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Man at the Wall - Men Only
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Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
(gentle instrumental music)
- I grew up in a
conservative Jewish home.
- I set the record
for most absences
from the Reform Hebrew School.
- I never heard of the (speaking
in a foreign language),
never heard of them.
- My whole appreciation
of Jerusalem at that point
was going to the Wailing Wall.
- Then I felt the
tap on the shoulder.
I turn around, and he
says, "Are you Jewish?"
- And he said, "Would you like
to see what yeshiva is like?"
(gentle instrumental music)
- Three and a half
thousand years ago,
when Hashem told
us to build him a
(speaking in a
foreign language),
he did not say,
"Build me a sanctuary so I
can live in the building."
God doesn't need a physical
structure to live in.
He's God.
What Hashem wanted was for us
to make a space in our hearts
and minds and invite
him into our lives
so that we can have
godliness shine through us.
What stood over here so long
ago was only a testimony
to that deep connection that
existed between us and Hashem.
As soon as that inner space
was contaminated by hatred,
jealousy, indifference, and
apathy towards one another,
the (speaking in a foreign
language) was destroyed.
This (speaking in a
foreign language),
as we reflect and
contemplate galus
and geulah, what we
have to think about
is how to rebuild
this structure,
and that involves
loving one another,
helping each other reconnect
with (speaking in a
foreign language),
and there's no greater example
than Rav Meir Schuster.
Rav Meir stood right here
at the (speaking in
a foreign language)
for almost his entire adult
life, looking out for people,
for wandering (speaking
in a foreign language),
and try to bring them
closer to Hashem.
That was the epitome
of (speaking in a
foreign language),
caring about another Jew.
When we talk about
Rav Meir Schuster
and we try to
describe who he was,
it becomes glaringly obvious
that it makes no sense
how this person single
handedly inspired
an entire generation
to (speaking in a
foreign language).
Rav Meir grew up in
Wisconsin in the 1950s.
He attended public school
until he was 11 years old,
after which his parents
sent him to the local
Jewish day school that
was run at the time
by Rabbi Dr. Abraham J. Twersky.
Rabbi Twersky sent him to
yeshiva two years later,
and Rav Meir went to
Ner Yisroel in 1960.
If you were to walk into
Yeshivas Ner Yisroel in 1960,
and you were to look around
the (speaking in a
foreign language),
and you had to guess who is
going to end up impacting
an entire generation
of (speaking in a
foreign language),
your last guess would be
the shy, soft spoken, quiet,
reserved kid
sitting and learning
in the back of the (speaking
in a foreign language).
How did this man, who
didn't have the personality
or the background,
inspire and change
so many thousands of people
to (speaking in a
foreign language)?
- I met Rabbi Meir
Zvi Schuster in 1966.
I went to Ner Yisroel
from 1964 to 1968.
- Meir Zvi was the one
who encouraged me to come
to Ner Yisroel in Baltimore,
and he was my (speaking
in a foreign language).
In the morning, about seven
o'clock, he would be going
from room to room in his
robe, and it was like,
"Come on, Shloimy, get up.
"Get up.
"Get up, Shloimy.
"Get up," and he
was, I tell you,
he was an (speaking in
a foreign language).
It was like, that
was his (speaking in
a foreign language).
- He had a special (speaking
in a foreign language).
That's for sure.
I mean, his (speaking in
a foreign language) was,
whoever needed help, he helped,
and he did it in a very
(speaking in a
foreign language) way,
very gentle way.
- He couldn't talk.
He was shy.
Meir Schuster is gonna go
up to complete strangers
and then talk them
into going to yeshiva?
I would say it's impossible.
He was so naturally
an introvert.
(gentle instrumental music)
- When you saw him (speaking
in a foreign language),
you wanted to be a part of that.
The way he looked up,
he was speaking to Hashem,
and maybe I have
some misgivings.
If I could've maybe
listened in a little bit,
maybe I could've asked, Meir,
what were you asking (speaking
in a foreign language) for?
I think I probably
would've heard
that Hashem is my best friend,
and I'm getting reacquainted.
I'm sharing my life with him.
He's sharing his
essence with me,
and when you saw him (speaking
in a foreign language),
you wanted to be a part of that,
and I was touched
by just watching him (speaking
in a foreign language).
I became a different person
'cause I saw Rav Meir (speaking
in a foreign language).
- I once heard a great story
about the (speaking in a
foreign language), Rav Shach.
When the (speaking in a
foreign language) passed away,
Rav Shach gave a
eulogy, and he said that
he had never seen
an (speaking in a
foreign language) Hashem,
someone who serves
Hashem, like Rav Chatzkel.
After the funeral,
one of Rav Shach's (speaking
in a foreign language)
came over
and asked him, "How could
you say such a thing
"about Rav Chatzkel?
"The Rosh Yeshiva
saw the (speaking in
a foreign language),
"the (speaking in a
foreign language)."
Rav Shach told him, he said,
"Every person has a (speaking
in a foreign language)
"and in that (speaking
in a foreign language),
"he can be the (speaking
in a foreign language).
"Rav Chatzkel was the (speaking
in a foreign language)
"in going against his nature."
In our generation, the giant
in going against his
nature was Rav Meir.
