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Ep. 11: The Chossid Who had 29 Yechidus'n, with Rabbi Shmuel Lew
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In this episode, Rabbi Shmuel Lew—Shliach and longtime educator in London, England—shares his journey from Torah Vodaas to becoming a Chossid, along with heartfelt and detailed stories that illustrate the Rebbe’s personal care and involvement in every aspect of his life over many years.
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
[Music]
And in in the next split second in my
mind,
I had
a an insight,
an inspiration. that this man who's
talking now is the greatest leader, the
greatest saddic, the greatest, the
greatest teacher, the greatest mak, the
greatest,
[Music]
the greatest builder of misters, the
greatest publisher of works of previous
generations.
Well, one of the greatest of the whole
20th century. But look, think of this
farm that ever gave out. Besides those
that he's inspired people to give out
and and and you know this all in a split
second but at the end of the day he is
your personal best friend and that you
can say about everybody in the world.
Anyone comes to is to him totally his
whole essence is given over to that
person.
I'm Yasi Cayman. Welcome to among
an ongoing faban about life as aid, our
vibrant connection with the Reb and
inspired living shaped by the way he
teaches us each and every day.
>> Okay. So, thank you very much for being
here. We had some minus vuim when we try
to do it uh on the uh via the internet
but uh I think it's better because now
we're doing it face to face panim. So
>> however it happens that's how it's
supposed to happen.
>> Exactly. And um that that's that's
actually I feel like that's connected to
you
because the way you ended up being who
you are is because that that's the way
it was supposed to happen. and you as
well and everybody. The real challenge
is what were we going to do with that
situation
and for that you need a reba and a
mashpia
and a good friend and you have to be
honest with yourself. That's what you
need in order to find what do I do with
everything that brought me to this
second where I am now.
>> Okay. So I I think we should talk about
that. May maybe you can tell me a little
bit what brought you to the Reb like how
how how'd that happen?
Well, I'm uh my parents
my father was born in Russia but he came
to America
and um as a teenager
in 1917 January in Tavis
Tavis he was was his day and um he
studied to be a lawyer at form
university which the top law school was
a brilliant brilliant person in order
that he should be able to be
self-employed and be able to keep
chabas.
And my mother lash was born in New York.
And I was born and brought up in
Williamsburg, which was quite a Jewish
neighborhood. It was much more diverse
than it is today.
And I went to Yeshiva to Vadas, a good
f.
And at the age of
15,
that was in the summer of Tshinv 1955,
my mother Shalom sent us probably the
first time they could afford it. They
really were very pressured financially,
post depression years until the 50s,
until the toughen youths sent us to
camp. And in Williamsburg, Rabbi Mosha
Lazar was a ba was very active in the
agura and he he was the whole
all the
>> in the camp in
>> in the in in Williamsburg itself. He was
also
>> he wasn't a bachan 770.
>> He was a bachan 770 but he was his
hafatra like many other people in those
days of labavich was there in
Williamsburg. He did what? Whatever he
did, he was being m people
>> because he was from there
>> in the in the good Israel on Betford
Avenue, 616 Betford Avenue. And uh for
example, if they had a um they put out
like a a monthly little journal, a
little de so-called, but he would put
input.
For example, they had an article about
sites. So it also had that it's a
beautiful mic to sleep with and like not
are not very aware of that
but in generally speaking he is a person
with and true and a sense of and my
mother had a very high opinion of him.
So he went to camp a good because he was
there
>> but he was involved in Williamsburg
because he was from there that's how he
>> he lived in Williamsburg a couple of few
blocks
>> he was involved in all these
organizations
>> he was involved in in um youth
activities and and
>> and he was in campa so
>> he was in campa I don't know what his
role was even doesn't make a difference
he could have been the truck driver
could have been the learning director
probably but he was there and he had a
spiritual position he ran the
shabis the shos singing him things
and the next year as is known
he came to the Reb with the idea of
making a camp
and the Reb called him in famous stories
about how the origins of camp
you know it's almost almost 70th we're
starting the 70th year this year this is
the 70th year actually
>> this
And so my mother heard that they're
making
that Rabba Lazar is making a camp. So we
went to auda not because it was a good
but because it was Lazar and the next
went to uh camp GR. I was a counselor. I
was 16 and a half years old and I was
not the youngest counselor.
>> Okay. And uh that changed by the time I
was a staff member between that
campaign
tov that's when I really met Lebar was
sort of something hardly knew about
you know it's it's one of there a lot of
groups there were plenty of groups in
Williamsburg as well that were just
coming building up and we knew that
labavich are people that are known for a
Israel
but it was quite remote from my personal
experience in campa
today
>> Montreal
>> Montreal so he was at the same like
group with me and he told me that
there's somebody there
>> the bakham in 770 would all go to Kagoda
>> people went to that's the camp there
were there were very few choices of
camps to go to this is one of handful of
from boys Jewish camps
and after meas
a lot of bakim would go for a week or
two to these camps as guests and
obviously while they were there they did
have
one of the bahim that was there in camp
a good that summer was a ba by the name
of Berl Shmp
and so he was older
um by several He's four or five years
older than us. And
uh
at night we were waiting for a shia when
title bomb used to give a sh every
evening. So told me look we're starting
a sh in Tanya
um with Rabbacha
>> and Rab
was there in the camp also.
>> He was a guest.
He after me I guessed he he was there as
a guest.
>> Yeah I read a week or two I read inim
from
>> he writes also that he was in this in a
for a few weeks
>> that he goes to the camp. Yeah, he read
he wrote that in his
>> all right. He went to camp and um
I consider myself very much
ideologically.
The idea of going to to join something
different
>> right
>> than where I was quite comfortable
was a very radical idea. Your father was
like a was was
>> my father was he never learned in
actually a deep deep
and he also was he made his own
as a but his father
studied in Mir in 1890s
>> okay so you're
>> and he he was he studied and he knew
closely he was known by brisk and the
native these people it was very lit the
family but my mother's side
>> they were from Presburg her father
learned in yeshiva in Hungary in prebber
and his father but
so for generations but you know it was
it was um and the atmosphere with us it
was you know it was just wasn't anti-
anything but it was uh um
I sort of had an identity
>> right
both at home and in my yeshiva and in
the the groups in the p to go with you
know activities I was not looking uh I
was looking to learn you know that's
nice but so this idea was so radical
that the kind of person I am I said yes
da because it was so out of he asked me
would you come and I went and we learned
that summer the whole eggeras marim at
the And um
it was very beautiful about must have
been about 10 15 brim that came in one
of the rooms there. I think there were
mixed feelings from the camp authorities
about it. I think they didn't want
parents to say you know kids were capped
somewhere else or whatever. I don't
know.
Um
I tell you one thing there were things
going on there which were
euphemistically speaking no you know a
lot less than that was going in the
evening things
>> I thought the problems only started
these days I didn't realize they had
problems then too
>> they were very different form you know
and
wasn't born
said about the Tyrus is
there in Ganeden already,
>> right?
>> So that's our that's our work to
overcome all those external and internal
impulses that we're supposed to
overcome.
Um so anyway, we had this sh we finished
it
and at the end of the summer
>> so B Shmp was giving the sh
>> B Shmp gave the Shia made us see him. We
learned through Sachuva
and before Rashashana,
which is a few weeks later after we left
camp, let's say a month later, he sent
me I could be I still have it a small
little shaver and with a handwriting
just like the Reb's handwriting I
subsequently realized
>> and a small
black pocket Tanya
And we were invited to continue learning
Tanya
in the yeshiva.
Now this was
um in in a dormatory on a Wednesday
night. It was you know it was an open
secret in yeshiva but it was outside
study time was after
>> they wouldn't allow it in the
>> after
going home doing your homework. It was
8:30 or nine o'clock at night. uh there
was shurim going on but even before that
or simultaneously
uh called me up and invited me to come
to the fabbran
of the
on the second night of
he said that's a special occasion which
is geared
and associated with bim from all
yeshivas it's not just for Kabad
specifically and that
>> and I said fine I'm coming that so that
was the first time
>> those years
would be for that
>> yes all the years all the years and you
see it in the
and even you see in Poland it was inim
but the all night
you know 11 hour or something was was um
for
it wasn't for especially
and it's now going to be 70 years the
coming
>> that I saw the and heard the first
um it was really
in a sense when you look back you see
key moments it was a transitional
moment it was a key moment in my life
and said I was there a couple of hours.
>> What was what was it like? What was that
moment like?
>> It was I was a a fun boy, you know. I
went to shul every morning. I was in
Tadas. I was happy.
Um I had I had a teacher Rabbi Palm Pal
was my teacher in the in the 11th grade
and he was the best teacher I had. And
it was really really ahead of his time
and he was good person and he was a big
figure.
>> He also he overcame resistance. He went
to see the rebate at moments when he his
own circles. He was a person with um he
invited us to his house for Malach in
groups of two. He he had um he was ahead
of his times I think
>> in how to relate to American
Baham that I was finished that year then
and just going into Rabba Shapiro
learning
uh that that year
and um but I was also an American boy
and I was in three sports and this and
that and that day was a turning point
that night that
was a turning point in my life.
Um
I don't like to bring in Kipa Shabba
Kipa but that was the day that the
Dodgers won the World Series for the
first time and the whole which was in
the Suka there was and this Brooklyn
night was very very much Dodger country
and
>> they were there were honking horns the
entire in the background
>> and to me it was an end of something
which is empty and meaningless,
just something to waste time with, you
know, maybe harmless, but it's certainly
meaningless
and the beginning of everything.
But it took me years to actually
appreciate that
and um it was encouragement of people
like and others and there we had they
teach there were several groups in I
mean Rabbi Sudak was a ba he had a class
that wasn't mine
um Krinsky you have a class to others
Mosha Bamilski I think maybe was himself
And um I studied most the two years that
I was a student in Tadas
>> earlier earlier. He was already we had a
connection. Yeah. But from the a family
connection there
>> and the person that I learned with
um most almost all of those two years
was Rabbi Gasha Gerelic.
and he had a very very profound effect.
Um he would tell stories.
He would bring tapes. Bring a tape then
wasn't a little iPhone or something or
it was a wall soak one of these big
heavy tape recorders. He play the niggan
haned alolu as sung in 770. The gave a
lot of this. He told stories about the
Reba and you saw his love for that and
he taught the it was Tanya that we were
learning and a classmate of mine who
lived on the same street the next block
Rabbi Yseph Nakman Rottenberg very very
big going and he was very close to
Labavich and had a cash with the reba
um he's a dian
former
Um he's in Baltimore for many decades.
Um so but he and I were very very close
friends
and we went to the Tanya
and we would walk home
and walk
to the bus stop on Robing Street.
It was late at night, you know, starting
11 o'clock at night maybe when we got
there after this year
and we insisted on paying the 15 cents
or whatever it was his coffee that he
paid for the bus. But he would stand
there and sometimes one and two or three
there were times he was there till maybe
1 2:00 in the morning
and he was talking he had to push it
away.
Uh so that was one thing besides the
also when everything was
which I'll come to in a minute. The
first time I actually met the Reba face
to face was a few months later. But the
Reb would give for Vadas in a one of
these half gallon bottles and he would
pour in some wine and add some more and
then they would make a fabangin
and uh with good gashmas in a nearby
shul. I remember I never counted but I I
can imagine there were anywhere between
50 and 75 buckham that would come
>> this after every
>> after the yeah after after the time the
gave the it could be a few weeks later
you know they worked out what was a
a suitable time
and um
so sometimes Gashando would also bring
there in Williamsburg
He was generally
uh pretty careful
not didn't take mashka very much or
anything but one time he did and you
know was it was uh very interesting
what he said to the r who was he was
giving us his apartment or something
anyway
um so that you know that had a a big
effect already that first year
I was at Seven Fabians
which I mentioned
>> that was the first
>> and then there was
which was in the Gayart ballroom which
was on the corner of Norin and Eastern
Parkway
and then there was Yuchvat also in the
same hall probably
and then there was Purim.
