י״ט כסלו ה׳תשפ״ו | December 8, 2025
New Study Cycle Takes Off with Over 200 Participants
Since its recent launch, the new three-year cycle for learning Likutei Torah and Torah Or has quietly gained momentum, with more than 200 participants already taking part.
Since its recent launch right after Simchas Torah, the new three-year cycle for learning Likutei Torah and Torah Or has quietly gained momentum, with more than 200 participants already taking part.
The program, which sets a daily quota of 1–2 amudim and a weekly total of roughly 2–3 maamarim, was launched to make a complete study of the seforim both practical and consistent. Organizers estimate that the commitment averages about twenty minutes a day.
Participants say the structured format has already made a noticeable difference.
R’ Chaim Cooper from Westchester, NY, shares that his Chassidus learning had shifted from something extra to the center of his learning day. “Over the last few months, Likkutei Torah has become not an ‘addendum’ to daily learning, but a backbone,” he said. “It feels more possible to engage with Chassidus and I greatly appreciate this learning structure.”
In Melbourne, Australia, R’ Sholom Gorelik described the regular schedule and weekly materials as key to keeping up. “The well-arranged system of small sections to learn every day makes it very manageable,” he said. “The PDF sent out every week is very useful.”
London shliach R’ Avremel Raskin said that breaking the learning into smaller portions has made all the difference. “Dividing the Chassidishe Parsha to smaller parts, and dividing the weekly study into short daily learning, has enabled me to make a weekly goal and quota that is attainable,” he explained. “I started learning with someone every working day for ten or fifteen minutes, and every week we finish a full maamer or more. This short kvius uplifts him and brings a chayus in chassidus that he hasn’t had for many years.”
Other participants echoed the same sentiment, reporting that the manageable pace and regular structure encouraged steady progress rather than occasional bursts of learning.
To help learners stay on track, organizers prepared a checklist of all maamarim, along with weekly PDFs broken into seven portions to create a daily quota. Some participants choose to receive printed sets mailed to them, while most download materials and access recorded shiurim online.
The cycle includes all of Likutei Torah, Torah Or, and Shir HaShirim, with a maamar on the weekly parsha and on each Yom Tov built into the schedule. Each participant can follow at their own pace, though many are using the organizers’ checklist to measure progress.
The project continues to grow as Yud Tes Kislev is observed this week, with new participants joining daily. Organizers say the aim is simple: to make continuous learning of Likutei Torah accessible to anyone willing to set aside a small part of each day.
To download the moreh shiur, sign up for a weekly email, or arrange to have the weekly PDFs printed and shipped directly to your home, visit www.LikuteiTorah3Years.com.
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