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IN-DEPTH FEATURES
Part Four
The Yeshiva's New Home
On Rosh Chodesh Elul 5700 (1940), Rav Chaim Shmuelevitz
zt'l delivered the first shiur keloli in the
Mirrer Yeshiva's new "home," the beautiful and spacious two
story beis haknesses Beis Aharon in Shanhgai. At the
time, nobody knew or expected that the yeshiva would remain
in Shanghai for the following five years.
Shanghai was an open city of four million Chinese and one
hundred thousand foreigners; no visas or passports were
required to gain entry and, until August 1939, immigration
was unrestricted by the Japanese authorities, who controlled
the city's harbor. Despite the city's negative reputation, it
became a haven for Jewish refugees who fled from Nazi-
controlled Germany and Austria in the year before the war
broke out. The Jewish refugee community grew to nearly
eighteen thousand souls.
Approximately half of the two thousand bnei Torah who
had escaped to Japan via Vilna were either already in
possession of, or managed to obtain, end visas to Eretz
Yisroel, the United States, Canada, or other countries to
which they could actually go. The remaining thousand, whom
the Japanese expelled to Shanghai, comprised rabbonim and
bochurim from a number of different yeshivos.
The largest contingent was that of the Mirrer Yeshiva, the
only Eastern European yeshiva that survived the war virtually
intact. The leaders of the Shanghai community devoted
themselves to the needs of the bnei Torah and soon
after their arrival, the various yeshivos were quartered and
the sound of Torah continued being heard. Besides individual
sources of support, the Vaad Hatzoloh and the Joint also
contributed to the yeshivos' upkeep and substantial sums
reached them. Although contacts with Rav Kalmanovitz over
plans for reaching the United States continued amid concern
for the future, the Mirrer Yeshiva's situation during the
first four months in Shanghai was stable.
Swept Into War Once Again
Everything changed with the surprise Japanese attack on the
American naval base in Pearl harbor, and America's subsequent
entry into the war. All contact with Rav Kalmanovitz was
lost. The generous support of the Joint came to an abrupt
end, with the organization's refusal to violate American laws
against communicating or transferring funds to enemy
countries.
A few weeks into the war, the bnei yeshiva were
stricken with conditions caused by nutritonal deficiencies,
and the threat of starvation loomed.
Initial relief came from the Sternbuch family in neutral
Switzerland, from where there was no problem in sending
funds. The Sternbuchs immediately organized appeals and
collections among the Swiss communities, which yielded the
desperately-needed funds to sustain the Torah community in
Shanghai. They established a special organization for raising
and sending the funds, and when Vaad Hatzoloh subsequently
started sending money again, it was routed via this
organization in Switzerland.
Since lives were at stake, Rav Kalmanovitz and the
organization's other leaders had no compunction about
bypassing legal restrictions on sending funds to an enemy
country. When threatened by the F.B.I. with prosecution and
imprisonment for the illegal transfers, Rav Kalmanovitz
declared that he was even ready for the severest retribution
but he would not be deterred from attempting to rescue the
bnei Torah, whom he considered as his own sons, from
starvation.
Eventually, the Vaad managed to have the transfers legalized.
Rav Kalmanovitz made a personal appeal to the Secretary of
the Treasury himself, who was a Jew albeit assimilated. While
presenting his case Rav Kalmanovitz fainted which, under the
circumstances, was probably the most effective demonstration
possible of the urgency of the situation.
The State Department agreed to license the sending of funds
to the exiled Polish government, to benefit Jewish refugees
who were Polish citizens. However, although the refugees were
allowed to receive money from neutral countries, great care
was necessary in order ensure that the Japanese did not
discover that the ultimate source of the funds was
"traitorous America." This would have brought the harshest of
punishments upon the heads of the yeshiva. In fact Rav Chaim
Shmuelevitz was interrogated several times -- prior to one of
the interrogations he even recited the viduy -- but
miraculously, he emerged unscathed.
An elaborate system of coded messages was employed for
passing communications between Rav Kalmanovitz and Rav Chaim
Shmuelevitz concerning the yeshiva's needs and details about
the various sums that were sent. The messages were relayed
via Rav Shlomo Wolbe in who was in Sweden, Rav Aharon
Milevsky in who was in Uruguay and the Sternbuchs in
Switzerland. Altogether, in the course of the yeshiva's
sojourn in Shanghai, three quarters of a million dollars were
channeled to the support of the bnei Torah.
