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IN-DEPTH FEATURES Rediscovery Trip to Lithuania Almost a year has passed since that wonderful voyage of discovery to the roots of the yeshiva world in Lithuania,
organized by the yeshiva Ahavas Torah-Baranowitz of
Yerushalayim, led by HaRav Elchonon Baron. The trip was
graced with the presence of several senior talmidei
chachomim who have personal memories of those roots,
including HaRav Leib Baron, the nosi of the yeshiva.
The voyage was chronicled, so that we can all participate, to
some extent, in the voyage and the lessons it has for us
today.
The airport clerk stops in the middle of
examining our tickets and looks up hesitantly. "I see you
have just returned from Vilna," she says in heavily accented
Hebrew. "I am from there myself; I came on aliya about
a year ago. May I ask what you want in Lithuania -- I mean,
Jews of your sort?"
Odd, we'd been asked the same question by another young,
secular oleh chadash while waiting to board the plane
at Vilna. He had gone back to visit his family, but obviously
he had already adopted the Israeli style: "Tell me something -
-- what is a Dos [Israeli slang for Ashkenazi
chareidi] like you doing here in Vilna? Did you lose
something here?" Then he answers his own question with a
knowing look. "Wait, don't tell me -- I already know. You
came to visit the Gaon's grave, right? Don't think I never
heard of him. I went to the Gaon's grave myself on this
visit. That's what you came for, right?"
The word "gaon" rolls off his tongue with a strong
Russian accent that seems to augment the triumph in his
voice, as if he had gotten to the bottom of the mystery. So
this was why so many chareidim, rabbonim, and roshei
yeshivos come to Vilna!
As a matter of fact, our visit to the kever of Rabbenu
the Gaon of Vilna, ztvk"l was one of the high points
of our recent trip to the destroyed Torah centers of
Lithuania. But if anyone had doubts about whether they were
really destroyed, this question would easily settle the
matter: "What would Jews like you want in Lithuania?" -
- clear evidence that only a wasteland is left after two
hundred years of glory. Second and third- generation
tinokos shenishbu, victims of Communist "reeducation,"
wonder what on earth bnei Torah could be looking for
in Lithuania.
"What did you lose here?" they want to know.
The Lost World
We were a group of bnei Torah from Eretz Yisroel and
America, who set out during last summer's bein
hazmanim on a trip to what were once the greatest Torah
centers of Europe: the Lithuanian yeshivos.
Our trip was organized by Yeshivas Ahavas Torah-Baranovich, a
yeshiva for bnei Torah from America founded in
Yerushalayim two years ago. The nosi of the yeshiva,
R' Arye Leib Baron, is himself a talmid of the
original Yeshivas Baranovich and of Yeshivas Mir. R' Baron
and his son, R' Elchonon the rosh yeshiva (named after
R' Elchonon Wassermann Hy"d), decided to found the new
yeshiva as a memorial to the kehilla of Baranovich,
which was famous for its love of Torah.
In addition to visiting the sites of the great yeshivos, we
were seeking out the remnants of the modern Jewish
communities of Lithuania, hoping to meet these Jews face to
face and offer them some spiritual sustenance.
Our having with us rabbonim who were actually raised in the
Lithuanian yeshivos added another dimension to the tour. At
every stop the group was gripped by their reminiscences; the
historical accounts they had read came to life as those who
had been there described what had once been.
Besides R' Arye Leib Baron there was R' Osher Katzman,
another talmid of both Baranovich and Mir, and also R'
Nochum Zeldis of Lakewood, a talmid of Baranovich
whose father had taught in the yeshiva ketana there,
and R' Aharon Florans, also of Baranovich and Mir.
As a result of the political upheavals of recent years, the
Lithuanian yeshivos are nowadays split between two countries,
Lithuania and Belarus. The tour began in Minsk, in Belarus: a
painful example of the devastation of European Jewry.
Pre-Holocaust Minsk was home to 140,000 Jews, well over half
of the total population of 215,000 (the similar proportions
were found in many towns and villages in the region). In this
city, where such great men as the Nachalas Dovid and
the Or Godol served as rav, not a trace of that glory
remains. Even the Jewish cemetery is completely obliterated;
only in the park that was planted in its place one may
occasionally stumble over a fragment of an old
matzeivah.
The Great Synagogue of Minsk is still standing, a beautiful
building -- it now serves as a theater. Members of the local
Jewish community showed us another former shul, now an
art gallery. If they hadn't pointed it out to us, we never
would have known it had once been a shul. All the
obvious signs have been stripped away. But yes, now we can
see it: there is the niche where the aron kodesh
stood, and there is the ezras noshim up there and
look! There are twelve windows!
The local Jews take us to see some more buildings. Here too
was a synagogue, they tell us, and here there was a
shtiebel. They say "was": everything is in the past
tense.
On the Way to Volozhin
From Minsk we travel to Volozhin, whose name alone awakens
the heart of every ben Torah. Volozhin, the mother of
all yeshivos.
On the way to Volozhin we are thinking of how the foundation
was laid there for all the famous yeshivos, how R' Chaim of
Volozhin came to the Gra and enthusiastically presented his
idea for a real yeshiva, a mokom Torah that would form
a total environment for its talmidim instead of the
study in a local kloiz or beis midrash that was
customary until then. The Gra would not answer R' Chaim on
that occasion.
Only much later, when R' Chaim came again to ask for the
Gaon's ruling on his idea, did the Gra finally approve it and
explain why he had been unwilling to give an answer the first
time. "When I heard you speaking so excitedly about your
idea, I was afraid that your intentions were not
lishma, that some personal desire from deep in your
heart was involved. But when you came back and presented your
idea in a calm, detached manner, I could see you were
lesheim Shomayim. That is the only way to found a
mokom Torah."
We remember hearing about how R' Chaim's talmidim
testified that when the cornerstone of the yeshiva was laid,
he wept so much that no water was needed to moisten the
mortar. The Chofetz Chaim concluded from this, "A yeshiva is
built with tears."
