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Behind the Greatness: Rabbi Jacob S. Kassin - Full Feature Documentary
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[Music]
Rabbi Jacob Escassen
Shalom was God's gift to our illustrious
community.
You felt that if he's here, everything's
good. Everything's right. He just felt
safe. He really saved the community
to him to be happy, to be healthy, to be
successful.
[Music]
You felt that he was a holy man. This is
a man of tremendous tremendous knowledge
>> big in every area of the Torah.
>> You felt that you had a holy man leading
the community.
[Music]
He's the the very important link that
kept us floating.
He was the lifesaver of the community.
>> And if you don't have Rabbi Jacob S.
Cassen, without a doubt, our community
perishes.
[Music]
Hashem, today our community is
flourishing.
After over a hundred years on these
shores, the struggle of our grandparents
and great-grandparents led to the
infrastructure we all enjoy and benefit
from today.
We have dozens of synagogues in
Yeshivot, social and recreational
centers, organizations, and so much
more. spanning from Brooklyn to Deal and
many places in between. However, this
wasn't always the case. Before we had
what we have today, there was a vision
and a foresight
all in the eyes of one man, Rabbi Jacob
Kassen Alaba Shalom.
our community was on the brink of
oblivion and we found uh you know
America and it's a free country and we
want to establish ourselves and the last
thing that was on the minds of the
earlier generation was setting ourselves
up spiritual we were too busy trying to
exist make a living build our families
buy homes and Rabbi Jacob escass alab
shalom comes to this community at a very
very perilous time for our people.
How does somebody become such a giant?
What type of upbringing must one have to
become so holy
[Music]
born 1900 as he mentioned in his own
book no I was born
at
which is 1900
at a young age in his early 20 he start
to run Kabala under his
father-in-law
Hakam Shalom Haday and he ended married
the daughter of Hakam Shalom Hadaya
the author of Shalom any question and
the Kabala he used to answer on the spot
all the books what he wrote under the
age of 28 if I have no doubt would have
stayed in Yusha
He'd have become one of the greatest
coalists ever known in our century.
It was very hard for me to believe that
this is the rabbi who wrote these
unbelievable books. books on Cabala,
coming to a community that basically was
not a religious community per se
and dealing with these people and
becoming a father to them and becoming a
father they all looked to as a father
and respected.
There is no such thing as coincidence.
Everything is in the hands of Hashem. As
fate would have it, this humble giant
would find his way into our community.
And after a one-year trial, the rabbi
would stay for over 60 years, fully
shaping who we are today.
He comes to the community at a time
where he sees a trend and the trend is
towards assimilation. We didn't have the
basis of Torah yet which could protect
us. So really we were very vulnerable
and he knows that if he could just keep
the community together and united and if
he could just show the community
tolerance until they get to that
maturity where they could start building
the proper spiritual infrastructure then
we have a shot and then many years later
like today we have the mikvah today we
have the yeshivot so we have that
protection when he came he was the
protection
>> when I was a little I lived in
Mensonhurst and my father Alaw Shalom
used to take me to 67th Street Menddev
to pray and he would tell me there is a
chief rabbi here a very holy man
Kamyakov Katine and he would make sure
that before I left Shul I would kiss the
rabbi's hands we were children we really
didn't know much about him alls we know
is is that he was a very very holy
person before expanded in the back on
East 5th used to be a parking lot. It
was the place where we used to play
softball.
Used to walk down East Fifth and then
enter Shereson from the parking lot. And
that day he starts to make his rounds
around the parking lot picking up little
pieces of bread. So of course, you know,
we stopped the game. You know, out of
respect to the Reb, we knew a holy man
is coming. Game stops. And it made such
an impression. You see this old sadik?
He bends down. He picks up a little
piece of bread. He kisses it and he puts
it in his pocket. Then he bends down
again and he kisses it and he puts it in
his pocket and you see 15 16 teenagers I
don't know how old we were and we were
just frozen. As the years went on, I
started to study Hakam Yakov and I
realized this is a man of tremendous
tremendous knowledge
in
match exactly what the
Zud saying they call him isot
and the ask isot
and the answer simply ish
he has everything
he was the zakan phenomenal memory. In
fact, when
he rejoiced
Rabbi Kasim when they arrive with the
coff
he mention
called
the dictionary and any question or any
sh which you go to
in will be Melik
because every understood who kasin in
the young age he wrote all those books
and he was involved with big at that
time
and
which is he for long maybe 96 years old
very powerful question BT you come from
very high class to community at that
time struggling chabatu and kashut you
come actually tobar the wilderness
because that
and his nature soft
is
in order to get the people together
you must have ahabat is
in 1965 5. There was a boy in the
community that passed away. One of the
rabbis came to me at the time and said,
"Listen, we need someone to be shar
Rabbi Hela and Rabbi Mosha Franco." We
went to the Godman's funeral home. That
was the funeral home that everyone in
the community used to use from way in
the beginning. And we came there and
there was a big burly I don't know
Irishman or Italian I don't know what he
was but he wasn't Jewish in the funeral
home and he didn't permit us to come in.