Rav Kalmanovitz himself who, as the yeshiva's president, was
the prime mover in the fundraising and allocation, wrote
after the war that, "as far as the yeshiva was concerned, I
myself am astounded at what possessed me. How was such an
achievement possible? To convey to Shanghai, flying through
the sky and digging deep underground tunnels, in order to
obtain the money and make it available . . . three quarters
of a million dollars, to the enemy zone. To get the money in
and to send it during the war years -- was it anything short
of an open miracle? To protect them from being killed and
destroyed and then afterwards to get them out of there with
neither money, boats, nor visas -- and that expense also came
to a quarter of a million dollars."
No Peace of Mind
Rav Kalmanovitz might have marveled in retrospect at the
incredible achievement of having maintained the yeshiva, but
if one examines how he acted at the time, it is clear that he
dealt in practicalities and hard work.
He labored unceasingly to do anything that he possibly could
for the cause of hatzoloh in general and for the
welfare of the Mir Yeshiva in particular, without overly
concerning himself with gauging the probability of success.
If an endeavor held out a chance of being able to save or
help Yidden, he pursued it. This is one of the
preconditions for meriting siyaata diShemayo over and
above the norm. His ability to drive himself with such
superhuman zeal is also understandable when one sees how he
felt towards the bochurim. He was racked with a
father's concern and a father's sense of responsibility, for
them.
Once, while staying at the home of Rabbi L. B. Friedlander of
Baltimore, Rav Kalmanovitz told his host that he would be
leaving the next morning to keep an appointment in Washington
D.C. Heavy snow fell that night and at four in the morning,
Rabbi Friedlander heard Rav Kalmanovitz leaving the house. In
response to his host's amazement, Rav Kalmanovitz explained
that since no taxis were running, he was going to walk to the
railway station. "I cannot miss the appointment," he
stressed. "Our children are freezing in Siberia and starving
in Shanghai and we are sleeping in comfort!"
Rabbi Friedlander noticed that he was not even wearing
galoshes on his feet.
In addition to the difficult living conditions that the
bochurim endured throughout their wanderings, and
particularly in Shanghai, they were tormented by worry over
the fates of the families that they had left behind. It was
Rav Kalmanovitz who received the letters from bochurim
and avreichim alike, expressing their concern and
begging him to try to help them, which he did.
In a very moving telegram to one of the bochurim, Rav
Kalmanovitz asked that it be conveyed to all the rabbonim and
avreichim, "that they are all etched upon his heart
and that we will beli neder do whatever is possible,
in Hashem's kindness. But do not do pressure in order to
hasten an outcome, for things are not in our hands at
all."
He also wanted to apologize for being unable to reply to all
their letters. He was not managing to daven with a
minyan nor to learn, he told them, so he certainly
could not find time to reply to letters. Were he to spend
time resting, he wouldn't be able to devote himself to relief
work. "I cannot describe or give an idea of what I have
experienced since the beginning of the war . . . I have had
neither rest nor peace but [instead] have solely been
concerned with the welfare of the bnei yeshiva. While
the remainder of my colleagues have been securing themselves
spiritual and material foundations, and have been learning in
peace and having spiritual satisfaction, I have had to assume
the role of fighter and warrior over every extra cent that I
fought to send you, with the blood of my heart and soul. I
placed myself in danger over sending the money that was a
thousand more times serious than the money's actual value, as
well as the cost of the visas . . . "
A Glimmer of Hope
Sometime during the winter of 5703 (1942-3), the first
Japanese plan to exterminate the Jewish community of Shanghai
was to have been executed. This plan, and another later one
that also failed, were devised by the Japanese in
coordination with their Axis partners, the Nazis
ym'sh. The idea was that the Jews were to be evacuated
by boat to one of the Japanese islands. In the course of the
voyage, all were to be drowned at sea. Everything had been
prepared in secret when, two weeks beforehand, details of the
plan were leaked and the resulting exposure made its
implementation impossible.
Around this time, Rav Kalmanovitz learned of a possibility of
leaving Shanghai in the framework of a British-Japanese
diplomatic exchange. He immediately seized the opportunity
and obtained permission for the inclusion of forty bnei
Torah on the list. Towards the end of 1942, he called
meetings to try to raise funds for the plan. "According to
the telegrams that we have received from London, there is
currently hope of taking them all together to South Africa, a
safe haven. We must not delay, even by a single hour, for
this is the Torah's law, [as stated] in the halochos
of redeeming captives . . . "
The Rosh Yeshiva, HaRav Eliezer Yehudah Finkel zt'l,
who had already arrived in Yerusholayim, also wrote to Rav
Kalmanovitz about the plan, after he heard from two
bochurim, Rav Zeidel Semiatitsky and Rav Shimon
Wiskoer zt'l, who had already left Shanghai that
way.
