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IN-DEPTH FEATURES
Part I
It was the highlight of the annual journey in the Jewish
kehillos of Eastern Europe, organized by the Vaad
Lehatzolas Nidchei Yisroel of New York, founded and led by
Rabbi Mordechai Neustadt, with the Mashgiach of Lakewood as
Nosi.
Here, beside the kever of the Chofetz Chaim, the
dramatic journey attained a further dimension: a spiritual
one. Here, from the little, remote town of Radin, today in
the territory of White Russia, the light of the great Sage
shone out to the Jewish Diaspora all over the world. Here
stood a delegation from the Vaad LeHatzoloh and promised to
carry on doing its utmost to bring the light of Torah to the
Jews in far-off lands.
Someone noted, in an ironic aside, that when the Chofetz
Chaim wrote his sefer in Eastern Europe about
nidchei Yisroel, he had referred to the nidchei
Yisroel in America. Today, Jews are coming from America
to take care of the nidchei Yisroel in Eastern Europe.
The wheel has come full circle.
And in the beis hamedrash of the Chofetz Chaim, a
place once teeming with Torah and yir'oh, which the
native gentiles have converted into a clubhouse and even a
theater, Rachmono litzlan, the Mashgiach of Lakewood
stood up and recited a lamentation for the Holy Site in which
foxes have trod. But he could continue no further, for he
burst into loud weeping, as did all those who were present at
this awesome scene.
Azerbaijan
For a whole week a delegation from the Vaad Lehatzolas
Nidchei Yisroel journeyed through the several Eastern
countries where shlichim from the Vaad are active.
Vaad chairman Rabbi Mordechai Neustadt, who abounds with
youthful energy which belies his advanced age, directed the
trip. He was joined by Vaad Nosi HaRav Mattisyahu Salomon,
menahel ruchani of the eminent Lakewood Yeshiva, and
HaRav Shraga Feivel Cohen who is among the major
poskim in America today.
The delegation of activists, businessmen and friends of the
Vaad from America, England, Belgium and Israel, launched
their annual journey to uplift the spirits of Jews in remote
lands -- and came back themselves uplifted. And encouraged.
Much work is being done. But the Jews have an insatiable
thirst for Judaism. They are begging: please, give us more
Yiddishkeit, more Torah, more kosher food, another
kosher mikveh.
The Mashgiach of Lakewood exclaims, excitedly: "Think what an
impression these Jews are making on Shomayim. They are
literally begging for their souls!"
HaRav Moshe Kashei, chief rabbi and av beis din of
Azerbaijan and head of the shlichim of the Vaad
LeHatzoloh in this country, was there to greet the delegation
upon its arrival in the city of Baku, capital of Azerbaijan.
HaRav Kashei couldn't contain his excitement at the arrival
of the delegation, and its being headed by HaRav Mattisyahu
Salomon, and he expressed it in an emotional speech at the
reception for the delegation, held in the hall for VIP guests
at the Baku airport.
"I am your shaliach here, your emissary to save
Yiddishkeit in this state. Yaakov Ovinu sent Yehuda
ahead of him to Goshen, and that is how I feel. You sent me
on ahead, and now you have come here yourselves to give
chizuk to all of us, to see with your own eyes, and
get an impression of the extent of the operations being
carried out here," he said.
HaRav Kashei thanked the mashgiach of Lakewood for
exerting himself to travel to such distant countries to aid,
encourage, and open up the hearts of the Jews there to
Ovinu Shebashomayim. He thanked Vaad chairman, Rabbi
Mordechai Neustadt, "who does vast and wonderful work to
spread Judaism and kovod Shomayim in the Commonwealth
countries through the shlichim of the Vaad
LeHatzoloh."
The state of Azerbaijan is largely Moslem; they constitute 84
percent of the population. The Jews, who make up 3 percent of
the population, are accounted the largest foreign sector in
the state. Azerbaijan has undergone significant changes in
the last few years and has been swept by a veritable
revolution. Up until about three years ago, it was a
primitive, backward country. Poverty and deprivation were
rampant everywhere and there were literally no indications of
any modern Western progress.
An astonishing, sudden turnabout has occurred, and now the
city of Baku is thriving and flourishing. Businessmen have
uncovered the latent potential in the state, and in the last
three years scores of modern, prestigious, and multi- story
buildings have sprung up, which are easily on a par with
those found in any western country. The city has developed
and expanded the roads and means of transportation beyond
recognition. New and luxurious hotels have sprouted up, with
thousands of rooms to accommodate the numerous businessmen
who are flooding Baku -- and they are almost always booked
solid.