We didn't know what to do. We called
maybe we called the rabbi something
back. He told us okay maybe just stay
outside and stay as close as you can to
the met which we did. We stayed all
night in the freezing weather. The rabbi
told us we have to be shame with shame.
A month later my father passed away. I
clearly was not going to use government.
They changed over the years and now it's
1965 and he's no good for our community.
So I decided I said, "But what are my
family? My family is going to kill me if
I change it. So I have to figure out a
way to do it." And I was very nervous.
And we go to Rabbi Kasa Kasa. I tell him
the whole story. And with kindness, he
says, "I'll tell you what you're going
to do. You're going to call Harama."
Harama was then the head of the I went
to meet Harama. I told him I want him in
the car when he passed the house, but
it's you're not going to do this. Tah is
taking care of everything. They're
really doing, but I want my mother to
think you're doing it. My cass told me
exactly how to do it. Go to Harama, get
him in the car, make sure he passes the
house, and you're doing the right thing,
my son. And he gave me not only to help
me and allow me to do it, but he told me
how I should do it to make my mother
happy, too.
>> He was also the most humble person. He
didn't show that he's gul. In fact, many
times like many cabalist.
He kept quiet.
[Music]
Managing a growing community is a
difficult task. Many issues arise.
Disputes amongst the people, friction in
families, challenges affecting religious
and educational growth. It takes a
certain type of leader to be able to
work with it all.
>> He would able to close his eyes to
certain things and make believe that he
didn't see it. He knew that if we can
just keep everybody whole for now, the
time will come where the blessing of
Hashem will just resurge back to the
spirituality that we had. And uh and he
was right. Be always from student of a
shalom.
You love peace be shalom. You're
pursuing peace. You love the people and
you bring him close to the Torah. That
was his approach.
That was his approach. And he
accomplished
to keep the community together. He would
use words like darling, honey,
sweetheart. And this is the way he would
talk to the people. But behind that
sweet image was a very strong man. and
he meant business and he knew how to
accomplish this through his sweetness.
He involved himself in family disputes,
making peace between uh feuding
partners. That was a priority to him.
The first minan in the 67th Street Shul
which was the main sh in for the
community Benson was much bigger than
the regular man.
And the reason why was that the first
man people all went to work on Shabbat.
They were going to work. He told them,
"Come to Sha before work. Come to the
first minyan." He encouraged them.
That took a tremendous foresight and
wisdom. He took his eye away from the
work and said, "Okay, come to sh the
first vignette. Come there." He had the
wisdom and the foresight and the
knowledge to be able to understand
our people. It reminds me of a story
many years later. We when we first came
to deal we're going back 47 years ago
and we wanted to open up other shel
came. So we're thinking of opening up in
West Long branch. The problem however
was was that almost everyone that would
have come to the school in West Long
Branch
was uh working on Shabbat. But not only
working on Shabbat privately, but
working on publicly
which clearly says is not. You can't use
them as we didn't know what to do. We
went to Rabbi Rosenbl at the time, one
of the Gulim that we we used to talk to,
and he asked me the following question.
If they're smoking a cigarette on
Shabbat
and Rabbi Kassen would be walking down
the block, would they ditch the
cigarette?
Would they throw away the cigarette? I
say absolutely every person they would
hide the cigarette, throw it away.
If they would do that, that means that
they're not called
even though in front of everyone.
[Music]
But if they're not going to be before a
like rabbi,
it's a sign that down deep they're
that they're privately but that's it's
not called a public Sabbath uh breaker
and therefore they're permitted to
become part of the that was the
philosophy of Rabbi K
that it may be that they're doing even
but he encouraged them to come to why
cuz he knew that that's not called the
person who was not allowed to be missed
after he saw that they wanted to keep
Shabbat the proof of the came to sh in
the morning they wanted to they were
anus and therefore he treated them with
tremendous respect tremendous love and
ultimately all those people started to
keep Shabbat their children surely kept
Shabbat and that's how the community
starts to change
forch.
