![](https://blogger.googleusercontent.com/img/b/R29vZ2xl/AVvXsEjBV_rc4MQ9MkDIVKQBWny3UcvuBqtDttuwCBYXkH05PzsW_vLKOnr5CD4N5Nkb9KTF11NkiVPqvp51oFDsDNfuJ35txIqED3vppYhbJFxF9sqDN0nTQfILKV4ydldXQkSV0qmVD5mp9iJL/s320/1508.jpg)
At a superficial glance, the Torah's commandment that we love our neighbor as we love ourselves seems peculiar and virtually impossible. How can a Jew from Yemen be expected to love a Jew from Belgium, when the two have so completely different customs, mentalities, and attitudes? How can a "Chossid" love a "Litvak" when the two have been arguing for centuries already about the proper way to serve HaShem? How can a religious Jew love a secular Jew when the two differ on so many basic issues?
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