Now all of those four
were
during the week. You can take a bus
there. But then I also walked on
and also on second day Shabus
and uh Yam.
So
>> who would you walk with
>> in Williamsburg? There were a lot of
families. You know over the years the
Blosskis lived in Williamsburg with them
later years you know shabasim the whole
family would walk Simkin lived in
Williamsburg a real Tim but he didn't
walk he was unfortunately
disabled
um but we had a fbrangan
probably a little bit a few years later
than that um
twice a year
like Pes night and
or something
in
house in Rutland Street and
>> he was he was part of Mascus like he he
was
>> he was
>> he worked for the right
>> he worked for me I don't know if that
was his only job I don't I don't know I
never he's buried in London actually in
Anfield cemetery
>> there's an article in the we did on him
Yeah, few years ago I remember I
remember but I remember the article but
I don't remember the details. I remember
him
>> right
>> I remember many things that he said at
these fabangans because he was close
also with the satov and he used to you
know to bring messages sometimes.
Um
but so there was a there was Lazar Lazar
had a brother whose birthday was alfiss
I remember and he lived in Williamsburg
so he was like
the the shishers from the food company
they had a connection a lot of these
people this is you're talking here about
the 1950s and early 60s the goods and
the cuffs was not many years after you
do the fbe from Vienna or something some
of them.
>> So you had six fablings.
>> I I don't remember who I worked with.
>> Right. So but you had six fabans that
first year.
>> Seven
>> sevenans.
There was
then there was which was a very very
historic. It was right after the tragedy
of the other of the uh the terrible
tragedy inabad and theb announced at
that he's going to be sending
12 he sent to Israel that summer and
that's a whole chapter in itself
and then tamos was also very historic
and a thing which is not known
um it was the beginning of campa this
row and they went to camp on to Zion
Tamas that year before
the first trip went out there the it was
in Ellenville the first
Gas Royal ever
now what's not that well known it was
Jesus if I remember correctly was on a
Thursday pretty sure
and
at the end of the must 1:00 2:00 in the
Marshall Lazar comes over to me. He knew
me from Williamsburg. He said
>> you you were you were part of the camp.
>> I was going to be a counselor
>> and um
the f the very first staff meeting of
that camp.
The beginning of the staff meeting was
an address by Rabbi Khadakov. It was in
676 Eastern Parkway, the dining room of
the Yeshiva.
And Rabbi Khadakov came in and he took a
look around the
>> Where is that? 676 Eastern Parkway.
>> Where a few few houses
>> between Brooklyn and New York,
>> huh?
>> It's on the side of 770 between Brooklyn
and New York.
>> The This was a staff meeting.
>> It's it's on the side of 770 between
Brooklyn and New York. That's where it's
on the side of 770.
>> Between Brooklyn and New York. Yeah.
And but that was where the dormatory and
there was another dormatory in Lincoln
and Troy as well. But this was like the
main dormatory. The dining room was
there.
>> I once got a ride with Rabbi Ramos from
the and he was telling us about how the
Reb visited the dorm.
>> The Reb
>> how the Reb visited the dorm in on
Lincoln
>> on when there was fluip.
>> No, a different time. The Reb just did a
surprise visit
>> and as he was he was driving us as he
was telling us a story he made a sharp
right and drove us to the uh to the dorm
to show us which which house it is that
the that the Reb was there. Anyways, go
ahead.
>> Right. So, Rabbi Khalakov walked in. It
was a Friday afternoon. I was still in
Toras yet for more than a year beyond
that. I came there for this meeting
and
looked around the room
and they were all like basically young
people s you know 17 18 year olds you
know those are the older counselors
and he told a story that the
once spoke to a group of
in maybe it was in Ria and he said the
said
um you are fantastic people with a lot
of he says you have one
you're young
>> time will clear that as well
>> right
>> so he said that to us as well over the
years I thought it was a very beautiful
way to begin that
>> I was watching a fablangan yubis tamos
And the Reb said the Reb says the
opposite. The Reb gives a whole about
the younger the young can do.
And then in the next the Reb says and
even the older people can also because
they can act young. So the Reb has
flipped flipped it.
>> There was like a Jew not not at all but
he said that he met a lot of kabadnik.
He said they're all 40 years old,
>> right?
>> They said what do you mean? He says the
20 year olds are wise like a 40-year-old
and the 60 year olds are energetic like
a 40-year-old. Anyway,
>> so um
let's come back to that and after the
camp and this was a couple of weeks
later was a days before camp starting
camp's about to start
>> the meeting with Rabbi Khadakov. Yeah.
>> No, the meeting with Khadakov was a a
few weeks before camp was the first
staff meeting. Ah so you're going back
to when the
>> now yeah now was
and at the end of that and it was a very
fantastic fab I think was there as well
but the ma
it's my favorite one well it's one of my
favorite was my very very special ma
anyway
um
not that I followed it then but the
subsequent I learned it but I was there
it was a it was an experience
at the end of that
that's I think it was a Thursday night
and it must have been 10 15 minutes
maybe I I don't maybe I was going to go
back to Williamsburg
with mo I used to take buses anyway I
used to go home by public transport
>> and when I was inas I never was late the
next morning and that meant after shak
Chris, even if I slept three hours that
night, because I didn't want them to
think that somebody who associates
himself with Labavage is using that
>> as a way to, you know, to miss a day of
of of uh
>> and at that point they're already
considering yourself associated with
Labavage
>> in Judian after after camp
they knew I was close. Look, I you know
I had a circle these people
a lot of these types of people but we
were close to each other and people knew
I had it.
>> Mhm.
>> In fact a few years later I met somebody
who I was very close with inas and he
said to me he wasn't blaming me. He said
I just want to understand why did you
become Labavich?
What was missing?
>> Mhm.
What did what was wrong with what you
had before
you was? So I said I did not drop a
single thing
by coming to lab. I said on the contrary
I said the same fillin became a
different thrillin. The same gammora
became a different gamorraha. They said
all the experiences of before were given
a completely deeper meaning. I said, so
it's not that I uh abandoned or I I I
left anything that I had before. It was
the context. We say some some theb
showed how it's like
it's it's the idea that
both in learning in everything
it it introduces a person to a deeper
dimension
>> it says that it's the
it says that every area of Torah becomes
deeper and different as a result of the
way you look at it.
It's not it's not one of the four
it's
which which is penetrates everything.
It's so and this is in life generally.
It's a way of looking at life. It's a
way of seeing meaning in in in uh things
which otherwise would just be you know
preunctery just regular
and uh anyway so Mosha comes to me at
the end of his must be 1:30 in the
morning 3:30 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3 2 3
2 3 2 3 2 3 o'clock in the morning that
the Reb said
that he wants a minion
to go to camp Israel
on Friday
and have a sa there so that the
beginning of Israel should be
>> on Friday.
>> This is I heard it Thursday night. He
asked would you be ready to come
tomorrow morning 9:00. It means seven
hours later and I was here
>> and I went that that Friday.
I went
and um
and we had 10 people there. I remember
the lipids brothers. I remember some of
the people we and we had a little sa
there
we got back just before Shabas. Um
now the Reb himself also began the camp
and not also heard this is the Reb
started the camp by coming there before
the boys came out
>> to visit. I didn't know that I was then
in Williamsburg,
>> right? You didn't know
>> playing ball or whatever I was doing,
you know, and I I was very upset. They
didn't have the telephone connection
like you have today so much.
Anyway, I so I missed that one.
Um
so um we were in Ghana myself and two
younger brothers
that summer as a counselor
and in Zion I already
saw myself
as like
>> so be but before that you already went
to and you saw the
>> Oh yeah
was
and
and the rebel
Shamp took me and Rabbi Rottenberg Yosi
Rottenberg was his name uh to the Reb
after the Fabenion
I don't know why but they went upstairs
to the Zal for
I don't remember
>> there was another minion while the was
downstairs. the the had the and every
took it was it was
it was very with a tremendous amount of
of of energy and even as
go
and and um I you know I didn't know the
workings as far as this is the first
time I was ever anything like this what
I know is that they said may will be
upstairs
that's in the zal It was packed but you
know but I don't know how many people it
was packed packed and the was on the far
corner later for after
so the table was there in the way you
went around the
west you know that which goes to the
where the suka is you went there there
was a bit of a space and then in in the
duram in the south in in in the leading
to the
and that area the Reb stood and there
was a table and the Reb gave
it's nothing like the crowds that were
there 10 20 years later obviously but it
was still hundreds of people and you
went out through the
in 770
BMP took us over to
and he said
This was without consulting us
whatsoever. He said uh here are two
students of Rottenberg and Lou and they
want to ask the Reb for they should be.
So the said Rottenberg
what's the other name? He said Lou. So
the said
I agree to the but they have to agree as
well. And three times in my life
that I had
varying situ very varying situations
where the told me
I'm giving you special energies.
I think it applies to everyone whether
they said it to you directly or not.
anyone who wants it. But it's what you
do with it that really matters.
>> And I maybe I'll jump and tell you the
second time.
>> Yeah.
was when I was actually going to
um which was the beginning of after a
year of when I consider myself
and I was known by Shivas in also as
Labav.
Um
but the trajectory was I would be a for
lawyer very close to labavich you know
that type of thing coming to fangans
hang around with the guys
>> maybe living somewhere in tene or so you
know and learning d I don't know what I
would have been doing
>> but uh
but alavage
>> and also in I had my first I'll come to
that
then at at the end of G's ro there about
coming to
and at before
there was a whenever everyone went to
the to all the different sheling
and the rebba didn't start a coff till
after they came back wouldn't start till
about after midnight
at that
I approached the Reb and I said the
words,
I want to ask for a
that I should succeed in.
And the Reb said
or whatever the double, he said.
And uh and I gave him and as I was
withdrawing like walking backwards from
the reb when I was a few feet away he
looked after me on his reb's left side
and he said
you also have to do something about it.
So in other words, you know, you got a
double braha,
but it's not going to work if you're not
going to do something about it.
So this is a general approach of the
Reb.
>> This is a general approach of the Reb.
The Reb gives the
but we have to do something about it. I
think that's what the Reb said the first
night.
The Reb said that that we're going to
help. The Reb is going to help but is
for us
>> give much. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah.
Yeah.
So um now in Zion
I walked regularly
with Marshall Lazar. That's who I walked
with.
>> Mhm. just remembered that's who I walked
with ones
and cho
it was and fella lady also I I got to
know him
>> he's also from Williamsburg
>> he was no he's from Minnesota
>> he's from Minnesota but he he was
studying invadas in the dormatory so he
lived in Williamsburg
>> and um
subsequently married my late sister
>> he's your brother-in-law
>> he's my brother-in-law yeah now um
Yeah, in Zion
we walked
obviously, but also many times when
there was just rumors there might be a
which was not which was
there was not a given that there's going
to be a
But he was the
and um
so that was
about
a couple of months before my my birthday
is
and uh
the
I was learning Tanya with
Maybe they saw it or was maybe they
asked me if I wanted to go to for my
birthday, get a a direct bra from the
Reba. And this was like this was like a
major major step
to
actually go and see the Reba.
In fact, where many bhim ofas went but
they went like they went they would go
to see other
and gdim etc etc you know it was no it
was like a done thing people went for to
different people
>> you're saying for you
>> for for me I I didn't go I didn't go to
I didn't go here I didn't go to to any
of those I you know I I saw them I maybe
went sometimes to the tish or to the or
or something, but I didn't uh I didn't
entertain the thought of having to go to
them as an individual asking for Abraa
and this became a very special thing and
thank God you had to make appointments
anyway months in advance for this. Rabbi
had this little pad and he wrote in, you
know, for the next few months all the
nights that there was there were three
nights a week, Sunday, Tuesday and
Thursday. I think it was with older lady
years from it was only Sunday and
Thursday
and um
my was on a Tuesday
the first but I was starting months
before
preparing
and the preparation was they invited me
to come once a week besides Wednesday
there was the Shia Tanya in toas
I would come to 770 I I think it was on
a Tuesday
and learn.
