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IN-DEPTH FEATURES
Part II
In the first part of the story we met Rocco, the window
washer of the restaurant Windows on the World, located atop
one of the twin towers of the World Trade Center in lower
Manhattan, New York City. Charles Harrison is the manager of
the restaurant and Jimmy is a waiter who serves Doniel
Jacobs, one of the regulars, who sits at a corner table and
just orders Coke in a paper cup. Mr. Jacobs owns a hi-tech
firm called Electro-Telcom. Periodically he meets with a
distinguished rabbi named Rabbi Meizlish, who reports to him
about a kollel that Jacobs supports. Jimmy the waiter
overhears the conversations, sees how much importance Jacobs
attaches to the matters that Rabbi Meizlish comes to talk to
him about, and concludes that it is some top secret research
project.
It was the beginning of September, yet it was still stifling
and sticky. Windows on the World continued to host thousands
of tourists a day and its workers had gotten used to the
crowds of amateur photographers who wanted to snap pictures
of Manhattan from the clearest observation point in town.
Rocco continued to polish the windows, and in the end, all
congratulated him on his new job as exterior window-washer.
He had finally agreed to dangle on a scaffold on the 107th
floor of Twin Towers, and to wash the Windows on the World
from outside. All were excited. Harrison was pleased. That
summer he had earned a pretty penny, and as a result planned
to open an additional restaurant -- Asiatic style -- on the
open area in back of the kitchen.
Although Jimmy understood Harrison's plans, he couldn't make
head nor tail of the customer Jacobs' latest idea. "I know he
told his brokers that he wants to manufacture some sort of a
mat which is supposed to prevent the rain from penetrating
something he refers to as a Succah. What's a Succah, though?"
Jimmy mused. "But I guess he knows what he's doing. I heard
him tell one of his pals that everyone in Boro Park will buy
one of those mats."
Rav Meizlish arrived, like he did at the beginning of every
month. When the two went over the lists, Rav Meizlish said
that the holidays were nearing and that the expenses of the
large families were greater than usual. "My men aren't
accustomed to luxuries. They are very frugal and suffice with
little. You have a great merit in supporting them," he told
Jacobs.
Jacobs smiled and told Rav Meizlish that he knew that the men
were very fine. Once again Jimmy noticed that Jacobs treated
Rabbi Meizlish like a king, and regarded him as the keystone
of his success.
Jimmy examined Rav Meizlish's face and dress once again, and
concluded that he was special. Yes, even Jimmy, the non-Jew
could, to some degree, sense kedushoh.
The cell phone rang and Jacobs picked it up. "Tell them to
launch the idea immediately. Now's the perfect time to market
it. It's the beginning of September, and nearly Succos."
Jacobs finished his conversation quickly and turned to Rav
Meizlish: "Rav Shaul, we're coming out with an original idea
for schach. It'll be like a mat of halved, hollow
reeds. When it is placed on the Succah in a slanting
position, the rain won't penetrate. If we sell enough of
them, we'll able to accept many more students this year!"
"What did you say? Rainproof schach?" Rav Meizlish
asked with a furrowed brow. "Won't that invalidate the
Succah? After all, it's forbidden to seal it off. We'll have
to study the topic in depth. If it's only a matter of how the
schach is laid, and not a matter of the material from
which it is made, it's probably okay. If it proves kosher
lemehadrin, it'll be a big boon because last year the rain
sent most of us back into our houses the very first night of
Succos."
Jimmy had absolutely no idea what they were talking about.
But it was clear to him that Rav Shaul Meizlish and his brain
pool were the ones who would decide whether the idea was
feasible.
"I get the point," Jimmy continued to muse. "If the idea
succeeds, Jacobs can make a lot of money and expand his brain
pool. The pool will develop and Jacobs will become wealthier.
I'll have to ask Jacobs whether I can invest in that company
too."
* * *
Rocco was scheduled to make his debut as the Twin Towers
outside human window-washer the following day. That night the
guys on his shift organized a small party for him.