Rav Meir was not a
natural conversationalist.
He didn't like to talk.
He only spoke if he
absolutely had to,
so when he would be at the
Kosel and approach people,
you can actually reduce
his entire conversation
to just two questions,
"Are you Jewish?"
And if the answer was, yes,
he would follow it up with,
"Would you like to hear a
class in Jewish philosophy?"
That was it,
and you sort of
wonder to yourself,
how could somebody convince
someone else to take a class,
bring him to a yeshiva,
go to (speaking in
a foreign language),
or (speaking in a
foreign language),
with two questions?
- We moved into
the Jewish quarter
of the Old City of Jerusalem.
I went down and went
looking for a man
who I only knew by description,
and there I saw this tall,
lanky man, wearing a black suit
and a black hat, bearded,
and I walked over to him
and introduced
myself, and I said,
hi, I'm Michael Kaufman.
I just moved into
that apartment.
I pointed to our apartment
overlooking the Western Wall,
and I said, I'm at your service.
In the middle of our
discussion, as I stood there,
he did a complete about face
and made a beeline away from me
and towards the Western Wall,
and there I saw a young man,
about in his early twenties,
with a backpack on, and he
had his head on his arm,
which was at the Kotel,
at the Western Wall,
and he tapped him on the back,
and I watched as he engaged
him in conversation.
About a minute or two
later, he headed towards me
and without even
slowing down he said,
"I'm going to (speaking
in a foreign language).
"I'll see you later."
That was my introduction
to Rav Meir Schuster.
Can you imagine a person
like this, who was as shy
as can possibly be,
going up to a with it
young college man or woman,
and getting that person,
persuading that person
to change his direction in life
and becoming a religious Jew?
- Anybody who you would speak to
would give you the same profile.
He was not cut out for this job.
It's not something that you
would ever hire him to do,
but he was somebody that cared.
- It didn't come easy to
him to have a conversation.
It was very to the
point questions,
and there was no flourish.
There was no side conversation.
- He just wanted to
get the job done.
There was no ego.
There was no shield
between him and the people.
It was just him saying, "This
is what I want you to do.
"This is what you need to do."
It just attracted me
'cause it was so truthful.
It was so real.
- One person told me.
He said he went back to L.A.
He wasn't from.
He got a knock on his door,
11 o'clock at night.
It was Rav Meir.
Rav Meir searched,
tracked down his address,
went to this unknown
place, knocked on the door,
and said, "How are you doing?"
That's all he said to him.
"I just came to find
out how you're doing,"
and the person was so astonished
by that act of care and concern
that that reconnected
him with his Judaism,
and he found his way back.
Rav Meir wasn't doing
it as a technique.
Rav Meir, he would genuinely
remember this person
and wanted to know
how he was doing.
- The greatness of Rav Meir
was that he made himself
into a great person.
- My family and I
were truly blessed
to have the (speaking
in a foreign language)
of becoming close with
Rav Meir Schuster,
as having stayed here with us
for approximately
one week every year
for almost 20 years.
I was walking with him to
(speaking in a foreign language)
one Shabbos morning,
and I said to him, I said,
I don't even know what
we're supposed to do.
I don't even know
what we're doing here,
and he stopped,
and he never stops,
and he turned to me,
and he looked me in the eyes,
and he put his
finger on my chest,
and he said, "Do you want to
know what we're doing here?"
I didn't answer him.
He said, "Do you want to
know what we're doing here?"
And I said yes.
He said, "Our job is to
bring light to the world
"and God forbid darkness.
"That is what we're doing here."
And he turned and he
continued walking,
and I said to myself,
for the first time I
understood who he was.
He was on a mission.
He was driven.
He was driven to
relight the flame
of every (speaking in
a foreign language)
that was in jeopardy or
possibly could be lost.
He was gonna spread
as much Torah
and light to the
world as possible,
and he thought,
and he knew that
this was his mission,
and he certainly believed
it was ours as well.
- Do you know what's
really interesting?
What inspired Rav Meir to
come out here every single day
for 40 years is a story that
you and I heard tens of times,
the famous story
with the Netziv.
When the Netziv made
his (speaking in a
foreign language),
he made a party for
his family and friends
and told them how
when he was a kid,
he was struggling
with his learning,
and his parents were
about to send him
to learn how to
become a shoemaker,
but he begged them,
and he cried,
and he asked them
for another chance.
And the Netziv said,
"Imagine, had I
become a shoemaker,
"I would have come
up after a 120
"to (speaking in a
foreign language),
"and they would've asked me,
"did you learn Torah?"
Check.
Did you (speaking in
a foreign language)?
Check.
Did you do (speaking
in a foreign language)?
Check.
Did you make (speaking
in a foreign language)?
Check.
Where are your (speaking
in a foreign language)?
I don't know about any (speaking
in a foreign language).
I got shoes.
Netziv said, "Now,
when I come up
"to (speaking in a
foreign language),
"I can be proud that I
fulfilled my potential.
"I'll show them the (speaking
in a foreign language)
"and the (speaking in
a foreign language)."
Rav Meir, when he
heard the story,
he felt like he has to discover
what is it that I have
to do with my life.
How can I do it?