>> So the bahim suggested that you do this
or
>> Yeah. And we learn with Gash who was
Gash Mandal who was he was my
>> right
>> I'd come I I remember there was a time
that he wasn't there for some reason
during the preparation. And I would go
once a week and we learned bosani teny
bay.
>> Mhm.
>> And they suggested
that I learn at bal as well.
And um they told me about which is
which was formulated by the
which had it was not necessarily for
is generally people who took on
themselves wash negasa by the bed sleep
with sites wear wool and talis cotton
there are certain
uh probably
that's when I started a lot of the
minhog in those couple of months
>> preparing for the you got
>> preparation for
and then I
>> was like a formal formal group then or
was like a Was ata like a formal group
then or was
>> it's a group which is mentioned in the
>> not mentioned but I'm saying what was
like they got
>> was it famous I never heard of it before
then or
>> was there like a meetings or anything or
was just you were part of it something
that you associated
>> it was it was I think it was something
like like kas you undertook something
was it was like an association I don't
know if they ever had meetings a good
question it would have been inro where
it was big
>> you know relatively speaking.
Um
the main things they I mean I took on
things for the and then I had a heavy
session.
He told me that the difference between
andad
or other people is
with others
you you can be an onoff you just you
know you say
um you don't you go to you tell them
everything your mile your you say
everything your problems and your
achievements as
And he also said if the tells you to sit
down, you don't sit down. And that I had
a big problem with.
I didn't I said it was beforehand. And
he was trying to explain it to me. In
the end, he just was frustrated. He just
>> What was your problem with it?
>> If a man like I was looking at the Reb
tells you, walk down the street. You
walk down the street. He says, you know,
>> your problem is how could I not listen
if the Reb tells me to sit?
>> Yeah. you know, and he and and uh he
screamed at me or some that's the minute
that that don't you do and uh by the way
just an aside parathetically
the the Reb was once going out to his
car I think that Simpson was the driver
in the early years and it was snowing
where it was it was icy on the ground
and the Reb told him
the driver to go in first not to go
around because it was slippery
and he just stood there didn't like
didn't move and grabbed his shoulder and
said ful is
obeying is bigger than everything anyway
that's what I heard
um when I went into actually
and I wrote to they told me I should
write that I learned I wrote I'm learn I
I was coming in there expecting
Mhm.
>> So before I was looking at that mimema,
I looked at the gamarra that I've had
been learning in yamas that week. I was
ready, you know, they write this, write
that, you know that I'm doing this.
So the first word that ever said to me
was zit,
sit down and of course I didn't because
that was the protocol. But I was
>> he told me
>> instilled it in you.
>> Yeah. Well, if he told me that's what
you do, I I I just wanted to understand,
>> you know, how does that fit in?
>> But my knees were wobbling already.
Anyway, just to meet the Reba was
a very very
one-on-one
and um in that
I asked the Reba about I was very sec I
you know I was learning and I learned
but I was doing pretty well in secular
as well.
Um and the plan the unspoken plan which
I would follow my father
footsteps be from lawyer that's all you
go you would go to what the bim did they
go to a night school in Brooklyn college
it was not
it wasn't mamish it was college but it
was more like you call a technical
school today to learn a skill people
learn accountancy they learned law they
learned something for a panosa That's
what they did. The Reba was the person
who really showed the world
that it's not necessary
that you're not gaining
not in uh intellectual development and
not in and and not in panos even that's
not you know that's not a key to those
things. Maybe you can elaborate a little
bit on that because I think there are
people that have this question a lot
like you know you need so much money to
live especially today how you going to
do it if you don't have the proper
credentials or secular education
what what
>> the secular education
that people get the I haven't I haven't
examined the statistics I did many times
the last time was probably maybe 10
years ago or five years ago you know
like I in the last few years, but it's
consistently
that when they say that um x% of college
graduates get jobs easier than others,
let's say 85, whatever their number,
they'll say
together with that they will say that
85% of them or 90% are not
employed in areas which they studied at
university.
I'm not talking about someone who goes
for a specific
um for a specific profession, right?
Someone wants to be a doctor or whatever
it is, uh they go into it. People they
study because they think they're going
to it's this is the ticket to a job.
It's not it develops your mind. It's not
it's not uh and and
the BBC
in England made a series of programs
about genes, about genetic
questions. And the man who made it was a
man called Professor Jones from Wales, I
think, and he was in University College
London. I'll tell you, I worked with
him.
He made a a series of six programs about
different aspects
of the genetic composition of people.
And uh one of them was
about weddings about marriage and the
you know combination of genes and and
and about you know what they call do
today about genetic diseases and
preventing them that each one had one
word name. This was called roots.
>> Mhm.
>> And it was sold in the whole world. And
so he met me a few times and interviewed
me about howim works in the film
community.
But the actual program which I didn't
see but the actual program
uh they had I spoke to him in my office
all the interviews but on the on the
camera on the visually they showed a we
went to in London.
>> Mhm. got permission with from the horse
and the kala and we sat together the
professor and I and they showed us
sitting at the wedding talking and they
played what we had discussed in the
office. So what were we actually talking
about? We're talking about knowledge and
education.
And he told me that the boys who went to
yeshiva in his classes in in in London
are streets ahead intellectually in
understanding all the concepts that
they're learning. He said their minds
are much more developed than anybody
else. This is a non-Jewish professor.
England isn't that high a percentage of
Jews. He said every time I have somebody
who came from yeshiva
their shop the mind it's developing the
mind.
Now if you need a certain uh area of
expertise whatever field a person wants
to go into you could do that you know
they could do that at the age you don't
have to start that at the age of six.
>> Yeah.
>> You worry about a kids there
he shouldn't have to become a shoe shine
boy.
uh you can do that when you're 15 or 20
whenever it you know it it takes weeks
or months a year or two even one of the
integral components of being aim
and whether it's
or
these days give us an opportunity to
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other and be better
what is the story behind each of these
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living with
there's another component to all of
this. Not just that whether or not you
need your credentials to get a job. I
think like what you're mentioning that
in American culture there's a whole
obsession with panosa from when the kid
is 5 years old and that's you know what
track is going to go on to or she's
going to go going to go and that's like
ingrained in American culture and it's
like this pressure that's put on them
since they're little kids. How would you
eventually make a panasa? I think the
Reb was saying
maybe you can tell me but I I believe
that the Reb was saying that the whole
way we get is from the so we have to do
the Aisha wants to get the pan and we
should be we should be obsessed with the
and he'll figure out the panas later not
be obsessed with how you're going to
make a pan because that's
counterintuitive. I think I think that's
also part of it. It's not not not only
the dangers or the issue of college, but
also that to refocus on on getting on
the on the source of the pan which is
the and therefore do if you if you're
supposed to be in yeshiva being yeshiva
or whatever whatever the situation is.
Does that sound right?
>> I 100% I had an answer from the to this
effect which I'll come to in a minute
about about
>> going to college.
>> That's how you started this.
>> Yeah. Yeah. We but you said we should
talk a little bit about the secular
education I worked my first 10 years the
Reb said a number of times both to Rabbi
Sudak and to my because I was I come
home sometimes 3:00 in the morning and I
teach at 9:00
>> you came home from what
>> the wanted me to when I went on in
England
>> the said that part of my work even
though I was working basically with
youth adult education and students I was
like Kabad House and Kabad on campus,
those didn't exist really.
>> And I traveled around the country to
different campuses. I met hund I had a
mailing list of almost a thousand
students
>> at that time in the in the in the late
60s and early 70s and um
I I I dealt with many students who went
through times where they couldn't get a
job.
And those who got jobs very very often
it was not in the field that they had
studied including Jonathan Saxs he's one
of the students who went to he became a
rabbi
>> he was a student that that you met
>> he was I met I met him in two and a half
years after I came to England but we
were very very close
um
the point is
the point is panosa comes from the aish
as you say I'll come to the settle of me
in a moment
and even
it needs a bit of discernment
to understand
that it's motivation
it's developing the mind it's it's it's
it's you know working and and that that
gets a person a good a good position I'm
not I'm talking here about getting an
employment Some people want to go into
business and want to you know uh it's
also something which the more you know
the more you know
uh
of of
the more it helps because it develops
the mind in a in a much deeper way than
people think. I know somebody in our
community. So he was learning only kesh.
This has happened to other many people
and they wanted to get a qualification
and go to university at some stage was
18 or whatever
and in order to take the necessary exams
you had to go through a school and I'm
principal of a high school of girls
where they do these exams so I can uh I
can facilitate this um study
which I did many times
and um this so this baka he studied he
did about four which people would do
five after five years in high school
it's a fiveyear course the last two is
mainly towards the exam the first three
and um he did it in six months maybe or
less and did all the different subjects
and he got an A star that's higher than
A in every single one. Then we said you
want to do the advanced studies and he
said that was boring. So I said maybe
you got a better education than you
thought
>> right
>> what you did you know you want now you
want to go into a field you want to
study it study it your mind was
developed that's what really matters
>> you know there's so many examples there
was another Baltuva a doctor and he had
a son a brilliant
uh he is he is a brilliant scientist now
in but he applied
for
a grant. The Japanese government gave a
certain small number of people who were
genius.
they got a scholarship to spend five
years for free studying in Japan
advanced science
and um
and this person was one of them this son
who's a professor
and and uh he had to he didn't know
Japan Japanese
that was part of it so you learn
Japanese now took a couple two three
months or even less I don't know what it
was you the that is if your mind is
developed
and then you decide which area you want
to focus on and you do focus
then you know um
it nowadays those who have are are
discerning you see what goes on at
universities
>> never mentions this too the social life
the political life you know they're
being used
>> for sure
>> they're being used and and
>> soak wrote after the uh after some
October 7th and the demonstrations on
campus the anti-semitic ones. So wrote
today a good day to ask me why I don't
send my kids to college.
>> That's right. Well, that's exactly it.
>> Yeah. So what did the rabb tell you
about your your
>> now? So when I went to let's come back
to my first
uh which was
>> this is the first
>> yeah I was invad spoke to me then
in Yiddish there's a different word when
you say you familiar and not familiar
it's most many languages used to be in
English
>> thou. Thou, that's right. Thou is is is
personal and you is plural or
respectful.
>> And thou is do in Yiddish. And and you
is in Yiddish or French you have.
>> Wait, no. You
>> and to
>> Oh, so you is do. No,
>> you is you is
>> okay.
>> You is you is plural and thou is you as
an individual.
>> Okay. thy
and um
so the Reb spoke to me
that you're writing formal that was the
only I was many times it was the only
one that said
>> formal way of
>> it was before I came to
and I wrote to the about the future and
this was a major
it must have been under the influence of
my lab
mashim
about whether to take a one-year break.
really today it's done by many people
secular non-Jewish even they what in
England they call it the gap year after
you finish high school you take a year
out to find yourself or something and
then you go to university but so I asked
the rebba
about
um
whether I should do what I was planning
to do like going to study law to study
at at at Brooklyn College at
after I finished high school. This was a
half a year before
or and and also I mentioned that I
wasn't ready to go into I was in middle
I was in in then you know finishing my
exams and things. So the Reb said
in June he said this year
he said I don't know how to say this
there and and and the Reb said you'll
certainly stay in he did not he did not
talk about where I'm going to be the
following here
but he did say
>> I'm not following the said this is man
that's ending
>> this man you're going to certainly
remain in that right just where you are
now that's I was I was this is February
mama
>> and this and the school term goes till
June
>> right
>> college that's which you write about
college
If you ask my opinion,
I think that this year you should you
should throw all of your energies
into Kesh as you yourself mentioned one
of the options and maybe more.
So as far as I was concerned that was
that's what you're doing
>> very clear.
>> Yeah. If you and then if you and you
knew you if you ask the rebba
you know many people say don't ask the
rebba if you're not prepared to do
>> and you mentioned Rabbi Saxs.