A week before, Jimmy had seen Rocco practicing. Rocco had
poked his head outside the window and had bent over, each
time a bit more, without losing his balance and without
becoming dizzy.
"Brave chap," Jimmy had muttered. "He's only a kid."
It was half an hour before sunset and New York was bathed in
orange. Jimmy scanned his tables and saw that Jacobs was
there too, giving orders to his brokers via the cell phone.
Even though Jacobs had a well-equipped office on the 103rd
floor of Twin Towers, he preferred to wind up his day in his
corner table in Windows to the World before rushing out to
who knows where. (By now, you've probably figured where
Jacobs went every day before sunset!)
Then Jimmy heard him say, "Yes, Rav Shaul. We'll discuss it
tomorrow. Come before nine. I have a rough day ahead."
Jacobs finished his conversation and Jimmy served him a Coke
in a paper cup, wondering if that was the right time to
discuss business with him. Suddenly Jacobs' cell phone rang.
Rav Meizlish was on the line.
"Ah, you'd rather come tonight because you deliver a shiur
in the morning right after Selichos? Okay. I'm
going to mincha now. I'll meet you here in half an
hour. Take a cab at my expense."
If anyone else had made such a request from him, he would
have refused them. But Jacobs was one of those rare Torah
supporters who fully believed that he had made the best
business deal in the world -- that of Yissochor and
Zevulun.
Rav Meizlish headed a special kollel for truly
outstanding avreichim who were capable of detaching
themselves from the materialism of the Land of Unlimited
Opportunity, and devoting themselves solely to Torah study.
Reb Daniel Jacobs, the businessman supported them.
Jacobs had strict standards, and he wanted proof that the
avreichim were abiding by them. He and Rav Meizlish
had made a written contract and Jacobs was a full partner to
all of the kollel's achievements. However, Jacobs was
always willing to comply with Rav Meizlish's requests.
Although Jacobs gave his avreichim very high stipends,
he knew that the dividends he reaped in return were well
worth his efforts.
Precisely because the stipends were so high and the
agreements so exacting, the members of the kollel
didn't want to break faith with Jacobs even in the
slightest. Every lateness or absence would give rise to many
halachic questions. Jacobs for his part had never in his life
encountered people who honored agreements in so remarkable
and precise a manner.
Jacobs waited half an hour until Rabbi Meizlish arrived.
While he was seated at his table, he heard the kitchen staff
clapping hands and chanting, "Bravo, Rocco. Bravo, Rocco."
Rav Meizlish arrived a few minutes before the restaurant's
closing and rushed over to Jacobs' table. Jacobs approved the
applications of six more avreichim, while Rav Shaul
showed him a thick book which one of the kollel
members had published. A large section of the book was
devoted to confirming that the rainproof schach was
kosher lemehadrin. When properly laid, the
schach enabled the rainwater to flow outside the
Succah, and not to penetrate it. The sefer would be in
bookstores the following day and Rav Meizlish wanted Jacobs
to see it. He opened it to the title page, which contained a
dedication to Reb Doniel Jacobs who had played a vital role
in its publication.
"Another year has passed, Rabbi Doniel," Jimmy heard Rav
Meizlish say with great warmth, "and I wanted to make you
happy. Thanks to you, we have been able to expand our student
body. The best young men on the Eastern seaboard come to us.
Indeed, you have a great merit, Reb Doniel and we need many
merits before Rosh Hashana. May you be blessed."
Then he gave Jacobs a list of the avreichim, who had,
concurrently studied hundreds of pages of gemora and
prepared hundreds of halachic responses and
chiddushim. Then he added: "Doniel, you are a full
partner to their merits. I'm jealous of you, Reb Doniel. Not
everyone merits!
"But let me tell you an insight I recently heard. It's tailor-
made for you. It was made by the Rosh Hayeshiva, the Avi
Ezri, Maran HaRav Elozor Menachem Man Shach
zt"l:
"When Yehoshua asked the ministering angel of Hashem's army:
`Are you one of ours, or an enemy?' the angel countered:
`Last night you neglected to offer the korbon tomid of
mincha.'