As the bus enters Volozhin our eyes widen in amazement. The
town looks almost unchanged, as if time had stopped sixty
years ago. (Later we would see that Radin and Mir too, still
wear the same rustic look.) The peace and quiet of these
little towns, free of the restless hunt for pleasure that
characterizes modern urban life in the West, explains
somewhat why gedolei Yisroel chose them as the
location for the yeshivos.
As R' Dov Eliach tells us in his book Avi Hayeshivos,
it was this atmosphere (among other things) that led Rabbenu
Chaim to turn down a tempting offer from Vilna's Jewish
dignitaries: if he would move his yeshiva from Volozhin to
Vilna, they would completely finance it, as well as make him
rav of the city.
"Not everything can be moved from one place to another
without damage," R' Chaim explained to them. "A stone or a
beam of wood for example, no matter how heavy it may be, can
always be dislodged and reinstalled in a new location. You
could do that with the beams and benches of the yeshiva, too.
But you could never move the cobwebs from the yeshiva and
reinstall them. A yeshiva is more like a cobweb than a beam
of wood. If you try to move it, you are liable to destroy
it."
HaRav Zalman Sorotzkin, who heard this ma'aseh while
he was a student at Volozhin, explained it this way: "A
yeshiva's existence is purely miraculous; it is based on
things as delicate as a cobweb -- mainly, the give-and- take
relationship between the local people on the one hand and the
spirit that has been cultivated within the yeshiva on the
other hand. These things can't be uprooted and transplanted
in another location."
R' Zalman added that R' Chaim had another reason for
preferring Volozhin to Vilna: "Conditions in a small town are
more suitable and more advantageous for a yeshiva. We saw in
later generations too, that the founders of yeshivos always
tried to open them in small towns" (from HaDei'ah
Vehadibur, p. 94). R' Chaim Ozer Grodzinsky ztvk"l
expressed a similar view in a letter concerning R' Boruch Ber
Leibowitz's yeshiva, which was located in Kaminetz: ". . .
the administrators found that an urban location was bad for
the yeshiva, and our geonim have always founded
yeshivos in small communities, because there they will not be
disturbed by the noise and crowds of the city" (Marbitzei
Torah Umussar, R' A. Surasky, Part 2, p. 146). Similarly,
R' Aharon Kotler wrote during World War II, "We are thinking
of moving the yeshiva temporarily to Leonova, outside of
Kovno, because a village is more suited to the
ruchniyus of a yeshiva, as is well known"
(Ibid., Part 3, p. 241).
Desolation
We all feel a thrill as we approach the site of the Volozhin
Yeshiva. It is no small thing to enter this holy place, on
which today's whole Torah world was built.
But as great as our anticipation is our disappointment. We
find a cafe instead of a yeshiva. The local population took
the building over as soon as the Jews had been "removed," and
the building that once rang with the sound of Torah is now
full of young gentiles sitting around and drinking beer. Only
when we walk around the building can we discern, from the
outside, the outline of the aron kodesh. Near the roof
is engraved the year the yeshiva was built: 1806 (5566).
The members of our group go inside and stand around as if
rooted to the spot. The woman behind the counter gawks at us.
Before her very eyes are Jews, who haven't lived in Volozhin
for the past sixty years, standing there uncannily silent,
like ghosts, ignoring her wares of cakes and drinks and
staring at the walls.
Our eyes wander over the barren walls as we try to recreate
the past, to see the young men walking among the benches with
gemoras and Rambams in their hands, to hear the
roar of voices battling in rischa de'Oraisa.
The stark reality of the present, like the scenes that await
us in Mir, Radin, and Baranovich, wakes us from our daydream.
It hurts more than everything we've heard before about the
churban. All the kedusha that we have conjured
up from our imaginations is no more. The yeshivos are a
desolation and foxes roam through the kodshei
hakodoshim.
When we leave the building our feelings pick up a little.
Someone points out that despite what we've lost, the Jewish
soul is not bound to buildings and benches, but to the spirit
of Torah that these buildings absorbed. After all that has
happened, is that spirit not still alive in our botei
midrash? There Rava and Abaye live on, and we learn the
Torah of Volozhin to this day.
R' Leib Baron has an anecdote to tell us; everyone pricks up
his ears. In his youth he once came to Volozhin with his
brother to visit the yeshiva. They searched among the old
seforim in the beis midrash hoping, as young
boys will, to have the thrill of finding some famous names
written in the flyleaves. In the first gemora that
came to hand they found the name "Chaim Ozer Grodzinsky," and
next they came upon a gemora signed "Chaim Nachman
Bialik" -- a juxtaposition that concretized for them
Chazal's saying, "For he who merits, [the Torah] becomes the
elixir of life; for him who does not merit, it becomes the
elixir of death."
We might add that it also epitomizes the Gra's famous
peirush on the verse, "Let my doctrine drop down like
rain": Divrei Torah are like rain, which causes every
seed and plant to grow according to its nature. Fruit trees
blossom and bear fruit, whereas thorns and thistles also grow
in response to rain -- becoming even thornier and
pricklier.
But R' Baron had a further message in mind for us, seeing our
mood as we left the desolated building. Some time later, when
he happened to tell this story of finding the gemoras
to an antique dealer, the man yelled, "Why didn't you take
them? You could have gotten a good price for them!" The
dealer added, thoughtfully, that at any rate he could have
taken a tidy sum for a book signed by the "poet laureate" of
Israel, but he probably wouldn't have found many collectors
who would pounce on R' Chaim Ozer's gemora. After all,
people who can appreciate the Torah of the Achiezer
are not the people who would spend a fortune to acquire his
worn-out personal effects.
That is the difference between them and us, R' Leib
concluded. Those who are bound to an empty culture which is
continually changing have nothing but inanimate objects to
link them to the past, but we cling to the living Torah,
which is still as fresh as if it had just now been given at
Sinai.
