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IN-DEPTH FEATURES
Part III
Friend and Support
"Like a face's reflection in the water, so are the hearts of
men to one another (Mishlei 27:19)." When people feel
that they are encountering someone whose concern for them is
genuine, they respond in a similar manner. The best possible
demonstration of the warmth with which Rav Ginsberg reached
out to others is to hear some of the reactions of the
beneficiaries of his friendliness. Many of those who had
contact with him over the years -- some on a casual basis,
others with greater exposure -- felt that they had lost a
very close and special friend.
Among the visitors at the shivoh were a number of
meshulochim who spoke unabashedly in terms such us, "I
had a special relationship"; "Me and the Rosh Yeshiva"; "He
kissed me, not once but twice"; "Ich hob gedavent far em
und ihr far mir (I davened for him and he
davened for me)"; "I told him my tzores and
he told me his" . . .
Upon hearing this, a communal leader who also felt that he
had enjoyed a particularly close relationship with Rav
Ginsberg, remarked in amazement, "Do you mean to say that he
said, `I love you' to everyone?"
The truth was that each and every one of them was
special and enjoyed a unique relationship with him. He
would invariably call people his brothers. One of Rav
Ginsberg's sons-in-law recalls when he became a
chosson, being introduced to acquaintances and being
told, "This one is like a brother to me" until the Rebbetzin
a'h, asked her husband, "How many brothers do you
have?"
His concern for others often went far deeper than
friendliness. There were many occasions when he stepped into
a situation to fill a role and lend support when it was
needed.
When a young local family lost their mother, he would call up
every evening to wish them a good night. A young boy lost his
father several months before his bar mitzva. Rav
Ginsberg would make the twenty- five minute journey from the
yeshiva into town in order to review the boy's droshoh
with him. He told the yosome, "I'm your zeideh.
Call me whenever you need me."
In cases where it was necessary, he made himself available at
any hour for individuals who needed his counsel urgently.
If his fellow Yidden were his brothers, his
talmidim were literally his sons and they felt this as
strongly as he did. A talmid from Toronto wrote, "Ask
any talmid -- the Rosh Hayeshiva treated each one
mamesh like a son and each talmid considered
the Rosh Hayeshiva like a father. These are not mere words .
. . I cannot begin to say how much fatherly love he gave us
and what concern he showed for all of us, and we all felt
it.
"He was not only concerned with our ruchniyus but very
much with our gashmiyus. In fact, on many occasions
the Rosh Hayeshiva would call me into his office and spend
tremendous amounts of time discussing personal things with
me. I was (in the beginning) shocked that a Rosh Yeshiva
showed such an interest. He had a sixth sense. He always knew
when a talmid needed encouragement and he of course
provided it, with his soft loving words and his loving hugs
and kisses. He was . . . always going over to talmidim
and asking them how they were feeling.
"When I broke my ankle, he himself made many phone calls to
get me seen by a top doctor. He even gave his own car to take
me downtown to the doctor and to my many appointments with
the physical therapist . . . There were countless other
times that I witnessed his fatherly love, his literally going
through `hoops' to do anything and everything for his
children."
Even less successful individuals felt the power of his love
for them, which, because it was genuine, never resulted in a
blurring of the line separating right from wrong. Sometimes,
it was necessary to expel boys from the yeshiva's dormitory.
One such fellow visited the shivoh and recalled that
having been a yosome, after being asked to leave, the
Rosh Yeshiva had taken him into his own home. He realized
that he had not lived up to the yeshiva's expectations, nor
those of the Rosh Yeshiva but at the same time, he knew from
the way he was treated that he was loved and respected.
A friend in Eretz Yisroel observed that Rav Ginsberg was
always a dynamic person with a direction in life. He never
simply walked; he moved, with a sense of mission, never a
shpatzier (a stroll). He was always on the move yet he
was soft-spoken with a tremendous power of persuasion. He was
able to talk to people and was extremely calming.
One would have thought that his dynamism would give him an
agitated air, as is often the case, but he could also speak
gently and soothingly to someone with problems. Busy as he
was, he lived with time. "If he was with you", this friend
concluded, "you were everything; you were the ben
yochid, the only one with whom he was dealing."
Say It, My Child
His love for his fellow Yidden expressed itself in
many ways, both in his interactions with them and in his
efforts to better their situation and his striving to bring
them closer to their Father in Heaven, of which his prayers
for them were an integral feature. He would beseech his
Creator as a child begs his father. One observer described
his tefilloh as having had "a childlike innocence
about it." (See the Mishnah Berurah at the beginning
of siman 98, quoting Teshuvos Maharshal,
describing the tefilloh of the RaSh as having been
"like that of a young child.")