So he and his friend,
Rabbi Chaim Sofer,
they came to the Kosel there,
and he wanted to (speaking
in a foreign language)
to ask Hashem to open his eyes.
- And I saw a guy in a backpack.
He looked Jewish,
and I said to him, Meir Zvi,
let's go over to this guy.
Maybe there are a lot of
guys over here like this.
I've been here at the
Kosel a lot of times,
and maybe we should
do something about it.
Let's talk to him a little bit,
and we gave him a couple of
yeshivos as a suggestion,
and he said, "That would
be very, very nice."
Next two, three times,
we did the same thing.
I started up, "You want
to know a little bit more
"about Judaism, and
stuff like that."
Then about the fourth or
fifth time he told me,
"Let me try it myself.
"I want to try it."
Go ahead, Meir.
I have no problem.
So he started up,
and he goes over to the guy.
You like it around here?
And it was very (speaking
in a foreign language).
I don't know how you say it,
but it worked, and
he got him too,
and that's from what I hear
that's the beginning
of the whole story.
He just kept on going
and going and going
for the next 40 years.
- The time was ripe.
This was in 1970 after
the Yom Kippur War.
In Moscow, Eli
Esses was beginning
his (speaking in a
foreign language).
There was a world
wide revolution.
- My parents didn't have
much of a background,
my father even less,
and that kind of was typical
for I think Americans back then,
and that continued
until my Bar Mitzvah.
Bar Mitzvah was
a very big event.
My Jewish education ended
promptly thereafter,
and I never put two
together at that point
that the Bar Mitzvah
should be the beginning
of doing (speaking in
a foreign language),
not the end of doing (speaking
in a foreign language).
My parents didn't have a
problem with me dropping it,
and I applied to a
couple of universities.
I applied to the Naval Academy.
I got an appointment with
the Naval Academy as well,
and I was on ROTC program.
So that meant that
they paid my way,
and after four
years in university,
I was expected to graduate
as a commissioned officer
and join the Navy.
So I went to Israel to work
on a (speaking in a
foreign language),
and I was scheduled to
be there for four weeks,
working in the morning,
learning Hebrew
in the afternoon,
and basically
having a great time,
meeting people from
all over the world.
During my stay on the (speaking
in a foreign language),
you were allowed
to get one day off
and to go wherever
you'd like to,
and I think my whole
appreciation of Jerusalem
at that point was going
to the Wailing Wall.
I went to the Kotel
on an (speaking in
a foreign language),
and I was one of
the observing Jews,
trying to take it all in
and staring at this wall
that had been standing
for thousands of years,
and I got tapped on the shoulder
by an individual I didn't know,
and I turned around, and he
asked me, "Are you Jewish?"
And I said yes,
and he says, "Would you
like to attend a class
"in Jewish philosophy?"
And I was an open minded person,
and I said, why not?
I didn't have any other
great agenda for that day,
and he said, "Great."
He says, "Come with me,"
and that was really the extent
of the entire conversation.
I don't know if he asked me
any additional questions,
but before I knew it,
I was in front of Rabbi
(speaking in a foreign language)
and one of his famous 48
Ways to Wisdom classes,
and I was all prepared
to go on my way,
but before I could
leave the classroom,
there was Rabbi Schuster.
And he said, "Would
you like to speak
"to the rabbi who
just gave the class?"
And I said, I don't think so,
and he said, "Come with me."
They hustled me right in
to see Rabbi Weinberg,
and he says, "Did you
like what you hear?"
Yes.
"Would you like to stay longer?"
And I said, I really can't
because I have a
commitment to go back
to the (speaking in
a foreign language),
and he said, "Well, what about
"after the (speaking in
a foreign language)?"
And I said, I think
I would like that.
I had a commitment to the Navy,
and if you don't show
up, you can go AWOL,
and the Navy is very strict
about those kind of things.
There was a time when the
pressure was so great.
I was considering leaving,
and I had a conversation
in the dining room
with Rabbi Schuster,
and I told him, I said, Rabbi
Schuster, it's not right.
I have a commitment to
the Navy, to my country,
and I have to go back,
and he asked me.
He says, "Well, you know a
little bit about Judaism now."
He says, "When did the
Jewish people stand
"at Mt. Sinai?"
I said, over 33 hundred
years ago, thereabouts.
So he said, "Your
commitment to Har Sinai
"precedes your commitment
to the US Navy.
"You make the choice."
Rabbi Schuster was
part of me staying
in yeshiva for the first time.
He was part of my
life in making sure
I was taken care of
when I was in college.
It was through the
family he set me up with
that I eventually made
a (speaking in a
foreign language) with,
and it was just, as I said,
a continuum that
lasted me through life,
and I'm very much appreciative
of everything he did
and how much he cared.
- Rav Schuster
didn't see people.
He saw (speaking in
a foreign language).
It didn't matter what
color their hair was.
It didn't matter how
many earrings they had.
It didn't matter what
they looked like.
He wanted to give
them a chance to grow.
He didn't see where
they were coming from.
He looked where they could go.
That's who he was.
- When we started filming
for the documentary,
I had no idea how
much of an impact
Rav Meir Schuster had on the
world, on the Jewish world.