Why Rabbenu Chaim Wept
Next we visit the old cemetery of Volozhin. The newly
refurbished tombstone of Rabbenu Chaim of Volozhin stands out
among the aged stones at the center of the cemetery. As we
walk among them, we see familiar names: one member of our
group points out the grave of the father of R' Michel Yehuda
Lefkowitz ylct'a. At the edge of the cemetery we
notice several matzeivos that have been given a coat
of paint, and we go over to see who they belong to.
They bear the name "Peresky." These are relatives of Shimon
Peres, whose grandfather was among those who learned in
Volozhin and who watched in horror as his children left the
path of Torah. Apparently some local authority arranged this
gesture in honor of Peres' visit a few years ago.
After we pour out our hearts in tefilla at the grave
of the Nefesh HaChaim, R' Leib Baron tells us how
before his death, Rabbenu Chaim one day burst into tears. His
talmidim asked him why he was crying, and he explained
that the Torah had, through the centuries, gone into
golus after golus, and the last golus,
he said, would be in America.
But why did he cry? R' Leib asks again. He offers this
explanation: Today we can clearly see that R' Chaim was
speaking out of ruach hakodesh. There were not many
Jews in America at the time of his petirah, and most
of those who were there had left their fathers' ways. The
idea of founding yeshivos in the New World was like something
you would see in a dream. Who could have imagined then that
America would become the haven of Torah that it is today?
But if R' Chaim knew all this through ruach hakodesh,
he probably also knew of the circumstances under which it
would come about.
The Torah wandered with Am Yisroel from Eretz Yisroel
to Bovel, to Spain, to North Africa, and to Europe. There
were many reasons for these peregrinations, including
persecution by our enemies, but never has there been such
large-scale destruction of the Torah world as the
churban that brought Torah to America.
The survivors who straggled in gave everything they had to
the task of rebuilding Torah. R' Aharon Kotler came to
America with the words, "Bemakli ovarti es haYarden
hazeh" (with nothing but my staff did I cross this Jordan
River), and then founded the yeshiva of Lakewood.
Just so were founded the rebuilt yeshivos of Mir, Telz,
Kaminetz, and others. The Torah world was indeed rebuilt, but
we do not forget what preceded the rebuilding -- and it was
this that made Rabbenu Chaim cry. "And just as we have seen
that everything that was revealed to R' Chaim min
haShomayim came to pass, let us remember that he also
said that the golus of Torah in America would be the
final golus! So let us trust in those words and expect
the geula," says R' Leib with tears in his eyes.
On the Heights
While we are trying to daven and afterwards listen to
R' Leib's speech at the kever of Rabbenu Chaim, we are
pestered by an old drunken goy who tugs at our jackets
and demands that we take his picture as he poses in front of
the kever. Another living proof of the churban,
just in case we had needed one.
As our bus heads out of town we get one last glimpse of the
building that was once the Volozhin yeshiva, still standing
proudly on its hill. It brings to mind what R' Eliahu Aharon
Mielkovski wrote of his last moments there, before the
yeshiva was closed (in protest at the government's order to
include secular studies in the curriculum): "I passed by the
yeshiva in the middle of the day and cast an eye for the last
time on the beautiful building, standing tall on the heights
of the city, where I had spent the best years of my life. The
roar of the voices of five hundred talmidim emanated
from it. Fortunate was he who saw all this. Did it occur to
any of these people that soon they would be chased out of
this beis mikdash with `anger, rage and great
fury'?"
On our way down we take the beginning of the path that the
grieving talmidim of Volozhin took after the yeshiva
was closed. As the chroniclers describe it, the police came
and took the bochurim out of the beis midrash,
whose doors were then locked with a government seal, while
peasants gathered from the whole area with their wagons to
take the exiles to the nearest train station at
Molodechna.
But we are going to Molodechna for a completely different
purpose. A summer camp is in progress there for Jewish
children from Belarus, Lithuania and Russia who are returning
to their roots, and the roshei yeshiva have been asked
to speak to the children. They seem fascinated as R' Baron
tells them gently there is a mitzvah in the Torah to live for
seven days in the succah, "so that your generations
may know . . . "
In "The Mir"
The next day we move on to the village of Mir, where R'
Baron, R' Katzman, and R' Florans once learned, along with
boys from all over Europe. The stream of eager
talmidim was so great that R' Shabsai Yogel once
remarked, "In the posuk `all the rivers go to the sea
(yam),' the word yam is the initials of
Yeshivas Mir!"
And when the yeshiva wandered off to Japan, the joke went
around: Why was it decreed that "The Mir" must travel all the
way to the Far East? Because that was the only part of the
world from which no talmidim had arrived, and the
guardian angels of those countries were jealous and wanted a
part in the Mir's Torah.
We arrived in time for a memorial ceremony. The survivors of
the Jewish community of Mir had gathered from all over the
world to inaugurate a memorial stone on the site of the mass
grave of the martyrs Hy"d. We had met them at the Minsk
airport, where a lively conversation developed between them
and R' Leib Baron, whose sharp recall of every youthful
incident delighted them. These Jews -- bareheaded to a man,
sad to say -- are proud of their hometown and understand
perfectly that its sole fame comes from its yeshiva.
"Wherever we go, when they ask us where we're from and we say
`Mir,' no one knows where that is. Who ever heard of a tiny
village like that? Only when we met chareidische
Yidden do we get any reaction -- and what a reaction!"
We say Tehillim and Kaddish at the mass grave,
remembering how R' Avrohom Tzvi Kammai, the rav of Mir,
refused to leave his townsfolk in their last moments and
strode along fearlessly to his death together with his
people. R' Chaim Ozer had once said of him, after the Chofetz
Chaim died, "We still have the Rav of Mir." Now when his end
was near he remained a "living sefer Torah." Only one
thing he asked of the butchers: not to shoot him at the edge
of the pit but to let him climb down and then shoot him. His
last thoughts were to do the mitzvah of kevurah
properly, such that none of his blood would fall outside of
his grave.
We heard this story on the way to the grave site from an
eyewitness, who had escaped just in time and joined the
partisans. He watched the procession of the doomed from his
hiding place in the forest trees, and has never to this day
forgotten the awesome sight of how R' Kammai calmly descended
into the pit and gave his soul back to his Creator.