"`But why have you come now?' Yehoshua asked.
"`To take you to task for bitul Torah during
wartime.'
"That night Yehoshua `slept in the valley, the emek
(umko shel halochoh, the depths of the halocho).'
"The angel's claim that they had been mevatel Torah
during wartime teaches that our only weapon is Torah and that
Torah is the sole basis of our existence.
"Jews lived for centuries without daled amos under
their feet. They had no political status, only golus,
golus and golus. No other nation can exist without
ground under its feet [i.e. its own country]. Yet the Jewish
Nation has been in existence for thousands of years without
its own territory. Our way is that of the Torah, the way of
Torah study. Torah study is our weapon, our joy, our success,
our vitality, our source of existence.
"No fire can consume us. They burned our sifrei Torah.
The scrolls were consumed, but the letters continued to fly
aloft. They are the secret of the survival of the Jewish
Nation. When a Jews enters a beis medrash, he is
happy, and he does no one except himself a favor, making
himself the happiest of men. When he studies Torah, he scorns
all the adversities of this world. The only way he can assist
himself is by studying Torah."
*
Jimmy didn't understand a word of course. However he was very
impressed by the warmth with which these two "tycoons" shook
hands.
Jacobs studied the detailed list Rav Meizlish had given him,
and placed it into his pocket, right near his heart. He was
calmer than usual and Jimmy sensed that the business was
going very well.
Jimmy approached Jacobs' table, hoping to speak to him that
very evening. He had to make some money. He had to lay stakes
in that company. He would try to talk to him now, before New
York closed.
* * *
Swishing was heard from the kitchen. Even though the
restaurant was equipped with large dishwashers which worked
nonstop, the huge pots were washed in the sinks. Harrison was
tired and he distributed the tips in an automatic manner.
However when Rocco's turn arrived, he gave him a generous
tip, and tapped him on his shoulder fondly. "Baby- Face," he
then said excitedly, "good luck."
They seemed about to part forever.
* * *
Jimmy surveyed the restaurant. The chairs had been placed on
the tables, the floor had been washed. Then a morbid thought
crossed his mind: If anything goes wrong with Rocco
tomorrow, there will be a lot of glass to sweep up.
Afterwards, he thought about Jacobs, in whose pocket was a
list worth millions. "Tomorrow's another day," he consoled
himself. "If I couldn't catch him today, I'll discuss my
investment with him tomorrow."
*
Tomorrow dawned. As usual, Jacobs took the elevator to his
office on the 103rd floor of Twin Towers, looked at the
emails he had received during the night and then went up to
Windows on the World for a Coke. He wanted to read the
lengthy discussion on the schach at his corner table.
He hoped that the idea would succeed and that the money he
earned would enable him to accept many more avreichim
into his kollel. Still thinking about his private
stock market -- the Yissochor and Zevulun one -- he leafed
through the book.
8:37. Jacobs' eyes met those of Rocco, who was
supposed to clean the facades of the restaurant's windows
that day. Rocco seemed excited and jittery.
8:41. Very soon, Jimmy would offer him a Coke. Soon
the five new avreichim he had accepted, would also
begin their studies and the avreich whose son was in
the hospital would not only receive his regular stipend, but
also a holiday bonus, plus a check to cover many of the
medical expenses.
Electro-Telcom's competitors were breathing down his neck.
But he wasn't worried. These merits were his advocates. They
guaranteed his success.
8:43. His wife called. "You forgot your sandwiches."
Rivka, his devoted wife had been preparing fresh sandwiches
for him for the past thirty-four years. Did he always
remember to thank her?
"Don't worry Rivka," he calmed her. "I'll buy something in
the kosher deli around the corner. We'll talk later."
Then, in the background, he heard the kids going off to
school. "Is everything okay?" he asked. "I didn't get a
chance to talk to Yankie yesterday. He's starting yeshiva
today. Wish him hatzlochoh from me. Tell him that I
heard a wonderful insight made by Maran the Rosh Hayeshiva,
and will explain it to him on Shabbos."