A talmid from Toronto wrote, "Who can forget the Rosh
Hayeshiva every morning . . . literally crying out before
Shema to the Borei Olom, "Ovinu Ov horachamon,
hameracheim, racheim oleinu . . . "? I merited seeing the
Rosh Hayeshiva's avodas Hashem close up many times. I
would frequently daven before the omud and each
time I would watch him in awe, davening with such
tremendous bren. You could see his entire body became
energized. His face would become fiery. He would get all
worked up, with all his kochos . . . When I looked
closely, I mamesh saw tears in his eyes. During his
long Shemoneh Esrei, he would wrap his face in his
tallis and I could hear his muffled cries. When he
finished, I would see his face, so shaken up, full of fear,
his eyes teary . . . "
His supplications after the main Amidah prayer were
lengthy (he would knock on the wall as a signal for the
repetition of the Shemoneh Esrei to begin). He had
lists of people to pray for -- one section for the sick,
another to merit children and yet another for singles -- and
he often wept copiously on their behalf.
Once while staying with a daughter and son-in-law, his
daughter offered to repair her father's tallis. It was
very frayed but it was so worn that the stitches wouldn't
hold. She then offered to buy him a new one but he found it
impossible to accept her offer. He asked her, "Do you know
how many tefillos I davened, how many tears I
shed and how many tefillos the Ribono Shel Olom
answered, [when I was] in this tallis? And I should
get a new one?"
The effects of his efforts in tefilloh may have been
noticeable but the respective proportions of his prayers for
his fellow Yidden and those for what he referred to
as, "my sole desire in this world . . . to spread Torah,
yiras Shomayim and [to make] public kiddush Sheim
Shomayim . . . " remained hidden. All we have are the
clues -- which the following incidents provide -- to judge
the extent of his concern for and his preoccupation with
increasing and enhancing the revelation of his Creator's
glory in the world.
This was a factor of which he was always aware when he spoke
in public. Prior to addressing a large audience in Eretz
Yisroel several years ago, he made a decision. He had always
been a dynamic and impassioned speaker. While his thunder-and-
lightning delivery used to get people to sit up and listen,
he had the feeling that there was an element of personal
pleasure in this style and this bothered him. He therefore
resolved that on this occasion, he would simply repeat some
divrei Torah and let them speak for themselves.
Following this gathering, he addressed a letter to the
Ribono Shel Olom. After having spoken this way, he
wrote, he wondered whether there might not have been
something missing from the kevod Shomayim that he
could have engendered had he been more forceful. He therefore
asked the Ribono Shel Olom to allow him another chance
to correct his omission. By that time though, he was
unfortunately already sick and he never got a second
chance.
On one trip to Eretz Yisroel, Rav Ginsberg approached HaRav
Shlomo Zalman Auerbach zt'l with a query concerning
his practice during tefilloh. While he understood the
reply he received in a certain way, family members who later
heard the exact wording of Reb Shlomo Zalman's response, as
Rav Ginsberg repeated it to someone else at the time, were
convinced that in his humility, he had not realized what the
Yerushalmi poseik had really meant to convey to
him.
The Mishnah Berurah rules that if the tzibbur
reaches kedushoh while one is saying the supplications
following the Amidah, one should say "Kodosh,
kodosh . . . " and "Boruch kevod . . . " but not
"Yimeloch . . . " Rav Ginsberg told Reb Shlomo Zalman,
"I make lengthy supplications because I need to pray for the
Ribono Shel Olom's children. I daven for each
one of them. But how can it be that I don't daven for
Malchus Shomayim (by having to remain silent during
`yimeloch')?"
Later, Rav Ginsberg expressed his amazement over what he saw
as the power of a renowned poseik like Reb Shlomo
Zalman to take issue with the ruling of the Mishna
Berurah, for he had told him that he should say it.
Reb Shlomo Zalman's intention only became clear during the
shivoh for Rav Ginsberg, when an avreich who
had heard the story from him when it happened, repeated the
gaon's exact words. Reb Shlomo Zalman had said,
"Zog, mein kind, zog (Say it, my child, say it)."
Clearly, his meaning had been, "You can say it. Your
concern and worry over omitting it demonstrate that for you,
it is one of the supplications."
Shivisi
While his absolute reliance on and openness with his Creator,
like a child's total reliance on and lack of guile with a
parent, was most noticeable in his prayer, it extended to
every facet of his life. He would speak to talmidim
and audiences about the requirement to constantly maintain
awareness of Hashem's Presence: `Shivisi Hashem lenegdi
somid' (Tehillim 16:8). This was something that he
himself worked on and practiced constantly.
"His perfect trust and simple faith in Hashem were . . .
incredible," wrote a talmid in Toronto. "So many
times, we actually saw how, `One who trusts in Hashem is
surrounded by kindness' (Tehillim 32:10).
"In one instance, we were to go back to New York for Shabbos
Chanukah and we were to leave the yeshiva after second
seder on Thursday night. That morning, the weather
forecast a tremendous snowstorm in Toronto. We called the
airlines and they told us that due to the weather predicted,
we could change to an earlier flight. We asked the Rosh
Hayeshiva for permission to leave early and he unequivocally
said, "Learn till after second seder and don't worry;
you'll all go home for Shabbos Chanukah". And so it happened.