Rav Kalmanovitz wrote to HaRav Abramsky zt'l, the
av beis din of London, asking him to become involved
and to involve the British Chief Rabbi and others. The
continuing uncertainty and the multiple dangers to which the
Jewish refugees in Shanghai were exposed, led to a
modification of the earlier resolution to emigrate all
together as a group or not at all. In his letter to Dayan
Abramsky, Rav Kalmanovitz decries the use of that argument to
deny the bnei Torah at least their rightful quota
among those who might be allowed to leave. As citizens of the
Polish government-in- exile, the bnei Torah were under
British jurisdiction and were therefore entitled to
representation among those to be included in the exchange.
Contacting Rav Kalmanovitz from England, Rav Zeidel
Semitatzky wrote, "I arrived here in London several days ago
. . . In the holy yeshiva, they are learning with great
application, so much so that the terrible world situation and
the bad material situation of our yeshiva in particular, are
not discernable. In the same degree that the spiritual
situation is very good, the material situation is very bad.
Many bochurim have recently become weak and have taken
ill with pneumonia R'l, and there is nothing with
which to fortify them. We are aware of your honor all the
time, and of your personal devotion to the yeshiva and are
certain that you are doing everything that you can. Still,
`One only encourages those who are already alert' . . .
Yitzchok Tzvi Semiatitsky, a.k.a. Zeidel Tiktiner."
Ultimately, it is clear that for one reason or another, it
was not possible to utilize this avenue of escape.
From the Depths of Despair to the Heights of
Achievement
Shortly afterwards, in Shevat 5703, the Japanese authorities
announced the establishment of a ghetto for stateless
refugees who had arrived in Shanghai after 1936. This further
exacerbated relations between the authorities and the Jewish
refugee population.
Although the former tried to dismiss the sinister intentions
that were imputed to them, they were not believed. After all,
they had concealed their vicious plans to wipe out the entire
population several months earlier. The bnei Torah had
the choice of entering the ghetto, or of remaining outside it
by accepting the protection of their official citizenship,
which entitled them to British protection. After weighing the
pros and cons, the Mashgiach resolved upon the former
course.
Registration for the ghetto continued until the thirteenth of
Nisan 5703 (April 1943) and the ghetto was established after
Pesach.
In retrospect, this proved to have been the yeshiva's
salvation. Had the bnei Torah refrained from entering
the ghetto, they would have been placed in internment camps
where conditions were terrible and where learning would have
been impossible. In the ghetto, life continued virtually as
before. The yeshiva's schedules of prayer and Torah study
were uninterrupted and it was possible to arrange whatever
was needed. In fact, it was during the ghetto period that the
bnei hayeshiva experienced their greatest spiritual
elevation. Here they attained their most impressive
accomplishments, in both the personal and the communal
spheres.
At this time Rav Chaim Shmuelevitz wrote to Rav Kalmanovitz,
"It upsets us that we cannot describe the yeshiva's spiritual
splendor to your honor, with the frequency of our earlier
correspondance. The truth is however, that it cannot be
described in words. It can only be experienced and understood
when one comes face to face with the hundreds of precious
bnei Torah . . . the sound of whose Torah grows
stronger, despite all the vicissitudes, for now that they are
starting [with the establishment of the ghetto], the
concentration within the daled amos of halochoh
all day long, is reaching the highest possible level . .
. In brief, there has never been a period of such spiritual
success as the present. Were your Torah honor to witness it
personally, you would agree that for the sake of all this,
all your toil on our behalf and the great burden that you
bear in order to sustain the yeshiva, are worthwhile.
"The only thing that upsets us and pains our hearts
continually is that this present period of spiritual success
reminds us of the troubles that we have experienced, that
have destroyed our homes and have cast our brethren into an
ocean of suffering, may Hashem have mercy on them . . . With
regard to material conditions, boruch Hashem to date,
we have seen Hashem's kindness, for your . . . honor has
been like a redeeming angel to us all the time . . . your
name is mentioned for blessing on everybody's lips. We will
never forget it, neither us, nor a single one of the [other]
bnei Torah, all whom feel you to be literally like our
father."