>> Yes. Rabbi Saxs, I saw a video of him
talking about that he asked the Reb
about being the chief rabbi and he he
says that I told my wife
before I asked are you ready to listen
to whatever the rabbi says because I'm
not going to she he wanted his wife to
agree that she's going to listen to
whatever the rabbi says before. So you
got Rab Saxs had the from from the
>> No, that's a known thing with
>> I and I've dealt with many many people
with hundreds of people over the years.
come up pretty high in their fields
besides Rabbi Saxs, other people in
secular fields
and they had personal
medical issues, fertility, different
issues
and um some of them were in touch with
world class leaders in the field who
might have said differently than the Reb
told them.
Actually I remember one uh very big
professional said
you know I I was brought up she came
from you know her grandparents were like
city
pol from Poland not the parents not so
much but uh she said when you ask
she said I'd be afraid
to go against what he said a fertility
question
Um
yeah so in that
told me this. Now the point is here I
did not prepare the ground
with my father so much. Not then and not
afterwards. I guess it was like just
you know an evasion maybe or you not you
know when I think back
>> you were a teenager.
>> Yeah. But you know,
if I had a
there's, you know, when I look back at
all the different things and the
bittersweet memories of of certain
things, I say if if I knew then, but
today it's from experience and and and
observation. I can't say I was when I
advise people I'm very often telling
them things which I never did or maybe
never would have done
but I sincerely believe that that's
really what I should have done and what
what's best for them that's all if
they're going to listen
um
so I mean
>> you you had things from the you asked
the different things that you were
struggling with in yourself right
>> there were certain things that you asked
theba questions about how to deal with
the of your own children.
>> That was later on. That was years many
years later,
>> you know, that was 16 years later.
>> Mhm.
>> No. Here. So, the trajectory, the
direction was that I was going to after
the summer, I going to Israel the second
year, the first year in Swan Lake. This
year I was there when they ever came to
camp on the Sunday Teslam
and
Um
and and um after camp I was to go back
to toas
and go in the evening to Brooklyn like
everybody else did. But now said this
that's going to be there for one year. I
did not intend or expect
to rem to change from or to be or to do
this more than one year. That was my
feelings then. Then my father was very
upset and etc etc. And I wrote to the
Reba and and then I was in camp. After
camp, we stayed for a shabas to clear up
the camp
and I went and rabbi Shiv, he was very
very close
to us always our family. Later on the
Reb told him uh when the Reb told him
that it's when he moved up to a higher
position directing the camp, the Reb
said it's not his inion. It's not his
job to maintain contact with individual
parents except for Lou.
>> Yeah.
>> He said that that that family you got to
stay with. So he was very close with my
parents. But anyway, he told me a very
uh he spoke with me went went for a walk
that Friday night dark
and he said, "Look, you know
that sooner or later
you're going to go to
it's going to it's going to aggravate
you. You're going to regret not taking
the move earlier.
And that sentence
was like the
we a whole buildup of all different
things. So I wrote to the
and I wrote that what my father was
concerned about
um pandas issue
and um I had a friend called Rabbi
Israel Rosenfeld of Yeah. I knew him
from Turdas
had one or two years he was with me in
the eighth grade then he was he was a
lab but then he was in camp and he told
me you come if you come to labavage come
to Newark that's where he was studying
and we'll learn together
so I wrote to the reba all about Newark
and this this plan and about
my father's apprehensions.
So the Reb wrote the following answer.
Newark or Montreal
Menlik.
You go to Newark or Montreal, which I
had not mentioned. I didn't know it
existed.
According to the advice of Rabbi M.
Mantik
maybe
the conversation
with your father
should be based on the content of the
first braha of benching han which speaks
and
>> that is the one that's
Rabbi Khadak when he gave it over this
was regular normal practice with when
Rabbi Khadakov gave over all in those
days
and very often he would elaborate and
this was obviously
>> was common then for the for the the
answers to come in the form of not
letters.
>> It was common then for the answers to
come in the form of opposed to letters.
>> Yeah. Yeah.
No, if you were in New York, if you here
you gave it the there was the desk pad
in the Americ's office which later was
called Mosquito. It used to be called
America's office.
>> There was a pile of it would pile up in
the course of the day and several times
in the day the Reb would either buzz in
and ask whoever was in the office of the
maskeim to bring the letters into him.
Sometimes the Reb himself when he came
in would walk in and take letters.
That's where there was a corner of the
of the of the desk pad on that in Rabbi
Khadakov's desk. That's where letters to
the Reba were piled.
And um
so and where Rabbi it was obviously
that this was what his job was. part of
his job was to elaborate on answers of
the many it was he was known for saying
and to add to the answer of the he
wouldn't say a word if it wasn't from
the but in my case it was written
>> right
>> so you have to elaborate
>> on it it's said the answer is based on
and he said that the rebb told him to
say that in the first braha of benching
Hashem gives pas to the entire world.
That's where the pasa comes from. And he
doesn't have to worry about pasa. It's
it it comes from Hashem and and uh and
and you're not going to, as you say,
you're not going to lose out because you
follow Hashem's word. It doesn't mean
that you can just sit at home when the
time comes to work. Go to the mikvah 12.
>> Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. Anyway, so
that was first this the other part of
the answer actually the first part of
the answer but Rabbi explained the
second part first what you should tell
your father. The other part was Newark
or Montreal. This was already opening up
a whole new thing. Leaving the country,
I never I'd never left
>> United States.
>> I hardly ever went to New Jersey. I was,
you know, a Brooklyn boy, that's all.
And uh suddenly
Montreal,
a foreign country is brought up.
Um so um and the Reb said, "Ask Rabbi
Menlick." So I anticipated
you know a grueling
searching
at least 20 minute for her see where
you're holding to know is this yeshiva
appropriate or that one so I was
thinking about the amra that I had been
learning and different things and I went
to rabbi mantle it was during the seda
in dal in 770
and I introduced myself and I told him
the rebba told me to speak with you. I
told him the answer.
So he said, "What did you write to the
Reba?" I said, "I had a plan of going to
Newark deliver to Rosenfeld."
He said, "Uh, did you mention Montreal
in your title?" I said, "No, I didn't
even know about it." He said,
"Montreal." So the whole interview was
maybe 60 seconds. And I I always think
maybe the devil wanted to show me
what
a it is. Mantik was a real real deep
>> as opposed to thinking, "Oh, the Reb
told me to figure it out, so let me
figure it out." No, he just needed to
figure out what the Reb really wants.
>> That's right. That's right.
So that was that was uh then I went to
Montreal and that's when I went to and I
said I'm asking for
um
things were pretty tense with my father
you know and I had a whole about it
early it was four o'clock in the morning
invat
Gimu and I brought brought this up and
the Reb told me one thing was to go back
as quickly as possible to Montreal.
Don't get into arguments.
And the Reb said if you if you are
success get the yeshiva in Montreal to
write reports from time to time to your
father you when he sees your success
there
college is
told didn't just say one year he said
he'll see the college is not for you
>> that in that
>> uh it was a very very
powerful every was powerful every single
whatever it Because even it was
so-called
>> was also you were asking the rebba
questions.
>> Pardon?
>> You were asking the rabbi questions
about what to do. I think like other
people later that experienced they
didn't really ask the much. It was more
>> Yes, they and also they never tell you
sometimes but a lot of them would never
asked me questions
>> like what
>> pun
>> like what
a lot many many you know there's a
famous one where in tough
on isakus
now the context is it was a Thursday
night
There were hundreds of people. This was
Wednesday was
Thursday was Friday night's chabases,
the most precious chabas of the year.
And was going to sit there the whole
night. I was there with a son. My son
Penny was 5 years old. Took him I took
him to the Reba for sukus.
So we went in relatively early. It was
probably about 10:00 at night.
Um,
and I just wrote asking Abra that's all
for myself and my family. I didn't I
didn't anticipate and I didn't want
to
keep the rebba and I didn't have any
special thing to ask either
and um
yeah actually it turned out to be one of
the longest it's the only I was in I
think 29 times but this was the only
where the mas opened up the door in the
only time
and the next night with Friday night
before the ever came down it was Rabbi
Grona he came it was good friends he
said why do you keep I said I didn't I
said I wrote one line in my settle I I
told him a little bit of what the said
he said I thought you're too young for
that kind of a thing
>> but uh I was 34 that's label growner
said
>> but what what did the deb say
was a few things I'll tell you One thing
he told me
um
he said that I my main work then I was
teaching also but my main work was with
student and youth and adult education
like as I said house and campus type of
work. So the Reb said when you go on
campuses
you will meet female students was heat
and garnished who keep nothing of. Now
this is tish. It was exactly a month
after when the Reb
launched the
Nabases campaign and um the Reb said
they keep nothing but you speak to them
about lighting a candle for Shabas
on the condition
that they light it before
sunset.
And the Reb said twice in that little
part of the holy
they will obey the rule not to do after
not because of the Reb just said they're
talking about people who keep nothing.
It won't be because of it'll be because
they're honest,
>> they're straight and they'll and that
will be a condition you make with them
so they'll do it. He said tell them if
they missed a week better not to light
that week and to light after
that was one's one part of it and a lot
of satellite stories that happened as a
result of that sentence of the that
another thing
there were so many things like he asked
me
did you hear from soand so lately it's a
famous I miss yides
about a a certain um communal figure.
Now I dealt with ba mainingly with young
people. I spoke to you know bene bri
adult education groups groups but my
main uh the work that I had to initiate
was going to youth clubs. There were
many in those days. Lady years you
didn't have it because you had people,
you know, had their own games on their
on their devices. But those years there
were thousands of young people in in
groups on weekday nights
and universities especially
all the campus I all throughout England.
I had I had regular shi yudam weekly in
London on Wednesdays for King's College
and LSE London School of Economics.
Thursdays in University College London
and Hill House which was nearby
uh Monday in Queen Mary College Tuesdays
I used to go to Cambridge one week and
Oxford the following week. So that was
way traveling and then the other
campuses I would I would come either for
you know to speak for an evening in
Bristol different or in Birmingham or
for a Shabbaton Manchester in Scotland
even Edinburghough
it was my work with with students
and um
so
um what was I holding
>> you talking about the
You did you did the the work on campus
before you went on also in in New York,
right?
>> Yeah. Yeah. I I started here. I tell you
the truth, my first experience was in
the winter of Tshin when I was 19 and a
half years old and Rabbi Nissen Manguela
brilliant
is very very brilliant and
he was going
to downtown Montreal. We were we were in
uh Uptown, whatever it was. We were in
Park Avenue, a certain Jewish area, but
the uh it was one of these big shoes.
And there was what they would call today
singles or something. It was people in
their 20s mainly. This was 1959, 1960.
And he asked me to come with him. I was
a younger ba
several years older than me.
about five years older than me. But he
asked me to come with him
and I did
and it was like an hour an hour and a
half walk coming back. We probably went
by car before Shabas and we were there
for and there were hundreds about 200
students and young people and I was
fascinated
by the questions how he answered it. You
know how he respected every question.
You know he gave a compliment to every
question or elaborated on it. On the way
home, we analyzed what had been said and
and how, you know, ways of answering
questions. That was my first experience.
I think
>> you also went to Penn State. That that
was
>> that Penn State was Yeah, but this was I
was in Montreal.
Okay.
>> Penn State was
>> You were married already?
>> No,
>> right before.
>> I was 21 years old.
>> Okay.
21 and a half and um I was in 770 though
those two years
and six people went for that chabas.