If you ask any member of uh our
community,
no matter how religious or irreligious
they are, you know, what what brand of
Judaism do you associate with? And
everybody will say Orthodox.
And that's a guy that's driving on
Shabbat. And that's the guy that's
eating tariff. and the guy doesn't keep
too many of the fast days, but God
forbid call that guy conservative and
he'll punch you in the nose. Now, what
what gives a community at the time that
maybe doesn't have all the religious
observance that the Torah demands, but
one thing is clear, we're Orthodox.
Rabbi Kassen put that in their brains.
You're all part of the congregation, and
it's an orthodox congregation. He said,
"We're not judging the way you live, but
when you're part of the community,
you're part of the community that's an
orthodox community." Inside of him was
so much love to every individual.
He didn't lower anybody. He look even
the people they're not on the right
track. He look only positive. The way he
spoke to the people softly, nicely with
love only beautiful word he used that
changed the people.
a bear guard. They realize he's speaking
from the heart and that rich your heart.
[Music]
But times were not so easy in those
early growing years of our community.
While values were strong and tradition
came first, nobody can help notice a
dangerous wave starting to spread across
the United States and sneak into our
community. The problem of assimilation.
One thing that Syrians really love is
living in the community and they love
their services and they love their shoes
and they love their parties and they
love being together. So if we can make a
sort of uh like membership to be part of
this unique community that doesn't exist
anywhere in the world, you have to
accept upon yourself that you're going
to marry only within and you're not
going to marry out. Even converts we're
going to have to say not here once he
felt there's a gap in the fence. So then
it could lead to all sorts of
compromises. And my mother says you
could have had that those years in the
30s you could have had the whole
community intermar that's how it was it
was very bad and he suddenly sensed it
and made a special tala and that tala
saved the community without a question
>> don't see any inter marriages I don't
see in the community as far I know
there's really cases
>> the edict that you're going to be
ostracized in the community was able to
eventually win them over and give them
the strength
not to, you know, give into their desire
to marry the the boy that they wanted to
marry. It's unbelievable. Edict actually
is hanging in every one of our
synagogues. When you walk in, you see
that holy document with all the
signatures of all the community leaders
and you don't have to read every single
word and all the fine print, but we all
know what that represents. It represents
Rabbi Kassen's stroke of genius and
stroke of prophecy. It was amazing how
this man at was such a community that
was not as religious close to what we
are today. Wasn't close and yet to make
a such a strong takana against gimm and
against accepting with the understanding
that you're not going to really have a
gic and therefore he made this taka that
saved our community without a question.
Throughout our lives, we are filled by
Hashem with happy occasions, not so
happy occasions, and many events in
between. Rabbi Kassen made it his
business and top priority to attend all
of them as the community was his family.
As great as he was, he was accessible.
He was there for the needs of the
community. So, the main life cycle
function, of course, is a wedding. And
that takes a lot of the rabbi's time.
We'd call the couple to his house way
before the wedding. and just to talk to
them and give them you know little
tidbits of advice and uh talk about
their families and he would give them
pride where they came from and he would
remind them uh that don't forget to go
to the mcvan he would give them a little
handbook and created a certain protocol
for all these ceremonies that become the
way things are done in this community
nobody officiated out of the wedding
except Hakamov there was no such thing
there was one chief rabbi and Iam Sammy
Hakov was the man who officiated all
these rights and he kept records. He
established the way the ceremony is
done. It's his format.
The kituba ceremony. It's the way he did
it. It's it's signature. He has his way
and he had his lines and he had his, you
know, witicisms that he said. Everyone
knew that only Rabbi Kas is going to
marry you. Everyone had to go to Rabbi
Kas. Everyone had to go before the
wedding. His strength was he was able to
reach every single person of the
community regardless of religious
observance. He reached everyone.
Everyone knew this is the father of our
community. And as the father of our
community, this is the one you have to
get married by and if you have to get
married by you better listen to him and
that's that was his strength. If he's
officiating these ceremonies and he's
the greatest cabalist of the last
hundred years. So could you imagine the
infusion of kusha that he puts in the
Jewish home.
They say the apple doesn't fall far from
the tree. Today the Kassen family is
full of leaders in our community in
every right teaching Torah, learning
Torah, supporting Torah, serving on
boards of institutions across the entire
community.
All of this comes as the result of one
founding father.