Vibrant Torah life continued in Shanghai despite the
establishment of the ghetto and the changing regulations for
leaving it and returning to it and despite the uncomfortable
and hazardous living conditions. Educational institutions
were established by the bnei Torah for the refugee
community, under the auspices of the yeshiva, while
seforim and several issues of Or Torah, a
journal of original Torah, were published.
Nothing Too Difficult
The Mirrer bochurim were not Rav Kalmanovitz' only sons. He
doggedly pursued and spurred others to pursue any and every
scheme that held out hope for saving Jewish lives until their
strength ran out. "Though to begin with," he wrote, "Vaad
Hatzoloh was founded especially in order to save the
yeshivos, the talmidei chachomim and the spiritual
leaders, after a time [at the end of 5703], we broadened the
scope of our rescue work to include all tiers of our people,
to anyone whom there was any possibility of saving, even
remotely, in ways that called for real sacrifice, such as
border smuggling, hiding in pits, cisterns and caves, forging
passports and making ransom payments to the murderers
ym'sh. Be'ezras Hashem, we were fortunate to save a
small proportion."
The idea of something being impossible did not exist for him.
Quoting Rav Boruch Ber Leibowitz zt'l, he would say
that the yetzer hora has many names, the first of
which is, "Men ken gornit oiftuhen (Nothing can be
done)."
"To save oneself," he would say, "nothing is too difficult,
too costly or too disgusting. When it come to saving oneself,
there is no such thing as `illegal.' Our obligation to save
others is exactly the same."
One of Rav Kalmanovitz' associates, who worked together with
him said that, "Nothing stood in his way during that period.
When it was a matter of rescue, he repudiated all normal
channels. There were no rulers, ministers or honorables, no
wealthy men and no important ones. The law of the land did
not exist. On more than one occasion, he committed genuinely
criminal offences in order to save a Jewish life . . . He
could not understand all those whose minds were filled with
endless reckonings."
His burning zeal was infectious, touching all those around
him. He even managed to move the highest government
officials, who were not ashamed to admit that they could not
stand up the tears in his eyes and the storms that rocked his
soul.
The United States government War Refugee Board was set up
after great efforts on Rav Kalmanovitz' part and after a
drawn out campaign against Reform rabbi Stephen Wise, who
hindered the office's opening. The Board's director, John
Paley, wrote about Rav Kalmanovitz, "Nobody, in Government or
out of it, was as devoted to rescue work as he was. His hard
work, his sincerity and his faith, gave us all strength."
Another hatzoloh worker recalled that Rav Aharon
Kotler zt'l, told him, "In all matters pertaining to
hatzoloh, the halochoh is like him [i.e. Rav
Kalmanovitz], even against me."
Rescue Attempts
News of Rav Weissmandel's negotiations to ransom Jews from
Nazi hands arrived on a Shabbos. Every penny raised could be
used for preserving lives. Losing no time, Rav Kalmanovitz,
accompanied by a young Rav Gedaliah Schorr zt'l, set
out immediately in a cab for one of the botei knesses,
many of whose members were enormously wealthy.
Upon arrival, Rav Kalmanovitz asked one of the congregants to
call the gabbai, from whom he asked permission to
address the congregation. The gabbai referred them to
the president, who deferred to the rabbi. After hearing their
request, the rabbi replied that they could not simply allow
everyone who wanted to speak to his members to do so. "Maybe
come back in the middle of the week and we'll see how it
could be arranged," he suggested.
Rav Schorr pointed out that lives were in danger and that
there was no telling what a few days delay could cost. "I
understand," the rabbi said, "but we cannot bypass the rules
of the synagogue." And he turned to go.
Rav Kalmanovitz ran after him and begged, "Please, let me say
just one single word; I beg of you, in the name of all of
Klal Yisroel, our people!"
The rabbi gave in, on condition that it really would be one
word and no more. When kerias haTorah had ended, the
rabbi introduced Rav Kalmanovitz and then stood at one side,
to make sure that the condition was kept. Rav Kalmanovitz
drew himself to his full height and glanced here and there at
the congregation. Then he began trembling from emotion and
from the depths of his heart he cried, "Hatzilu!
(Help!)"
Then, from the effort and excitement, he fell down in a
faint. The congregation was dumbstruck. Three doctors were
summoned and it was only after ten minutes that they managed
to revive him.
"How do you feel?" the rabbi asked him.