Those were
Rabbi Shamv
was one and who who
are the other the six people
>> who organized this thing to go? It was
actually Rabbi Binyaman Klene
because
when he was a baka years before then
he was on meas in Texas and in Waco
Texas he met a man by the name of Rabbi
Goldberg
and um interesting person I found out
years later that the Reb's mother
lived that Rabbi Goldberg's mother lived
in Crown Heights and that the Reb's
mother had a room in her house in
Lincoln place in the early you know when
she first came to uh America in Ting at
the time of that year she was there
anyway. So, Rabbi Goldberg
then became the hill rabbi in Penn State
and he and Rabbi Klene had maintained
like he was a big massuda. Rabbi Klein,
he maintained even later years after we
were there, he always had contact and
the Reb would ask Rabbi Klene,
what do you hear from Rabbi Goldberg? It
was after Yakov Khaneka
was was in this
and
>> you're talking about after the the
>> years later after our Shabaton and and
years later and he was aid and he
couldn't eat and Rabbi Goldberg's
house they ate
and Jacob Khan couldn't he was a guy
didn't know olive based three years ago
and he couldn't eat in his house and he
was upset
>> Arabic. Yeah. So the Reb asked Mama
Klein and when he went in one time he
said what's asking with Rabbi Goldberg.
So he said he feels bad
that this is his can I in his house you
know. So the Reb said tell him
that it's that all of yanak
is his credit.
>> Okay. Okay. So now explain why because
Rabbi Klein knew Rabbi Goldberg and
Rabbi Goldberg
>> from from Waco
>> made.
Yes. He became he was a contact with
Rabbi Goldberg. I'm I'm telling you a
little bit about Rabbi Goldberg
>> because that was the Shabaton and Khan
Kaneka became from
>> and this went on for every few months
would ask him and he would report to the
Reb. Then eventually got married
and his wife
who is of by the way.
She
was very knowledgeable
and uh she was like a bakov graduate
type of girl
and Rabbi Goldbury had sons and there's
no schools there
hours away from anything
and she was the teacher
of Rabba Goldberg's sons
and at that time he appreciated what the
said that you're going to it's your
benefit it's
your reward and uh the Reb asked and
Yama Klein told this to the Reba and the
Reb didn't ask again what how is he
doing anyway let's come back so we went
there
bomb got
Yas and his one of his protetim
Rabbi Yasul Goldstein
Rabbi Maman Khine
>> only the men went or was the
>> only men went Okay. Rebel Shamiv
and myself
along
and with those four
and there were about 300 students people
didn't really you know today
Orthodox Jews Jews you walk in Manhattan
you see people you know and in many
various communities including London but
then around the world there are pockets
of
hundreds thousands of and people see it.
Then it was like it was like a dream
and they they had on the lampost and on
the trees they had like a poster with a
handle li painting of the dancing and it
just said an experience or aidic
experience Friday night is in this time
hundreds of people came
>> so it was just a a wild phenomenon that
they wanted to see
>> it was like you meet them firsthand we
sang with them and we spoke with
them and the whole chab is and you know
and um at the end and they were very
taken
two weeks later Rabbi Goldberg invited
what what worked out retrospectively
this was the first pisha ever there was
but it was Mila
Rabbi Goldberg took a group of about 15
students
for Shabas
to New York for Shabas.
They came Thursday night. It was
arranged and three of the students had
um
one girl Susan, she was in for maybe at
least 45 minutes.
And then there was Ronnie Kaplan,
another student, and Jako Kaneka, Jack
Kanoka, he was no.
And they were the two bim were in for
over an hour and a half each.
And uh look, that's a story in itself.
all of these uh
gave a first a general um small five
10-minute talk to all of the 15 with the
rabbi and he spoke about uh
and the rabbi dwelled on two nudis and
he spoke in English.
One was that a lot of people have a
mistaken notion of what chabas is. They
see it as a ne they define it by what is
forbidden
and that's not really what it's about.
That that is part of it but that's the
byproduct. It's what it is. It's it's
the kadusha the spirituality that you
gain on shabas.
And and the second was the fact that
it's it's not any shabis
which the essence is and the idea of
increasing in holiness. Those were the
two
of
>> Okay. So
so you were you were discussing this
long that you had.
>> Now so what I was saying yeah
>> is that my work at that time
>> was with young people with students. You
ask me how it started, you know. Uh
>> I feel like we I feel like we need a a
week over here to see till we get until
all the information comes out.
>> I'm happy to share the information. It's
you know I always think I I whenever you
make a nephesh
where men I heard from him countless
times. He told me he lived in London for
years
is the supposed to be not what I
achieved. You have to see what I did,
but it has to be focused on what I could
have done more than that.
>> Mhm.
>> And that should be a story. That part I
never really excelled in.
You how could I what what did I miss?
I'll tell you stories what I you know I
I tell you the stories I tell are 1% or
less of what happened. the people you
met and it worked and this happened,
that happened, but then there's all
those times that you just uh blew it or
you just you just sat and read a book on
on the plane or you slept or whatever it
was.
>> Um,
so I I I tell these stories I hope it'll
help someone else to be able to do the
same thing but better. But
>> it makes people feel guilty that there
was there's always things. Is that a
good thing? People should feel guilty.
>> Guilt is not a good feeling. It's it's
it's you know.
>> So what is it?
>> People should feel inspired. People
should feel u empowered and people
should feel you know the only thing that
matters
is now.
the 20-year-old
and the 80year-old
uh each of them is making a mistake
in their general attitude to life.
And ironically, they're both making the
exact same mistake. The 20-year-old is
saying, "I'm young. I got all my options
open.
Please God, I got energy. I'll have
health. I'll have this. I'll have that
and I'm going to be able to do this. I
have so many choices. Wow. Spoiled for
choices.
The 80-year-old
is living with nostalgia, good things,
regret, anxiety, what's next,
aches and pains, whatever it is,
whatever they they live with, they're
both making the same mistake.
that took the eye off the ball which is
now today you today is a lifetime. You
can achieve something today which will
last forever. Whether you're 20, whether
you're 90, doesn't make a difference.
It's it's it's
using that day
and and that's all exists. Remember
Morgans
there's no there's no yesterday there's
no tomorrow there's just a little bit
today so what do you have to worry but
he said it's today
you you have something you can do so
it's not it's not a guilt I I whenever I
tell the stories of things that happened
which were successful those are the ones
I'm going to tell Right.
So, uh I say to myself,
>> we'll do another podcast with with the
failures. We'll do another one.
>> Yeah. You can learn them, too. But my
point is that because you don't want
people to see you as such a great guy
because it's false pretenses.
So that because of that great
um
anivos
just because you are a modest guy and
you don't want to have false pretenses
you should deprive them of something
because of that that's certainly not on
the cards the many letters from the
people wrote to the
why do you expect me there the most
important thing he expected of us was to
share with others it's not about your
it's about what the wants in the world.
It's about and that means it's somebody
else helping them. And many many letters
of in Hebrew and in English where people
wrote
feeling that they are
not really worthy
and not really doing what they should be
doing in their own life.
And um so why should how can they
justifiably
speak to someone else
hypocrite
and almost every time that says two
points
number one
why should that person suffer because
you didn't live up to your potential
you're missing something
but that you're stealing from the
another person because of your you know
you're adding something. Secondly, by
sharing it with someone else, you'll
inspire yourself as well. That's the way
you'll be able to go some way towards
correcting the mistakes you made.
>> Omission or commission.
>> Okay. Fine. So let let's let's go back
to learning from from the stories. So,
>> so there Reb told me at that long
you it was probably 15 minutes but on
that night anything more than a minute.
>> Mhm.
>> I had of two minutes but that you could
write a you know there was something to
learn from it. things that the Reb said
a oneliner at the end somebody you know
went in like fornication a birthday but
it went right it penetrated straight to
where you were and what you needed
the night before the bris of our eldest
son the visits from England well those
usually connected with other things
anyway so let's come back there said
have you met have you heard anything
didn't say deit have If you heard
anything lately from, we'll call him Mr.
X, a communal dealer. I was dealing with
students mostly, adult. I knew him, you
know, and he probably knew me, but uh it
wasn't my normal field of work. But it
happened to be that I met Rabbi
Bernhard, Rabbi Nakman Bernhard from
South Africa. It was before he was a
kabatnik
himself, but he was very very much the
reb person. He saw the Reb as the leader
as the Mosha of their generation
and I knew him well from South Africa
for my visits there. I was there twice
by then.
>> Before you were in England?
>> No, I when I was in England, I was sent
in in three years later and in Alf.
>> There's no there. No, that that's a
whole story in itself because they asked
me to come to and South Africa is a
different I have a very special
closeness with South Africa and with
Rabbi Lipka and the whole
yeah very very
>> okay so
>> but let let's come back to here
>> so theb said
have you heard heard from him. I said, I
met Rabbi Bernhard
and he told me that he met him and for
breakfast.
He was in England as some official
person, you know, and that this person
was I I said it in Yiddish.
He strongly criticized the Reba about
Miu Yehudi.
Actually, it was very much strong. What
Rabbi Bernard told me
was that the man was so vehement
in his criticism of the Reba
that he saw there's no point to even
try to, you know, to try to convince him
that he's wrong.
And uh so what he did was he made a he
said he said I don't agree with you at
all and let's change the subject. He
just didn't discuss it.
That's what he told me. I think I told
that to the as well.
So the said to me,
do you know why he said that?
Which is remember to come to me. I was
30.
>> This person was a person of influence.
>> He was
>> Yeah. Okay. and and he he was a person
who had made a statement. I'll tell you
a little background which was not
directly said. He had made a statement
or written an article in some somewhere
that is not such a problem.
>> Mhm.
It's a diversion of energy or whatever.
He belittled it. And the Reb in probably
said something which was not you know
but that's what the Reb said to me. Do
you know why
he said that? It's because somebody
told him about me about the Reb
or maybe even the difference between
lashes
is a negative aspect of a person which
is true. You're still not allowed to say
it just because it's true. That's what
the isra
is slander. It's it's a lie. It's not
even true. So say he says something
which is
maybe even
and
namely that I attacked him in public
and that's why he's seething inside of
him.
And um then the Reb said a sentence
mention
I don't speak about people I speak about
ideas
in other words if theb said something
which didn't agree with him is not going
to compromise his idea obviously
but the is not it's never a personal
attack it's never it's never about the
person he never said somebody said and
therefore the Reb spoke about and I
something which which which contradicted
what he said and then somebody told him
and and as the Reb is saying it I'm
standing like a soldier at the by the
and I'm listening to this
and in in the next split second in my
mind
I had
a an insight
an inspiration that this man who's
talking now is the greatest leader, the
greatest saddic, the greatest, the
greatest teacher, the greatest mak, the
greatest,
the greatest builder of monsters, the
greatest publisher of works of previous
generations.
Well, one of the greatest of the whole
20th century. Think of this form that
ever gave out besides those that he
inspired people to give out.
And and and you know this all in a split
second but at the end of the day he is
your personal best friend and that you
can say about everybody in the world.
anyone comes to the reba is to him
totally his whole essence is given over
to that person and therefore this all in
a split second when you get back to
London
you're going to get a meeting with Mr. X
by hook or by crook.
>> You're thinking this.
>> I'm thinking this in a it's a second all
the whole thing was in a second.
>> And as I'm thinking it is,
it's not a good idea for you to go to
him and tell him that I said this.
And as I'm thinking that, I must admit I
was like a bit of a wise guy. In my own
mind,
I said to myself, I'll ask Rabbi Vogle.
Ra Vogel was very close with this person
and I'll speak with him and I'll tell
him he should go and and set this man
straight you know whatever and as I'm
thinking that a second later says
it's not a good idea if you ask a fellow
to go to him
and the said if the man came to me
personally I could I could straighten
him out himself
I could I could explain it to him. It's
not to you. It's not for someone else of
an why
said there were 63
mitzvah in the toy.
Miu Yehudi who is a Jew is one of them.
If this person does not want to
cooperate with
oni,
let's work with him on the other 612.
And I consider that to this day
as a oneline
lesson
direction and directive in life in
everything in in parenting in marriage
in business in in in
just socializing.
You have a choice of seeing a person.
You don't have to compromise your
values, but you see where you agree with
the other person and work together
to build something with that joint
agreement. This is the premise that we
learned from the Reb on how how we're
and how we every single Yid
because
this is the premise they're doing
mitzvah that that that they can or
they're not doing that one mitzvah that
they can't.
