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IN-DEPTH FEATURES
Part I
One month ago a unique era of rabbonus came to an end when
HaRav Betzalel Rakow, one of the ziknei horabbonim,
presiding over a kehilloh full of rabbonim, moved his
shtender to the yeshiva shel Ma'aloh.
HaRav Hutner zt"l once likened the task of a rov to a
village clock-tower. What did he mean? He explained in his
poignant way: Why is the clock fixed so high? Were the clock
to be within easy reach of everybody, the ordinary man on the
street would simply move the clock's hands so as to fit them
in with his own schedule. It is essential that the clock be
out of reach so that every man has to fit his schedule in
with the clock -- and not vice versa! (Heard from HaRav
Mattisyohu Salomon on the occasion of the Jubilee Dinner of
the Tottenham Adass, London.)
No other parable could better sum up the Gateshead Rov's
fulfillment of his task. He had an almost unique opportunity
to head one unified kehilloh with one shared
hashkofoh as the one rov -- and he towered
"untouchably" above even the most learned members of the
Gateshead kehilloh. He was the ultimate example of
devotion to Torah, and devotion to chinuch. He set the
tone, he took the decisions -- and the kehilloh
followed the clock -- like clockwork.
One visitor (the present writer's father zt"l) used to
travel the length and breadth of pre-War Eastern Europe and
was well acquainted with pre-War rabbonim such as HaRav Chaim
Ozer, the Lubliner Rov and HaRav Menachem Ziemba. He always
remarked that Gateshead reminded him of a "vortzeitig
Poilish shtetl" where the rov had absolute control over
the kehilloh and the ba'alei batim were on his
spiritual "wavelength."
Introduction
Our guiding light in this biography will be the observation
which the Rov made to one of his regular visitors in the
hospital, Mr. Z. Sandler: Any biography of a godol
depicting him as a virtual angel, a "mal'och" who had
supposedly learned Shas countless times and so on, was
so removed from our spiritual terms of reference that it was
pretty much pointless and not worth the time it takes to read
it. Much more inspiring was the story of little Yisroel Meir
[later the Chofetz Chaim] who helped a widow pick up all the
fruit that had fallen from her fruit stall.
In this vein this article will discuss a supremely "human"
being, a young boy who was sent out of class for misbehavior,
a boy who attended a school where secular studies figured
most prominently and who took them seriously, a boy who by
force of circumstance had to attend a non-Jewish school and
lodge with a non-Jewish family for some time. That he grew up
to be an outstanding talmid chochom despite his very
normal side -- that is the most inspiring part of the
story.
Youth: Frankfurt with a Difference
Shortly before young Betzalel's birth, his parents had moved
to Frankfurt-am-Main, at first living far from the Jewish
center of population in Bornheim near the Jewish Hospital on
the Gaggernstrasse. Later, HaRav Yomtov Lipman (father of R'
Betzalel) became rosh yeshiva in the Hoffman yeshiva
and was able to move into a kehilloh house.
HaRav Yomtov Lipman was from Russia and had learned in Slutsk
and Volozhin. He fled to Germany to escape the draft in
Russia.
His erudition, rischo de'Orayso and unlimited devotion
to Torah was an inspiration to the talmidim of the
Yeshiva. He was an East European "import" to the Frankfurt
Yeshiva. On the other hand the "German virtue" of
punktlichkeit (punctuality) became part of his
dictionary. Never did the rosh yeshiva, who was known
to be "drunk" with Torah, come late to the beis
hamedrash.
One day, in 1927, the unthinkable happened! The rosh
yeshiva had come late! At the end of the learning sessions he
excused himself: "I came late today because my wife gave
birth to a baby. I waited until I was sure that my wife was
all right and hurried to come here. As to whether the baby is
a boy or girl -- I will have to find out upon returning
soon."
That baby was his son Betzalel. It was this atmosphere of
unbelievable devotion to harbotzas haTorah into which
little Betzalel was born. The fact that he had been the root
cause to show his father's talmidim how devoted he was
to Torah may have been symbolic for the baby. Eventually this
devotion became HaRav Betzalel's leitmotif.
Young Betzalel attended the Volkschule (primary school).
Although his father headed the yeshiva of the general
community where Orthodox Jews and heretics joined together in
the kehilloh framework, his personal outlook was close
to that of the Hirsch-Breuer separatist community. In 1938 he
sent his sons to the grammar school affiliated with that
community, the Hirsch Realschule. It is interesting that he
learned enough English in those few years to be able to
communicate afterwards quite well when reaching England.
