Orginal article here
The Brooklyn Navy Yard, where the Rebbe worked after arriving in America in the early 40's, housed a large auditorium where many worked openly at their own desks and offices, closed from view, for higher-ranked individuals. Someone sitting in the auditorium could see those who would enter or leave the building.
The Brooklyn Navy Yard, where the Rebbe worked after arriving in America in the early 40's, housed a large auditorium where many worked openly at their own desks and offices, closed from view, for higher-ranked individuals. Someone sitting in the auditorium could see those who would enter or leave the building.
He wanted to know who this was. One afternoon, after the generals turned back, he followed the Jew from behind, then stopped, when he realized the Jew sat down at the bus stop. At a bit of a distance, he waited. Once the bus arrived, he hurried to get onto the bus before it closed its doors, to continue his tracking.
When the Jew got off the bus, he too got off. It was at Eastern Parkway, in Crown Heights. There he saw the Jew enter 770. He asked chassidim there who this Jew was and they told him he was the revered son-in-law of the (Previous) Rebbe.
This story, the man himself who tracked the Rebbe, also a Jew, told us one Shabbos, many many years laters. He was our Shabbos guest whom we hosted that Shabbos in 770, some 18 to 20 years ago, to "farbreng" with us.
The other thing I remember from this story, although its recollection is faded, and therefore on this point I'm not entirely certain, is that the work at the Navy Yard entailed secrecy because it concerned the "Manhattan Project".
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