"Flee Quickly!"
R' Osher Katzman tells us now about the last time he met the
Rav of Mir. The War was already raging and the Mirrer Yeshiva
had evacuated to Vilna. Food was, however, scarce there and
hard to come by, to the point where the refugees were almost
starving. R' Osher had in the meantime made the acquaintance
of a local baker, but when he told the man what a state the
talmidim were in, he received a surprising answer:
yes, the baker could manage to supply them with a small daily
allotment of bread, but he had run out of salt and could find
no more! Since saltless bread would not be very tasty, the
baker suggested that R' Osher find a supply of salt
sufficient for the bakery, and in return he would supply the
yeshiva with bread.
But where could one find salt in wartime Vilna? R' Osher
suddenly remembered his abandoned guest-room back in Mir,
with a half-full sack of salt standing in the corner. Quickly
he decided to make the dangerous trip there and back --
anything to feed the hungry!
He returned to a fear-stricken Mir, a village where the
people numbly awaited the inevitable coming of the butchers.
Then he heard that R' Kammai was still in the village.
Hurrying over to the Rav's house, he asked, "What is the Rav
doing here still?"
The measured answer was, "A Rav does not leave his community
in time of trouble. I am staying with my people, come what
may." Raising an eyebrow, the Rav continued, "But what are
you doing here? You had already left for Vilna. Out of
here, quick, if you want to escape death."
"Suddenly R' Kammai seized my hands and burst into tears over
the closing and flight of his beloved yeshiva. `Elokim,
gentiles have come into Your heritage, they have defiled
Your holy place,' he mourned, as his tears ran down and wet
my hands. But after a couple of minutes he pulled himself
together and commanded, `Now flee quickly, immediately, right
now! Don't wait even a minute. Every moment you delay you are
in mortal danger.' I tried to convince him to let me spend a
few minutes in town to ask after my family, who had remained
in Mir, but he prodded me: `Absolutely not! Off with you at
once! Hurry, hurry!'
"I obeyed the Rav and rushed to the train station. All the
cars in the train were full, crammed with refugees from the
battle areas. I couldn't even get into a car, and ended up
standing on the steps with half my body hanging out over thin
air.
"Only when I got back to Vilna did I realize how right the
Rav had been. If he hadn't hurried me along I wouldn't be
here today, for that train was the last one to leave Mir.
Afterwards all roads were closed and no trains were allowed
to run. Every Jew left in Mir after that last train was
murdered."
From Yeshiva to Post Office
In Volozhin, the yeshiva had been turned into a cafe; in Mir
it had become the local post office, and we felt R' Kammai's
tears once again.
Our welcome too, left something to be desired. Stiff
formality, cold enmity, icy stares, and the aged postal clerk
looking as if she cannot stand the sight of "those Jews"
returning to Mir and shrieking at us, "No more photos!" You
would have thought this village post office was a secret army
base. And in ghostly counterpoint to the clerk's hatred, R'
Baron and R' Katzman poured out all their memories of bygone
greatness, faster than we could grasp it all.
There was the day when R' Meir Shapira of Lublin stopped by
to visit. He was just then preparing to open Yeshivas
Chachmei Lublin, and had decided to make a grand tour of all
the Lithuanian yeshivos, to see their methods and pick the
right one that would fit his new yeshiva.
"R' Meir was a chassidishe rav and when he arrived he
was amazed to see, among hundreds of bochurim, not one
with a beard. R' Yeruchom explained that among us growing a
beard was not seen as a mere natural activity. It was a sign
of mature acceptance of one's obligations, and therefore one
should grow a beard only when he thought he had reached the
right madreigo. `The bochurim,' said R'
Yeruchom, `do not feel that they have gotten there yet.'
"All the same, when the grandson of a chassidishe
Rebbe came from Poland to learn in the yeshiva, R' Yeruchom
would not let him exchange his long kapote for our
sort of clothing. `According to the chinuch you grew
up with,' he told the einikel, `a kapote and a
beard are part of your Yiddishkeit. And you must never
give up anything that is part of Yiddishkeit!'
"R' Meir accepted R' Yeruchom's explanation about beards, and
added that he had just learned a chiddush. `We always
hear about some Jews who are extra particular about
Chassidic, or chareidi, dress and manner, yet inside
they are empty -- their inside is not like their outside, as
Chazal say. In Yeshivas Mir I have discovered what
Litvishe bnei yeshiva look like, beardless and dressed
in short jackets and modern styles, and yet at the same time
on the inside they are full of Torah, yira, and
mussar. With these bochurim, their
outside is not like their inside.'
"Before R' Meir left, R' Leizer Yudel the rosh yeshiva
decided to show him what kind of lamdonim the
bochurim were. He called over one of them and asked
him to say over the chiddush he had made that morning
in Kodshim. He gave a complete shiur, while
dealing with kushyos that those present interjected as
he spoke. R' Meir's eyes glistened with delight. At the end
he smiled and said, `It's a long time since I heard such
clear chiddushim.' He added jokingly (remember, R'
Meir became a rav at a very young age): `I see that the
bochurim here know how to learn. Maybe when I get to
their age I'll be able to learn like them'."
How to Save a Life
Our next stop is R' Yeruchom's grave. R' Katzman tells us
something about the effect "the Mashgiach," as his
talmidim call him to this day, had even after his
death.
"Many years after the War I met R' Yaakov Finkelstein in
America. (He came to the yeshiva from Poland -- chassidic
territory.) After we greeted each other R' Yaakov said to me
with strong emotion, `I want to tell you something! By your
merit my life was saved. I don't suppose you know it
yourself, but it's a fact.'
"It turned out that he was talking about an article I had
published in Sivan of 5699 (1939), on the Mashgiach's
yahrtzeit. I wrote about how I remembered R' Yeruchom,
the great mechanech, and somehow a copy of this
article made its way into R' Yaakov's hands. It seems he was
so impressed by the figure of the Mashgiach and the picture I
drew of Yeshivas Mir and its ways of building
ruchniyus that he decided, `I want to learn there.'
