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IN-DEPTH FEATURES
Part II
The first part described travel through Italy and
Switzerland. This part describes the trip through Germany,
Belgium and Holland.
Germany
We began a long journey through the Schwartzvald, the Black
Forest, which stretches over a vast area. To casual observers
it may appear to be just a lovely green and innocent forest,
but to those who remember the horror stories of the mass
murder of Jews inside this forest the green of the trees
assumes a black hue. This is where the Final Solution began.
Here all those declared "undesirable to humanity," including
the sick and elderly, were executed. How much evil can a
place of green serenity contain? How many years later can the
shadows of the trees pursue us? Very many years, without
relenting!
We passed by large cities as well as small villages, rivers,
castles and fortresses scattered across the mountains and a
view that would unreservedly be called beautiful were it not
in Germany.
We arrived in the city of Michelstadt, famous primarily for
the tzaddik who grew up famous there, HaRav Yitzchok
Aryeh Wormser, known as the Baal Shem of Michelstadt. The
Baal Shem was born in 5528 (1768) and was a descendent of
HaRav Eliyohu Loantz, known as the Baal Shem of Wormser, the
first Ashkenazi "Baal Shem."
As a child the Baal Shem of Michelstadt became known as a
tremendous prodigy, bright and diligent in his Torah study.
As a youth he studied under the author of the
Haflo'oh, and later under HaRav Nosson Adler of
Frankfurt.
After marrying, he suffered tzaar giddul bonim and
lost some of his children as well as his wife, leaving him
alone with five children. Members of the Enlightenment
circles in Michelstadt informed against him to the
authorities, preventing his appointment as rov of the city.
As a result of their reports, as well as miraculous deeds
attributed to him, he was imprisoned for a short period.
Still within a year of the passing of his wife, he left the
city for Mannheim. There he cured a severely mentally ill
woman at the local hospital shortly after undertaking to
help. From then on he was called the Baal Shem, a reference
to his use of holy names and kabboloh to perform
amazing deeds. He also gained fame as a godol beTorah,
a tremendous genius who wrote numerous chiddushim in
every area of Torah scholarship.
The notebooks he left behind contained the names of some
1,500 people who turned to him for brochos and advice.
He would record the date of each conversation and after a few
months or up to a year-and-a-half he would follow-up on the
state of the sick person or person in need. Among those who
sent requests for him to pray for them were the Chasam Sofer
and the author of Chiddushei HaRim of Gur. Together
with his prayers for sick individuals he would designate a
shiur in the sick person's merit.
His lists included the exact amounts he received in the form
of kesef pidyon and tzedokoh for his prayers,
and the commitments he made to teach shiurim for the
sake of those who sought his brochos. The number of
shiurim he committed to teach is astounding, as well
as the efficacy of his miracles and segulos through
the power of the holy Torah.
The Baal Shem's son-in-law was R' Eliyohu Strauss, whose son
was the famous Shmuel Strauss, who bought and founded the
famous Chotzer Strauss in Jerusalem and was one of the
followers of the Alter of Kelm. Chotzer Strauss became the
home of the mussar greats who moved to Jerusalem. R'
Shmuel's son-in-law was HaRav Yaakov Rosenheim, president and
one of the founders of the World Agudas Yisroel.
In 5571 (1811) the Baal Shem returned to his hometown of
Michelstadt and was officially asked to serve as rov.
During his final years he suffered sickness and pain, but did
not stop giving his shiurim despite his difficult
condition. His condition deteriorated drastically until on
Rosh Hashanah 5608 (1848) he was so weak he could hardly
speak. Nevertheless he asked to hear the tekios in his
home. Afterwards he gave instructions for his funeral
arrangements, demanding to be carried by hand and not on a
wagon, as was the Reform custom.
Toward the end of Tzom Gedaliah the next day, after
tefillas Minchoh, his soul departed at the age of 80.
In 5700 (1940) the Nazis destroyed his gravestone, which his
great-grandson replaced seven years later, inscribing the
words, "Here lies the great genius of renown, R' Zekel
Wormser, known as the Baal Shem of Michelstadt. May his soul
be bound up in the bond of life." In 5759 (1999) his
descendants erected a third gravestone, with the original
inscription on one side and the above description on the
reverse.
