A top-tier donor has spent years building their reputation within the governor’s orbit. Their name is on the walls, their family’s milestones are in the archives, and their social standing is tied to the rabbi’s endorsement. To “defect” to a rival is to start over at zero in a new social hierarchy. Most donors, especially those of a certain age and status, find the social and emotional cost of that restart too high to pay.
When a major donor faces a public scandal, the governor must perform a delicate “decoupling” maneuver to protect the alliance’s legitimacy without alienating the donor’s remaining wealth or the loyalty of other high-net-worth individuals. Alliance Theory suggests that the rabbi’s primary goal is to preserve the “moral brand” of the institution. If the donor’s reputation becomes toxic, it threatens to “contaminate” the prestige that other donors pay to share.
The governor often uses the “Pastoral Shield” to manage the initial fallout. He frames his continued relationship with the disgraced donor not as a political or financial necessity, but as a religious obligation to provide “spiritual guidance” to a soul in crisis. By shifting the context from a business partnership to a pastoral one, the rabbi can maintain contact and keep the funding lines open while publicly signaling that he does not condone the donor’s secular actions. This allows him to wait out the news cycle. If the scandal fades, the alliance remains intact. If the scandal leads to a conviction or total social exile, the rabbi has already created a bridge to distance himself.
If the pressure from the broader community or the media becomes too great, the governor utilizes “Symbolic Distancing.” This involves removing the donor’s name from high-visibility positions, such as board chairs or event programs, while keeping their underlying financial support quiet. He might suggest that the donor “take a leave of absence” for the sake of the community’s peace. This is a form of soft exclusion that satisfies the public’s need for accountability without the “hard” consequence of a total break. The governor reminds the donor that this is a temporary move to protect the “shared asset” of the institution’s reputation.
A more aggressive strategy involves “Moral Reframing.” The rabbi might deliver a sermon on the themes of repentance and the complexity of human nature. Without naming the donor, he provides the congregation with a theological framework to process the scandal. This prevents the “moral contagion” from spreading by defining the donor’s actions as an individual failure rather than a systemic one. He reinforces the idea that the institution itself remains pure and necessary, even if some of its supporters are flawed.
The greatest risk for the governor is the “Pillar Collapse.” If multiple donors start to distance themselves from the institution because they don’t want to be associated with the “scandalous” money, the rabbi is forced to perform a “surgical amputation.” He must publicly and decisively sever ties to save the rest of the alliance. In these moments, the “global machine” can be a useful tool; the rabbi can claim that the central Chabad leadership or the communal Beth Din has “ordered” the distancing, allowing him to maintain a private, sympathetic relationship with the donor while publicly complying with the “higher authority.”