This is what motivated him to come to the yeshiva, although I
never knew it. In fact, he left Poland the same day with just
a single suitcase.
"If the article came out in Sivan 5699 (1939), you can
understand that R' Yaakov got to learn in Mir only for a
month or so. Then the war broke out and the yeshiva set off
on its wanderings -- on the way to survival. `So,' claimed R'
Yaakov to me, `it was your article that brought me to the
Mir, and that is why I am alive'."
R' Leib agrees that many boys came to Mir simply to be near
the Mashgiach. After all, he points out, a good many of them
were already on high levels of lomdus and had learned
from the greatest roshei yeshivos. Some of the older
bochurim were fit to give shiur themselves. But
all of them, from youngest to oldest, clung tightly to R'
Yeruchom. "People used to say then that what R' Chaim Brisker
was in lomdus, R' Yeruchom was in mussar."
R' Yeruchom -- The Mashgiach
We learned that R' Yeruchom was a great meivin in
personalities -- what is called a "psychologist" nowadays. He
could see down to the bottom of a person's mentality. For
example, there were boys from Germany in the yeshiva, who had
arrived after they already had received a university degree.
R' Yeruchom used to give them a special shiur in
Chumash, which left these boys stunned with the Mashgiach's
understanding of psychology and his ability to find the words
for any concept, however subtle. "What took us years to study
in the University, he can cover in a single shmuess,"
they said.
There were bochurim who were actually afraid to speak
freely when talking with the Mashgiach, because they knew
that he was weighing every word, discovering from the nuances
of their speech what was going on inside their heads. Even
their "body language" spoke to him.
R' Yeruchom, everyone knew, could tell what town a boy came
from before he ever spoke with him. How did he do it? The
first time a boy came from a certain town, R' Yeruchom would
observe every last detail of his conduct. After that, the
next time a boy came from that town it took the Mashgiach
only a few minutes to spot the unique similarities. Ordinary
people can usually tell what continent or country a person
comes from. R' Yeruchom could spot the differences in
mentality between one village and its neighbor.
He also could measure how mentalities change as a
talmid grows, as R' Leib remembers: "I came to Mir
after Succos and went home for Pesach. Before setting out I
went to take leave of R' Yeruchom. Generally speaking he
objected to bnei Torah travelling with a baal
agoloh, but I explained to him that I couldn't afford a
train ticket. `Have you gone to the Rosh Yeshiva,' he asked,
`to say some Torah before you go?' I told him that I had.
"Then suddenly I heard him mumble to himself, `Baranowitz . .
. Mir . . . from Baranowitz to Mir . . . R' Zeira fasted
forty days to forget the Torah of Bovel and replace it with
the Torah of Eretz Yisroel . . . Baranowitz -- Mir . . .
Bavli -- Yerushalmi . . . ' All the while he was gesturing
with his hands as one does when weighing a doubt. Finally he
held his hand out to me and said, `For one zeman it's
not bad.' It wasn't hard to understand: to go from Baranowitz
to Mir you had to go through an acclimatization, like R'
Zeira's fasts, in order to absorb the unique atmosphere of
Mir. After some thought he had just summed up my progress:
`for one zeman -- not bad.'"
R' Leib reminisces: "When R' Yeruchom fell sick [at the end
of his life], we had no idea that it was anything serious,
until one day the Rebbetzin came to the beis midrash
and opened the aron kodesh and cried. The whole time,
the only thing that bothered him was the fear that his mental
powers might be impaired. When they brought a doctor to
examine him and he forbade the Mashgiach to exert himself, R'
Yeruchom asked if this included mental exertion. The doctor
was a simple village practitioner and didn't understand what
the Mashgiach was talking about. He was angry at this `silly
question' and could only ask sarcastically, `What's the point
in thinking? What would you get out of it?'"
On the way to the Mashgiach's grave in the old cemetery of
Mir, the group shared more memories. Lost since World War II,
the grave was rediscovered only ten years ago by members of
the Levovitz family, who restored the headstone and engraved
on it the names of the family members killed during the
Holocaust. Finding the grave was a story all by itself:
The family searched the entire cemetery, looking for the
headstone. However, they knew that even if that had been
destroyed, they had another landmark to look for: the broad
concrete foundation that had been poured over the grave.
Strangely, though, they could find neither headstone nor
foundation anywhere. They had almost given up when a drunken
farmer spotted them and beckoned them to him. "I know what
you're looking for," he said with a grin, "and for fifty
rubles I'll show you the place." It turned out that they had
not found the concrete slab because they had looked in the
wrong place! It seems that this farmer had high- handedly
taken over a large part of the old cemetery and turned it
into extra fields for his personal use. However, he
discovered quickly that his plow kept getting stuck (somehow
or other . . . ) on the concrete foundation of the
Mashgiach's grave, so he ended up not using that particular
area.
The family was able, soon enough, to establish that here
really was the Mashgiach's grave, and after some brisk
bargaining the farmer agreed to "sell" them the stolen
cemetery area. (The old cemetery still served as a cow path
to take the herds to and from their pastures. Boruch
Hashem, a fence is now being put around it.)
After we said some tefillos by the grave, R' Leib
decided to give us an idea of what people meant when they
said, "What R' Chaim Brisker did for lomdus, R'
Yeruchom did for mussar."
"R' Shimon Schwab zt'l once told me something that the
Mashgiach taught him about bein odom lechavero. Before
Pesach R' Shimon had borrowed some money from R' Yeruchom so
that he could get home for yom tov. When he came back
to Mir and paid the loan back, he attempted to say, `Thank
you,' but R' Yeruchom cut him off brusquely: `Don't you know
the halacha, that saying thank you might be
ribis?'