We went to the ancient cemetery to visit his grave, for he
had an established reputation for bringing yeshuos and
praying for Am Yisroel. Many heartfelt prayers were sent up
to the Heavens, with tears dripping onto our siddurim,
kvitlach read aloud and placed on the gravestone and
candles lit to the side. We left the grave murmuring,
"Ovinu Malkeinu, pesach shaarei Shomayim
letefiloseinu." As we were still drying away the tears I
added quietly, "Tehei hasho'oh hazos, she'as rachamim
ve'eis rotzon milefonecho."
Worms
According to historical sources, Worms boasts one of the
oldest Jewish communities not only in Germany, but in all of
Europe.
Often referred to as "Vermaizo" in Hebrew texts, it
claims Rashi among its illustrious former residents. We
stopped at a place called Rashi Gate, which is the entrance
to the ghetto and the Jewish area. We walked in silence on
the cobblestone street and turned down a narrow street with a
depression in one of the walls. According to legend Rashi's
mother was walking down this street when a man on horseback
tried to trample the obviously Jewish woman. With nowhere to
escape on the narrow street she pressed against the wall and
miraculously a depression formed in the wall where she was
standing. There is indeed a hollow spot in the wall that can
only be seen from up close.
Further down the street we followed a set of stairs down to
Rashi's mikveh. We were only able to peep into the
little alcove and the stairs leading to it. Of course there's
no water and the door is shut tight and bolted.
Behind the mikveh is Rashi's beis knesses, the
only remaining one in the area. It is well preserved and
looks like it is opened only when Jewish visitors arrive.
Alongside the beis knesses is a small room people say
was Rashi's study. There is an antique wood chair and desk
and a kisei shel Eliyohu made of stone. Afterwards we
took our leave from the place that had great symbolic meaning
to the Jewish people and now shu'olim hilchu bo--
German children play on the street's cobblestones.
On the entrance gate to the city's Jewish cemetery hangs a
sign that reads, "The oldest Jewish cemetery in Europe."
During the Holocaust the Nazis tried to harm it, but thanks
to efforts by the Mayor of Worms, a Righteous Gentile, the
cemetery went unscathed and remains intact to this day,
revealing this kehilloh's great past.
In this age-old graveyard renowned rabbonim, tzaddikim
and other Jews of repute were laid to rest. The story of the
cemetery is the story of the glorious kehilloh once in
Worms.
The local counsel established the place of rest for the
Jewish dead outside the city walls, far from the ghetto and
the municipal area. The Jews of Worms buried their dead in an
open field. Soil from Eretz Yisroel, which they would place
at the head of every deceased Jew, is said to have protected
the cemetery from vandals.
Later, when a new wall was built around the entire city, the
Jewish cemetery was included within its bounds for the first
time. Once the cemetery was within the city limits it was
harmed on several occasions, during wars waged between the
princes and the cardinals. They would use gravestones to form
fighting positions and dig trenches, which the soldiers used
to pass from one wall to the other.
The goyim made the Jews' lives bitter and desecrated
their graves once they were dead. The walls of the city are
inlaid with gravestones from the Jewish cemetery.
Nearly 2,000 remaining gravestones are decipherable. The
older they are, the simpler the inscriptions. A modest square
tablet lists on one side the name of the deceased, a date and
words of praise, all in loshon hakodesh. Meanwhile
gravestones from the last few hundred years, mostly on the
top of the hill, are much bigger. Some are made of marble,
others of stone. The writing is in Hebrew and German, or just
German. The simple tablets from earlier generations of pious
German Jews are replaced by ornate family gravestones
decorated with drawings. The traditional Hebrew inscriptions
make way for florid German.
Among the many graves in Worms' historical cemetery is that
of HaRav Meir of Rottenburg. On the slope of the cemetery
just to the left of the gate is the grave of the Maharam of
Rottenburg, who died in prison after refusing to be ransomed,
in order to prevent the authorities from arresting other
rabbonim for extortion purposes.