Obviously, he had taken his language lessons seriously.
[heard from the Rov]
Since school lessons only took place in the morning and
secular subjects figured most prominently in the curriculum,
his father sent him for extra limudei kodesh to a
cheder. Together with the sons of the rov of the
Austrittsgemeinde, HaRav Joine Horowitz, they learned in the
Beis Hamedrash Ohel Nosson, Schneigrabenstrasse 12,
amongst the hallowed walls where Reb Nosson Adler had once
taught the young Chasam Sofer.
One day young Betzalel was fooling around in class. The
Rebbe sent him out. Young Betzalel was very upset
because they had just been asked a kushya from the
Maharam Shif. Betzalel would now miss the answer. When he
came home he was crying. When the melamed met his
father, HaRav Yomtov Lipman, the latter told him that
Betzalel had come home weeping bitterly because he did not
know what the Maharam Shif had answered. The melamed
remarked: "Fun eim vet eppes veren! (Something will
come of him!) (My Father, My Rebbe by C. Zahn, p. 44)
When reminiscing about his youth, the Rov related that from
this beis hamedrash he could see the window of the
Schuetzenstrasse Shul, the original shul from the days
of HaRav Hirsch. Those in charge had refused to sell it to
the "Ostjuden" (the Jews who came to Frankfurt from
Eastern Europe, whom they looked down upon). They had
preferred to sell it to non-Jews. Now the boys' gaze was met
by -- horses. The shul had been turned into a stable!
Those responsible for this outrage did not live long.
With the rise of Nazism, young Betzalel and his friends'
lives became anything but a bed of roses. Often they were
beaten up by other boys. Nearby was a school for the mentally
handicapped. They learned very little; but one thing they
managed to absorb: Hatred for Yidden. In particular
there was one very strong boy whom little Betzalel and his
friends used to call the mal'ach hamoves. They always
tried to look out of the window to check whether the coast
was clear before going to school.
On one particular occasion, little Betzalel was suddenly
surprised by the appearance of the mal'ach hamoves
coming towards him from the other side. Only quick thinking
by an older daring boy saved young Betzalel from a painful
confrontation. Many years later, this kind boy, Chaim Stark,
became one of the stalwart members of the Rov's
community. [heard from the Rov]
The Rov's mother used to bake for needy widows who lived
towards the center of town. Although the boys could run into
painful encounters, they willingly delivered the packages.
Evacuation, Yeshiva and Kollel Years
After Kristallnacht the family moved to England. Young
Betzalel had to attend a non-Jewish school for a short time.
Eventually he was evacuated to Sheffield and ended up in a
well-intentioned, but gentile, family.
Every day pork was served, until one day his host declared:
Today you can eat with us. I took care to get hold of a
chicken and was careful to kill it by squeezing its neck!"
Little wonder that soon young Betzalel "evacuated" himself
from the evacuation. He joined Schneider's yeshiva in London
which was no mean feat since he was really too young. He
became bar mitzvoh as a yeshiva bochur! For the
preparation of his droshoh his father provided him
with source references and young Betzalel composed his own
droshoh. He spoke at length -- at very great length --
until the "Rebbe," Reb Moshe Schneider, said: "Genug!"
(Enough).
Among its elite bochurim were some who are today well-
known Torah personalities: HaRav Tuvioh Weiss, HaRav Moshe
and Dov Sternbuch, HaRav Ezriel Schechter and Mr. Yitzchok
Kaufmann. These bochurim had the great benefit of
being able to look up to and emulate a group of older
bochurim of the highest caliber. Many of these also
later became famous talmidei chachomim: HaRav Alter
Halpern, HaRav Shamai Zahn, HaRav Naftoli Friedler, HaRav
Fishel Goldberg, HaRav M. D. Gruner. The "Rebbe" Reb Moshe
Schneider, advised the bochurim to view Betzalel as an
example and "goalpost" despite the glaring age difference.
The Rov would recall with great feeling the atmosphere of
these bnei aliyoh and the prodding guidance of their
Rebbe, HaRav Moshe Schneider.
The war was in full swing -- outside the wall of the beis
hamedrash. Inside -- the milchamto shel Torah was
fought with full force.