When I started
reviewing the filming
and the footage
and the interviews,
I saw that my kids' principal,
Rabbi Shlomo Goldberg,
was one of the people
that was tapped
on the shoulder by Rav Meir,
and that blew me away
because that means
I was indirectly affected
by Rav Meir Schuster.
- I grew up in,
we're in the Bronx,
moved to New Rochelle, New
York, when I was a baby,
lived there till I was
about 11 or 12 years old,
when my family moved
to El Paso, Texas,
and I got Bar Mitzvah'ed
in the Reform temple.
We had to ask to be
allowed to wear a yarmulke.
My parents wanted me
to wear a yarmulke
when I was Bar Mitzvah'ed,
but in the Reform temple
you weren't allowed.
I lived there until I
went off to college,
in those years, went
to a small college
in north central Texas,
just north of Dallas,
between Dallas and
the Oklahoma border
called Austin College.
I was a political science major.
It was before school
when I went to the
head of the department
to get my schedule signed
off on for the classes
that I would be taking.
Another gentleman came in.
His name was Dr. Larry Fuesher.
The head of the department
introduced him to me
and said he's joining the staff,
and he's going to be
teaching a course in Fascism,
the Nazi Experience,
and World War Two.
So that sounded very
interesting to me.
I was fascinated by the topic
and that such a thing
would be taught,
so I changed my
schedule in order
to be able to take that course,
and then that year, in
the month of January,
the professors could
teach any course
that they wanted to,
and it was for a month,
and his course was
a trip to Israel.
So when I heard about
that opportunity,
I grabbed it.
There were a group
of 14 or 15 of us.
There was one other Jewish
person in the group,
a young man named Bennett.
I don't remember his last name,
and Larry took us on
this trip to Israel.
(gentle instrumental music)
We arrived in Israel.
We were actually
staying in hotels
in the Arab section
of the Old City
because they were
less expensive,
and I remember that
when I saw the Kotel,
there's no reason why I should
have any connection to it.
I didn't know what it was.
I didn't know what
it represented,
but when I saw it,
and I was there,
I was really overcome
with emotion,
and I was approached
by a tall man
who asked me the question,
"Are you Jewish?"
And would you be interested
in spending Shabbos,
having a Shabbos meal
with a religious family,
with an Orthodox family,
and is there anyone else
who's Jewish in your group?
So I answered, are
there other Jews?
Yes, Bennett.
Would we be interested
in spending Shabbos
with an Orthodox family?
I think so.
And we took off,
trying as hard as we
could to keep up with him
because that man of course
was Rabbi Meir Schuster,
and he was a very fast walker.
So we trailed behind
him as he took us
out of the Old City
into (speaking in a
foreign language).
That Shabbos was very special.
I still have it
etched in my mind.
There was a purity in the house,
which was extremely simple.
Rabbi Schuster took us to
(speaking in a foreign language)
to learn with someone
who was there,
and that was the first
Shabbos experience.
I decided to wear a yarmulke
when I was on the trip
because I felt very
special being Jewish,
but there was something
that was awakened
within me in terms of
a desire to be Jewish,
and that stuck with me
even when I returned.
I had thought about coming back,
like I had said when I had
left that I would be back.
I didn't know when.
I didn't know how,
but I appreciated the
fact that Rabbi Schuster
wanted me to come back
and that he would work
things out if I ever did.
When I got there, and it
was again, a Friday night,
so there I was at the Wall,
and a tall gentleman
tapped me on the shoulder.
I turned around,
and he said to me, "Steve
from Texas, right?"
And that was amazing,
that he remembered me.
He said, "Is Bennett with you?"
I said, no, Bennett's
not with me.
I'm in a different group.
I'm on an (speaking in
a foreign language).
He said, "You decided to go
"to an (speaking in
a foreign language)
"on a (speaking in
a foreign language)?
"I wish you would've
come to yeshiva."
So I said, well, this
is what I started
and what I decided for now.
And he said, "Are you
interested in spending Shabbos
"with a family?"
I said, well,
that's actually one
of the reasons that I
came down to the Wall.
I'm happy you found me,
and I set back out
following Rabbi Schuster
to the same family,
to the Finehandlers,
who accepted me back like
I was a long lost cousin.
(dramatic instrumental music)
So I made the decision that,
even though I
hadn't been in touch
with Rabbi Schuster
for many years,
that I was going to go down,
and I was going to give
yeshiva a real try.
I walked into the
yeshiva offices,
and of course who was
there in the office
when I came to enroll
in the yeshiva?
The person who was there
was Rabbi Schuster.
So he took a look at me.
I held out my hands.
I said, Rav Meir,
put on the cuffs.
Take me away.
I'm turning myself in,
so he was very happy.
He gave me a big hug.
He worked out the enrollment.
I became part of (speaking
in a foreign language),
and I guess the rest is history.
- Many years ago, I was
standing with Rav Meir Schuster
at the Kotel,
and I was having a conversation
and talking to Rav Meir
Schuster at the Kotel,
you're probably mostly
talking to yourself
because 90% of his
focus was looking
over my shoulder to
see if there were
any potential
targets approaching,
and sure enough, while
I was standing there,
I remember this tall,
skinny kid with a backpack,
with a long ponytail walking by,
and Rav Meir Schuster
hooked his arm into him,
and he goes, "What
are you doing, man?"