"A year later R' Shimon needed once again to borrow his
travel money, and this time when he paid it back after yom
tov he remembered his lesson. Shaking slightly, he put
the money on the table and rushed for the door without saying
a word. The Mashgiach called him back: `What about saying
Thank you? What happened to gratitude?' R' Shimon was
staggered: `Last year you warned me that it's ossur!'
Now R' Yeruchom explained himself: `To say it is certainly
ossur; but you still have to want to say it! You
mustn't treat other people's help as if it were a matter of
course. To say thank you out loud is ossur, but your
heart has to feel thank you.'"
Always on Duty
"The Mashgiach went on building us up and strengthening us
even after he died. I remember in Shanghai when we trembled
with fear amidst the terrible bombings, R' Yechezkel
zt'l told us one morning that R' Yeruchom had spoken
to him the previous night in his dream. `He said that we
would have great difficulties, but we would come out of them
safely,' R' Yechezkel reported.
"He used to tell us that the Mashgiach was definitely
speaking up for us in Shomayim, `He's looking out
(mashgiach) for us,' was the way he often put it. He
explained that R' Yeruchom wasn't just guarding us; the
Mashgiach couldn't stop being the Mashgiach no matter what
the circumstances. He was still full of concern for the
yeshiva's welfare, and kept busy constantly davening
for us in Shomayim, that we should not be harmed
either physically or spiritually.
"And the truth is that in those days we actually saw Hashem's
hand and His hashgocho every step of the way. We were
learning then in an old building in the Hongkyo industrial
district of Shanghai, an abandoned factory that was
practically a ruin. It was enough to look at it to convince
you not to go in. The whole building actually leaned to one
side, and it looked as if it was about to fall over, any
moment. Not to mention that the Americans were bombing the
whole industrial district so as to put the arms factories out
of action. I remember that the heaviest bombings used to
knock down even buildings that hadn't been hit -- the shock
wave alone was enough. These were mostly poor people's homes,
and they collapsed like a house of cards. The streets were
strewn with corpses. But with Hashem's help, not one of the
yeshivaleit was hurt.
"Even in quiet times we felt afraid to walk into the yeshiva,
and the fear was much more during bombings. If we even heard
the sound of the bomber planes approaching, the whole yeshiva
would rush out of the building. Only R' Yechezkel would stay
and learn with R' Moshe Berenstein zt'l (who just
recently passed away). He had no doubts that the safest place
of all was a place of Torah study.
"Every bombing run weakened the building's foundations more,
until we were afraid to go on there. We all got together,
everyone gave ten dollars, and with the three thousand
dollars that gave us we bought another building in better
condition. Two weeks after we moved, the old building fell
down -- not during a bombing run, just out of dilapidation!
One of the talmidim still has a photograph of the
ruins."
A Four-Hour Shiur
From Mir we took the road to Baranowitz. That was the
opposite direction of what the bochurim used to take.
Yeshivas Ohel Torah of Baranowitz was meant for younger boys,
who would spend their years from 13 to 18 there and then go
on to learn elsewhere -- perhaps in Mir.
They are old men now, but they remember: R' Elchonon Hy'd
used to give two shiurim every day: one from 9 to
11 in the morning, and a second one immediately afterwards,
from 11 to 1 P.M. Four hours straight! Both shiurim
were on the same maseches, too, only the first one was
for the higher classes and the second one was simpler, for
the beginners. (The kibbutz only heard one
shiur a week.) In Baranowitz they didn't learn just
one or two perokim of the maseches: they
learned it from start to finish, taking two zemanim to
do it thoroughly.
R' Elchonon stuck to the daf in his shiur,
always dealing with the pshat. It wasn't out of
necessity, that much was sure. R' Leib Baron remembers what
the mashgiach, R' Yisroel Lubchansky, told him over
the Shabbos table (R' Leib made his Shabbos by the
mashgiach for several months.) R' Elchonon, told the
mashgiach, was renowned for his pilpul; people
called him "the Boisker illui." Then one day he told
some of his chiddushim to one of the gedolei
hador, who immediately rebuked him: "This is not the way!
You must learn pshat." From that day on R' Elchonon
put away his pilpulim and stuck to learning the
pshat.
R' Leib used to write down the Rosh Yeshiva's shiur
every day. His transcriptions were so accurate that when R'
Elchonon decided to publish his Kovetz He'aros he sent
his son R' Naftoli Hy'd to Mir (where R' Leib was
learning by this time) to ask for his notes to serve as the
basis for the proposed book.
An Orderly Army
As we hear these reminiscences we are walking down the street
to see the house where R' Elchonon used to live. It's still
standing, but like all the other houses of this once Jewish
neighborhood, gentiles are living there. There are no Jews
around.
Next stop is the yeshiva, Ohel Torah of Baranowitz. The
building is still there, but now it is a gymnasium. The
broken-hearted whispers, "There is where R' Elchonon sat,
that is where the mashgiach davened," echo off of
goalposts and gym horses.
In Yeshivas Ohel Torah everything ran by the clock. There
were sedorim for learning, for prayers, even for
eating. The davening was carefully organized, under
the leadership of a chazan appointed by R' Elchonon
personally. Not just anyone got to be the shaliach
tzibbur in the yeshiva. (R' Leib lets it slip that once
he was appointed to this task.) The way R' Elchonon saw it, a
congregation of hundreds of bochurim needed a
shatz who was an expert in every aspect of
davening. So the appointed shatz davened all
the daily tefillos, weekdays and Shabbos together,
during his period of service. Only on Yomim Tovim was
it different: then the roshei yeshiva themselves led
the prayers.
Then there was the day R' Meir Shapira of Lublin arrived in
Baranowitz. He was on his great trip of investigation,
looking for the right way to run Yeshivas Chachmei Lublin
that he planned on opening. The yeshiva was in the middle of
Mincha when he arrived. He stood silent in amazement as three
hundred bochurim answered Boruch Hu uvoruch
Shemo and Amen in perfect unison. Never had he seen a
yeshiva that was organized like an army!
