When we approached them for help, many of R' Leib's
talmidim and acquaintances, directed us to a well-
known article entitled Beis Chayeinu (a synopsis of
which accompanies this article), which HaRav Malin wrote as
an introduction to the Torah journal Hatevunoh, which
his yeshiva published. "That was Reb Leib," they said,
"you can work the rest out for yourselves."
The first part describes the uniqueness of Mir Yeshiva in
prewar Europe. Older talmidim who had already absorbed
the Torah of gedolei roshei yeshiva congregated in Mir
where they learned together. The main rebbe was "the
yeshiva itself." Reb Leib's own contribution to the Mirrer
Torah "exchange" was massive, encompassing both what he
brought with him and what he went on to receive during the
time he learned in Mir. He was saturated with the Torah of
HaRav Shimon Shkop, the Brisker Rov and HaRav Yeruchom
Leibowitz. Beginning with the exile of the yeshiva within
Europe and continuing in the period in Shanghai, R' Leib was
a fiery leader of the chaburah of Mir Yeshiva.
A New Home
In one sense, the real test of the chaburah's cohesion
began with the conclusion of the exile in Shanghai and the
subsequent parting of many of its members' ways. To an
alumnus of the yeshiva, Reb Leib once wrote, "It gave us joy
and pleasure to see your links to the holy yeshiva and how,
[even] after several years have passed since you were here,
you still retain your spirit -- the spirit of scholar and
sage. From the few lines that you sent us, it seemed as
though you had just left the yeshiva."
Reb Leib continued with, "a magnificent idea from our master
and teacher [Reb Yeruchom] zt'l", about a branch's
connection with the life force of the tree: `If the tree's
connection with the growth force is interrupted for a moment,
it begins to dry and wither. In the spiritual realm it is the
same. One must maintain a connection throughout life, with
all that one achieved in the holy yeshiva, with no break or
interruption . . . This is the real purpose and the essence
of the holy chaburah. Those members who are here
gather periodically, taking measures to strengthen themselves
[through spiritual] regulations and undertakings. You, who
are away from the yeshiva, certainly need to take such
measures, for the same . . . purpose."
Although Rav Kalmanowitz founded the Mirrer Yeshiva anew in
Brooklyn, and many of the newly arrived bochurim from
Shanghai after the war went to learn there, Reb Leib yearned
to reestablish the old chaburah and recapture the
yeshiva's unique spirit. He turned down invitations from both
HaRav Moshe Feinstein zt'l, to serve as rosh
yeshiva in Tiferes Yerushalayim and HaRav Kalmanowitz to
serve as rosh yeshiva in the new Mir. It seems that he
was reluctant to dilute the lofty ideals to which the bnei
yeshiva of his own generation had aspired in order to
cater to the new reality, in which a Torah world had to be
built up from scratch.
His ambition was to create a beis hamedrash where
Torah would be learned in the same milieu and with the same
ferment as in prewar Europe. At first, the Mirrer
chaburah formed their own kollel; later, in
order to accommodate younger bochurim, Reb Leib
resolved upon running their beis hamedrash as a
yeshiva proper.
Reb Leib used to say that Torah in its entirety, with all of
its boundless expanse and depth, was vital for man; it
contains nothing that can be deemed unnecessary or
superfluous. "He looked into the Torah and created the world"
-- the Torah as a whole is the basis for the world's
existence. The world could not continue to exist were a
single stroke or line of Torah's depth and dimension to be
missing. Rav Chaim of Volozhin zt'l, is quoted as
having said that were a single thing from the gemora
to be annulled, chas vesholom, the entire world would
collapse.
Reb Leib (and friends) felt that broadly speaking, with
regard to disseminating Torah, the same was true for their
chaburah's retaining the precise form that it had
before the war. This was the foundation upon which the
yeshiva Beis Hatalmud was established.
Reb Leib clarified that Beis Hatalmud would embody Torah
study, on the deepest and most exalted plane -- Torah learned
for its own sake, without any dressings or ulterior motives
such as attaining a financial footing. It would be a
continuation of Volozhin, Slobodke and Mir. In mid-twentieth
century America, Beis Hatalmud represented the creation of a
new standard, against which all else might be measured -- a
statement against the prevalent superficiality and diminution
of Torah's status.