He said, "What's
wrong with you?"
He says, "Are you Jewish?"
He says, "You don't have to
be Jewish to be at the Wall."
He says, "You don't even
know if you're Jewish?"
He says, "I happen
to be Jewish."
He goes, "How do you
know you're Jewish?"
He says, "'Cause my
parents are Jewish."
He said, "Really?"
He turns with him, and he says,
"Tell me about your parents,"
and he starts walking off.
He says I was walking with him.
I was talking to him,
and I said, "By the way,
where are you staying?"
He says, "I'm staying in
the Christian Quarter."
He says, "You can't stay
in the Christian Quarter.
"You're Jewish.
"You gotta stay in
the Jewish Quarter."
So he says, "I'm perfectly
comfortable there.
"I don't want to move.
"I'm happy there."
He says, and I spoke to him,
and I talked to him,
and there was
nothing I could do.
He said, "So yesterday morning
"I was on my way to (speaking
in a foreign language),
"probably (speaking in a foreign
language) in the morning."
He says, "I realized I
was 20 minutes early,
"so I said, you know what?
"I'm gonna go by
where the hostel
"where this kid is staying,
"and I'm gonna lean
against the wall
"and say some (speaking
in a foreign language)."
He says, "Can you believe it?
"Five minutes
later he walks out,
"and I grab him by the arm,
"and I said, you need to
stay in the Jewish Quarter.
"You're Jewish.
"You don't understand it."
He goes, "Rabbi, are you crazy?
"Have you been waiting
here all night?
"What's wrong with you?"
And he said, "Okay, take
me where you want me
"to stay tonight.
"I'm happy to stay in
the Jewish Quarter."
He says, "And (speaking
in a foreign language),
"he's staying at
the Heritage House,
"and I have him booked
at his first class
"at (speaking in a foreign
language) tomorrow morning."
I said, the reason that
happened is because he cared.
He really cared,
and I think God didn't want
to disappoint Rav Meir Schuster.
I really do.
(gentle instrumental music)
- I grew up in a little town
called Willimantic, Connecticut,
which has about 15,000 people,
about 100 Jewish families
in the whole area.
When I graduated college,
I was watching TV and John
Chashlo came on the TV.
It was the Channel 4 NBC.
At the end of the report
about the Yom Kippur
War in Israel,
he said, "And Israel
needs 10,000 volunteers
"to work on (speaking
in a foreign language)
"to replace the soldiers
who are on the front."
That was the first
time I ever thought
about going to Israel.
I said, well, I wanted
to go someplace warm.
I wanted to go
someplace far away,
and Israel fit the bill.
I was there for about a year,
and I had decided
that I was gonna go
back to America and go
into the Peace Corps.
I had been accepted
into the Peace Corps
to go to Senegal.
This was about February.
In November I was
supposed to go to Senegal,
and I was leaving Israel.
I was with a friend of mine
who also ultimately
became religious,
and he had a car, so
we drove to the Kotel.
We parked the car about two
o'clock in the afternoon,
and we walked around Jerusalem.
We ended up at the Kotel.
I wanted to say good
bye to the Kotel,
and it was about eight
o'clock at night,
and we decided it was
time to get out of here.
We're going to Tel Aviv,
and I walked into
the parking lot,
and there was a guy there,
standing there with
a snap brim hat,
with a suit and a tie.
He looked at me,
and he said, "How would
you like to meet a Rabbi?"
And I said, how old is he?
He said, "50."
I said, too old, not interested.
And then he looked
at me and said,
"How can you not be
open to your religion?"
This was in 1977,
and my whole purpose
in life at that time
was to be open to experience.
Well, that kind of like got me,
and my friend, who
was actually Greek,
wanted to go see this Rabbi,
and we argued a little bit.
So we said, okay, we'll
go meet the Rabbi.
We went to this class that
Rabbi Schiller taught.
Rabbi Schiller was probably,
his class was the
most impressive thing
I had ever seen.
He was like the smartest
guy I had ever met.
He talked about
Plato and Aristotle
and the relationship
between the oral law
and the written law.
I didn't even know
there was an oral law,
and when we got up
and out of there,
Rav Meir was waiting for us,
and he said, "Rabbi Schiller
would like to talk to you."
So anyway, we went
down to the office,
and Rav Meir stands outside
the office waiting for us,
and Rabbi Schiller said
after a long conversation,
the Rabbi said, "Well, boys,
will you stay here for a week?"
And I said, Rabbi
Schiller, you know,
I said, I think you said
some very good things
for the Jewish people there,
for the Jewish young men,
but I'm going to Tel Aviv.
Then I'm going to the beach.
Then I'm going to the airport,
and then I'm going
to the Peace Corps,
and besides, I have this ticket,
and if I lose my
ticket in a week,
I'm gonna lose the ticket,
and he said, "If your
ticket is your problem,
"you don't have a problem."
He said, "I thought about why
I wasn't gonna go back there,
"and instead I enjoyed talking
about Jewish philosophy."
He offered me to live in
Jerusalem for three months
and go to classes from 9:00
to 1:00 in the morning.
