"No taxation without representation"
The slogan "No taxation without representation" was first adopted during the American Revolution by American colonists under British rule. They believed that if they were not represented within the government of the ruling empire or nation, then they had no right to be taxed.
As we commemorate America's Independence Day, the 4th of July, we express our gratitude to the founding fathers of this great country while reflecting on our country's mission statement and the values of religious liberties and moral ethics that helped shape our society into one that has been so hospitable to Jewish people and members of all faiths.
Leadership: Influence Vs. Power
In 1968, as a college student at Cambridge University in Cambridge, England, Rabbi Jonathan Sacks decided to visit the United States and meet with the greatest of America’s Rabbis.
During his visit, every Rabbi he met told him that he had to meet the Chabad-Lubavitch Rebbe, Rabbi Menacham M. Schneerson. After scheduling a meeting, Rabbi Sacks, who was by then in Los Angeles visiting family, took a Greyhound bus for 72 hours back to New York.