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An Evening of Connection with Rabbi Shalom Rosner
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Introduction by Benyamin Kaminetzky Rabbi Moshe Hauer Rabbi Moshe Schwed Siyum with Rabbi Shalom Rosner How My Father Shaped My Life with Rabbi Shalom Rosner
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
hi um ESS I would like to welcome all of
you to our home um as we all know we're
in the period of Bim the period of
communal mourning between uh Shas and
Tish that kazal mandates that we view
as like walls closing in on us with no
place to hide or no place to run um
picking up on this theme developed by
mes Shapiro we're in this period of
Crisis p
as a result of
theel and the breaking of the luos we
lost the Torah in in a sense the Torah
we then received on yum Kipper via Theos
were entirely different and on the other
side we have Tish when because of
theim the re received after 40 years in
the midbar was also that was then
detached
from was entirely different and
therefore subject to horban so in this
period where we are mourning the
diminishment as it were of both the
Torah and of er
Lau uh uh it's now um and it's of course
our goal to earn back these original
luos and the original concept of eral it
is beyond meaningful that we're here
tonight enhancing our commitment to tal
Torah uh and to erel by marking the
completion of M
ofi which is kind of exactly Torah is
and by hearing the Torah from a ad God
from Isel R rasner who will be speaking
about his wonderful father
z um and I want to conclude by
personally thanking the U RAB schwed and
the entire all Toro all daf machine
because a year ago we were Z to host
this event and I was so inspired by of
course rasner and by all of you that I
joined the liud of yui right then and
there and I'm Z to be part of this CM as
well not just a a bystander so it's now
my great privilege to call upon Rabbi
Hower the Executive Vice President of
the
OU thank you thank you very much uh
precious Rabbi
rasner um I don't know how I every time
we come to
events like this and places like this
and we hear like little things like that
like somebody said because of this now
I'm making a like on of you're
already we most of the way there because
of this little thing it's just it's an
incredible incredible beautiful thing
and I can only imagine how how you feel
in a room full of talim some I heard
overheard earlier for decades learning
from you should give you the to continue
to do so uh I want to
be to to Ben ketki who not only you
opening your home again A year later but
just the the many opportunities I have
had which are probably a tiny fraction
of your neighbors and friends around to
see your your prioritization of worrying
about the community and how Torah takes
root in the community in every which way
and Torah values take root in the
community
is very inspiring uh it could
explain uh rather than checking your
mulus why canar your children are all
like out there being marbet Tyra but
don't worry they it's a good thing it's
a great great great thing and uh and
Hashem should give you the ability to
continue to be hosting and strengthening
Torah in in in every possible way um B
Rabbi schwed who's who wonderful
leadership and Innovative leadership
isra Glasser who's who's uh who's
uh I just came from a meeting where
Rabbi Glasser was describing the range
of of initiatives which he's leading
through the through the OU and it's I'm
still trying to catch my breath I don't
know when you're going to catch yours um
but K noara beautiful beautiful things
and everyone everyone who is
here as as Ben said you know this is a
Time
which is it's a it's a time of it's also
a time in a sense it's a time of time of
we we say we say at we say in the
before the
holy the holy city and its
environs have have been shamed and been
plundered all of its Treasures are
buried away what we have left what we
have left is just the Tyra we are
mourning what we're missing and in a
certain sense we're celebrating what we
have left this is the season in a
certain sense you'd say is the season of
the celebration of
T is the season of the celebration of
Torah but this is also are there as many
suum
[Laughter]
in any other period like here like we're
doing it like lishma like you can have
fligs
anyways um but
um but it's really it's it's one of
those beautiful twists of the hash of
the way of the way things are that we're
able to celebrate tyan I'm sorry I just
I was looking for you I want to give a
special appreciation and welcome to Josh
Goldberg and family it's good to see you
gun strong hm and uh Josh has been a uh
a big supporter of these celebrations of
Tyra and is a celebrate of Torah in many
personal ways you should be able to
continue to do
so but it's an interesting thing when we
speak about the B mdash we speak about
bdash bdash is from the ground up where
we're building something we start we
start on the ground we build a
foundation
like D had made the foundations of the B
mikdash and from there it goes up when
we speak about t we have an expression
and the expression is harbas Torah what
is harbas Torah what's the meaning of
the term harbas Torah to be marbits you
know to to be rates everyone ows us to
crouch to lowerer oneself a little bit
closer to the ground when when we when
we speak about it in h shabas right is
it's to take to literally to make the
dust settle a person has a home with a
dirt flooor and if they or like we would
probably relate to it as you know the
the mound or the infield you know where
you have dust that makes up the floor so
you it it tends to to kick up and to go
up and when you when you do Rita what
the gor calls Rita mishna calls Rita is
to spray it a little bit and to make it
that it goes
down is to bring it
down MD
was on a mountain the harabas that we
went from there and we built up and seni
that other Mountain was a mountain where
we didn't build anything up it was a
mountain where the came down upon the
mountain it came from above and it
settled it settled
maybe but it settled down came closer to
the world and haras Torah that act that
charge
is for us to do that to bring the sh
down to bring
the and to bring it down to earth to
bring it down to
earth
the the way we bring it down to earth
how do we bring it down to earth what's
tal Torah to bring it down to earth so
we know we all know that there are two
components to Talma
Torah there's a component of Talma Torah
which is very
practical
Al many are familiar with the famous
discussions about that that in itself
merits that in itself merits a mitvah t
even if there isn't a standalone Mitzvah
T but anybody who has the of the
obligation to perform a Mitzvah has to
know how to perform the Mitzvah there's
the Torah which is in that sense brought
down to earth to be able to apply it
practically to the things which we do
and then there's
learning where it's not simply learning
for the sake of doing it's not learning
uh it's not learning even perhaps
sections of Torah which at that moment
might be particularly applicable for you
but it's the engagement of
lior it's the engagement to spend time
and to invest in trying to integrate
within ourselves to whatever possible to
whatever extent possible
hashem's
mind God's values God's word that he
shares with
us tonight is you
know any such Gathering is is a is a
celebration like such a room filled with
people all
students of Torah students of of a
specific teacher of Torah and uh just a
sign of something which is which is
filling the atmosphere filling the
atmosphere of the Jewish Community the
value of t k k which in a certain sense
means you know the r says t k k means
because Tor leads leads to actions it
leads to the specific actions but t
it's also because it's it's the holistic
picture it's not just the specifics of a
particular action it's the holistic
picture of people just being engaged in
trying to again so to speak incorporate
into themselves hashem's mind and
hashem's values and specifically