>> Yeah. Yeah. And Deb said explicitly,
Rabbi
Greenvald,
he was when he was when they when Kabat
first came there
in in the late
and the and in the especially they went
to all the kibbutim. The people in the
kibbutim were from Russia. A lot of them
they came from similar millure, similar
society.
And they but they had you know
jettisoned a lot and uh he would go and
speak about and what unites us and sing
and you know be them and the many of the
other
would
criticize him.
>> Yeah. the about people. They were
Russian. They said, he said, you know,
you're being too soft and too
pussyooting with them, you know, tell
them like it is. Tell them, you know,
just tell them off.
And he so he he he felt that that's not
going to be an effective
way but he look he heard it so much that
next time he was in
he mentioned it to the Reba
my grand my daughter is married to his
grandson. At that time he told me this
story.
He said at the time he said that um the
Reb said to him
if you tell them that in Yiddish if you
tell them that you're going to create a
barrier a wall
between you and them.
He said you you go and you build on the
good. That's that's the only way to work
with a person doesn't mean compromising
your values or not saying here's what I
hold but you you're not out there to
criticize you're there to get the person
where you are holding there's something
you can do
is brought to you by
we live in a chaotic world a world where
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we do not have the ability to hear and
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Thank you very much. Enjoy the rest of
the podcast. So, let's go back to um
I think in the chronological place where
we were holding, you're you're in
Montreal, then you came over to 770. So,
how did how did you how did you come
over to 770?
>> Actually, that's a very very important
question. I didn't know how I can ever
get it happen.
>> You were stuck in Montreal.
>> I was Yeah, exactly.
And
I loved
the Reba. Everyone does, but I love
being in the Reb's presence.
I love being bad. It was less you know
Davening but whatever it was
thinking even when I was here already or
before when I came in just for a while
the fabian was like you're in Grenaden
you can see it you can get a taste of it
from the videos today if a person really
wants and you focus on it if it means
something to you you know allow it to
happen instead of anal people today some
people analyze themselves am I feeling
it enough you know just get into the
whole thing. But then
>> your son your sons
>> Yasi on the podcast was discussing this
that through a video you can feel it.
>> Yeah. Well, Yasi himself gave a talk
somewhere abroad
about.
>> Yes. He spoke about this in the podcast
how he
>> and then somebody told him you know what
are you telling us? We didn't see it. He
says I was six years old then.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. He did a lot of he when the things
that he made and his articles he asked
first as can I know her a brilliant
memory
>> and he's putting it into book he said
yeah
>> so but you're you're saying that when
you're in Montreal you wanted
>> you want to be with the reb saying every
time you're by the
>> yeah yeah in Montreal
you are entitled so-called to go in the
yeshiv is to go in with a bus or with
with hired a train carriage a car of the
train
four times a year
and pes
and
tamuz
and tish.
Those are the four times you went in.
Besides that, you need a special
permission to come. Even those times you
were not allowed to go unless you had a
special
paper
signed by the
>> anhal and you had to be in order to get
that paper a you had to behead in
and b while you were here in New York
you had to be forhead in
I remember because I used to be I was
four years there would and Rabbi
Mantleik in Nigla
and if Aba came and he asked Rabbi
Khadakov going to or something he said
who is thine passport
where's your passport
um I have somewhere like a blank like of
that form there was a form of that
um I didn't know you know I had in my
mind the reb was concerned. I don't know
because I had um I wasn't writing to the
but but you know there was there was
tensions probably I I wasn't in New York
that much and my mother wrote every week
and every every couple of months or so
my father would write a couple of lines.
Yeah. He was like, you know,
>> I could one of my biggest regrets in
life. I could have handled him
like like it would have been the
smoothest thing in the world.
You need a little bit
and a little bit of experience. Anyway,
by the way, he was a very very a man of
incredible integrity.
He was moish for Shabas Mameish in a way
that you know people wouldn't wouldn't
know. There's stories about him at the
university when he was he didn't take
exams. They took a chabas and people uh
denounced him to the people who had to
give him his qualification
>> right
>> and he stood his ground. But now when we
were getting married, which is now just
almost to the day, 62 years ago. Uh
yeah,
which was Tesv Thomas.
>> You're talking about how you got to 770
first.
>> I'll tell you about my father and then
we come and and and then you'll
understand.
>> Okay.
>> Why why I thought
I thought it's because of my
relationship with the father. My father,
the Reb felt that not being the whole
time together,
>> right?
>> Because he he did tell me
leave as soon as you can. By the way, he
I told him I told the Reb
I'll come back to that about about I
wanted to get my father to go into
and uh the Reb said he explained to me
the spoke to me even though I was
already in he was calling me do but he
was explaining things to me 4:00 in the
morning to a a boy who was under 18
years of age.
He said when you ask someone to go visit
someone privately
it's not usually the done thing. He says
tell them to come to
midb
sitting there with beards without beards
and he'll hear a little bit of what's
spoken that will have some effect
and the reb suggested that I should get
he says it's too early to do it now but
for purim this was so six weeks
is going to be
>> Pimai
>> in advance said get him to he said asked
me who is close with him who does he
know here and he asked if he knew wise
didn't he I said the person he knows the
best is a shiv
so theb told me asked a
to arrange
and to arrange a the first thing the
rebba said was arrange a lift
a a a ride.
My father never drove. I don't know if
they ever knew this. But he said,
"Arange
a a lift for him to come to that Fabian
and he'll be there and he'll hear a
little we speak that's going to be
have an effect
and Rabbi Shivita and arranged with
Yanka Winter
he went to my father. He used to which
was you know he my my father liked him
very much. We talk with him in Russian
you know he he liked the whole idea of
him from the camps he was in the summer
camp two of my brothers had the bait
mitzvah in camp. So my father had been
there
and when Araml said would you like to
come to the Puran?
So my the first thing my father said was
will you send me it's a Russian word he
knew he could speak to coach
>> the first thing said was get him a lift
get someone to take him the first thing
my father said to was
>> are you going to send me
>> and then he came to was there for maybe
an hour told him I think if you listen
on the tape you can hear tell Mr. was
here and then
which is another six weeks after
you know it's it's 10 weeks after a kid
of 18 years old was in your
I went over for about one of the last
people maybe 1 2:00 in the morning
and asked me did your father tell over
anything from Puressa
Anyway, so uh
like kept
kept kept account kept account of it
>> later when we were getting married
five years later invas
and the was going to officiate.
So my father
>> that's a whole another story in itself.
>> Yeah. Yeah. But my father part of that
story is my father he the massage of his
son's wedding he has to go see him. So
he went into with my mother
on hey Tamuz Thursday night 10. So he
didn't go in as part of the officially
his pretext for going to the is because
is is in the edition.
Yeah. But by that time he had he been to
that he had been to the
fellow
>> and
as well.
>> Mhm.
>> We had for the fellas.
So I mean you by that time it was like
smooth running. It was not me,
>> right?
>> So I did something I never did before or
after which is um when my parents were
going into that night. Hey Thomas, I
walked in and I introduced them.
>> It was it wasn't the of Kala.
>> Uh I went in with my kala separately
that night. that was a separate
but when my parents came it might have
been before I came as I don't remember
if it was before or after I went with my
kala but we opened the door I opened the
door and I walked in and I said
this is my father and mother or this is
my these are my parents and I withdrew
and closed the door but as soon as I
said this the stood up and walked around
the table and gave him shalik
So my father said to the in Yiddish
I don't think that I deserve this
recognition this covered because when my
son was in your yeshiva the first three
years I was not happy about it.
My father was like very straight person.
So said
what do you say today? He says
today I'm happy. So says
let's talk about today.
>> That's that's what come now. How did I
get to go to 70
inshinf
after having been four years
in Montreal? four beautiful beautiful
years which I
you know in in in the wrong way but I
wanted to I want to be in summer 70
and um
I spoke I didn't write in it settle this
I spoke with Rabbi asked him to present
to the rebba
that uh my brothers is
we're going to camp Gasro
and I think I can have a positive effect
on them if I'm in the camp
and uh so he asked the said if you feel
it then go to the camp
at the end of camp the end of the summer
I told
that
if I learn in summer
I will be able to
have a career learn with my brother was
going to college I think I don't
remember if exactly when if it was he
was going to the evening college
and uh and I didn't again I didn't write
this this I asked orally through Rabbi
Khadakov
and the Reb answered if you can if you
if you if you're going to if brother
with you stay in se 70 that's how I the
I was in in summer 70
I got engaged at the end of that's a
story in itself and then I I was a full
year. So I was in summer 70 and then I
was in
that four special years. I mean you know
all the years all the visits the tish
and the whatever it was these were these
were you know powerful moments.
I remember the after Shabas Fabian
with the hot summer days
and you walk out and going home whether
it's in yeshiva and co and crown heights
was majority of like you know modern
orthodox auda style people were walking
going foratia chabas afternoon you're
going home it's 5:00 you're just going
home for suda shabis
and I I used to How can there was such a
light, such a powerful
gilly
taking place?
How could a person just be next door in
a manner of speaking and and not to uh
go in?
Um years later I went to Russia
and I met the guy you know I met people
who were from Libavich but from litish
kind of
I realized there was a community there
there was non-religious which is known
but it was also like religious like a
man told me battle tob was his name I
met him in Moscow and the old used to
call him nag
So one private moment while we were
there over
I said to him how are you? Where are you
from? He said I was born.
So I says why did they call you? He said
>> he said I went toic school. So there was
another you know
>> it's existed before
>> I I didn't even I was thinking when I
was in Crown Heights you you know it to
our feeling
the whole universe was there
was changing the world
every word that the reb was saying every
was an experience
if things happening
And I say it's accessible to people
today as well
and the people who experienced it also.
You know you can you can have withdrawal
symptoms or you can just some sometimes
it just you know it it gets in the back
of your memory
but it was something and it was
something
effective
in
the world. It would it it it change
things. If you allow it, if you
surrender oneself
to hearing what the Reb is saying,
then one thing you know, you're going to
be doing you're a you're going to access
your own inner self and b you be doing
more of what you should be doing than
you otherwise would.
So I I heard someone mentioned that
Benashem wrote a letter
to your um to to your mother-in-law that
he never saw the be as in as much as he
was with yours.
You agree with that uh statement?
I don't know what happened.
And I I'll tell you something that um
that letter he he wrote in his own
handwriting
>> in English.
>> He wrote he writes I have it I have I
sent it to all our kids you know I kept
it all the years. It was to my
father-in-law and mother-in-law
>> and he z and Rosalin he said dear
and uh he said I want to speak from my
heart and that's why I'm writing in
English. I want he wanted to speak to
them. He spoke English bench.
>> Well, you see he wrote there. It's what
you know very that's an at one time I
had to go I was invited to speak to the
Kabad in Israel. It's about 50 years
ago.
>> Mhm.
>> In the summer I wasn't there's no school
anyway then.
And I asked through the mosque. I asked
orally again asked
should I accept the invitation?
And the answer was if you can speak
Hebrew in a way they should understand
it, accept it.
Didn't it didn't work out then. But now
I've been to Israel many many times when
or in Zoom over the last few years uh
given Fabbranians or talks.
Um I always think of that answer. The
Reb didn't say if you are grammatically
correct or if you have nice uh uh words
or or poetic. He said if they will
understand in other words the main
object of abran
is the it's what it's what you're
saying. Will they understand what you're
saying? That was the question. Mhm.
>> And uh Rabbi Beni Shiff wrote, "You
could clearly understand his English."
You clearly understand it. And what he
wrote was, "In my 43 years in Labavage,
I never saw one of the Rayan push." I
think the word he used was pushed
uh like this one.
Now
um he also told me
Ben.
>> You knew him from here from New York.
>> But
>> you knew him here in New York.
>> Where Ben? I knew I I knew his sons. He
was a known a known figure, you know.
