One small thing changes everything.
Everything on this path has been an idea. This page is where the ideas ask for your hands.
A Mitzvah (MITZ-vah) is a Jewish deed — usually translated “commandment,” but the word is related to connection. Each one is a point of contact between you and G-d: something you do with your actual hands, in your actual life, that makes the invisible relationship physical.
Here’s what Judaism does not say: it does not say start at the bottom of a ladder and climb. There is no ladder. There’s a table full of doors, any one of them real, and the tradition treasures a single Mitzvah — done once, by anyone — as a complete, precious thing.
The deed is the main thing. Not the feeling, not the knowledge, not being “ready.” In Judaism, doing usually comes first — the understanding arrives through the hands.
The Rebbe built his entire worldwide movement on this one conviction: offer a Jew one deed. Not a lifestyle. Not a membership. One deed — because one act of light pushes away a lot of darkness, and because one deed has a way of leading, gently, on its own schedule, to another.
The Do section of this site is that offer, made to you, ten different ways — including all ten of the deeds the Rebbe himself campaigned for. Some take ten seconds. None require a synagogue.