Alongside it lies the grave of Alexander Ziskind Wimpen, one
of the leaders of the Frankfurt kehilloh, who ransomed
the bones of the Maharam from the prison and brought them to
burial in the cemetery of his hometown.
During pre-Holocaust times many Jews came to prostrate
themselves on the grave of this gaon of Ashkenazi
Jewry in halochoh, in his conduct and in his model of
kiddush Hashem. Now fewer visitors arrive, but we
could see the remains of candles that had been lit beside the
grave and many little notes bearing requests for
yeshu'oh for individuals and for all of Am
Yisroel.
The years have taken their toll on the Maharam's gravestone,
but after a bit of effort it was possible to make out all of
the words. "This stands as a monument to the head of
marono verabono, Meir ben HaRav R' Boruch, who was
caught by the King of Rome on the fourth day of the month of
Tammuz of the year 5046 and passed away in captivity on the
19th of Iyar of the year 5053 and could not be buried until
the fourth of Adar 5067. May his soul be bound in the bond of
life with the righteous of the world in Gan Eden, omen
seloh."
The Maharam's responsa reflect his brilliance as a great
halocho master, posek and moreh derech for all
the kehillos of Germany and France. He founded several
yeshivas, most notably Yeshivas Worms. He taught superb
middos, mutual respect and courage in facing the
princes and cardinals. He defended the poor against
discrimination and instructed talmidei chachomim to
forego their status in order to spare others from affront.
During periods of persecution from without and economic
hardship from within, he followed in the footsteps of his
rebbe, Rav Yechiel of Paris, who moved to Eretz
Yisroel and directed German Jews to leave golus for
Eretz Hakodesh. He also ruled that a father cannot prevent
his son from moving to Eretz Yisroel--kovod ho'av vekovod
haMokom, kovod haMokom kodem.
The Maharam set out on the journey with his wife and
daughters and sons-in-law and all his possessions. Once they
arrived in a secluded mountain town as Shabbos began, so they
were forced to stay. Suddenly the evil Cardinal of Bazilo
rode into town while traveling from Rome with a Jewish
apostate named Kanofafa. They caught the Maharam and handed
him over to King Rudolf.
He spent seven years imprisoned in Wasserburg Castle in Mainz
and later in Anzisheim, where he passed away. He had served
as rov of Wurzburg, Nuremberg, Mainz, Rottenburg and finally
Worms.
While imprisoned he wrote a will that read, "When a person
resolves to sanctify the Name and to give over his soul,
whatever is done to him, whether he is stoned, burned, buried
alive [or] hanged, does not hurt him at all. And know this
truth: there is no man on earth who would not cry out if his
little finger were to touch fire; even if he tried to
restrain himself he would be unable. Yet many people [who]
give themselves over for burning and execution to sanctify
the Name do not cry out in any way."
Leaving the ancient Worms cemetery, somberly we whispered,
"May it be Your will, He Who Hears Weeping, that You collect
our tears in and spare us from all decrees, for to You Alone
our eyes are raised."
These districts are dead in terms of the Jewish presence, but
they are alive in the gemora, in the Chumash,
in the mouths of lomdim young and old. This spirit
cannot be broken. Rashi, the Maharam of Rottenburg, the
Maharil and his minhagim all remain alive and their
lips continue to speak from the grave.
We did not spend the night in Germany. How can one sleep
there when the spirit of the Jews cries out? As if something
draws you away from there the moment you finish your errand
there. A voice calls out from within telling you to flee.
Perhaps this comes from hidden fears, or loathing and
residual anger. Germany, do not cover their blood. As we say
in Av Horachamim, "Harninu goyim amo ki dam avodov yikom,
venokom yoshiv letzorov." ("O nations, sing the praise of
His people, for He will avenge His servants' blood and He
will bring retribution upon His foes." Devorim 32:43).
Hashem will not remain passive and silent . . .
Belgium
From Germany, traveling a seemingly familiar road, we went on
to Belgium after spending the night in Luxembourg, a country
consisting of a large city and several small towns.