One of his chavrusas was HaRav Moshe Sternbuch. Every
week they learned four blatt and chazered them
five times. Every half-year the Rov would finish the
masechta in its entirety. When fears of the nightly
bombardments made it hard for him to fall asleep he used the
nighttime hours to chazer what he had learned that day
until he fell asleep.
Many years later the Rov asked the great rosh yeshiva
HaRav Leib Gurwicz why the pace of learning had slowed down
so considerably in yeshivos. HaRav Gurwicz explained that
since many bochurim have been exposed to the
attraction of deeper intellectual understanding of secular
subjects -- chochmoh bo'umos ta'amin -- it was
necessary to delve deeply into the sugyos and show
them the sparkling diamonds of profound Talmudic insights.
Although indeed this may not have been the ideal state of
affairs, it influenced many to devote themselves with full
energy to Torah-learning.
On the short walk from yeshiva to the dining room, the
bochurim used to drink up the news of the day. But
young Betzalel was not interested in anything except the
sefer he had with him.
A contemporary remembers that HaRav Schneider used to say to
them: "Follow the Chofetz Chaim's advice and take for
yourself one good bochur as an example. I advise you,"
continued HaRav Schneider, "to take one of your youngest
chaverim, the bochur Betzalel."
When his mother, Rebbetzin Rakow died, young Betzalel was
profoundly affected. Though he had survived bombshell and V-
Raketen without moving out of London (unlike many of the
other bochurim) this "bombshell" persuaded the family
that it would be best for him to change his abode.
When he applied formally to the prestigious Gateshead Kollel
HaRabbonim his biggest problem in gaining entry was not his
level of learning but his age. He was a mere 18 years old.
He joined the Kollel and threw himself with all his vigor
into the demanding learning schedule. His exertion in
learning was such that one Friday night, having been invited
for the meal, he lost consciousness. His father found out
about this and asked his son to cut down on his learning in
order not to overexert himself. From then on he stopped with
his evening chavrusa at twelve o'clock. On Friday
night they went together around the large Gateshead park and
discussed the gemora outside. This chavrusa was
Reb Aryeh Grossnass [later the head of the London Beis
Din].
The Rov's learning was always based upon the solid
foundations of pshat. He learned the computations of a
complicated sugya over and over again, and only
afterwards he explored the rishonim and poskim.
His amazing clarity and fluency in explaining quite difficult
sugyos was actually the result of exertion in
mastering the "bones" of the sugya well before
"fleshing them out" with the acharonim and
sevoros.
The Rov of Gateshead at the time, HaRav Shakovitzky, chose
HaRav Betzalel as his son-in-law. After learning for about
twelve years in Kollel, including several years before his
marriage, the Rov accepted the invitation of Montreux
Yeshiva, one of the very few functioning yeshivos in Europe
of those days, and became a maggid shiur.
Montreux
In later years the Rov would call the following seven years
golus Montreux. Having grown up in the large
kehilloh of Frankfurt, having been nurtured in
Schneider's yeshiva in Stamford Hill and having spent many
years in the Torah citadel of Gateshead, he now found himself
in a Swiss town of exceptional physical beauty, but a
spiritual desert.
He invested energy into his new task of molding fresh
bochurim into bnei Torah. At one time the level
of his talmidim was of such varying standards that he
gave three different daily shiurim to accommodate the
different levels in learning -- and spent the rest of the day
in yeshiva. On Friday he would summarize the
chiddushim from the week's shiurim.
Unfortunately the Rov's house was a half-hour away from the
yeshiva. This made keeping to his rigorous schedule more
difficult.
While the Rov had the satisfaction of drinking -- and giving
to drink -- the waters of Torah in this oasis, it is the
Rebbetzin who must have felt the full extent of the
golus. HaRav Dessler, the Rov's mentor in his Kollel
years, used to say: A married ben Torah's gratitude to
his wife should be endless. The avreich himself has
the pleasure of learning the gemora, and its
geshmack more than compensates for any lack of
physical "extras." It is the wife who -- without the actual
learning -- by dint of her ahavas Torah elevates
herself above the mundane pursuit of extras. The Rebbetzin's
stay in the spiritual desert was ample testimony to an
eishes chayil's happiness in her husband's
accomplishments in learning.
The Rov's hashkofoh was firmly grounded in the yeshiva
world. Studying secular subjects within the hallowed walls of
a yeshiva was out of the question. [Much later he explained
his hashkofoh in an early issue of the Kol
Hatorah journal.] He was steadfast in resisting pressures
to the contrary.