Even the dining hall was run with military order and
precision. It was considered a privilege to be appointed a
waiter, and the appointment conferred a special status on the
recipient. (He was even paid a salary -- purely a nominal sum
--, just as the chazan was.) R' Yaakov Yisroel, the
mashgiach, used to come and "stand guard" in the
dining hall so that no one would indulge in idle talk, and
that everyone would finish the meal promptly and not waste
precious time. He never needed to say a word to anyone -- his
presence alone was enough to drive the message home
eloquently. The moment he entered the hall, nothing could be
heard but the soft clatter of knives and forks. A stunning
sight: hundreds of yeshiva bochurim eating their lunch
in complete silence!
No one who knew him could forget the mashgiach. R'
Katzman recounts what the Jews of Baranowitz used to tell
about the day R' Yisroel Yaakov came to the beis
midrash with half of his beard scorched to a frizzle,
arousing amazement among the bochurim, of course. But
the mashgiach was not about to sing his own praises,
and only after much investigation was the story pieced
together. A nearby shul was tended by an old
shamash, who was getting senile and had begun to be
forgetful of his duties. The mashgiach, who just then
was serving as the rav, had decreed that the old man might
not be dismissed, since it would cause him considerable pain -
- so he himself had taken on the responsibility for the
shamash's duties!
Every morning at dawn R' Yisroel Yaakov arrived at the
shul and waited to see if the old man would show up.
If not, he lit the stove himself, so that the shul
would be warm enough to daven in. That fateful morning
he had given up waiting for the shamash to come and
was just ready to light the fire in the stove, when suddenly
he saw the old man tottering through the shul door. R'
Yisroel Yaakov thought quickly; how could he save the man
from feeling shamed? Swiftly he threw himself down on the
floor under the oven and wrapped himself up in his coat until
he looked like a bundle of discarded clothes, something the
old man would not notice. Unfortunately his face was jammed
up against the stove casing.
The old shamash dutifully lit the fire in the stove,
waited until it had got the coals burning, and then tottered
away to his regular seat in the shul and began to say
Tehillim. Only then did R' Yisroel Yaakov dare to
disentangle himself quietly and slip out of the shul.
A scorched beard, he felt, was a fair price to pay for saving
an old man's dignity.
Rod and Staff
Next we hear about R' Dovid Rappaport zt'l hy'd, the
Mikdash Dovid. Once, when R' Boruch Ber Leibowitz had
come all the way from Kaminetz to a wedding in Baranowitz, in
the middle of the simcha he was told that R' Dovid was
just then entering the hall. R' Boruch Ber jumped out of his
seat, trembling, and drew himself up straight and tall to
greet the guest. Seeing everyone's astonished looks, he said
simply, "Seder Kodshim just walked in!"
R' David always prepared his shiur while walking
slowly up and down the streets of Baranowitz, totally
enwrapped in his thoughts. When his talmidim discussed
the day's shiur afterwards, you would hear them
saying, "This part the Rav must have worked out on Sdobska
Street, this bit would have fallen into place on Poscztova
Street." If anyone asked R' Dovid if the passersby didn't
disturb him, he would answer, "The Jews of Baranowitz
couldn't possibly disturb a person's Torah study!"
As he walked around the town, R' Dovid would constantly tap
the ground with his cane, now to the left, now to the right.
"We used to say that when he tapped on the right-hand side he
had found a ra'ayah in the Bavli, and when he tapped
on the left he had thought of a pircha to it from the
Yerushalmi."
"Oheiv Yomim"
The rough shouts of the gentile youths bouncing basketballs
waken us from our dream of the past and eventually drive us
out of the building, shuddering at the realization of what
has become of this once-holy place.
The present takes on an even gloomier aspect when we meet
with the few remaining Jews of Baranowitz. For sixty years
they have had no contact at all with the Torah. To think what
they once were . . . a community famous all over Europe for
its single-minded devotion to Torah, people whose bustle on
the street "couldn't possibly disturb a person's Torah
study." When a bochur from the Mirrer Yeshiva married
a young woman from Baranowitz, R' Yeruchom spoke ecstatically
at the wedding: "To marry a Baranowitzer meidel is in
itself a treasure worth half a nedunya!"
These were the people who were practically starving, yet
willing, gladly, took in the yeshiva bochurim, one and
all, for "eating days," sharing what they themselves didn't
have so as to keep their beloved yeshiva functioning.
R' Leib remembers the day he took leave of his old
melamed to go off to learn in Baranowitz. His teacher
thoughtfully asked, "How is a boy from a family as poor as
yours going to have money for food?" When young Leib answered
that he would go out for "eating days" with families, like
the other boys, the melamed said to him, "I hope that
the posuk will come true for you, `Oheiv yomim
lir'os tov' -- loving your eating days and seeing
something good on the table!"
Like the old melamed, the bochurim never ceased
cracking jokes about their "eating days," but the jokes had
an edge to them; hunger is no laughing matter, and poor food
and not enough of it is no solution for the problem.
They told, for example, of the boy who dreamed of winning the
state lottery. "And what would you do with all that money?"
his friends asked him. "What kind of question is that?" he
shot back. "Obviously, I'd build a house with seven stories.
Then I'd rent each story out to a different baalebos,
all of them well-to-do of course, and then I could get decent
meals every day of the week!"
Sometimes an overly solicitous baalebuste could create
problems just by being so attentive. The questions would rain
down on the poor bochur's head: "Where are you from?
What do your parents do? How did you travel to Baranowitz?
How long did it take?" And the boy, too embarrassed to eat
while someone was talking to him, would sit there hungry
while his food (none too abundant to begin with) got cold.
One day one of the bochurim in Baranowitz excitedly
told his friends about a solution he had found to this
problem. He had just tried it out, and it worked perfectly!
"The moment the baalebuste started in with the
questions, I didn't wait for her to ask, instead I gave her
the whole story in one shot: `I'm from Eishishok, I have a
father but my mother died two years ago, I have six brothers
and sisters but we manage all right because my sisters help
out in the house, my maternal grandparents live in Slutsk but
my father's side come from Vilna, I'm in the second
shiur in the yeshiva and I like it. . . .' The poor
lady was so bowled over that she got out of the kitchen quick
and I had my lunch in peace."