tonight this night is the the of
the for uh for Dr Fred rasner Rabbi Dr
Fred rasner who you said 60 books so
like any of us from a while ago right
knew that there was such a thing
that that was coming on the scene called
learning medical ethics halic medical
ethics and there was a name there were a
couple of names that were associated
with that UAM most prolific was Dr Fred
rasner and it was a tremendous
effort of harbas Tyra of bringing Tyra
down to earth Tyra of practicality Torah
in dilemas about how a person with
values is supposed to live their lives
questions of values which arose that the
world had to Grapple with the world was
forced to Grapple with and the the
opportunity which was taken with such
strength by a physician to say we can
be we can tell them how the Torah tells
tells us to navigate these decisions to
make moral decisions to look at these
dilemas not in a ritual you know it's
it's really that's
the of which the T says and that's one
incredible maritz Torah and that one
incredible marbit Torah was
tremendously to a
son who's who teaches plenty
of but the reason why we're around this
table I think is not because
of we're around this table because of
the other kind
of of the fact that to to he has been
one of those who has made it that the
Jewish Community just wants to learn
more Tyra they just want to know more
more of the
Torah even even yeah even my
Shen even my Shen youel me right just
anything anything we want to
be to we want to just be immersed in in
the in the Tyra learning and it's a it's
a it's a magnificent thing it's a
magnificent thing and it's such a such a
magnificent H from the amarit Torah alos
to amitz Torah just Torah Torah Torah
together and uh I just want to I want to
be m one with one thing to Rabbi rasner
personally and one thing to us all to
RAB rasner personally um the we all wish
you um there's there's a there's a m in
the P pites it's on my phone in the
pictures if you want I'll I'll I'll give
it to you but you'll find it yourself
cuz I I I I somebody somebody gifted it
to me when I was in AIS for my father's
and it was a gift that I like to share
the
Pat said that you know
Kadesh they say 12 months I he said I
don't understand why it stops after 12
months so he said he himself would keep
saying it
say he says
but I'll tell you something else he says
he says I every day I get up in the
morning I say
you that everything that I do today
that's it's
all for my father for my parents I'm I'm
here because of them I learned because
of them and that's something like for a
whole life and you know a veil sometimes
crystallizes how we are the children of
our parents
and how be everything that we will
continue to do is really just them
they're they're they they're marching on
you should continue to to do that to
help him have Aliyah and and to do that
and for us I would just say that we're
living in a very difficult time and one
of the most difficult parts of this time
Beyond
missiles and
Beyond protests and Beyond everything
else is that the Jewish people are
cast by so many as an immoral
people we're
genocidal we're we're unethical we're
we're we we we don't care and we hurt
and that's a ter terrible it's a
falsehood and it's a terrible
terrible and you know Kem doesn't
necessarily mean silencing the pr
winning the pr battle getting a good
firm to be able to counter it k hasem is
when rooms filled with people that will
then go everyone will go their own merry
way but they'll be going their way with
their own t and saying you know you know
something I spend my time as much of my
time as I can trying to know what the
right thing is trying to know the truth
is there any nation in the world that
spends as much time trying to figure out
how to do the right thing right this
isn't this is right thing this is you
know
like like I want to know I want to know
to do better to be better this is the
truth and as we mourn theban and as we
mourn the continued repercussions of
being being without
the
that's this is what we're rebuilding and
hasem it should shine forth and we
should
be thank you RAB how so thank be for
coming and being here be travels a lot
and it's going back to Baltimore soon
and it's uh tremendous cover for us that
you came and uh Dressed everybody I
obviously want to thank it's obvious but
we have to thank the kaminis for opening
their home again and when estd ketki
told me that the fact that we had the
see him here kamki started learning Yi
so I was I think I was sharing with her
by Howard and her by Glasser know we get
messages and the the availability and
the ability for people to be able to
learn there are people sharing with us
that because they have the old mishna
app they started learning mishna and
there are people saying we added a
mishna y and for people who are telling
us that they're starting to learn Yi
it's only to us and a thanks to
everybody that's here for taking part
and being able enabling us to provide
the ability to learn y Shi
I just want to thank R Glasser for
coming as well we work together to be
able to continue building out these
programs I obviously have to thank Asha
tesser who works behind the scenes and
El flam who's here with a video and
Reena hirs who spent the last two weeks
working together no this wasn't her
full-time job but part of her job for
the last two weeks was planning and
making sure that everything worked out
and thank you very very much it's
greatly
appreciated before we make the CM I just
want to say that the CM is in memory of
RAB rosner's father Dr Fred Rosner mayor
Ben yushua which he's going to be
speaking about after the CM after we
break for
sud it's also memory of Mrs saren who
last year we made the CM during her sh
and her yard site was
just which was last week May her have an
alahas schlomo
and Josh Goldberg and family have also
dedicated this evening in memory of
Elliot Goldberg y Isaac Ben harav elazer
we thank the Goldbergs for coming and
Josh as mentioned has sponsored and
dedicated many and takes a big part in
being in enabling the old AF and the old
par the old Mish the old Torah to
continue I always like to mention Josh
has mentioned to me that his brother was
in the hospital over 250 times and
whenever we're making a c on yomi we
talk to people who are especially those
learning Yi who have added yi yi to
their day yomi is perseverance it's
consistency that was something that OT
stood for being able to persevere and
overcome and whatever stood in his way
and he he to have wonderful parents and
a brother who are
constantly memorialize memorializing his
Nish so thank you just want to share one
quick thought
that says in last week's para two weeks
ago
para's I'll read read the words of
ker and explained that learned from the
word offer offer is compared
to that there's offer in is who are
learning and they're on speak about this
in other
places and it's similar to the weapons
and mentioned something which is
certainly necessary in our times but the
expression the next expression has
really got me for our
crowd how many are there that are
sitting and learning
T and he says how do we explain how do
we explain what what does this mean that
btim are learning ter what's the con
to so one of the per on the side says
that since people that learn aren't
necessarily as great as that are around
to teach them therefore they humble
themselves they lower themselves it
says to be able to learn
from that's the comparison to the offer
to the dirt who recognized that we need
to learn from and they if they need to
download an olda app they have to get an
Arts will
whatever it takes to be able to continue
learning that's what they do and
therefore it
says and one last line shares with us is
says so this was something that was from
the times of what's the
connection it says he
was someone who lived the life of
lowering himself and humility what's the
connection
in order for a person to be able to have
AUM the ter should stay by him he has to
have humility and when we talk about
somebody like
