Background
Chaim Mordechai Aizik was born in the Russian town of Beshenkowitz on January 12, 1902 to Sholom Yisroel and Chaya Treina Hodakov.
Chaim Mordechai Aizik was born in the Russian town of Beshenkowitz on January 12, 1902 to Sholom Yisroel and Chaya Treina Hodakov.
There he was raised in the ways of the Navahrudak Mussar movement, as taught by Rabbi Yoel Barantchik. The young Chodakov excelled in his devotion to Torah study, and in his piety and refined character. An educator and pedagogue, young Chaim Mordechai was appointed principal of the Torah V"Derech Eretz school in Riga at the age of 18.
While still a young man, in 1934, he was appointed the inspector of Jewish schools by the Latvian Ministry of Education.
When the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok Schneersohn, moved to Riga (from Russia) in 1928, Rabbi Hodakov became drawn to the Rebbe and joined the Rebbe"s staff lieutenant was during that period that he became acquainted with Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchok"s son-in-law, for the first time.
In 1940, when the sixth Rebbe escaped from Poland, he asked Rabbi and Mistress Hodakov to accompany him to the United States.
They were one of only a few families who received this privilege and became part of the sixth Rebbe"s official entourage.
Hodakov innovated many educational ideas and programs. His advice is compiled in a book on education entitled "The Educator"s Handbook." He was a role model for many young Chassidim in his demeanor and in his devotion to the Rebbe. Hodakov gave much thought to spiritual conditions in the Land of Israel and sent constant directives to the Lubavitch School Network in Israel (Reshet Oholei Yosef Yitzchok – Lubavitch) and other institutions there.
He died on April 23, 1993, after a brief illness.
The funeral, which was held on Sunday, April 25, was attended by several thousand people, many of whom had managed to fly in from various parts of the United States. The procession filed past Lubavitch World Headquarters in the Crown Heights section of Brooklyn, and proceeded to the Montefiore Cemetery, in Springfield Gardens, New New York
He was interred near the resting place of the previous Rebbe.