After a relatively short drive we arrived in the town of Han.
There we visited the most beautiful stalactite cave in the
area, called Han Sur Las. The caves are reached by riding
(that is, jolting along) on a special, open railway car on
tracks passing through trees and patches of grass that add to
the atmosphere of the trip.
The cave itself is quite large with a long walking tour.
Stalactites hang down all along the way and some of them are
illuminated with little lights that, together with the damp
air of the cave, create an atmosphere of mystery, as if we
were roaming through another world. Visitors exit the cave on
boats that float on the Las River, which passes through the
cave and continues flowing outside. Toward the end of the
excursion a fake cannon sounds, echoing through the walls of
the cavern, generally startling the visitors and designed
primarily to leave a lasting impression on tourists.
From the town of Han we continued onward to a large,
attractive town called Namur where we went up to the Citadel,
a panoramic viewpoint at the top of a high fortress
overlooking the town and the two rivers passing through
it.
We then traveled on toward the capital city of Brussels,
where we spent three hours in a huge traffic jam due to an
accident in one of the tunnels that caused congestion
throughout the area. When we finally arrived in Brussels, we
toured the city by bus to see its splendid architecture.
We saw the parliament buildings, the government offices, the
Hall of Culture, high-tech office buildings, European Union
buildings and the Royal Botanical Gardens. We also got a
glimpse of one of the king's palaces, which gave us some idea
of how much money had gone into its external beauty. The
meticulous, sculpted gardens surrounding the palace and the
ornate walls and gates could only belong to aristocracy or
royalty. We also stopped to see the well-known Atomium
Building and after seeing a few more buildings in the immense
city we drove on to Antwerp.
After a short ride around the large city the passengers on
the bus started crying out, "Look, chareidim!" "There's a
couple still in their sheva brochos; he's wearing a
streimel," "Look at the children returning from
cheder" and "Here are some Beis Yaakov girls."
We were very excited to see chareidim here in a foreign land,
not tourists like us but local residents of a neighborhood
not unlike chareidi neighborhoods in Eretz Yisroel. The bus
drove around a few of the Jewish streets then dropped us off
at Haufis, an upscale restaurant known for its high standards
of kashrus.
While dinner was being served HaRav Pinchos Kornfeld, of
Antwerp's chareidi kehilloh, arrived especially to
deliver a talk. He told us about community life in Antwerp
since World War II, the problems encountered in setting up a
strict kashrus system, building educational
institutions, which rabbonim led the kehilloh over the
years and who heads the kehilloh today. Of course he
also mentioned their esteemed rov, the Gavad of Antwerp HaRav
Chaim Kreiswirth, zt'l.
In response to our question as to who has taken his place he
said nobody can replace HaRav Kreiswirth! He was universally
accepted, got along with everyone, was not a political
figure, would go to every beis knesses and would speak
amiably with everybody and had no adversaries. Thus replacing
him is no simple matter, he explained, for today people who
have achieved such greatness in both Torah and middos
are hard to find. He added a few stories of his own in which
he was privileged to witness HaRav Kreiswirth's gadlus
firsthand.
While describing the local educational facilities and how
Bais Yaakov was built, as a side note Rav Kornfeld mentioned
his niece, Rebbetzin Tamar Steinman, o'h, who had
worked at a teacher during her time in Antwerp before she
married the Rosh Yeshiva, shlita.
Holland
We woke up to a pleasant morning in Holland, the land of
tulips. After breakfast we drove to downtown Amsterdam, got
off the bus near the downtown train station opposite the port
and walked down the Jewish street to the Portuguese beis
knesses, the largest, most beautiful beis knesses
in Europe. The broad building exudes a feeling of oldness and
inspires reverence.
To this day, electric lights have not been installed.
Instead, light is provided by 613 candleholders containing
wax and tallow candles. The beis knesses has seating
for 10,000 people, but only three minyanim are held
per week, all on Shabbos. The furniture is made of jacaranda
wood, which is dark brown. Construction on the beis
knesses was completed in Av 5435 (1675).