>> Yeah.
But um he told me that he met the
Rebana's
mother
in the street the day after aid was on a
Wednesday.
We met Amati Shabas the first time I was
a assistant head counselor in Ghana
Israel. I went back to Swan Lake.
>> That was the first interaction you had
with the Reba's mother after the shik.
>> I
>> Yeah.
No, I I mean you know I mean everyone
know she used to come to Fabbrang and
she came to Daving. I don't remember
when the actual first time. It could be
when I came back from England when I had
a direct but I would with her dozens of
times met her in the street. she would
stop and say something very relevant
or she would sit in the front of 1418
president where she lived like in the
summer when it's very warm and if you
went by she'd said no she'd ask you
something about your wife has this is
that whatever
um but she met Rabbi
and and he said that she told him
they told me that you have become a
whole shak. Uh that was the day after
I think which was it was one year
minus a day before our wedding.
Um yeah so that was
>> so the bench made the
>> it's it there were different factors the
I mean the first factor was
yeah you people were
you know at that time and I I I was I
was in heaven.
>> Mhm.
I I didn't need anything that was that
was grenaden for me just being by the
rebba every day and
but anytime any came they usually came
to my parents to my mother sham and she
would speak to my sister who know what
you know I did didn't come to me this
one
Rabbi Layma Minkowitz whose birthday was
yesterday
he was
of Rabbi Aram Jaffy, my brother-in-law,
my wife's brother, only brother
surviving,
and
he went for a walk with me on Lak Buma
and suggested the idea. What happened
was his brother his
had been home for Pes
and he said to lay just as as a just
asking for advice he says I was home for
Pes and my sister
is a very person
and it it and it was England in those
days there's no you know the
he says she needs a complete total
that could be acceptable to my parents
or whatever. And so lay
mention my name. He had been with me on
a pula in Long Island, a wedding in Long
Island.
And there was a woman that challenged us
about being from or about beliefs and
stuff. I don't remember what it was even
a middle-aged woman probably Yiddish
woman like a certain a certain type
and I answered her
but at the end she said what makes you
so sure of yourself
and Alma was very impressed with with
her saying that
>> right
>> so he told this and then he went for a
walk with me on was like that year
and he told me about this world would
you consider it as I said look whatever
comes up I would give it to my to my
mother I said but
that's the first thing I said so she
know what you know we're
you know that was the beginning of it so
that was the background officially went
through David dokin in those days so
he's the one that I spoke to directly
but Ben Shmp was really was he was
orchestrating
the whole thing
and um
um
yeah and my in-laws were not that
happy. My wife was only 18 years old
when we met which we married a year
later she was 19.
>> So um
>> those days it was common to have long
those days it was common to have long
engagements. No, not the Reb was always
against long engagement.
>> Why do you have a long engagement?
>> The Reba says, "Wait till something."
That's a whole story. That is a whole
story with letters from the Reb when
they wrote my father-in-law. Let's we'll
come back to that. Why was such a long
engagement, but I could also explain it
in terms of the norm at that time.
Um,
don't forget she was 18 years old. She
was a teenage bride. even at waiting a
year, she was only 19.
Anyway,
um
my in-laws
even though they were looking for her
different
what what was available in Manchester be
from person they were from people but
you know
there was no question there was no labav
in Manchester
that I know of.
Um, so
they were a little bit worried about it.
Betsy Shmp spoke with them.
My wife meanwhile went to the the
Detroit camp
where the fellas were. My sister
actually was there
and she was coming back about five days,
six days. She was coming back for Shabas
and they were traveling back to England
on Wednesday on a flight.
So my in-laws, my mother-in-law
especially was holding things back. So
she said, "Okay, you can meet a M Shabas
3 days before they're traveling. So
worst times you meet someone if you're
interested
you know come to England in in in the
winter or something they write to each
other you know that type of arrangement
you know months and and writing and
meeting nowadays you say zoom WhatsApp
so we met and they were staying by men
that's that was their place where they
used to stay on Avenue
>> and you wrote to the reb about meeting
Obviously what um no I wrote to I was in
camp I was a sister I wrote
I asked
>> should I take an interest in and there
made an arrow with the which crossed out
meant
and whether that particular person was
arranged will meet Mati Shabas. So I
came in for Shabas.
It was your basis
and um
um
I I came in just before Shabas. I was in
camp the whole time was you know
and Mati Shabis it was arranged that
we're going to meet at 10:00 at night.
It's middle of the summer.
>> Mhm. Tom was
at uh
we're going to meet at Albany and pre
and president at 1000 p.m. and my
brother-in-law is going to take us to
the Staten Island Ferry
and I had nothing. I was shaved dick.
So he gave me his watch and the $10 bill
expenses and he dropped us off
by the ferry
and we went, we talked whatever, you
know, and we we took the ferry back and
then took a taxi for that $10 in those
days was worth like a $100 today
probably. And uh got back about 1 in the
morning to the house to Melmpton's
house. My mother-in-law says that's I'm
coming back one o'clock in the morning
or whatever. But uh
that was the first meeting.
Sunday was the Reb's major the big the
weekday for
and the Reb said the then about is the
whole story with
and the interpretation fascinating
beautiful tells what it tells you what
is about also
>> and
Monday
it was arranged I'm going back to camp.
As I said, I was the assistant head
counselor. I did things there,
but we're going to meet we'll meet for
one minute. Uh
>> your assistant.
>> No, Sunday we didn't meet. Sunday we
didn't meet my and I because it was the
Monday before I go to the bus to Port
Authority to go back to Gany,
we'll meet for half hour at Mandel
Shmp's house,
which we did.
And then I went back to camp and on
Tuesday I get a phone call.
I don't remember from whom
that I have to come in
very urgently.
What happened was on Monday the Reb said
that he wanted to meet my in-laws.
My mother-in-law was not well, but my
father-in-law went into
and went in and the Reb said, "I was
thinking about two possible dates,
you know, either
or or or or June
>> said for engagement."
So he said, "We don't even know him."
Yeah, this is we that's met 48 hours
before.
Uh he said, "What's he going to do for a
living?" That's he asked. So,
>> it was the day after that
>> lamp lighter.
>> He'll be a lamp lighter. Yeah. So, um
and then he asked he said, "Oh, no. This
not the other." Like that. It was like a
a major a major shock. So they gave a
message to someone that they wanted to
meet me.
So the next day, Tuesday,
I came back in in in uh
>> You have no idea what's going on.
>> Who
>> you then? You don't know what the deba
said.
>> I don't have an idea now.
63 years later. Oh, I was in camp. They
told me you get engaged. You're engaged.
You married. Anyway, so I um looked you
had
people did a lot of homework, you know,
even in Tambodas.
So
um
I came in together within
we actually born the same day. He was
also coming in for so we compared notes
and um Tuesday was at
and uh so we waited till after Maid
and then Mash was there also Ding with
minion MV and then we went to we walked
to Lefort Avenue to meet
uh and then because the next day
Wednesday The plane was going back. It
was a chartered flight which my
father-in-law was the one who actually
arranged it. So the next day it was
going back. So it had to be done that
night to meet.
So we walked back and I said nice you
know I said look you know nice meeting
you. Whatever is going to happen in the
end all all nice people. And uh I spent
maybe
10 or 15 minutes at Mendel Shmp's
house upstairs there with you know
meeting them and saying hello and
I don't always remember anything that
was said and they said go for a walk
together.
You can imagine a boy in the middle of
Crown Heights and we walked for about
maybe
you know a total of maybe a half hour
but we walked down
uh connectity or Troy and went into
Carol this one person that we bumped
into it was a boy about 12 years old
Mosha
>> Katlosski
he was a mine from the day I ever met
him
he was a very I met him in Kang Gang as
well when he was about seven years old
and he was a I said who is this kid I
asked the people there I was I didn't
know him anything about him cuz he was
he was there in the office and he was in
the youngest bunk I think or you so
young seven eight year old kid and he's
telling them what they how they should
be doing whatever they're running how
they should run it differently
and you could see that he you know
somebody with
>> anyway So, and and then
I went back to uh oh that Wednesday
morning Rabbi Khadakov called me in
and he said that said
that you have to finish it today.
Their plan
was
now you've met two three times you go
you you know you know each other a
little bit but that's not a you know and
it's over three days. So what you're
going to do is you write to each other
and then maybe come to England in the
it's November, December
and you get engaged if it's if
everything's going good and they talk
about a wedding, you know, more like a
more conventional type of thing
and Rabadin
and he says says you got to finish it
today.
um
one way or the other this is it.
So I said in four words I said
it's something depends on others not
just my decision.
So he said the s of a is
that a couple meets
and if they see that there's something
there
each other's parents
and if they agree as well you write to
the fora.
So, in other words, you've met, you see
if she's if if you're willing and she's
willing. this all had to be done within
an hour or two and and um
and then you asked for
so I went to Mendle Shmpton's house
and I spoke to my
soon to be Kala
who I never called by name anyway
because I was in Ara took us to the
Staten Island of Ferim
But he said he introduced us. She said,
"This is my sister
and this is Mindy's brother." That's how
we went with no names. So anyway, and we
so we talked and decided spend the rest
of your life together
and uh we asked her that I told her what
you know say what do you think and this
that the other and we had already spoken
about main main things about different
different ideas besides you know many
other things camp she was very active in
camp in England
over those couple of
And then
um the parents met. My father was at a
business meeting. He couldn't even come
that afternoon. He came later on.
He was there by the but my I think my
uncle my grandmother came and met. We
met in the mil restaurant
the parents
uh
>> on Kingston Avenue. Kingston Avenue
which is now the drug store. It's was
owned by Spritzer
>> when he asked the Reb he should buy it
the Reb asked him is it suitable for a V
or a mitzvah
and he said yes. Now in the whole
history of that restaurant,
the nearest thing to avoid
was his own son's mitzvah was there.
>> Anyway,
um so we met there. I think my uncle
came with my mother instead of my father
and uh my mother's brother.
Oh yeah, one second. So Rabbakov told me
the sad will be she's going to go into
because there was in the afternoon in
those days for the guests from England
just before they take the buses back to
the airport to go back a minute
a two minutes.
So Rabbi said she'll be able to go in
with guests from England
and uh you write at settle
and I'll take it in between two.
I said maybe I can go in.
He says no you're not you're not a
visitor from England. That's for
visitors from England. So I I had to
give it in but I got the mileer of
getting an answer right and I write it
any time there's any engagement and I
have chance time to write it I write
those are the words and um
she went in
and uh
it was the f it was the first time in
her life that she was in alone. She
always went in only with her parents.
She was 18 then.
And she went in she said told me she
said that she told her I made up my
mind. She didn't say what the said he's
a very good baka this that whatever told
her good things
and Ben Shiv
was in
anticipating everything. He pulled out
of his pocket a butler mashka
and he pulled out of another pocket
small klesk little shot glasses
and he was giving to people around there
70 somebody came in bomb and came said
what's going on here and they says you
know it was just an engagement then we
went to the airport
and so we had I had a little
conversation off there while they're
waiting for the plane. Then we came
back.
I think it was all the coaches. We went
came back to 770 that night. But when
when we were when the coach was going
away,
the reb was smiling very very
powerfully.
And my mother-in-law Allah Shalom, Mrs.
Jaffy, Mrs.
told my mother
in England we don't do it like this.
It's not even been in the Jewish
Chronicle. Did you announce it in the
paper? She It's not even been the Jewish
Chronicle. I didn't give her a ring.
That's what she said. So my mother said,
"I got news for you. We don't do it like
that in New York either." He said, "This
is exceptional."
And that night my father my father came
a bit later. He wasn't there when we met
and at my that night when the Reba came
in he gave a very big mama his whole
face was illuminated smile to my father.
Um,
so that was the Shiva.
>> So why was it a year?
>> And now why was it a year?
My father-in-law said to the Reba
that asking the Reb when should the
wedding take place?