Rosner people here know RAB Rosner as
much as he's someone who's being marra
to thousands and thousands of people in
all areas of T is a person with
tremendous amount of humility available
for all and that's what we say we end
off person DAV that his soul my soul
should be like offer what's the next
sentence we
say when a person is able to live a life
of that is what brings him
to everybody for
coming thank you very much I'm really
not going to speak now just to make the
and say my words for for later but
just uh again it was said already but
uh are two AAS that we have uh the
physical that were in the Kinesis that
have opened their home again um little
did we know a couple of decades ago when
um I had many wonderful amazing
counselors in my Camp uh in my Camp
years many of them have gone out to be
great uh great leaders but um we didn't
know I would be back here but barash uh
many of my counselors shaped who I am
but uh I thank the Kinesis for that role
but again your continuing support and uh
amazing uh just walking in here and
hearing that you're being M together
with me and with all of us is really a
tremendous feeling should give you
tremendous braa to keep your house a Bas
vad for all wonderful wonderful meetings
um that's one a and the other a of
course is the OU um I feel tremendously
privileged that over the past few
decades um you know I could prepare the
year I could give the Shear but there's
only a limited limited amount of of
listeners um you know even in vagan you
know you could have an amazing sheer but
how many people did give Shear to how
many people did give Shear to how many
were in valan 200 200 how how big was
valan in it's Heyday and uh the platform
that the OU has allowed me and has
allowed all of the wonderful
M um you know the president Rabbi Hower
Rabbi Rabbi schwed uh Rabbi wild who
originally brought me in a couple of
decades ago um but it's really been a
tremendous um humbling experience to to
recognize what the what the OU has done
and how it has brought Torah to
thousands um of listeners and it's
really um you know it's a real to be
part of the part of the team um we're
celebrating tonight and I just wanted to
pick up one line from M sheni that you
know you learn Shi before we started
whenever you didn't like you knew there
was a kazal somewhere but you didn't
really know where it was
ohii in uh
Minas there is no yias right right but
uh but now hopefully in five and a half
years we'll be able to say it's not a
Yushi right uh oh it's a Zohar okay but
but but yeah we'll get we'll get there
we'll get there but um but um but
there's one line in the Yushi that uh I
think reflects everything that uh we're
celebrating tonight and really should
give us an amazing um Outlook there is a
line ofi it's it's I'm G to take it
say which again the the new pagination
is really
again and to the art scroll gar and kki
it's unbelievable but um the amazing um
presentation that they've given us for
theii says
there if you don't know what the is what
do you
do you don't know what go out see what
people are doing what people are doing
that'll determine that's could
be sometimes in life you got to look and
see what people are doing sometimes you
have to go against the against the what
the world is doing but I think in this
case we could look at remember when um I
think you call me whenever it was year
and a half two years ago whenever we
started want to start giving a sh in Yi
I'm likei I'm like who's going to want
to learn youri like no no no you can
start I'm like I was doing the lumus on
the D he's like no you RI he's like is
anybody going to be listening he's like
try
bras and it's really amazing I could
give this year but to listen to it to
have that that Kus is really something
special and look what people are doing
it's a Simmon again in our challenging
time that we uh we look around and it's
a challenging I have two uh I have a son
and son-in-law now up north One's near
uh Matula and one's uhon son and a son
that went back to mein this week after
four months out um so so it's a
challenging time and um there's a lot to
think about a lot on our minds but the
gar says there of there of G 150 years
150 years the population of the Jewish
people between 1850 and today that's a
that's that's a Simon of G if we just
have our eyes open so many of
G things are
growing but Jews learning you RI Jews
learning you RI when was the last time
in history if ever this many Jews were
learning Yami forget learning learning
period you know those who are not
learning isami it's okay B is also
amazing I say B is amazing Rami was
never meant to supplant it was just
meant to be an addition that's why this
year is half an hour not not longer
because it's meant to to be an addition
B is obviously the uh the anchor but
uh you're not you learn something from K
and that's what something that we have
to take also from the fact that we're
part of this uh part of this team part
of this train
we should be be part of clel in many um
many factors but again it's all you know
my preparing it is fine but the it's
it's the listening it's the listening
and the learning together and Theus and
walking around with the green and not
just uh not just the brown already oh
okay so it's a really uh could would
have both but uh anyway okay so let's uh
the last the last line in you in me
sheney um discusses uh we'll just read
the last line the word demine the last M
spoke about there were five that made
which this was but the last one had to
do with so the the last line of the gar
says what does the word de mean what
does the word
mean classic right what is deay so the
geara that we have is De dumy T de low
and the rasio says is from the word Dion
it appears to be fixed it appears not to
be fixed you're not sure exactly what
what to do with this that's what the de
but the mara has the Gea the one that
we're familiar with t this what is it is
it fixed is it not fixed it was truma
taken off but you don't know if the
other halfs were taken off so that's the
de and then just I just wanted to end
off with also the uh the second to last
D mentioned this in the D yesterday the
maraa uh who discusses um how we without
getting into the Contex of the gamarra
he just
says to recognize and not to get to
shaken up about things that happen to us
that are
totally because it seems like there's m
a little bit there's nothing m
says to
be but we recognize everything is both
beat and personally communally and
nationally we know there's a plan you
know there's a divine plan who is
willing the world to its ultimate
Destiny we just got to hang on for the
ride and be able to
bring as he brings us the ultimate
pap
for
for for
[Music]
everybody please it's food time and then
my father was always very mock bid was
time to eat time to eat and
then AB teaches us the Torah teaches us
this time for be and there's time for
hpid and though hpid took place also 30
days ago my father's Leva Asim gives us
a little distance to evaluate to put
into perspective to call some Eternal
lessons to take with
us is one of the most basic mitzvos
there are more chairs people uh nobody
has to stand just take some chairs
back is one of the most basic mitzvos
one of the of Yos it is the
transitionary debor we spoken about this
on the L right so is down at number five
it's the transitionary debor which has
both elements this Mitzvah applies both
of the parent
and different themes different Halos so
I stand here today on my father schim at
a transitionary point between these
poles faintly holding on maybe not so
faintly trying to hold on to
the but preparing myself for what's
ahead I just take comfort in the fact
that my parents couldn't be separate
from each other so I had 11 months
between my Cottages between finishing
for my mother and starting with my
father but they
together my father taught me a
medish that he mentioned that my uncle's
levia will get back to him a little bit
later
says greater is the day of death than
the of birth and that's why in Judaism