"Who, me? Fine, boruch Hashem. But gevald!! So
many of our brethren are being cruelly murdered, so many!"
And he began crying hysterically again. Then he said,
"Rabbosai! People see a Jew faint and they straight
away run to help him. But in Europe, hundreds and thousands
of our brothers and sisters are dropping and nobody lifts a
finger. What is going on? How can we let such a situation
continue?"
By this time, the rabbi and his congregants saw that a holy
man was standing before them. They allowed him to finish
making his appeal, which brought in much larger sums than
expected. The story caused quite a stir and was even
publicized in the newspapers.
Rav Kalmanovitz was the leading proponent of Rav
Weissmandel's plea to bomb the railway lines leading to
Auschwitz and he put much effort into furthering the plan,
which, as is well known, never came to fruition.
Not the least important aspect of his work were his
interactions with the heads of Jewish groups that were far
from Torah. These groups either sought to employ methods of
rescue which were improper from a Torah viewpoint, or simply
failed to utilize every moment for saving lives, dragging
their feet at times when the rescue of large groups was at
stake.
In the case of the Kastner train for example, Rav Kalmanovitz
dictated to them which demands should be made and which not.
He also warned them about causing damage in the course of
their struggles, for example over the issue of the threats
that were made to the Hungarian Prime Minister, when Rav
Kalmanovitz staunchly opposed the tactics of the irreligious
groups.
The Satmar Rov zt'l, felt that he owed Rav Kalmanovitz
his life, on account of the latter's role in the release of
the famous Kastner train from Bergen Belsen on which the Rov
and many others escaped. The Rov expressed his gratitude
throughout his life and he drew many lessons and ideas from
Rav Kalmanovitz, which the latter had absorbed as a result of
his closeness to the gedolim of the past
generation.
He was involved in the details of a myriad rescue schemes. He
wrote, "Let people understand, experience and examine a
little of what [responsibility] I bear and of what I have
experienced since the beginning of the war. I cannot
describe, or appraise even one ten thousandth of it on paper.
Many volumes could be filled."
During the war he also wrote, "Sometimes I think that maybe I
have gone out of my mind, chas vesholom, because I see
that nobody joins me in taking such an intense interest,
right to the very end. Perhaps. Therefore, I am wrong to
abandon my own interests and my family to such a degree, with
respect to both support and endeavor. Perhaps this is not the
Torah's way, for in truth, what can flesh and blood achieve
with their toil? Perhaps it is better to do a little and to
trust in Hashem.
"This is not what I have learned however and it is not what
is written in the Torah: "And they sustained the children"
(Shemos 1:17), which is the source of the
Yerushalmi's teaching that a person is obliged to
place himself in a situation of possible danger in order to
save someone else."
In the Eye of the Storm
The Yomim Noroim of 5705 (1944), were the last that
the yeshiva spent in Beis Aharon, which was situated
outside the ghetto. Thereafter, the refugees were completely
confined to the ghetto and for the following two-and-a-half
years, several other accomodations served the yeshiva. In the
course of that year, with the tide of the war having turned
against Germany and Japan, the refugees were exposed to new
and grave dangers.
While the war against Germany ended in April 1945, the war in
Asia continued until August. During the six months prior, the
Americans subjected the cities of Japan and China to intense
bombing in an attempt to force the Japanese to surrender.
Although many bombs fell on the Hongkew quarter where the
yeshiva was located, causing much loss of life and damage to
buildings, miraculously, none of the bochurim nor the
yeshiva building were ever harmed. Even to the gentiles it
was evident that the bnei Torah were meriting special
Divine protection.
Rather than give in, the Japanese prepared Shanghai for an
all-out land battle. The city was fortified and the refugees
were quartered around the military installations, to serve as
human shields. Both sides were preparing for a furious fight
and the Jewish refugees were caught in the middle.
There was no way that Rav Kalmanovitz could intervene on
behalf of the bnei hayeshiva, but he worked like a
lion to secure them whatever protection he could. He turned
to the many diplomats and governments with whom he worked,
and he succeeded in enlisting the help of King Gustav V of
Sweden. The King agreed to open the doors of his country to
the refugees and in the meantime instructed the Swedish
consul in Shanghai to spare no effort in forming a safe zone
around the consulate.
Several neighboring buildings were acquired and the Swedish
flag was flown from them. Their walls and roofs were also
emblazoned with the Swedish symbol, as a sign to ground or
air forces that the buildings and their occupants were under
the protectorate of a neutral country. This was only one of
the several ways in which the King assisted Rav Kalmanovitz
in rescue and relief work during and following the war.