Citing Reb Yeruchom, Reb Leib would say that in the same way
that we know how tefillin must look, through the
transmission of halochoh that was revealed at Sinai to
Moshe Rabbenu, and in the same way that we know how a
sefer Torah must look, our ancestors also transmitted
to us the way that a yeshiva must look; nothing whatsoever
may be changed about it.
The primary expression of this was of course to be the
atmosphere created within the yeshiva itself. It was to
faithfully replicate the great yeshivos which no longer
existed where, as Reb Leib wrote in his essay Beis
Chayeinu, "Torah and the fear of Heaven were preserved in
their full purity . . . toil in Torah and study of its
innermost meaning were perpetuated . . . Hakodosh Boruch
Hu's rule was discernible . . . Torah -- and nothing else
- - ruled and was all powerful. Upon entering the yeshiva's
portals, one could feel how the whole place was suffused with
Torah . . . [there,] everything precious was to be found, and
the Shechinoh resided..."
Preserving this identity at times led the roshei
yeshiva to prevent things that they felt were
incompatible with it. For example, when there was a general
wish to have a telephone installed in the yeshiva, Reb Leib
strongly opposed it as being out of character for a yeshiva.
On another occasion, the bnei hayeshiva bought a water
cooler, to provide cold water for drinking during hot
weather. The next morning, they found Rav Leizer
(Horodzhesky) zt'l, who was in charge of the beis
hamedrash, disconnecting the pipes from the large machine
by himself, prior to ejecting it. He said, "Doss iz nisht
kein park (The yeshiva isn't a park)," in a tone that
words cannot convey.
Beis Hatalmud was thus to be a fulfillment of a letter that
Reb Yeruchom had sent to the Mirrer chaburah in Lodz
before his petiroh. He wrote, "Who but yourselves know
what the basic structure of our yeshiva is; the true meaning
of `spending nights immersed in the depths of
halochoh;' of learning in depth, with the depth
encompassing an ever-broader scope and sharpening the
intellect; developing men who approach every aspect of life
with intelligence and contemplation, instead of living in an
ordinary manner; [rising above changing circumstances and]
thereby always remaining together with the yeshiva and within
the yeshiva's walls, exerting an influence upon those who
have never glimpsed the interior of the yeshiva -- through
doing so, you have merited being true disciples of the holy
yeshivos."
Beis Hatalmud
A month after Reb Leib's marriage (to a daughter of Rav Dovid
Dov Kreuzer zt'l, av beis din of Greive and a
maggid shiur in Kletsk), a meeting was held in his
home to establish Yeshivas Beis Hatalmud. The founding
chaburah included, Rav Levi Krupenia zt'l, Rav
Leib Shachar zt'l, Rav Simcha Zissel Leibowitz
zt'l, (Reb Yeruchom's son), Rav Shmuel Charkover
zt'l, Rav Chaim Wysoker zt'l, Rav Binyomin
Paler zt'l, Rav Avrohom Leibowitz zt'l and
ylct'a, Rav Sholom Menashe Gottleib, Rav Y. Perkovsky
and Rav Binyomin Zeilberger, who head the yeshiva today.
At one meeting with laymen prior to the yeshiva's opening,
some argued that, "Here in America one has to be a bit
flexible. Things look different over here."
But Reb Leib was unmoved and replied, "We didn't come to
listen to advice but to see who is prepared to work."
Rav Sholom Tzvi Shapiro, an alumnus of the old Mir, writes
that Reb Leib, "became famous as a gaon and a leader
after he succeeded in establishing Beis Hatalmud precisely
along the lines of his rebbes' teachings. To begin with, many
were skeptical about whether it would be possible to build a
`tent of Sheim,' without `the beauty of Yefes,' in New York
in those days. The great edifice became a fact, [skepticism]
notwithstanding. Anyone who entered the place during the
Yomim Noraim felt as though he was standing in Mir,
following the delivery of a Kelmer mussar shmuess.
Gedolim were also amazed by the place, where Torah,
wisdom and yiras Shomayim were cultivated."
"It was literally a continuation of Mir," says HaRav
Povarsky. "All the customs, in tefillah and in the
learning sedorim [were the same]. It was the only
place in the world that was a real continuation; Mir in
Yerushalayim was not and neither was there with my father
[HaRav Dovid Povarsky zt'l]. When I went there in the
summer of 5718 (1958), I felt as though I was in Mir; the
reason was that they adhered to [the path of] the Alter, the
mashgiach, our master Reb Yeruchom zt'l . . .