Jacobs placed the cell phone in his pocket. Rocco opened the
window. A pleasant breeze greeted him.
8:45. A Boeing 767 headed towards the World Trade
Center crashed into the Twin Tower's upper floors. Red flames
flared from the windows. Cement fragments and millions of
shards of glass flew all over the place.
I'll make it. I have to move my feet. My blood must
continue to circulate. It hurts. I'm tired. Running Electro-
Telcom is exhausting. It saps me of my energy. My eyes.
They're tearing. A burning knife has fallen from the sky.
It's a plane. A plane has crashed into the building. I feel
nauseous. I have to sit down. I'm dizzy. Why is Rocco on
fire? Why is he shouting in pain? He has to clean the windows
now. Yesterday they made him a party. Why is he screaming? My
back. It aches. Something very hot is muffling me. I can't
breathe. Black smoke is clogging my lungs. Thousands of
bodies are dancing before my eyes. Bodies are falling out of
windows. Rocco is jumping. He's mad. If he jumps, he'll be
smashed to bits. The blood is filling my throat. I can't get
up. I won't live. I'm on the way to a world which is Truly
Good. Very soon I'll have to present an accounting for all of
my deeds.
Yes, it was a good deal. My private stock exchange -- the
Yissochor and Zevulun one -- was the best one in the world. I
made a written agreement: 50-50. The receipts are in my
pocket.
People are jumping out of windows. Something terrible has
happened. Why don't they open the windows - Manhattan's
windows to the world? Rivky, I'm not exaggerating. I'm
choking. There's no more air, no more oxygen. R . .i . . v .
. k . . y, I'm rich! I have receipts.
No, no! Don't cut off his stipend. May his son be well soon,
and give him a good bonus for the holidays. Help him cover
his medical expenses too.
Yes, keep the air conditioners on during recess. They sleep
on benches instead of going home for an afternoon break? Rent
a few more rooms for them, with cots. Order hot lunches for
them too, starting today.
The schach is kosher! We'll earn enough to support
many more avreichim this year.
I hope you're not worried Rivky. I'm not worried. Make sure
that Yankie learns well. I wish I could tell him that
peirush. I can't breathe. I have to open the windows
to the world. New York is closing. Ribono shel Olom,
I'm coming.
*
Torah study is his weapon. It's his happiness, his
success, his vitality. No fire can consume him. The scrolls
were burned, but the letters continued to fly aloft. When a
Jew enters a beis medrash he is happy, and he does no
one except himself a favor, making himself the happiest man
in the world. Chanukah brings us the light of Torah.
Epilogue
Jews have always believed and trusted that Hakodosh Boruch
Hu would redeem them. They have always known that if they
davened better and learned better, they would fare
better. If, choliloh, the opposite occurs, that is
because Shomayim has its considerations. A Jew must always
believe that and must always be happy. As Dovid Hamelech
said: "Gam ki eileich begei tzalmovess lo ira ro, ki Atoh
imodi." Even when a Jew is led to the scaffold, he knows
that Hakodosh Boruch Hu is walking beside him. Are
they killing him? They are killing a Jew and a Jew never
dies. His soul remains forever.
"My dears ones, the Torah grants us only good. The best in
the world. When a person has Torah, he lacks nothing. Believe
me, that as a bochur I went with torn clothing, yet
lacked nothing.
"During these days, it is a Torah obligation to strengthen
ourselves. We must examine and scrutinize our deeds, but not
become confused and alarmed. Whatever occurs is from Hashem.
Hakodosh Boruch Hu is good, and all of us say,
`Ovinu, Ov horachamon, Hameracheim, racheim
oleinu.'
"Hakodosh Boruch Hu will help, so that all will be
saved and all will be healthy. But we must do what is
incumbent on us. How? We must strengthen ourselves in Torah,
tefilloh and middos tovos. Come, let us
strengthen ourselves, and on that merit, all of us will be
saved."
(Excerpts from a drosho delivered by Maran HaRav
Elozor Menachem Man Shach, zt"l, given in Yeshivas Ponovezh,
prior to the Gulf War, 5751.)
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