Similarly, Zionism as a political ideology did not exist and
did not deserve to exist, according to their
Weltanschauung. In his opposition to the Mizrachi
movement, the young maggid shiur was markedly
different from some other older learned figures in Montreux.
This led to severe difficulties and a bumpy relationship with
people who had an input into his position at the yeshiva.
Despite these problems, he refused to compromise and trade
his principles in return for convenience and smooth
relationships.
On one occasion a learned Mizrachi rov (later active in the
Israeli Army Rabbinate) delivered a shiur. Towards the
end, the Rov, who did not want the bochurim to look up
to the visitor as an ideal Torah personality, interjected:
Isn't all this found explicitly in a Rashash in
Mikvo'os? (as indeed it was).
When discussing the issue of providing a religious framework
for girls who volunteer for the Israeli army, the Rov was
adamant that the Chazon Ish's psak is the absolute
truth and binding upon everybody: That the proposal amounts
to aiding and abetting problems in tznius [as indeed,
sadly, experience has proven] and falls under the halachic
rule of yeihoreg ve'al ya'avor.
In the great Gaon HaRav Yechiel Yaakov Weinberg the Rov found
a sparkling diamond. They often discussed Torah topics and
some of the Rov's comments are quoted in sefer
Seridei Eish. The present writer also heard the Rov
quote some halachic rulings which he had been told by HaRav
Weinberg.
Call to Gateshead and Harbotzas Hatorah
The Sunderland rosh yeshiva, HaRav Shamai Zahn, had
selected him as rosh hakollel for the Sunderland
Kollel HaRabbonim. This plan, however, did not come to
fruition and the position was taken up shortly afterwards by
HaRav Chanoch Ehrentreu [currently Rosh Beis Din of
the London Beth Din].
Upon his father-in-law's petiroh, HaRav Rakow was then
approached to accept the rabbonus position of rov of the
Gateshead kehilloh. Using the Goral HaGra [by
those well-versed in its use in Eretz Yisroel] the following
posuk appeared: "Lemishpechosom leveis avosom."
The Rov interpreted it as suggesting that he lead the
"mishpechosom" of the Gateshead kehilloh.
Despite his relative inexperience in dealing with a general
community (as opposed to kollel scholars and
yeshiva bochurim) his candidacy was strongly supported
by a group led by HaRav Moshe Schwab, the mashgiach
ruchani of Gateshead Yeshiva. The latter considered it of
paramount importance that the kisei horabbonus in a
community of Torah institutions should be occupied by a
towering talmid chochom of unimpeachable character.
HaRav Shakovitzky was niftar in Nisan and the Rov came
for a trial on Shabbos the week of Parshas Noach. It
is interesting that the final note at the end of the weekly
sedrah (which includes a word having the numerical
value of the number of pesukim of the sedrah)
said: Betzalel!
Soon, the Rov returned from Montreux and assumed the mantle
of the rabbonus in Gateshead. He was then 37 years old.
The demands upon a rov in Gateshead were multifaceted. On the
one hand he had to be proficient in Noshim and
Nezikin which were the main subject of study in the
six local yeshivos. Furthermore he had to be well-versed in
seder Mo'ed as the necessary background to frequent
sha'alos. He also had to be familiar with all the
poskim in order to answer the array of sha'alos
which arise in a community of bnei Torah, of many
different "askers."
Not only did the Rov have to be equipped to answer the busy
housewife looking for a one-word psak, but he also had
to be prepared to explain his ruling to the searching ben
Torah who may be baffled by an intricate Chazon
Ish. It would be insufficient to merely remember the
"bottom line." As a rov he also had to find the right word to
say at the many simchas over which he presided. Above
all he had to be an example to the bnei aliyoh who
looked up to him. All this had to be found within one
person.
The great respect which the Rov never demanded, but
inevitably received, was vivid testimony to the chochmas
haTorah of this Ish Hoe'eshkolos. In addition to
the above, many of his shiurim showed great
familiarity with the lesser-known concepts of
Kodshim.
It is well-known that in our generation not every rosh
yeshiva could take up the calling of a rov. By the same
token not every rov is qualified to take up the calling of a
rosh yeshiva. HaRav Rakow possessed the combination of
Talmudic scholarship with halachic knowledge that qualified
him easily to handle either position.