I thought, why am I
not gonna be there?
I'm not gonna be there
because I'm afraid they're
gonna brainwash me,
and then I thought to myself,
since I was 27 years old,
if they can brainwash
me in three months,
they can have my brain,
and I decided to go
back for three months,
and I have tremendous (speaking
in a foreign language)
because my entire
life and lifestyle
is a result of this guy
who I would probably never
have been friends with,
would never have hung
out with in high school,
who was there every day,
was simply the
most persistent guy
that you could imagine.
Mrs. Schuster, when my
first child was born,
Mrs. Schuster knitted
a sweater for him,
which we still have,
which all of my kids wore,
and which is a
prized possession,
and now I'm thinking about it,
we haven't brought it up,
but now that I
have grandchildren,
it occurs to me now
that we're gonna use it
for the grandchildren.
I think that there's
thousands of people like that,
who are out there who
did more Judaism wise
because they met him,
and they ended up
studying a little bit,
and I think that
was his purpose.
- I keep on, to this
day, bumping into people,
and I'm always fascinated
whenever I hear
that somebody is a (speaking
in a foreign language).
I always ask them
for their story,
and the amount of people
who tell me, to this day,
new people that I'm
meeting for the first time,
that their experience
began with Rav Meir
picking them up,
continues to astonish.
- I was born in a
completely non-religious
secular Jewish family.
Religious Judaism was something
I just never heard of,
never knew of.
I always felt strongly
Jewish my whole life.
When Yom Kippur came,
I was one of the few people
in my extended family
that would fast,
and then on Yom
Kippur afternoon,
I remember, at 4:00
in the afternoon,
we would drive to my aunt's
house to break the fast.
I remember my mother's
sister, my aunt, saying,
"Why don't you eat something?"
And I said, well, no, I'm
waiting until sundown.
She said, "No, no, it's
okay, you proved the point.
"You can eat now."
In 1983, when my medical
school class was graduating,
a friend of mine,
his name is Steve.
We decided to take a trip
around the world together,
sort of a graduation trip.
We were in Amsterdam.
We were in Luxembourg.
I guess the major
concentration of time
was gonna be in Israel,
so when we went to Israel,
we were backpacking.
It was on (speaking in
a foreign language),
and we had our backpacks
on, no yarmulkes,
and this guy comes up to us,
who from our perspective
looked like he was from Mars.
He looked like something
from out of this world.
He had a black
hat, a long beard,
some (speaking in a foreign
language) going behind the ears,
if I remember
correctly, black jacket,
and he came up to us, and he
said, "Are you boys Jewish?"
We said, yeah, we're Jewish,
and he introduced his name,
his name, Rabbi Meir Schuster.
He said, "What are you
doing tomorrow night,
"which is the last night
"of (speaking in a foreign
language), of Passover?"
So my friend Steve and I
looked at each other, said,
I don't know.
Maybe we'll go see a
movie or something.
We didn't have any
specific plans,
so he said, well, how
would you like to spend it
with an Orthodox Jewish family?
So I spoke to Steve about it,
and we said, you know what?
For the cultural experience,
like you might go spend
time with an Indian family,
or a Chinese family, just to
see culturally what they do,
yeah, we're Jewish,
might as well see what an
Orthodox Jewish family does.
So we agreed,
and we stayed overnight
to the next day
'cause just really
enjoyed the conversations.
It was the most
intellectually honest
and open conversation
I'd ever had.
It was exuding integrity.
I could challenge anything.
I could ask anything.
If I stumped him,
he would say it.
There was no need to show
an ego, defend an ego,
defend an idea
because it was his.
So Rabbi Schuster had put
us there by Rabbi Kasnett,
and then, we ended up
staying the whole next day
and then the next night,
which was the eighth day
of (speaking in a
foreign language).
We left wearing yarmulkes,
and I made a commitment
at that point
based on the
intellectual integrity
that I'd seen in
Rabbi Kasnett's home,
and really the (speaking
in a foreign language),
not that I could have put
a word to it at that point,
that I would start
keeping kosher
from that point forward,
and that was our first
exposure to Rabbi Schuster.
- I once asked
Rav Meir Schuster,
how many people
did you approach?
How many people do you think
you sent to the yeshivas?
And he was very
hesitant to answer me.
He said, "I don't know."
I said, you have to
have some type of idea.
I said, do you have a number?
He says, "More than 5,000."
That's the first thing
he ever said to me,
and I'm sure it may
have been a lot more.
If you think about
all the kids he sent
to all the families,
to all the homes,
for all the Succos meals,
for all the people he
grabbed and sent in
and out of different yeshivas,
and how many that
he had an effect on,
one on one, I don't think
anybody had a bigger effect.
- I grew up in a Reform
household in suburban Boston.
- My father was considered
a very Jewish guy
within the Reform temple.
He used to go every
Friday night to services.
He participated in
the temple a lot,
but basically none of us were
turned on to Judaism at all.
- I grew up in the public
school system in Andover,
and I went after that
to Boston University.
I majored in journalism.
One of my motivations
for becoming a journalist
was because I had felt
that I hadn't really come
in contact with anyone
that really had the truth
in the world.
I had gotten to a
point of desperation.
