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Mendy Gutnick

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Rabbi Mendy Gutnick is director of Chabad of West Parkland, Fla., and a popular lecturer in the South Florida Jewish community. A native of Melbourne, Australia, Rabbi Gutnick is the scion of a long line of rabbis. Rabbi Gutnick earned his rabbinic ordination in 1998 at the Central Lubavitch Yeshiva in New York. He continued his postgraduate studies at the renowned Kollel Menachem in Melbourne, where he received a diploma in practical rabbinics. While in Australia, he served as an associate rabbi and focused on adult education and outreach, which he continued upon arriving in Florida in 2001. Rabbi Gutnick serves as director at Chabad of Parkland’s Educational Department and as a faculty member of the Boynton Beach Kollel, in addition to his role as rabbi of the Chabad congregation in West Parkland and its 500 families.
The rainbow is a universal symbol of hope and reassurance. Discover the origins of this association and how it relates to the current nature of existence, the changing of the seasons (both literally and figuratively) and how we can have an optimistic outl...
The reality that presented itself to those who emerged from the ark after the flood must have been surreal, if not horrific. Still, their behavior and the ensuing events are puzzling. Why was Noah’s first order of business to plant a vineyard, make wine a...
Explore the story of Noah’s ark as an archetype for how to deal with everything the world throws at you. When life feels like a chaotic storm raging around you, build yourself an “ark”—a rich inner world that becomes a space of refuge and inspiration. Not...
Imagine yourself witnessing the moral decay of the world around you. Do you try to save the world against all odds, or do you save yourself? Who was Noah? Was he simply a decent man relative to the corrupt society in which he lived or a great man in his o...
What is the correct response to sad days in the Jewish calendar? Are we meant to feel sad, down and perhaps even depressed? Rabbi Gutnick gives us another perspective of how the Torah wants us to observe the saddest days in our history.
Take a journey into the world of Noah with the Talmudic sages, Chassidic masters and Kabbalists as your guides, as we navigate the events that unfold in what was a literal watershed moment in the development of human civilization.
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