Many years ago -- in the early seventies -- for some time he
gave a regular advanced shiur which attracted the
older yeshiva bochurim of high caliber. The clear
delivery and content did not fall into his lap by dint of
geniality. It was the result of painstaking preparation. It
was primarily diligence rather than brilliance.
The Rov was a strong but selfless leader and influenced the
kehilloh by his personal example. His advanced level
of scholarship did not cause him to be blind to the needs of
the public.
Some of his shiurim were quite straightforward. Just
like the Vilna Gaon encouraged the setting up of very
straightforward shiurim, he too traveled to a business
located on the outskirts of Gateshead in order to encourage
them to set up a short lunch time mishnayos shiur.
When the firm finished a masechta, he would often come
to celebrate with them.
In his 40 years of leadership, the mosdos HaTorah of
Gateshead have multiplied many fold: from one to six yeshivos
and from one to four kollelim. Indeed when many were
hesitant about opening a second kollel, the Rov
encouraged it and even assumed a large share of the financial
burden. He also gave occasional chaburos to the
kollelim and administered the Yoreh De'ah
examination while granting semichoh only to married
scholars who had learned in kollel.
His shiur schedule included mishnayos, regular
shiurim on two masechtos, a weekly shiur
on Yoreh De'ah and shiurim on Chayei
Odom and the seforim of the Chofetz Chaim.
His most popular shiur was on Pirkei Ovos on
Shabbos afternoon. However, the Rov was neither a dramatic
orator nor a spellbinding storyteller. Why then was the
shiur so popular? In a town of Torah scholars people
learned to value the quality of the content!
Somebody once explained about HaRav Chaim Shmuelevitz's
mussar discourses: If a person is an outstanding
Torah scholar, his chochmas HaTorah will shine through
even in the simpler homiletic shiurim. In this case
too, the Rov's thorough treatment of pshat, his
command of the meforshim and the tapestry of
explanations were vivid testimony to his general
scholarship.
The Rov almost never delivered a shiur without
preparation. The present writer attended his shiurim
on Yoreh De'ah for four years. Only once was the
shiur unprepared -- and this transpired because the
Rov had forgotten where we were up to.
In those shiurim too, the pshat figured
prominently. Every line of the Shach was explored,
word for word and every printing error in Hilchos Vestos
was corrected. Nothing of the nitty-gritty was glossed
over, although it required toil without great intellectual
stimulation. Only after the pshat had been clarified
did the Rov proceed to present the array of poskim and
discuss the practical sha'alos.
Every Shabbos Shuvoh and every Shabbos Hagodol
droshoh contained a novel insight into the sugya.
The entire array of maggidei shiur from HaRav Leib
Gurwicz zt"l down to the laymen of the kehilloh
crammed into the modest structure of the Gateshead Shul -- a
great mark of respect. These shiurim had to pass the
critical perusal of the entire array of talmidei
chachomim who followed the droshoh. The Rov was
only too willing to discuss any questions after the
shiur.
In line with the Rov's approach to gemora these
shiurim always started with a thorough lucid
explanation of the pshat of the sugya in all
its stages. Only after that would he "take off" into its
problems and the rishonim's comments. Often he
presented not a novel sevoro, but a novel insight into
how to learn a Rishon which changed the whole
understanding of the sugya. The sugya-part of
these droshos was never very long. He had learned from
his Rebbe, Reb Moshe Schneider, who stopped the self-made bar
mitzvoh droshoh after he had spoken for well over one-
and-a- half hours.
Most of these shiurim were later published in his
sefer Bircas Yom Tov. As a rov involved in day-to-day
halachic sha'alos and the general ol
horabbonus, he was almost unique in that he published a
sefer on the Rambam replete with deep insights.
In general he kept his droshos at simchas
brief. Most interesting were his droshos to the
youngsters at Chumash parties. He adapted the content
exactly to the need of the child; and made sure not to speak
beyond their ability.
He spoke regularly to the noshim of the
kehilloh and to the talmidos of the Seminaries
especially during yomim tovim. As a rule he was not in
favor of presenting deep, searching concepts to women. Though
fluent in English he, as a vortzeitig Rov, very much
preferred to speak in Yiddish. However, when the occasion
called for it, he did not hesitate to speak in English. On
some occasions, when a foreign lady came to him for advice
but could not understand either English or Yiddish he fell
back upon his childhood German. He considered language a
means of disseminating Torah, not an end in itself.
End of Part I
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