Uh, if
the rebad kadushin,
we'll wait till next summer when the
planes come into America.
And if not, we'll make it in England in
the winter.
So,
um, on that there was a correspondence
with several letters,
some sharp, a little bit sharp. Um,
>> didn't the stop stop being?
>> Yeah, he already stopped
basically. There were maybe four
exceptions, I think.
>> So, but your father-in-law knew that
your father-in-law knew that there's
going to be an exception.
>> Yeah.
>> Yeah. But yeah, but that year itself in
there was an exception.
Mhm.
>> Um
it was an exception,
right? Um
what happened was
uh the Reb said
when he wrote to the Reb, should it be
in the winter in England with not being
tradition or in the summer being
tradition? So the Reb said the time and
place of a wedding is decided by theim
and uh in this case I don't see what's
the rush
since Mrs. Dafi feels that he's young
and um the it'll give the time to
complete his studies
better to wait till the summer. So that
that would look like saying okay now he
wrote he connected the two as
conditional if the rebution will be in
the summer but then say as far as
concerned
a relative
got married recently a few weeks ago a
few months ago is a relative and the
was a ro of an who
>> I don't know we try to work out I don't
know who it
And there weren't that many weddings in
those days.
Was not such a crowd.
>> And um uh
it was back and forth. My father-in-law
wrote one letter very very sharp
saying what do you have against me and
my wife just because I don't have a
beard and my wife doesn't wear shait
she'd wear hat you and they are they are
100% yours they'll go wherever they ever
sends them whether he said you know and
uh he sent the letter off he hadn't made
a copy he used to make copy all diaries
were based on letters he sent to the
deba and my mother-in-law saw the letter
and she said it's it's too sharp
whatever he wrote like and she's made
him write the next day an apology
letter.
>> Mhm. But um
uh we didn't have any now a bit of
background
which I believe if people say what's the
reason you can't underb to try to
understand you can't understand
and if you do understand
I promise you it's not the whole story
it says in that the time in whatever
time it gives whatever reason it gives
lives there's something deeper as well
deeper but I I want to give a bit of
background when my father-in-law was
being in this it was through a tragedy
they he came from
but they knew meant
so he told me those two things
>> they we just had an article in exploring
the story
>> that's right yeah recently
>> how your father-in-law
>> Yeah yeah yeah
And um
so um
so
that's that was that was the connection
but he became closer and the Reb told
him to become active
in the
Manchester Bethden. It's like uh it's
like the Va that's what it's called.
>> Mhm.
and he got involved
and the Reb told him to work on making
peace
between that Manchester
and it's it was a whole board like it
was a whole v and the which was like the
and there was a lot of tension between
and he succeeded in that they had peace
and they had coexistence
mach
is a very firm bas. It's a good ha
and and um but he made that peace
between them
and he he in order to do that he was
active and eventually he was elected the
president of the it was called the
Manchester
board that's what it was called and he
was the president
he he made a charted flight and brought
the wedding over to New York in the hope
and anticipation But there was no
confirmation that there was going to be
and the wedding invitations
there was going to be a on Thursday the
was on Sunday
and on Thursday you test there was going
to be a for the public.
So the invitation to the was it was over
300 people there. It was a big like a
wedding with a mitz with everything.
Um
but when he came to New York, it was a
Sunday
and he would always have a as soon as
they arrived and then he would have a
longer while they were here like this
time would be and one before they left.
So when he went in ones that Sunday,
my father-in-law said to the
um you don't have to answer me now,
but you must be
he said there's no he said I cannot
justify I'm the president of the board
of deputies of the of the board
and there's no way I can justify it's a
patch and punish to the whole that I
took the wedding out of that city. The
only justification would be because
there was going to be
never didn't answer but he smiled.
That was
Sunday.
Hey Tom,
my wife and I went in. Never told him
what to learn the things to learn before
the wedding. There was 10 days that were
left.
The Reb asked me when are you going to
the oil?
Uh before I said I'm going I said I go
everyone used to go the the whole went
to the oil three times a year
>> and those are the three times everybody
went with buses and everything. So I
said I'll go I'll go with everybody but
is to go on on the and he said yes and
um
and then the rebba asked me why is the
ka the was supposed to be 7:30 at night
or something 8:00 at night late
why is it so late
is the hall not available before
so I said
why that wasn't part of the arrangement
anyway. So,
I'll speak with your future
father-in-law about it.
And uh when my father-in-law went in
later on, so the told asked why is the
so late on the to fast so long.
So my said if you
don't mind fasting for two weeks
it's not necessary. He told him to make
it earlier
at at 5:00. I I it could be because on
the original invitation it said at 5ish
anyway in the Hebrew one
>> in the Hebrew side.
I don't know that's again speculating on
the reason but the of course when the
wrote he underlined five underlined 5:00
sharp
and it's interesting
because the Reb did not was at the oil
on the day of the wedding
and
it was 3:15 and the Reb was not back yet
from the oil and there would always be
Ma before it was 4:00 And said they say
the ma at the at the cabal pum which was
in
>> sea said he's gonna sign the condition
said
>> that you had to send out a a new
invitation
>> right
>> to everybody about the change of time
and venue of the and the said it should
not mention his name
the's name on that and you should not
take it to the printer there was no
quick print and all these things that
you have today home, you know, homemade.
You had to go to Rabbi.
He did a very, very, very big favor
because he had jobs.
And the Reb said, "We're not allowed to
go to him before
Thursday." That's
Sunday is the wedding. So, you have to
print a revised invitation and send it
out. It should reach everybody in New
York and in wherever it is before
Shabas. They should know not to come to
the Koopa in Glendale Jewish Center at
at 7:00 at night.
>> Right. So you're waiting and
>> we had a a separate panim and
>> we are pleased to tell you of the
following changes. So, so back to the so
it's the cabal and your father-in-law
says
>> December 70 and then so it was already
4:00 4 and my say
everything went on it's all on tape by
the way they made a tape my
brother-in-law made tape even of the
and
it was then about a quarter to 5
and said to Rabbi Khadak we have to go
and he Rabbi Khadak
Reb is not back from the oil
and when he comes back
it's unprecedented that the Reb should
have a before the first thing the Reb
does when he comes back is he comes back
from the oil
my father-in-law said the Reb said 5:00
and he underlined it twice I think
about 5 to 5 or 4 minutes to
Rabbi Krinsky drives up with the car
quickly parks. The goes out and the
meanwhile everyone the is set up and
everyone's ready ready you know
everything's all set to start and Rabbi
and the Reb told we the is first
and it was started
>> 459 and 60 seconds
>> exactly exactly
>> it's interesting because 7 minutes after
the ended it was a beautiful sunny day.
There was a downpour which lasted for
about maybe a half hour.
>> Mhm. just after the
>> and uh so the said
on Wednesday night there was a Tom
getting married
near Montreal
and um
it there's so many different things
mixed together here and he had wanted
that but he had no father there was his
mother.
Now he was they were in Yehiddis the
same night because the wedding was going
to be there was no Yehis until then
probably on uh on on
it was going to be on Jud Alfam
Wednesday
four days before our wedding
and the Kala was a Burough Park girl
and they the they had there was a
brother who was a little bit like
like a little bit uh
like
going his own way.
And they asked the reba what to do.
And the rebba said, "Invite
to the wedding
and introduce him to your son
and tell him that's me to invite that
son Kala's brother to my wedding on
Sunday."
>> Uhhuh.
>> And uh which which I did and they did.
It was, you know, it was there's so many
sensitivities involved here,
>> right?
>> And I and so we were at and and Labour
was at my wedding. They when they picked
me up on the shoulders, they pick him up
also to at the wedding,
>> right?
>> And he made at our wedding uh labor and
and in the wedding pictures is that Bak
that brother,
you know, but the Reb said you can
you're not going to I went to Rabbi
Mustam and he said I said the Reb said
what and he did it. I I you know he he
he was 100% in his rights to say
>> yeah you can't
>> I have you know I have a got a whole
backlog here
>> and he didn't
>> okay so
we can continue talking
the whole day and night for many days
>> so much more you can go down the avenue
of each of these things
>> but I want to uh no I want to conclude
that
I mean the rebba had so much I would
call it investment
so much
>> investment in you and your
and
what what does that mean for you and
what does it mean for all the that that
that hear about it? What what do you
think?
I mean this is very you know here is
I had
which haunts me in like
when Deb told me off for not learning
as I could in the
wasting you know I don't remember how he
how he got on to the top by the way
whenever I was in with my wife in those
days the Reb would speak in English.
There were two exceptions.
One was this one I'm going to tell you
about and one was the night before we
went on
but um the would speak in English
exclusive to my wife. Sometimes he asked
something and I would answer in Yiddish
and Deb would trans. go since you said
he would translate what I said into
English for the benefit of my wife.
But here the Reb spoke only in Yiddish
and told me off very strongly
and uh he said he said I promised your
father that you're going to become this
that you know I don't remember
all the different things that you're
going to be and said
that was the third time when the told me
it depends on you so I can only promise
which is an interesting sentence what do
you mean I can only promise ifever
promises but the is never taken away.
You have to remember
at the end of the day your life is
yours.
the the the
got the whole it's about what you do and
those are there if you don't ignore him
and uh the said these words
I can only promise in other words
depends what you're going to do with it
it's not it's not just a once off by the
way it's your whole life every Today
there are probably several or countless
opportunities in everyone's life where
you have to make a choice
and all and get the
but can manage
can promise and can give it but he's
promising that you have that potential
live and I I was in a state of shock
In fact, when soon we came out of my
wife says, "What was he talking about in
Yiddish there?" So I said, "He's telling
me that I'm not learning."
>> There was a report that you weren't
learning. What? There was a report that
you weren't learning.
>> Was it the
>> was somebody reported to obviously?
>> Yeah.
>> You didn't have to be a genius, you
know. Mhm.
>> Anyway, so and and I just stood,
you know, I don't know what what what I
should have said, but the Reb said,
he told me, "Your silence will achieve
nothing."
Those are the words.
And it was about 40 years before I ever
even told over that story.
That's from the
you know I I got a whole podcast
>> of of which which which which I I don't
take at first choice what to say but you
ask what do you feel
when I'm when I'm
when I'm feeling the way I should be
feeling
and not
interesting told me after
and he was in yeshiva in London and he
was I was there and he told me to speak
in English I should speak for in front
of me in
I couldn't and he he told me off really
very very sharp then but then I met him
privately a few days later and he said
now is a time
that you don't hear the Reb's voice we
have to talk we have to be the Reb's
voice You've got to, you know, you got
to talk to what I do when I'm doing what
I think I'm supposed to be doing
is to try to share even though it's
sometimes they're very personal and and
and intimate
memories and recollections,
but I feel that let somebody else take
it and run with it and and and uh use
it. So whatever any no one could live up
the was perfect asb
look among no vacation no predictable it
was close he like there's a about about
said
that they have a in the in the past I
know that they have a a share in the and
he told don't take it why does they have
a share it had to be given over
and that's
knows that besides the community each
individual has a role they can play and
each individual should play that role
and should be doing what they're
supposed to be doing and and uh so I
feel that by sharing the positive
focusing on the 612 that whatever's near
I can help other people I can't think
around you I'm not uh uh
the consequence is not what's important.
The important thing is what can I do
today? This is this is my lifetime. And
if I can do something which can help
somebody
to be what they're supposed to be,
that's what I'm supposed to do. And that
somebody it's not just me. I'm I'm in of
high school kids. I tell that to 13 year
olds and 12 year olds and 15. They said
I have a sibling who's this that. I said
your behavior can make a difference.
Every person,
you know, by taking themselves seriously
in in a in a good in a happy way
can feel empowered and can really make a
difference to that and and that's how we
bring Mashiach. It's like step by step
the pieces are falling into place with
all the problems with all the issues
outside and inside whatever one can see
that things are happening. We don't have
to write the whole script exactly how
and when and what but it's happening and
that's how we're bringing Mashiach.
Thank you very much.
[Music]