The Dead and the Living
Inevitably we visit the mass grave where the Jews of
Baranowitz are buried. Nowadays it is marked by a memorial
pillar, but we discover that this is not the original
gravesite. The local government decided to put a public
building on the original spot, and "permitted" the tiny
community of survivors to move the bones to the present
location. We say Kaddish over the remains of the holy
community, now memorialized in the yeshiva in Yerushalayim,
Ahavas Torah-Baranowitz.
Our next stop was Radin. On the way, as we bounced around on
the very rough road, R' Osher Katzman remarked that it seemed
as if the road had not been repaired since one night long ago
when he and his friends got stuck in one of the potholes.
It was the day that the news reached the yeshiva about the
passing of the Chofetz Chaim, rabbon shel Yisroel. We
rushed out to hire a wagon to take us to the levaya,
but on the way the axle broke. There we were, enveloped in
our mourning, forlorn on the wayside and beaten by the
pouring rain. There seemed to be no hope. How could we find a
replacement for the broken axle here, on a deserted road to a
tiny village in the middle of nowhere?
The mashgiach of the yeshiva of Baranowitz, HaRav
Yisroel Yaakov Lubchansky, was with us, and he offered a
heartfelt prayer: Ribono Shel Olom, have mercy on these
poor bochurim who used their last pennies to go for
kovod haTorah and to participate in the levaya
of the godol hador.
Hardly a few minutes had passed when suddenly a wagon lurched
out of the darkness. The non-Jewish owner stopped and told us
that he just happened by. Amazingly, when he heard of our
problems, he found that he just "happened" to have with him a
spare wagon axle, and we made it to Radin!
The Last Jews
At every place we visited, our encounters with the remnants
of local Jewry prompted us to wonder aloud, "Who will be left
here in a few more years?"
In every village a Jewish family or two remains. These are
the people who have the keys to the Jewish cemetery and who
show visitors the way to the buildings that were once
yeshivos or homes of rabbonim. In Volozhin it is Moshe
Alterman who performs this function. He, his wife, and his
daughter live isolated among the gentiles. Their life is not
easy in the material sense, and it is certainly not easy to
live with the memories that stare them in the face. Opposite
the Alterman home is the mass grave where the Jews of
Volozhin were slaughtered. "Every morning when I open my
eyes," says Mrs. Alterman in tears, "I see the spot where
they murdered my mother."
In Mir one Jew is left alive. Likewise in Radin. In Rakov,
the hometown of R. Osher Katzman, where his uncle R. Avrohom
Kalmanowitz zt"l served as rav, not a single Jew
remains. All the local inhabitants know of Jews is the story
of how the Nazis herded them all into the synagogues and
burned them alive.
Erev Shabbos in Vilna, we hear the bad news that the
last Jew of Kelm has passed away suddenly: Dr. Meir, who
devoted his last years to the care of the Jewish cemeteries
and retrieving lost kisvei yad.
In Kovno there are still Jews, not all of whom are aware of
their history. Chatzkel Zak, the gabai who used to act
as tour guide to Jewish visitors, emigrated to the United
States a few months ago, so we find our way with the help of
Yehudah Ronder, who speaks perfect Hebrew and is excited to
meet us. Listening to the exchange between him and R. Leib
Baron, we are impressed once again by R. Leib's acute
memory.
The first time had been when Moshe Alterman had come to
unlock the gates of the Volozhin cemetery for us. R. Leib
remembered that he had known a family called Alterman in his
childhood hometown, Horodok. Soon the two of them were
reminiscing about their youths and R. Leib was recalling
various members of the Alterman family by name, wondering
what had become of them.
Now, as we meet Yehuda Ronder, we are just as astonished as
R. Leib recalls that he and his friends from Yeshivas Mir had
stayed with a family called Ronder during their escape from
the Nazis. Our guide is almost struck speechless. To think
that sixty years later he is face to face with one of the
Mirrer bochurim that his family had taken in. "I never
dreamed I would be zoche to such a miracle, to meet
Jews like you and walk with you on Lithuanian ground," he
says. On the way, Ronder reminds us repeatedly that the Nazis
had plenty of help in their work from local citizenry. He
sees it as one of his life's purposes to try to bring these
criminals to justice.
We visit Yeshivas Radin, where Meir Stoller, the last Jewish
resident, tells us how he was saved from the Nazis. When the
Jews were rounded up to be shot, he and his friends, a group
of strong young men, were selected and ordered to dig the
pits that would serve as mass graves.
Realizing what was going to happen, they made a plan. At a
prearranged signal, the workers suddenly raised their spades
and struck at the necks of the German soldiers standing over
them. While the soldiers reeled in shock, the Jews fled into
the forest. The Nazi officer yelled at the stunned soldiers
to fire. A confused rain of bullets flew over their heads,
and then the officer himself came galloping after them on
horseback. He aimed his rifle accurately, but Meir Stoller
grabbed a handful of stones and threw them at the horse's
head. The horse reared up in fright and the shot that was
meant for Stoller hit the branches overhead as he escaped.
He joined a band of partisans and survived the war. When
asked why chose to live alone in Radin after the war, he
replies, "I want to die in peace in the place where my life
was saved." Who can understand the heart of a man who has
been through troubles like those?
These are the Jews who are left caring for the cemeteries and
guiding the tourists. What will happen when they are gone,
too?
As we make our way back to Eretz Yisroel and America, we are
full of the memories of our journey to Minsk, Volozhin, Mir,
Baranowitz, Radin, Vilna, Kovno and Kaidan. Centuries of
Torah life and our Jewish heritage, passing before our eyes
as if in a dream. There is nothing left of the life of old.
All we can do is to visit the centers of the past, and
remember what once was and is no more.
It was against that background, that the Israeli immigrant
who had been born in postwar Vilna approached us in the
airport and asked, innocently: "Tell me something -- what is
a Dos like you doing in Vilna? Did you lose something
here?"
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