we celebrate yard sites we don't
celebrate birthdays Washington's
birthday Lincoln's birthday we celebrate
yard sites why because the mic gives a
mushell when you have a a boat that's
going out on a journey and it has a lot
of uh Wares and a lot of uh you know a
lot of destinations that it was was
going to go to so when the boat goes out
there's some people there few people
there just wishing it well but when the
boat comes back after a successful
Journey after all the destinations that
it went to so then there's a big crowd
there a big crowd that that says
excellent successful Mission a job well
done greater is the date of death and I
just saw I mentioned in this today's par
I just gave it this morning PK says the
beginning of this week's paraa
Zan writes in what's the
of from where you came from to where
you're going to and then from where
you're going to to where you coming back
so as zean says each of us are writing a
book and every page in the book is a day
of our
life and we all set out on a journey
sends us out when we're
born and we go out on that journey to
fulfill to sanctify God's name for 120
years but ultim
we come back to where we came from we
come back to be with once again after
the time that we have in this
world we celebrate tonight a mission
accomplished 60 plus booksim hundreds of
Articles putting Jewish Medical ethics
on the map being a walking kashem for
the entire world thousands of lectures
and sh numerous cycles of DFI as long as
I can remember and mikra every Friday
night using a bencher whenever he
benched and kashita would never say it
by heart and would say it and would
always use a bener remember the one he
had right by his desk I grew up Rosner
oh Dr Rosner I said yeah the Dr Rosner
it was always a couple of
steps I grew up in my father's
Shadow and I we I wore that that I wear
that badge with pride but all this takes
added significance everything that my
father accomplished takes added
significance based on the
too when we think back about to his yalo
to where he came
from my remarks tonight will give an
overview of my father's life peppered
with some stories and toward towards the
end of the talk we'll learn four or five
concrete messages that we could take
from his life my father was born in 1935
in Berlin my grandparents were from
Poland so we're not yui we wait six
hours though my father was very yuy in
his demeanor but um but we are not yuy
my father at age three 1938 he was put
on the Kinder transport and with his
brother and his sister my father was
three my aunt I forgot exactly how old
my uncle was 10 he was seven years older
than my father uh and they ended up in
an orphanage in northern England for
most of the war and that's where they
spent uh the war my grandparents uh
survived unlike almost the entire family
the entire family was wiped out in awit
they were each one of us seven and 10
like 17 siblings that's just like one
generation up but the only ones that
survived were my my grandparents who
never heard recently that my grandmother
spoke to about it with somebody but my
grandparents that I remember them they
never spoke about it they never spoke
about the war they never spoke about how
they Sur survived we know little tidbits
about uh being hidden in families and
jumping out of the the top of the barn
but we don't know but they ended up in
Belgium after the war but part of the
miracle of my father's survival has to
do with one brother my grandparents and
one brother of my grandfather survived
they ended up in Belgium after the
war in Brussels and nobody knew who was
alive nobody knew my grandparents made
it to Brussels they they came in contact
with my aunt who went to Hollands uh but
my father and my uncle were in were in
an orphanage um there were two from
English soldiers that ate over at my
grandparents house for shabas and they
recognized the name Rosner they said
Rosner there's there's a man an older
man in in not so old but a man in London
that doin with us in sh his name is
Rosner and he goes to visit two of his
two of his nephews somewhere up north at
an
orphanage every couple of weeks and they
did the research and they realized that
these were their children that they
survived so this was
1945 the uh they sent they sent word the
Red Cross so my uncle was 17 he came
back right away my father Kadar bakesh
he wanted to finish the school year so
at 10 years old I don't know where that
came from but uh so he stayed for the
next couple of months until until June
1945 and then he remembers he was 10
years old he was a put on a he took a
train to a train to Southern England and
he went on a boat and he remembers the
boat he was on the boat and they come
towards uh aen ex exactly exact Port
City in uh in Belgium and he remembers
being on the boat holding the hands of
the of the captain is holding his hand
he remember seeing hundreds of people on
the shore like a whole group of people
and uh he says he remembers he says
remember sees as as it's pulling in he
sees this man with a hat and and a coat
go underneath the rope and run up the uh
the plank and start talking to the uh to
the woman and the captain the papers in
the papers and uh my grandfather is
brought over to be introduced to my
father my father was three the last time
he saw his father and now he's 10 and um
they give each other a hug my father
starts talking to him and they realize
they cannot communicate with each other
because my father only knows English he
been in the orphanage his whole life and
my grandfather knows Yiddish and German
and polish no English so after seven
years of not seeing each other they're
connected but they can't communicate so
2-hour train ride to to Brussels and my
grandmother knew English my father
eventually learned not eventually pretty
soon learned leish my father knew seven
languages he said after you learn four
five the others are they come I'm like I
don't understand that Hebrew English
yish German Flemish you know all of the
other the ones but so my my uncle my
great uncle at that time um had uh had a
say in getting them um getting them
back about 20 years ago again a couple
of other uh trying to go in
chronological order there's a story that
we didn't find out until about 20 years
ago and we didn't know the story for 50
years 20 years ago 22 I don't know
exactly how many uh my father receives
an email my father never used a computer
his 60 plus for him and thousands of
Articles it was all those yellow pages
long hand he wrote everything until his
last day the computer he knows how to
turn on it'll turn on the doth or he'll
call me sha I can't get the do what's
going on is it up yet elizabe
but but um but he but he looked at email
my father received an email from a woman
in Scotland who recognized my father's
name on the Internet he saw some of his
books are you the Freddy Rosner that was
in an orphanage in Scotland during World
War II in in England during World War
II my father responds
yes how do you know me she responds back
I took care of
you father's like what are you talking
about there was a whole orphanage she's
like I'd rather tell you in person so at
that time my father was still lecturing
publicly so he arranged to be in uh in
Scotland and uh Dr Steinberg be a showa
call said he he was at this meeting my
father's Dr steyer Shim Glick and Hal
the medical ethics uhra Dr sber went on
many of the trips with my with my
fathers they were in Scotland and they
meet this woman this this Jewish social
worker and he says my father says how do
you remember me and she he says you had
a brother right he says yeah I have a
brother seven years older so she says
you know the orphanage was only for
older children they went to your brother
how old was he he was 10 see they went
to school during the day and they came
home and they they slapped in the
orphanage you were three the orphanage
wasn't for three-year-olds so what
happened every Sunday morning we used to
dress you up in your finest and take you
to the church in the neighborhood and