The aron hakodesh has no paroches but is
covered with tapestries adorned with gilded decorations. The
seats are arranged in parallel rows facing one another and
the seat back of every bench has a candle. The floor of the
beis knesses is made of wood and covered with sand, in
accordance with the Dutch custom, to absorb the dampness from
the wood and the dirt from the shoes of the congregants.
There are two women's galleries facing one another and
extending the length of the sidewalls. The community leaders
sit beneath the northern gallery. Until the end of the War
the beis knesses had a choir, but today all that
remains is the choir leader's podium, built one hundred years
ago.
Next to the aron kodesh stands a fabulous
chuppah made entirely of jacaranda wood and ready to
be taken outside when weddings are held.
We left and continued walking around the crowded streets of
the city. In Holland the streets have one lane for cars and
trucks and buses, one lane for bicycles (marked with a
bicycle painted on the asphalt every few meters) and one lane
for trolleys.
In Holland, the Dutch bicycles are a popular means of
transportation. Both large cities and small towns have
bicycle parking lots--even multi-level parking lots where
somehow everyone is able to locate his own bike among the
thousands parked there! It's nice to see people of all ages,
including chareidim with rabbinical posts and respectable
businessmen, all riding on bikes. The locals warned us not to
stand in the bicycle lane for a single moment, since it
angers cyclists greatly.
After walking a few blocks we arrived at the flower market, a
street with numerous booths selling flowers of every color
and description, singly, by the bouquet, bulbs for planting,
plants, potted plants and flowers and a huge variety of Dutch
souvenirs. Flowers look nicer in Holland.
We continued walking through the bustling downtown streets
until we reached the central square, called Dam Square.
Across the street we saw the Amsterdam Stock Exchange
Building. From there, we crossed the street toward the port
where we boarded a small boat. During the hour-long tour of
the city's canals we had time to think about the Jews living
in Amsterdam before the War. Dutch flowers plucked from the
ground.
The Jews who were taken from their homes and through these
same canals for the last time to the other side of the city,
beyond the realm of the living. The Jews who were accustomed
to making a respectable living in commerce in Holland's large
port cities, the flowing water mocking them as they were
taken away to oblivion; when they were taken away forever the
waters of the canals continued flowing quietly as if nothing
had happened. The waters had nothing to say as Amsterdam's
Jewish population sank away among the canals.
Zaanse Schans is a small, picturesque windmill town with
little green houses, a lot of grass and greenery, canals
surrounding the houses and many windmills used to grind
spices. We went into a factory that manufactures wooden clogs
and were shown how the shoes are molded. The factory sells
clogs in every size and shape you could ask for, in every
color of the rainbow, and of course everyone who enters the
factory leaves with several pairs of shoes as gifts and
souvenirs. In another part of the town we went to a farm
where rounds of cheese are made, but here we could not buy
anything, for obvious reasons.
We continued ambling down the walkways among green houses
with tidy yards, among the spinning windmills and the canals
overflowing with water and boats. The town is so picturesque
and serene, life is so calm and pleasant, that someone
roaming through its streets totally forgets what a noisy city
even looks like.
Next we visited a famous fishing town called Markan. There,
too, we saw many little green houses with well-kept yards
full of plants and flowers. Wary not to disturb the
prevailing peace and quiet we spoke in hushed tones as we
walked through the idyllic town. The local residents wear
traditional Dutch garb and, to the tourists passing through,
it appears as if time stood still here. The people look as if
they don't have a single care in the world. At the edge of
the town is a harbor with fishing boats and sailboats of
every size.
After taking in some clean, country air we returned to
Amsterdam where we went to the home of HaRav Shatz, the head
of the city's kollel, American-born, who lived for
many years in Eretz Yisroel, who together with his wife does
much for the city's chareidi community and welcomes guests
from around the world. We were received there very amiably
and as we stepped into their home we were thrilled at the
sight of a large picture of the Rosh Yeshiva, HaRav Aharon
Yehuda Leib Steinman, decorating the living room, evidence of
appreciation for godolei hador among Diaspora Jews. In
his home we heard interesting stories from HaRav Aharonson
about Amsterdam's Jews past and present and then Mrs. Slyt
told us about rabbonim who lived in Amsterdam over the
years.