I didn't find anybody out there
who I felt knew
what life was about.
I decided that I
would come to Israel
to see what a (speaking in a
foreign language) was like.
I was staying at a friend's
house in Jerusalem,
and it was the
middle of the summer,
and it was extraordinarily hot,
and I couldn't get
out of the house
to even walk around at all,
and after a few days inside,
I got cabin fever
and decided I have
to see some of the
sights before I go
to (speaking in a
foreign language).
So the most important
sight anybody,
any Jew knows this,
is the Western Wall.
So I came to Western Wall,
and someone tapped me on the
shoulder when I was there,
and I turned around,
and Rabbi Meir Schuster,
I didn't know him by
that name at that point.
He said, "Are you Jewish?"
And I said, yes, I am,
and he said, "Would you like
to see what yeshiva is like?"
My reaction subconsciously
was twofold.
First of all, this'll
make a great story
as a journalist, right,
my experiences in yeshiva,
and the other one was,
I really want to
go and show them
where they've made
their mistake.
So Rav Schuster
brought me to speak
to Rav Noach Weinberg
at (speaking in a
foreign language),
just up the stairs
from the Western Wall.
I actually was
extremely impressed
with the professionalism
of the speakers there
and the logic of
their arguments.
They were extremely
persuasive in their argument.
They weren't persuasive
enough to prevent me
from going to (speaking
in a foreign language).
I went to the program anyway.
After an extremely
disappointing experience
on (speaking in a
foreign language) after,
I'm thinking five months or so,
I came back to (speaking in
a foreign language) to learn.
- When I got to be 16,
my brother went to Israel
to be on (speaking in
a foreign language).
He invited me to come (speaking
in a foreign language) time,
when he was on (speaking
in a foreign language),
and he had already
become interested
in (speaking in a
foreign language),
in Judaism, and he took me
to a (speaking in a
foreign language),
but didn't push too much on me,
and he took me
to a (speaking in a
foreign language) here
in the Old City by (speaking
in a foreign language),
and that was my only exposure
to any religious
Judaism ever, I think.
And then I came home
and never really thought
about it more
except for the fact
that he became more
and more religious
and then started
writing me letters.
Two weeks into the next semester
in Emerson College in Boston,
after having received many
letters from my brother,
I got the feeling
that my brother
was probably onto
something smart,
and I came to Israel
and basically never
looked back after that.
I never went back to college,
stayed in yeshiva,
and I took discovery
when I first got here,
and then just stayed
in yeshiva till today.
I've been here
for over 30 years.
- I have a family
that I brought up here
in (speaking in a
foreign language) myself,
and I have seven children,
and at last count the same
number of grandchildren.
My sisters, I have
three sisters,
two of whom became observant
in this indirect way,
through Meir Schuster.
Both of them coming
after my brother
and I had come here,
both of them coming
wanting to check out
what authentic Torah
Judaism was about.
- So how did Rav Meir
manage to convince thousands
and thousands of people
to just follow him blindly
to yeshivas,
seminaries, and classes,
with just a few words?
You see, it's not
about the words we say
as much as who we are
and how we come across
to other people.
Rav Meir was, in one word, real.
He was authentic.
He sincerely and really cared
and loved every single Jew,
and that came through in
the few words that he spoke.
- Rabbi Schuster was maybe
the ultimate salesman,
the ultimate man to go
out and find the clients,
find the customers,
and just to get them just
to take a little
taste of (speaking in
a foreign language),
and I think he knew and trusted
that once they got a
taste of what was real,
they would see a difference.
- If Rav Meir can
make his contribution,
basically meeting people,
given his personality,
which was really very
shy and introverted,
then any of us can do something
for (speaking in a
foreign language)
that we don't think
that we can do.
- I'll tell you what Rabbi
Schiller once told me.
Years ago, and I've been
very close to Rabbi Schiller,
and from (speaking in
a foreign language),
the head of (speaking
in a foreign language),
and Rabbi Schiller
told me at one point.
He said that I would say
that at least half the yeshiva
came from Meir Schuster,
and I heard the same
thing from Rabbi Refson
from the (speaking in
a foreign language).
He said, "At least
half his yeshiva
"would be girls
that he picked up."
Rav Meir lost a
child many years ago.
He sent a (speaking
in a foreign language)
to (speaking in a
foreign language),
who was the (speaking
in a foreign language),
the (speaking in a
foreign language),
and he sent a (speaking in
a foreign language) to him,
asked somebody to go
ask a (speaking in
a foreign language),
if he has to sit shiva or not,
because, he says,
"It's (speaking in
a foreign language),
"and every minute I'm
away from the Kosel,
"or away from doing my work,
"(speaking in a
foreign language), so
we're losing people,
"losing kids, so am I (speaking
in a foreign language)
"to sit shiva?"
- Rav Elyashiv (speaking
in a foreign language)
that he has to sit shiva,
but Rav Elyashiv
was so impressed
by the deep sense of (speaking
in a foreign language)
that Rav Meir had for (speaking
in a foreign language).
He was so impressed by the care
and the love that Rav
Meir had for every Jew
that he decided to take
out of his precious time
and come be (speaking in a
foreign language) Rav Meir.