then families from the countryside would
come and choose to who to adopt which
little kids to adopt and to bring home
and to uh bring up how many Jewish Souls
we lost from those families but your
brother he held your hand and he said
you're not taking him without me you
take him you're taking me with you
nobody wanted a
10-year-old so they had a problem they
didn't know what to do so you was stuck
three years old in this orphanage so
they called me I was a social worker in
the area and they said we have a problem
we so I came I moved into the orphanage
you slept in my room I bathed you I
changed you I played with you for four
three four years until you were old
enough to go to school and then and then
you went to school my uncle was still
alive at the time and uh he was a
jeweler he lived at canari he worked on
47th Street posha Jew posha in quotes
simple Jew went up to Uncle Eli I said
he didn't remember anything remember was
it just an older brother that was that
was not letting it was it my grandmother
when she put him on the train you don't
let him out of your sight that's one
thing I'm tell we don't know
but we found out the story 50 years 50
years later we were know my uncle was
still alive so a couple years later
after he was nifter we we had one of our
sons named El
yahu one other story that we found out
about 10 years ago or so there's there
was a mutual con friend of my of uh of
my father and he had a colleague who was
also knew someone whose son lives in
bees he was talking to him um the guy in
bees his father was uh was a that a
mutual colleague so he's talking do you
remember anything about the war he's
like well I was in an orphanage in
ilkley that's the small the small town
in northern England do you remember
anything from from the orphanage he said
not much he says I'll tell you one thing
he says I was I was always scared I was
always scared of being alone I didn't
like being alone so you know what at
night that was the worst I don't want to
be the last one up I remember there was
a really little kid who was a math
genius who you know I would just ask him
math problems at night so I knew while
he was trying to work out the math
problem I would fall asleep says says I
knew that's why it help it comforted me
so I have no idea where he is today his
name was Freddy Rosner maybe he's a math
professor somewhere getting the Nobel
Prize he's like actually his son lives a
few blocks away and he's the new so we
had them meet each other they didn't
remember no uh each other but um my
father didn't remember so my father they
ended up 1945 he comes to Belgium and uh
he's there for the next uh four years my
father had is he starts learning Olive
base my father he was in high school
already in secular studies but he didn't
know Olive Bas till he was 11 my father
didn't know Olive Bas until he was 11
and he learned Olive and he learned paru
that was his bar mitzvah
par was the last thing we were laning
with him on the on the Davis P maybe
we'll get back to that uh but uh we put
in they put in 194 they were there for a
couple of years uh my grandparents the
nuclear family that amazingly was that
that survived uh they put to for visas
to to Israel and to America American
ones came first so they went to America
uh my father says July 1st 1949 they
came in on the boat and 100 degrees
boiling hot they had relatives in
Washington Heights July 1st July 2nd
1949 my father was 14 my my grandfather
takes him into the Yu base Mish and he
wants him to go to MTA and uh they walk
in they didn't know anything they don't
know anybody all of a sudden a rabbi
walks runs over of a
where you from what's going on I wanted
to go so the rabbi takes my father and
goes over to some guy July second and
says you're learning with him this
summer so that summer every morning from
9: to one my father learned I don't
remember who the col guy was but he
learned the first mishna in bakama that
was the project that my father was uh
was learned so by the end of the summer
this Rabbi who ended up being
ravitz um who um my father developed
that was his rabbi that was a lifetime
uh friendship so he arranged for him my
father to have a with remend Z
son-in-law who was the bo at the time my
father said he was online and uh all the
guys are going this what which what do
you want to what do you
know or this and then my father's like I
don't know anything he says my
grandfather this is not for me look at
these guys it's like it's okay it's okay
it's okay come to my father's turn so
rendel's X says that new what do you
know he says first mission in babama he
like Z F so he he says the first mission
and obviously sees my father's a little
different para so he says you want to
learn do you want to be here father says
yes he like okay you're
in father said I know the Rashi no that
was it he didn't make him me the Rashi
he says no okay but that's the uh so my
father got went to MTA that was 1949 uh
somehow he did high school again my
father didn't know much he had to learn
what a missioner was that summer uh he
learned so he did high school in two
years
seems like cuz 1951 because then he went
to Yu to Yu he was in the Yu class of of
1955 and then he obviously very much so
wanted to be a doctor I don't know where
that came from but must be innate and he
always had this love of of medicine uh
it was at that time it was very hard for
Jews to get into medical school and that
was the year that why you opened
Einstein my father was in the first
class of Einstein class of
59 um he says that when he told r dpes
that he was going into medicine D didn't
talk to him for about a month he said he
wanted him to go into he wanted him to
be a rabbi um after a month he like
calmed down and um he uh said okay you
want to be a doctor you got to be the
best doctor okay but that was my
father's uh my father's RBI my father's
um know he um he considered Ravid uh his
Rabbi he went to him on uh on purm every
year uh so right before he started
Medical School my father my father uh he
he doesn't have SM he's not a ra he was
not a rabbi he always said I could speak
freely I'm not a rabbi I'm just raising
issues my father always said even though
he gave many uh
shiur but uh so he took off the summer
three months to learn Yara before
medical school before uh before uh in
between the college and and Einstein so
he has many stories he tells over from
that time he Saida came over to them
every morning he learn with meleski I
think he uh his Kusa uh so he said he
every day R came over to him talk to him
and learning I don't know exactly how it
started but he said once a week maybe
David he went down to the low E side and
he Ros iir them every week on whatever
Sim that they were uh that they were
learning so he went um once a week uh
there uh just one story that um some
might be familiar with uh so my father
when he was in at that time period so
one of the other classmates and call
guys at the time was Rabbi label duits
um I had RAB DLS for English in in MTA
and he goes back many years with my
father um his son was at the Levi in uh
in in Israel so one time RAB dulitz
comes over and uh he's asking my father
a question about H trus he knew that
these were the Premed guys my father was
a Premed he ask but then something an my
father's like explaining it to him and
explaining it to him two three times so
my father said I don't know I I did the
best I can I don't have a cow here I
don't know I just did the best I can the
next morning if you know by Duets the
next morning into the base medish a
brown paper bag dripping red Fred here
show me it was the neck of a cow right
he brings it to the Bas M show me like
he needed to know the MS unbelievable my
father said over that story and D's son
confirms but that was uh one of the
stories of uh of U in in Wu my parents
got
married uh my father graduated Einstein
1959 uh an amazing marriage 63 years
they were married lipitz was M them uh
my mother grew up on the low re side
American American my grandfather was the