The first Jewish settlers in Amsterdam were primarily large
merchants who developed the country through trade with the
Orient and their countries of origin, Spain and Portugal.
Jews took part in founding the Bank of Amsterdam. In 1805 the
Bank of Lissa & Kann was established, quickly becoming one of
Europe's leading financial institutions.
The famous international bank owned by Lippman, Rosenthal &
Associates was founded in 1859 and remained in operation
until the Nazi takeover. The Nazi authorities confiscated the
bank and Dutch Jews were ordered to report their monetary
holdings and bonds. The Nazis robbed the Jews of all their
assets, which totaled $500 million in gold.
When the Germans took over Holland the Holocaust descended
upon the Jews of Amsterdam. Only a small number of the exiles
ever returned. Most of them were killed in the gas chambers.
When the Germans were eventually driven out of the country,
only 20 percent of the pre-War population remained in
Amsterdam. The Dutch did not cooperate with the Germans and
there were many Righteous Gentiles among them.
We drove to the city of Harlem to the home of the Tan-Baum
family, a Catholic family of Righteous Gentiles who saved
many Jews during the Second World War until the Nazis
eventually caught them. None of the family members survived,
but their home was made into a museum to commemorate their
efforts and a woman volunteer tells visitors how the family
hid Jews in the attic, and about the signal they arranged to
update Jews. Under their home is a clock shop (which is still
there) and if the big clock was displayed it was a sign they
could enter the house. If the big clock was not hanging it
was a sign the area was in danger and Jews should keep away
from the house.
For years the Tan-Baums and their two daughters managed to
hide thousands of Jews in their home and to help them flee to
safe areas, until informers reported their activities to the
Nazi authorities, who arrested them. Most of the family died
in Nazi jails.
After surveying the background history the volunteer guide
took us to the room where the Jews hid, which was reached by
passing through an opening in the back of a wardrobe. The
opening, just large enough for people to go in and out, was
also used to send in food. An opening was made in the wall
between the hidden room and the rest of the home to allow
visitors to see how small the hideout is and imagine how
difficult it was to remain there for an extended period
before fleeing for safety. The Tan-Baum family surely
received its just reward in Heaven along with all other
Righteous Gentiles. (The volunteer guide is also a Christian
with a fondness for Jews. Perhaps her forefathers were
Righteous Gentiles, as well.)
As we stepped out into the bustling street we looked at the
buildings nearby, wondering if they once housed the
collaborators, may their names be blotted out, who brought
the rescue efforts to an end--or perhaps other unknown
families that provided a safe haven for Jews. These
contemplations were joined by other thoughts that flit
through the heads of the post-Holocaust generation. The
musings of a generation whose understanding of the Holocaust
is based only on stories.
From Harlem we continued on to the city of Dan-Hague, where
we stopped to see the Hague World Court, which the Dutch
refer to as the Palace of Peace. From the outside it really
does look like a palace and the flowers and vegetation
surrounding it indeed create a sense of calm and peace.
A short drive brought us to Madurodam, a town with a park
called Little Holland that stretches over a huge area. The
park has miniature displays of everything in the country, a
fabulous work of creativity where one can marvel for hours at
how natural the displays appear. We saw Schipol Airport with
its control tower, parked airplanes, a plane on the takeoff
runway, parking lots full of cars, passenger trains on tracks
and bridges, boats cruising on the canals, raised highways,
fishing and sailing harbors, royal palaces, the Portuguese
beis knesses, bridges, waterfalls, famous buildings
and many other fabulous sights--and of course many, many
flowers in a variety of colors.
The tour of Madurodam was indeed an appropriate way to
conclude our visit in Holland, providing a sort of review of
all we had seen in this splendid country. From there we went
to Schipol Airport, the third largest airport in the world,
and after ten days packed with experiences we headed to our
longed for destination: Back home to Eretz Yisroel!
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