If Rav Elyashiv could
take out of his time
to go meet Rav Meir,
all of us today on (speaking
in a foreign language)
can take out of our time,
and meet Rav Meir, get
to know who he was,
where he came from, and
what he accomplished.
Hashem said about (speaking
in a foreign language),
"(speaking in a foreign
language) loves me so much
"that I know that that
love will translate itself
"into the teaching of Torah
"and (speaking in a foreign
language) to his children."
When somebody is
passionate and goes out
and teaches Torah and brings
people closer to Hashem,
that is a reflection
of how close
that person is to (speaking
in a foreign language).
(gentle instrumental music)
- Later, when he wasn't well,
and he lost his memory,
and he came to visit while
he was losing his memory,
he came with a shadow
because he knew it was
only a matter of time
before he wouldn't remember.
I think it was sort
of like going around
and saying good-bye
to his friends,
that he was afraid
he would not remember
'cause he knew what
the diagnosis was,
and he came to this house,
and he had to look
at me for a minute,
and he stayed with
me for 20 years,
and then he went, "Sammy,"
and he gave me a big hug.
He remembered me,
but that was almost
towards the end,
the last time he came to America
before he really wasn't well.
It was terrible that
he got sick so young.
- My wife and I definitely
wanted to go by and visit him,
and we knew that
he wasn't as well,
and we knew that
he had a condition
that was already diagnosed,
and we went to visit him.
I think, the only thing
he was disappointed with
is that he couldn't
be at the Kotel
and help other Jews,
and we have to carry
on that legacy.
- I spent some time with him,
thanking him for everything
that he had done,
expressing who I was teaching
and what we had accomplished.
The adults who I had been
(speaking in a foreign
language) to teach,
and the children who I'm
(speaking in a foreign language)
to teach and how that
really all gets back to him.
- He never stopped
until he was stopped.
Until that, the (speaking
in a foreign language)
literally stopped him.
- It was a just
tremendous deep, deep
(speaking in a foreign
language) that he felt,
seeing me here,
living in Lakewood,
(speaking in a foreign
language) wife,
(speaking in a foreign
language) children,
member of a (speaking in a
foreign language) community,
contributing to the Jewish
people in so many ways.
He felt a deep, deep (speaking
in a foreign language),
and it gave me pleasure to see
how much pleasure this man,
who never wanted
anything for himself,
was able to receive and
to enjoy from the fruits
of his labor,
which was the life
that I was now living.
- At our (speaking in
a foreign language),
in (speaking in a
foreign language),
since my wife had also been met
at the Wall by Meir Schuster,
we thought it would
be very appropriate
for him to be an (speaking
in a foreign language)
on our (speaking in
a foreign language),
and he, with a lot of (speaking
in a foreign language),
participated in our (speaking
in a foreign language).
My wife, Robin, and I
have eight children,
of whom five are married.
Those five married
children have resulted in,
at this point (speaking
in a foreign language)
13 grandchildren.
The fact that we
are where we are
with dedicated Jewish children
and beautiful grandchildren,
and an opportunity
to teach Torah
and to spread Torah in
such a meaningful way,
was really the
dedication and the warmth
and the (speaking in a foreign
language) of Rabbi Schuster.
- When I came back
to Israel in 1996,
my oldest son was nine.
I had a seven year old
and a six year old,
and when I would go to the Kotel
and see Rav Meir,
I would bring him
because Rav Meir would
(speaking in a foreign language)
for the (speaking in
a foreign language).
He would (speaking in
a foreign language)
and lead the service,
and I would bring
them in front of him,
and they would stand there,
and I would say,
this is how you (speaking
in a foreign language).
I want you to see the guy
who made me religious,
and the guy who you're
here in Israel because of,
and I want you to watch the way
that he (speaking in
a foreign language)
'cause again, it was
this complete dedication.
- Each of us shouldn't
underestimate the impact
we have on another
person by just caring
and sharing something that
you deeply believe in.
There are ways in
which people touch you
to help you come and
become much greater
than you thought you
ever could become,
and I think Rabbi Meir
was one of those people
who helped me see that,
and all of us need to realize
that we have plenty
of assets available
to us to touch the
lives of other Jews
and Rav Meir certainly
is (speaking in a
foreign language) us
because he taught us that
you just have to care,
and if you don't care enough,
then that's something
that we have to work on,
and that we can use
him as an example.
- The (speaking in
a foreign language)
that he has
is a single person
in his generation.
(speaking in a foreign language)
- When I just look at him,
you stand in awe
of a man like this,
what he could accomplish,
and I always thought to myself,
could you imagine if
you had such a passion,
and you also have other
things going with it?
I mean, how much
could be accomplished?
I mean, what are you gonna tell
the (speaking in a foreign
language) after 120 years?
Where were you?
Where was I?
I mean, what we could have done.
Meir Schuster, he's
somebody to really admire,
and he was just great.
I mean, you saw.
There was nothing else.
- I was.
I was a side person,
but sometimes you
have to do something.
You do it.
That's all.
Kiruv is the most important
thing in the world today
because we're losing so many.
It's the most important thing,
so it's imperative
that you do kiruv,
to reach out, to try
to help somebody.
(dramatic instrumental music)