"
Reb Leib also began publishing the Torah journal
Hatevunoh as a vehicle for the Torah writings of the
bnei hachaburoh. He included several of Reb Yeruchom's
shmuessen in each issue writing in his introduction
that, "since he left us, the Oron Hakodesh has been
hidden and with it [has gone] his sefer Torah, the
Torah of mussar . . . each of his Torah teachings
powerfully illuminated the fundamentals of religion and
faith, revealed hidden stores of deep mussar wisdom,
unraveled obscurities and exposed the depth in the plain
meaning of Chazal's words, in true Torah light."
Beis Hatalmud was not geared towards the average American
bochur of the time and it never became a large
yeshiva. It was however, a place for the sons of alumni of
the European yeshivos, who would have travelled to their
fathers' own yeshivos and teachers, had that still been
possible. Reb Leib trained many of today's prominent
marbitzei Torah and he thus has a great share in the
Torah taught in yeshivos nowadays.
As rosh yeshiva, he upheld standards of Torah and
mussar that are instructive in themselves. Once he
announced that he would deliver a shiur on a certain
sugya and then, on the day of the shiur, he
cancelled it. He explained that he had been unable to discern
the proper desire to hear the shiur on the part of the
talmidim.
He would explain the posuk, "Widen your mouth and I
will fill it" (Tehillim 81:11), as meaning that only
after the recipient has made the proper preparations for
receiving and absorbing Torah, can the teacher fill him with
his Torah. On other occasions as well, he made it clear that
where talmidim failed to express or evince a desire
for instruction, not only was there no obligation to provide
it, it was forbidden to do so.
Talmidim note that although Reb Leib was a gentle
person, he brooked no compromise whatsoever in spiritual
matters. There was a period when talmidim were lax
about rising in time to daven in the yeshiva. Reb Leib
delivered a shmuess in which he said that a yeshiva
was not just a place for learning Torah. Quoting Reb
Yeruchom, he said that the form of a yeshiva is determined by
the tefillos that are offered there. "Tefillah
gives a yeshiva its character," Reb Yeruchom had said.
"Take care not to lose or alter it."
If the tefillos are not conducted properly, the
yeshiva must be closed, Reb Leib concluded. This admonition
was followed by an immediate arousal, for it was well
understood that there would be no further warning on the
matter from the Rosh Yeshiva.
Reb Leib made it clear that one could not enter a yeshiva
simply by walking into it. It was a world that one had to
actually become part of, in order to be able to truly say
that one was there. A young bochur who had recently
joined Beis Hatalmud complained to him about his
chavrusa who was not to his liking and about the food
that the yeshiva served. Reb Leib gave him a look and told
him, "If you can speak about your chavrusa and the
food in the same breath, it's a sure sign that you haven't
properly entered the atmosphere of the yeshiva yet (nisht
arein)." Nisht arein was an expression he commonly
used when referring to someone whose conduct was
inappropriate for a ben Torah.
(His response to the second complaint was, "The food
is good. Although there is better food, the problem is
that it is expensive. I'd like to know where it is written
that you should sit and learn with peace of mind and
pleasures, while I go around collecting money for you.
I'll sit and learn and you go to collect
money!")
A talmid of one of the yeshivos in Brooklyn was making
his way to the bus stop one Sunday. He realized that unless
he hurried, he would miss the bus and have a long wait for
the next one. Dashing after the receding bus, he caught it at
the next stop. Inside the bus, panting after his exertion, he
noticed a distinguished looking Yid who was staring at
him. Suddenly the Yid addressed him, "Ihr zent a
yeshiveh bochur? (Are you a yeshiva bochur?)" When the
boy replied in the affirmative, Reb Leib told him, "A
yeshiveh bochur loift nisht (A yeshiva bochur doesn't
run)."
In financing the yeshiva too, Reb Leib insisted on the same
degree of perfection as he did in the way he ran the yeshiva
and educated the talmidim, for example, by turning
down huge sums offered by an individual who was married to a
gentile woman.
As can be imagined, supporting the yeshiva was no easy task.
In those days, there were very few who appreciated the worth
of the members of the chaburah and of what they were
doing. As the layman saw it, they had after all arrived in
the United States as bochurim, not as established
roshei yeshiva, yet they doggedly insisted on
perpetuating their own group.