>> Part of his legacy besides who the man
was is his uh his children and his
grandchildren and his
great-grandchildren, his great great
grandchildren. The posterity that he
left to the world. I mean very unique,
blessed without a doubt family.
Everywhere that's good, you'll find
somebody from this family that's
prominent family definitely are a bunch
of miniatures. It takes I guess a
hundred, you know, of these Cassin
families to all replicate the rabbi and
they they shine in in their own way. He
gave his family a pride
that we are cassens and as such
we are responsible for our community. We
are responsible to support all the
institutions in our community and every
every one of his children and
grandchildren and great grandchildren
and great great grandchildren all have
that pride. It's a tremendous pride they
have in being part of the part of a
family that that they go all the way
back to the beginning of our community.
Hakam Sha went in the same path of his
father and also
was cabarist quietly. He didn't force
his way on the people. No,
he want to hear every rabbi what had to
say to give the to other rabbis and he
had big kabot to every he understood
exactly what the kahal need. I believe
exactly
that the son is the leg of his father.
Exactly. I'm sure that if my father was
alive now and he was able to talk to
you, he would tell you, I want you not
only during this week to keep this kind
of good feeling of brotherhood, of
unity, but I want you to always be
prosper and happy and have a joyous
times and continue with this love, this
affection, this harmony, this
tranquility that we could have among the
community.
>> They're the ones that support almost all
the yeshiv and all the synagogues and
everything that's important. Their name
is there. When I was in 8th grade, I had
my master and teacher bin. He taught me
and my friends and he's the son-in-law
of
he was very close with him. He learned
his way, he learned his style, he
learned his, you know, behaviors and
most importantly, Rabbi Baruk learned
his mentality. That was his way and
hashem
we succeeded to see
to this community
flourishing becoming 10 and 20 falls
than what it was growing and growing and
it is my hope that will continue to
grow. I consider myself very fortunate
that when Rabbi Baruk passed away, he
handed over the great synagogue Oil
Yakov uh into my hands to be the rabbi.
We're committed to uh continue and carry
on the great legacy of our chief rabbi
and oil is actually named after Yakov
Katin. Rabbi Kassen's children uh made a
very very respectful donation and they
felt that there should be a synagogue
named after the chief rabbi and they did
even something more. The street of our
synagogue is called Jacob Lane which was
the only Jacob Lane in the world I think
that's named after it's the only street
of its kind. So you know whenever we
walk into Ashul you have to remember who
it's named after and therefore the shul
has to follow that mahalak or that that
path and that ideology and we try to
keep it as close as we can all this all
this Torah all this
self sacrifice what we call
the man has why should leave to come
over
He doesn't have easy time over here.
Didn't make money over here. Was simple
man was purees
that we remember all this
those people were for the kahal their
merit stand forever and that go to the
children grandchildren.
Hashem will remember that for thousand
of generation. Therefore, no wonders if
you see the children that nothing that
pash
>> at the end of the day was right. He knew
that Torah is going to return to the
community. It's just when so he was like
I said the bridge and he held us
together until that time came. He wasn't
alive to see how true that vision would
become. Today
we don't have a statistic of kids going
to public school like we had in his
time. all those issues that he knew
would eventually be resolved through his
tolerance and peace and his patience
with the people, it came true. And
therefore, everything you see today
really, it's to his credit. It's the
He's the father of all. Anytime we send
a kid to one of our prestigious
Yeshivas, you have to know it's only
here because of this man's sacrifice.
never died.
The same way his children, his seed is
alive, so too he is alive. We are all
his children.
We see the fruits of his work and truly
Hakam Yakov is alive and with us and
there is nothing we could absolutely to
say to thank this man and his family
what he did for our community. We have
to know that every one of our people in
our community has a greatness to them.
Yes, they may not all be to be religious
yet. They'll all be and their children
will certainly be. But they have
unbelievable method and unbelievable
goodness. And if we could learn from
Rabbi Kass to see the good in every
person to see the good in every single
person our community and to give him
hash and give him importance and give
him love and give him kindness as if
he's the God himself. We would be
emulating him and definitely giving his
nishama a tremendous eli for in the
higher world without a question. get to
know the man and the children really
should know. I think the yeshiva should
teach uh the legacy of this man just to
know the philosophy of what the
community was built on and I think a lot
of the philosophy is his it came from
his his thinking his way his legacy must
be kept on and everybody must commit to
preserve that
he paid for us.
for
we pray to Hashem that this community
they have always
made to learn and to teach to observe
and to practice. is and to be always
together.
We are
[Music]