r of the bis Stucker the low side es
skolski and my great-grandfather before
him two rabbis
ESI rolski um and R mosha so but they
helped set up my father with another uh
I think uh one of my father's friends
also um so raos was my parents K they
say the story is that rosha and raron
Cutler never went to the same wedding
this is the way it goes that because who
who wouldn't be M kushan so raron said
told my parents you know what rosha will
be madushan and I'll be S got your first
son's bris so 11 months later my brother
was born and uh raron Cutler was the was
the sandic um so my parents um got
married they lived in bar Park and then
Maryland for two years during the uh
during the Vietnam War uh and ultimately
farak that's where they were for 50
years uh my father was always the the
anchor of the Shu we spoke to the to the
rebi the Reby son recently but he was
the Gaba he was the balore always acting
always uh you know getting invol we have
some farak altimer here um in aall the
rebit does everything this is also
unheard of my father had the boy's
minion what's the boy's minion just for
laning every week just for Ling he would
go downstairs and have a boys menion
where the boys would Lane and the boys
would be gby and the boys would get
alias and the boys would how many PE how
many farak boys I learned to Lan there
my brother who's a professional balore
learned to Lan there but that's um he
did that because he knew this is this is
part of his tkid to create to create a
um we dive into the because that's aish
and U but but he said I'm not going to
you know not have this to be able to
train my children and and the children
of the community and that was part of
his um part of his avod in the early 60s
is when his quote unquote hobby he was a
hematologist by profession he was a head
of medicine in Queens Hospital Queen
general for uh 30 plus years um but on
his side Jewish Medical ethics a hobby
that influenced so many just two of
we've gotten many tens of messages from
from all over it just wrote that I just
picked two of them yesterday um when my
father graduated medical school he is
now about 75 your father was an
individual who opened to him and all the
shr Mitzvah medical graduates a Vista
that many of them had not been exposed
to a giant of a clinician who was a
master of Hala who could write with
force and expertise in both fields and
was a Jew of great
Rus another one from a young age I
developed a strong affinity for the
medical journals and writing compiled by
your
father often writing together with my
family's Rob of mosha DAV tendler your
father's was a trailblazing force in the
field of medicine and ala and a
veritable expert in articulating the
Jewish law guidelines to be followed by
Jewish doctors and medical professionals
in a myriad of different situations may
his memory be a blessing so he he he was
mashia or he
created two of the influences that we
think number one the story is that
somebody gave for a medical school
graduation present rabie jakobitz a
safer on Jewish Medical ethics my father
conf considered RAB jakobitz the
grandfather of Jewish Medical ethics
others have said that my father was the
father of Jewish Medical ethics Rabbi
jaob witz he he coined the term that's
number one and also he obviously he
loved medicine and he loved Hal and he
loved Torah and the mixing and the
meshing of those two was where he he
made such a uh made such a mark he
writes he wrote some of his Memoirs a
couple years ago he says the 1964 was
the first Surgeon General warning
against smoking 1964 so he says that
week he wrote an article about you know
as rabbis there some rabbis in the room
like if we could find an article about
something that's our sheer you know you
take the article you take the maromo
it's basically a good way to cheat but
it's okay you look up the mar makos he
didn't have any articles he wrote the
articles he had to do the
research and you you find an rjj Journal
about a topic you want to give sheir on
you're good you're
pre computers pre computers but but but
he wrote it he said he wrote an article
he gave it to the first talak Journal I
don't know which one it was they
rejected it they said we can't print
this all the around by some smoke so he
says so he said I don't care he says
printed this is the my father spent the
next 20 years begging Riv mosha to ostra
smoking the final chuva 1983 was written
to my father if you look at the igis
mosha but you see over every 10 you read
the four or five is he's getting closer
and closer and closer and closer and
then he say that he would ask so he
can't bring any r as what a would be
today but um but he um he had
unbelievable accomplishments in this
area half his books are on Jewish
Medical ethics half his books about the
rambam his love uh the last few decades
uh the Encyclopedia of Jewish Medical
ethics was one of his Magnum opuses the
translation but it's not a translation
of Rob Steinberg's encyclopedia to
translate you have to reorganize and you
know adjust everything and the last 20
years or so were his translations of
rash chuvas and just the last number of
years the 10th volume came out within a
year over zin's 10 volumes of shim he
loved to teach he loved to share whether
it's medicine we got a WhatsApp during
Shiva of somebody you don't know me but
I just have to tell you the story you
know in all the years that I was taught
I was I was a resident and a doctor and
an attending in uh Queens Hospital
Center you know the M the Min minion in
Dr rosner's office was uh
was something to go to every day it was
my favorite part of the day remember
that the office Green couches and uh the
um so he went there for M but he says
the best thing was that after M your
father gave like a five minute talk
about something and that was like you
had plenty of non-jews that came and
like imams or whatever they wanted to
hear what Dr Rosner said about about
that because my father projected you
know the the view not just the Jews I
remember one time one from Friday
morning in elementary school I remember
I got to stay home from school why my
father was going to B be on TV I
remember the Phil danu Show remember the
Phil danu show right Sam I remember
there was a movie out um Richard dfus
whose Life Is It Anyway about somebody
who's uh I never saw the movie I don't
know anything I just remember seeing
this movie star on TV with my father
sitting there I'm like right that but I
remember I got but what what's the
Jewish view what's the ethical view
right that's he loved to teach whether
in sh he was the backup for Rabbi
pelovitz on on chabas afternoon uh in
the white Sho this is this is what his
his life was about his life was about
sharing and um and teaching
1988 my father was invited to Germany to
Berlin on the 50th anniversary of
Cal my father never he flew all over the
world we have he kept copious journals
of every single talk he ever gave we
have 20 volumes in the journal is the
invitation letter the flyer that that
the thank you letter it's it's
unbelievable and and and theous that he
gives every talk he'll speak in front of
Congress he'll speak on ABC and then
he'll give a post night activity talk in
the camp MOA canteen for four counselors
it gets the same kashus right it's all
it's all sharing but in 1988 he got an
invitation growing up in our house
anything German or Germany anything it
was TR would be under
statement I remember walking to the
white sh from our house in farak I
remember somebody had a Mercedes on the
left side we mamish couldn't look we
weren't like like to look there it was
rahmanan this where he was
from 1980 and he's he always spoke all
over the world but he received an
invitation from Germany he always said
no but this one they really wanted him
to come really want him to come is
something with a rambam also and he was
from Germany so um he didn't know what
to do so he asked Ravid Ravid was his
lifelong Rabat rev was alive at the time
what should I do my father even made a
Ned there that he would never go