On the seventh of Av 5705, Shanghai was subjected to the
fiercest bombing ever. The yeshiva building, which was not
the strongest of edifices, shook but remained standing. At
that time, the American navy was approaching the city's
beaches and Chinese nationalist forces were also on their way
to take part in the battle for the city. The Japanese dug
trenches in the streets, not far from the yeshiva. They
declared that they would defend the city until the last
man.
It is not hard to imagine the dread that gripped the refugees
at the prospect. Incredibly, during this period, the bnei
hayeshiva were helping to prepare a new building that
they had purchased, so that it would be ready by Rosh Chodesh
Elul. Driven by their own faith and fortified by the
Mashgiach's stirring declaration that the yeshiva students
would be protected, they busied themselves with the readying
of a new sanctuary for the Torah.
In His mercy, Hashem preserved them. On the twenty-fifth and
twenty-eighth of Av, atom bombs were dropped on two Japanese
cities and on the twenty-fourth of Elul, the Japanese
surrendered unconditionally. Shanghai was occupied by Chinese
forces (allied with the U.S.) without a single shot being
fired.
A Suitcase Full of Hopes
With the end of the war, Rav Kalmanovitz was able to renew
his efforts to secure visas for the bnei hayeshiva.
Despite all that they had endured, this was no easy matter.
His efforts were always accompanied by prayers beforehand and
by acknowledgement afterwards of the Divine help in every
small achievement.
Several months later, in the winter of 5706, he set out on a
long and involved trip, in the course of which he planned to
visit England, Eretz Yisroel and the Jewish refugees in
Germany. On the boat to England he met members of the British
government's commission on Palestine, from whom he succeeded
in obtaining a promise for certificates for the several
hundred talmidim. While in London, he met the Zionist
leaders and he tried to ensure that they would place no
obstructions in the way of the fulfillment of the
authorities' promise.
While he was in Eretz Yisroel however, several attempts to
land boatloads of `illegal' immigrants on the shores of Eretz
Yisroel provided the British with a pretext for withdrawing
their offer. Undeterred, Rav Kalmanovitz returned to London,
to try to have the promise reinstated.
Ultimately, the plan to transport the yeshiva initially to
Eretz Yisroel did not materialize. The bochurim did
not want to wait any longer and they preferred to go to
America, whose government was offering them student visas.
Rav Kalmanovitz' visit to the DP camps was at the invitation
of UNRRA, the UN body that provided relief to the survivors.
After visiting a number of camps, Rav Kalmanovitz informed
the heads of Vaad Hatzoloh that the condition of the orthodox
survivors was very poor. All aspects of religious life needed
regulation and there was a pressing need to open educational
institutions, to protect the interests of the refugees and to
assist them with plans for emigration. His main
recommendation was that permission be obtained for a
permanent branch of Vaad Hatzoloh to operate in Germany.
The yeshiva remained in Shanghai for another year-and-a-half
after the war's end. Technical difficulties, such as a lack
of vessels and mine-infested seas, prevented travel for some
time although the main delay was due to the difficulty in
obtaining visas. In Av 5706, after a year of intensive work
by Rav Kalmanovitz, these were finally obtained, The last
group of bochurim left Shanghai in Teves 5707.
The group that arrived in America numbered 324 souls
altogether, led by the Mashgiach. At that time, Rav
Chaim Shmuelevitz and a group of fourteen talmidim who
wished to go directly to Eretz Yisroel travelled to France,
en route to the holy Land.
"With the arrival of all of them from Shaghai," wrote Rav
Kalmanovitz on the day the last group arrived, "an epoch of
rescue and emigration ends and a period of foundation and
building opens, both in this country and in Eretz Yisroel.
"Yeshivas Mir that has existed for 130 years, its Torah and
fear of Heaven providing illumination [for the Jewish world],
has merited being saved in all its glory. There was not a
day's interruption in the learning and progress throughout
the seven harsh years of war. They had such success in
Shanghai that the junior talmidim have developed into
seasoned scholars, fluent in Shas. While antisemites
burned our Torah and our people in Europe, over there, they
printed both the written and oral Torahs, amounting to over
three hundred thousand copies of seforim."
Elsewhere he wrote, "We must recognize that they are now
Klal Yisroel's hope, from whom the worlds of Torah and
yiroh will be built."
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