The three men who accompanied Reb Leib in his quest for
support were themselves men of spiritual standing. Reb Leib
would never curry favor, nor would he go with anyone who did
not fully reflect the high values that he himself strived
for.
Living for Others
"He was also very astute in worldly matters," HaRav Povarsky
told us, "and he was involved in many acts of kindness
towards others. He had a wonderful quality of sharing others'
burdens, which he used for furthering spiritual ends. He was
a genius in mussar; this was the source of his
yiras shomayim and of the friendly countenance with
which he greeted everyone".
On the one hand, as talmidim of Reb Yeruchom treading
the path of Kelm, Reb Leib and his friends (particularly Reb
Chaim Wysoker), adopted a number of tremendously high
standards for their conduct, so long as these did not
conflict with their behavior as rank and file yeshiva-
leit. Reb Yeruchom wrote, "Man's essence and nature, is
to interact with others. His nature is like that of water,
which always flows to the lowest point. So too, is man a
channel and conduit towards others. If he lives for himself,
loves himself and holds onto everything for himself, he
negates the way he was made and his humanity."
Reb Leizer was once speaking about people who are self-
absorbed and wrapped up in their own concerns. He compared
them to a farmer who goes out at night and sees the heavens
studded with glittering stars and the full moon illuminating
the skies, the entire scene bespeaking Hashem's glory. "Now
listen to the farmer, as he says excitedly . . . `Ah, now my
cucumbers will grow even bigger!' He doesn't see the glory of
the Creator's works. He doesn't see the wonder and the
majesty of the luminous heavens. All he can see are his
cucumbers, which will grow fatter in the moonlight and fill
his belly . . . "
Reb Leib's devotion to the yeshiva was extraordinary and the
bonds among the members of the chaburah were like
those between brothers. When Rav Yosef Lis was hospitalized
one Friday night, Reb Leib was summoned to his bedside, where
he remained throughout the entire Shabbos. It was the same
when Rav Shumel Charkover fell ill. Reb Leib was at his side
day and night.
He was just as devoted to others' spiritual welfare. If he
saw that someone had the potential to develop into a ben
yeshiva, he would invest tremendous effort. At one time,
Reb Leib used to conduct lengthy daily telephone
conversations with a boy who was seven or eight years old,
because he divined the makings of a great rosh yeshiva
in the child. Years later, his foresight was confirmed:
today, that boy is a distinguished American rosh
yeshiva.
When one of the yeshiva's supporters was a guest in Reb
Leib's home on Friday night, Reb Leib refused to let the man
leave wearing the sunglasses with which he had arrived. No
amount of discussion helped and the glasses had to be left
behind. Reb Leib went to daven one Shabbos at a
minyan of Mirrer talmidim, to participate in a
simchah. One of those present was called to the Torah
and he greeted Reb Leib as he passed him on his way to the
bimoh. Reb Leib ignored the greeting and said,
"Weren't you just called up to the Torah?!"
Despite his preoccupation with the yeshiva's affairs, Reb
Leib would spend hours sitting and learning Torah and
mussar at home. Some nine months before his
petiroh, he was injured by a stone thrown at him by a
hooligan. Though he had possessed a lion's strength and vigor
all his life, he began to weaken following this incident.
On the last day of his life, one of the young talmidim
at Beis Hatalmud saw him in the ezras
noshim, standing with his hands outstretched, deeply
immersed in prayer. This talmid went on to become a
distinguished doctor and in later years he expressed his
utter conviction that, according to the signs that he saw
that day, Reb Leib was then suffering a heart attack.
Together with Rav Chaim Wysoker, Reb Leib was supposed to
participate later on in a meeting at the home of Rav Shabsai
Frankel zt'l (to make plans for a dinner to benefit
the yeshiva). Uncharacteristically, he arrived forty-five
minutes after the time they had scheduled to begin. Reb Chaim
asked him, "Why are you so late?"
"Ich bin shuldig (It's my fault)," said Reb Leib and
then he collapsed and fell down. He was just fifty- six years
old when he was niftar on the twenty- ninth of Teves
5722.
Additional material used in the preparation of this
article was taken from Hazerichoh Be'paasei Kedem by
Rabbi A. Y. Bernstein and Meged Giv'os Olom by Rav
Mechel Z. Shurkin.