back so rev says to to spread Torah you
could be Mater but uh you have to ask
your father my grandfather was still
alive at the time um so he asked my
grandfather and that he didn't know what
he was going to say he says if you could
go to Kev OS what's Kev OS on Cristal KN
my great-grandfather had a stroke after
what he witnessed his my my father's
father's father-in-law my father's
mother's father and um and he had a
stroke that and he died a few days later
he's the only relative that has a Kev so
my grandfather said if you could go to
Kev ofos that Kev is in East Berlin
right at the time right when the wall
was up so he didn't know so he sent uh
messages would he be able to go they got
they got permission they'll be able to
go my father's like okay so he was M
there and he went Rabbi Steinberg Dr
Steinberg who was at the shiv house he
was also he says he went with my father
my father did not leave the hotel room
except twice so I'm not walking on soil
says twice once to go to the Kev and
wants to give his talk so he says the K
Dr Steinberg said he says we were at the
wall we were there for about two two
hours they were like they took off our
glasses they were like looking for
Contraband in the metal they said it was
crazy until they let him through they
finally let him through we have pictures
uh M like you would have imagined a
Blizzard snow you can't find anything
but they found the Cav they found the
Cav of my great-grandfather thought was
there and then he gave one talk there
and his talk was titled we have a copy
of the talk why I return to Berlin 50
years after after I promised never to go
back that was the title of the talk I
just remember one thing we were looking
at it during Shiva one thing he says
says JFK was here 20 years a 30 years
ago and he said Berliner he had no right
to say that I was born here I could say
that I can explain to you why I returned
50 years
later some of the some of the stories my
parents were Z to make alah about nine
years ago uh their children pre alad
them uh as long as my father was working
part-time it was important for him to
stay but Hurricane Sandy and stopped
working so my brother-in-law and I you
know went and brought them on their uh
on their Alat
trip five messages quick short messages
that I again we can spend spend more
time but um five messages number one is
time my father didn't waste a
second can't waste a
second and he uh every moment was was
accounted for I never saw him Shilling
as it would said just hanging out he
didn't do that right there was a there
was a cartoon on his on his desk with a
guy lying on a couch and a psychiatrist
but doctor relaxing makes me tense
right but he he never I have some he
never wasted a minute everything was
part of his aoda but he he swam and he
joged my friend just told me I remember
him jogging down Reed's Lane everything
was part of the schedule I went I
thought it was a Kum because two nights
ago I took my boys that I have in
America right now to the to the to the
Mets to the Met game my father took me
to two met games every year before the
season which which days were going to go
so I felt I took a picture of my
siblings I it's a Keim for Daddy you
know it's uh they won it was good but uh
but but it was that was also part of the
schedule part of the schedule was
learning and
teaching there was no wasting ran we
mentioned him before has an unbelievable
V Parr where he says that know
everything in life those who listened
this year probably have heard much of
what I say everything in life has a
certain time that it exists people exist
for a certain amount of time a tree
exists for a certain amount of time know
everything exists
this stender is this stender going to be
here in a thousand years I'll probably
disintegrate I don't know something with
the the the atmosphere I don't know
everything has a certain amount of time
it could be very long it could be short
everything in life has a certain amount
of time except for one thing and that's
time
itself time has no time the second that
the moment is here it's gone time has no
time and yet ironically Cesar of zean
the only thing that we could take with
us for
eternity is our time if we fill our
moments with Torah and mitzvos and and
giving those days come with us
forever he came with all his days my
father took all his days with him my
father stands in shamayim with all of
his days every moment now we DAV in AEL
growing up as I mentioned we had my
father moved to farak so 1965 the day my
sister was born so there were four shs I
think three and a half right there was
the white shol and there was the sh wsbg
uh the rebes the Sol Rubin they said the
Young Israel was just uh was just
starting at the time my father liked
heish daving that's where he daved in
the in the in the in Washington Heights
he lik it see we D at the Reves at night
we D at the white show because of man he
wouldn't miss the man wouldn't D after
he D there so when Shak shabas morning
9:00 9:00 bras 9:15 hu they okay one day
a week my father had ausa 7 a.m. every
shabas morning I those are my some of my
earliest memories waking up to hear him
learning with this Kusa my earliest
memories Kusa had a very deep voice Dr
Aaron tski was a law professor on HRA so
uh he learned I remember like waking up
to some of those sounds 7 am shabas what
you D ATO so you gonna going to sleep
till
9: using time using time
was I thought it was a Kum that my
father would have would appreciate I
remember the last
um uh last I was in Camp Monday I was in
Camp I got the call that I should fly
back to to Israel on on Monday morning
Monday morning I wake up I knew it was
like I was going to go back later but
Monday morning my my siblings called and
said he should go back she come back um
so Monday morning so I got on the I got
on the flight the 1:15 from from nework
I'm like get there I'm like okay so I
had about an hour in Camp I had prepared
the doth for that day the night before I
really wanted to give it I'm like give
it it was too crazy I had to like get
the passports and get ready so I didn't
give uh I didn't give the do and C okay
so I flew back we landed my
brother-in-law landed on Tuesday morning
and uh my father was semi-stable but we
got there early in the morning six
o'clock in the morning so the whole day
I was we were with him in the in the
hospital so like the afternoon time and
things were we didn't know how long but
I'm like I have this do I'm not gonna be
able to give it for a week that's I'm
like I know my father would want me to
so first I was sitting in the hospital
just he wasn't wasn't um you know um no
we didn't know I'm sure inside he heard
everything but he wasn't communicative
at that time um so I was learning my
brother and I were learning the do with
him I said you know I said I told my
brother I said do you have a you have a
uh you know anybody in the hospital I
need a room like I can't get the do in
the ICU so he's like I I know somebody
in the genetics lab so he called
somebody in the in genetics lab uh on
he's like genetics what for what your
brother oh I live in some V year room so
anyway they got me a room on the fifth
floor so I saw like I went to my father
I said Daddy I said I said I know you
want me to give the duff I said you
don't waste a second I'm trying I'm just
I'm just gonna go give the duff you know
I'm just I have my phone G to give the
duff so I went down to the fifth uh went
down to the fifth floor in the genetics
lab the guy gave me a room and a table I
got my computers out I got the gar out
gave the do uploaded it you say went
back my father was still still uh the
same uh at that stage and um and two
hours later we was uh we we were all to
be with him but I I learned that from my
father because you know he would want he
would want to use every moment Mish
every moment so number one is time
number two is Aus my father was
inem everything about his life was
centered around AEM he loved the story
that he said over so many times of this