The big storm never came! He visibly demonstrated to us what
it means to put your entire trust in the Ribono Shel
Olom."
Family members and talmidim alike point to the period
of the illness of his first Rebbetzin a'h, as being
the prime example of this utter reliance. In the
aforementioned address in Eretz Yisroel, Rav Ginsberg
included some words of tribute to his late Rebbetzin (of the
Schindler family of New York) and he mentioned this
period.
"When I had the fortune to become a chosson," he said,
"it was a time when virtually every bas Yisroel wanted
a husband who was an accountant, a lawyer, a doctor, a
dentist -- a professional -- or a businessman. We were only a
handful at the kollel at that time. There was no one.
But fortunately there was a Bais Yaakov and that was our good
fortune. She didn't want an accountant. She didn't want a
businessman. She wanted kulo Torah. And because of her
kulo Torah, I and my family merited Torah . . .
"When the doctor told her, `We have no further medical
therapy to help you,' all she said to him was, `Well, this is
it,' and she walked out.
"As she went out she said to me, `Ich vill veinen --
should I cry -- in front of the goy and show him that
I have doubts in emunoh? Chas vesholom! I
merited marrying off my children to Torah and I would have
wanted to merit marrying off all of my grandchildren to Torah
but "Hashem Hu hatov be'einov ya'aseh (Hashem
will do what is correct in His eyes).' "
"After that she said no more. She guarded her lips to the
end. I can honestly say that I learned more avodas Hashem
from that last year than I did my entire life."
"Who can forget the days," wrote his talmid, "when the
Rosh Hayeshiva's first Rebbetzin was deathly ill and he would
sit over his gemora with a tremendous hurvanya!
It was something none of us could believe. His mesirus
nefesh for Torah in those days was mind-boggling! . . .
Who can forget [that] Purim? We all thought that we wouldn't
be able to have him celebrate the Purim seudah with
us. To our great surprise he came. Not only did he come, he
was marbin besimcha with us. In fact, I was told that
I got into a long conversation with him and he listened to my
every word as if there was nothing more important right now
than his talmidim. Just a few days after Purim [on
motzei Shushan Purim] the Rebbetzin passed away. It
struck me how much the Rosh Hayeshiva loved and cared for us
even during one of his most difficult times."
Another talmid who was leaving the yeshiva at that
time, came to take his leave of Rav Ginsberg and thank him
for the past three years. He had only discovered what had
been going on after the petiroh. He remarked to the
Rosh Yeshiva that he didn't know how he had been able to
carry on delivering shiurim and shmuessen
throughout the recent period. Rav Ginsberg picked up the
gemora and began crying. "Yossi," Rav Ginsberg told
him, "without this I wouldn't be able to survive."
Full Circle
Rav Ginsberg served as Rosh Yeshiva of Ner Yisroel in Toronto
since 5748 (1988). He continued conveying the devar
Hashem in his later years with undiminished zeal. His
excitement and delight in repeating a chidush in
shiur were just the same whether the thought was his
own or someone else's. As had been the case in Telz, young
talmidim in Toronto were still able to watch him move
around excitedly and see how Torah was the source of his
energy and vitality. His shmuessen too, remained as
lively, as engaging and as practical as ever.
Throughout the years, his bonds with talmidim of the
early years remained as strong as his more recent ones with
younger talmidim in Toronto. Besides his own ongoing
connection with his talmidim, he was also interested
in their maintaining their connections with each other. On
his frequent trips to Eretz Yisroel to visit and care for his
mother a'h, following his stepfather's petiroh,
he managed to speak with talmidim, advise them and
address them. On these visits, he would also attend to Kollel
International projects in Eretz Yisroel and would deliver
shiurim in several yeshivos.
Despite his reticence to remarry, expressing his concern over
his maasim (which the gemora says determine a
zivug sheini) he did so almost two years ago (to the
former Rebbetzin Grozovsky tbltv'a). His family saw
this zivug sheini as ample evidence of the level of
his deeds. Just as he had spent a lifetime devoting himself
to furthering kevod Shomayim, he merited a
zivug who selflessly devoted herself entirely to his
welfare.
His legacy is vast, extending from the talmidim he
raised and the Torah institutions that he helped establish,
to the countless others whose lives he touched. While those
who knew him can draw upon their memories of him to fuel
their furtherance of the goals for which he strived, the
story of his life will remain a powerful inspiration to
engage in self reflection and heighten commitment to Torah
and to being mekadesh Sheim Shomayim.
Acknowledgement: the writer wishes to acknowledge the
extensive help of HaRav Greenberger of Ner Yisroel, Toronto,
Mr. J. Koval of Cleveland, Rabbi Z. Klebenow and Rabbi Yonti
Bursteyn of Yerushalayim and Mr. Y. M. Rosenthal of New York,
in providing the material upon which this appreciation is
based.
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