many of you have heard it this says his
on the morning of aus he says make sure
you have kavana by when he say make sure
you have kavana there a the half of them
screamed
out they screamed out
other and they asked IM afterwards who
is right and he says you're both
wrong that's the special
kav that's my father my father his life
is a daving ding like like it wasn't
like a like getting out of bed and
freezing or remember I remember growing
up like we get up in the morning he
always went to the first minion sometime
like Daddy can we drive no we're going
to walk it's like what no we're walking
let's go I'm like come on it's so early
in dark
outside like daving benching like bras
wouldn't put anything to his mouth
without a braa what BR do you make on
this everything was and he learn the
ramom they have to walk after you eat it
doesn't matter Friday night gotta take a
walk right got to take a walk you know
we after you eat because this was this
is what the ram says and this is what
the is right I want be your
EV really he was uh an ultimate with all
of his with all his background number
three out of five number three rautner
has a letter some a well-known letter
where tet in that he feels like a fake
right like he's one person here and he's
one person there at work at home what
the Tom called a double life and runer
anwers no it's not a double life it's a
broad life a broad life meaning you're
the same person in all the different
areas my father was a had a very broad
life but he was the same person
everywhere the same person the same
person who could speak internationally
in front of thousands of Jews and
non-jews and and and be give the rabbi
sheer and Shu and uh and be the father
who takes me to a Met game and learns
with me on Friday night and and being a
doctor right many at the Shiva Shiva
said forget medical ethics he was
amazing but medical you know we called
him with our Medical shus the uh the The
Unbelievable medical genius that he was
and how he thought of of different
elements he was the head of the New York
State uh Ethics Committee which not to
do with Judaism but but he was uh same
unassuming attitude humble not not
taking always saying that um no I'm uh
I'm just speaking freely you know I'm
not a rabbi said that often but uh
making Kesh hasem in all areas of his
life so using every moment being an EV
AEM being the same person in every um
venue that he found himself for
adaptation he adapted to every situation
that KES threw his way being in an
orphanage not knowing his parents
somebody asked me at the Shiva did your
father ever express anything about being
put on the Kinder
transport like no not this is his matv
and this is what he does what's my next
step what's my next step forward you
know orphanage he had a major heart
attack in the early 1990s he had a
stroke in the
2001 he couldn't do his own research
anymore okay what can I do what are my
abilities there if Steinberg was after
he had his stroke or after the heart
attack the the the r zilberstein the 10
vimes you just transl I can't I can't do
my own research now so I'll translate I
still have that skill and that ability
came out within the
year he adapted he adapted after my
mother was nifta two years ago go or
yard sites next week right new reality
my father was always the one that was
Ill we got a helper from my father and
Aid before my mother got sick so it's
just but my father said okay what what
do I I have a new sidekick you know what
what what could I do now what could I
accomplish now and that's what he
did not just about assets but about
whatever situation he is in life right
Hashem gives us a and he makes the most
of it makes the most of it mosu also
didn't have such a childhood he grew up
in the house of par running around but
you make the most of everything gives
you and number five final
point he had an inner drive that never
stopped he never I said at the Laya he
never had Manuka from a very young age
he was driven what's my next project
what's my next book rinona writes on
peros on that mishna life is like a
shopping spree it's like you could
whatever gold you pick up in the next 24
hours is yours you want to take a nap
that's your choice we have 120 years
shopping spree obviously we have to be
normal my parents always wanted me to be
normal they said my rash Raks came out
the sh she's like you know your mother
met me before shet and she said you know
he wants he wants to wants to uh come
shanth and he wants to learn he's like
but just we want him to be normal you
know we want him to remain shom and R
said I hope that we like help succeeded
and so you didn't want me to do too much
this way too much that way but um but
there was a drive there was a drive he
had you know the past few months the
last few months of my father's life
after he finished Al final Ri
zilberstein so we looking more projects
more projects to uh what can we do he's
translating in Asia to get him excited
about something so I said I said Daddy I
said how you transla one of my sparm he
like wow great
so I remember one a few months ago so I
went to sit down I got him set up in his
apartment in Yim so I set up with the
safair and his notebook and his cup of
pens and his
dictionary this was his life his hobby
on the side but his life so he sits down
opens up table of contents he writes
table of contents on top then he looks
know High holidays you know his English
was English and then and then he he
tried he was trying he's
like I'm like okay we'll continue more
next time so he he did a little bit and
we tried I was there once or twice over
the last couple of months try because
translating was it was hard it takes the
the vision and the and the concentration
and he could still still listen and
listen to the dfim and listen to the
parir and listen to the navi like just
whatever it doesn't matter if it's last
week's para show or whatever it is he uh
my parents were my biggest fans biggest
fans you know my mother used to call up
you know the T tidbits that uh that come
uh so my brother would call up on on
Thursday Shalom guess who's on the cover
I said uh Ruda Michelle he's like
no page 26 is a great page they were
they were my biggest fans but again
everything came came from them but
anyway so so I set this up for my father
and we tried tried but it it was hard
towards the end and um so after the P
that day so I had I went back to my
father's apartment to pick something up
before I went home I walked into the uh
to the apartment and I see on the dining
room table I see my safer open to the
first page and I see the notebook and
the pen and I see the cup of pens see
the
dictionary I said to I said my father
tried to the last minute my father tried
you know this is a testament
right until he had
no he tried and he was
driven and it was life of Abdus and it
was life of
and everything that he accomplished was
not knowing Olive Bays until he was 11
years old so let's even take a little
bit a to use our time B to focus our
life evem to recognize we're the same
person in the business world in the b
medish in the wherever we are we're
making a kesem number four to adapt to
any circumstance throws our way we don't
choose we don't choose our our cards
right we don't choose our cards we do
what we can with the has
from our side and finally to always try
to be driven to something again it
doesn't mean that we're not normal and
we don't have relaxation as my father
had that also but he had a drive to be
in EM maybe theas of being the one that
survived the family that the whatever it
was it went from his
birthday Aldo so on this night the night
of his
schim we TR we try to take a little bit
try to take a little bit
ofua and we should be able to be z to
follow his following his footsteps uh he
did so much the OU had never officially
but the ajs and all those organizations
you know he was uh always very uh
supportive of and involved in and we
should be to follow in his footsteps and
follow in his ways and uh keep up um
keep up learning from him for for many
years for