Foreign businessmen have simply seized control of the city.
They are buying up factories and real estate, bringing a
powerful momentum to the state through their investments of
millions of dollars which are being brought into the
country.
Baku now has proportionally more foreigners compared to local
residents than any city in Europe -- or perhaps even in the
world.
To illustrate how massive is the transformation that has
swept Baku: a plot of land valued at about $10,000 three
years ago, is today worth at least a million dollars.
This tremendous material advancement is on a par with --
lehavdil -- the immense spiritual progress that the
city has enjoyed in recent years. Vaad LeHatzoloh Jewish
operations in Azerbaijan, headed by HaRav Moshe Kashei, are
extremely vast and extensive. Azerbaijan is not an easy place
to cultivate a Jewish lifestyle in accordance with Torah and
halochoh, and therefore all the work is carried out
with pure mesirus nefesh and the highest level of
kiddush Shem Shomayim.
Kubah
Vaad LeHatzoloh operations in Azerbaijan began some 15 years
ago, not in the capital city of Baku actually, but in a city
called Kubah, a few hours journey from Baku. This was before
the fall of the Soviet regime, when Communist rule dominated
the whole country.
It all began when HaRav Yitzhak Zilber applied to Rabbi Ariel
Levin, shaliach for the Vaad LeHatzoloh in Tbilisi,
about two agunos whose husbands resided in the city of
Kubah, Azerbaijan, and entreated him to take steps to attain
gettin from the husbands. Rabbi Levin and the Vaad
LeHatzoloh staff had no idea that any Jews existed in Kubah
or even in the entire area of Azerbaijan, nor had they ever
needed to go there. No one was willing to travel there alone,
across the Dark Mountains.
Then one day, Rabbi Mordechai Neustadt, chairman of the Vaad
LeHatzoloh, together with HaRav Eisemann of New York, decided
to take a trip to Kubah and see if it was possible to help
the two women to get gittin.
Rabbi Neustadt describes what happened upon their initial
arrival in Kubah: "We came to Kubah, and about 300 Jewish
children were there to greet us. They were yelling to us,
`Tel Aviv, Jerusalem, shalom.' Those were the only Hebrew
words they knew. We were in complete shock. We had never
imagined that in a city as remote and forsaken as this one
there were so many Jews, and Jewish children.
"The Jewish community of Kubah stood transfixed at the sight
of the two chareidi Jews from New York, tears glistening in
their eyes. They had been certain they were the last
remaining Jews in the world. That's truly how it was. They
simply could not believe that Jews existed in any other
place. That's the extent to which they were cut off from the
world, behind the Iron Curtain of the Soviet Union.
"Then and there we decided, naturally, that we had to send a
shaliach of the Vaad LeHatzoloh to Kubah. And, indeed,
shortly thereafter, our shaliach was already at work,
teaching and guiding the children of Kubah."
It soon became clear that the small town of Kubah is, in
fact, comprised mainly of Jews; it has a Jewish community of
close to 5,000. Kubah is a solitary town located at the foot
of the Caucuses mountains. The native Jews are nicknamed `the
mountain Jews.' There are all kinds of conjectures about
their origin. Some stubbornly insist that their roots date
back as far as the churban of the first Beis
Hamikdash. Others claim that the origin of the Jewish
community, which came from Persia, goes back 300 years when
they were cut off from their fellow Jews across the
border.
Before the start of Communism, 13 shuls were active in Kubah;
the remains of a few can still be seen today. The story of
what happened to them goes back many years, to shortly after
the Communists rose to power.
One Shabbos, a band of Soviet soldiers stumbled into Kubah.
They wanted to buy cigarettes. When it dawned on them that
all the stores were shut and not a single one of the
residents was willing to open his store on the Sabbath to
sell them cigarettes, they went on a rampage against the
Jews. They immediately assembled all the local rabbis and led
them out for execution, closed down all the shuls excluding
one, and transformed the little town into a `kibbutz,' in the
infamous Soviet style.
Despite the Soviet persecution, the native Jews continued to
cling to their heritage to the best of their abilities, and
to observe a Jewish lifestyle as they remembered it from
their parents' homes. But as the years went by, Judaism
receded further and further from their minds, until the
native children had all but forgotten their origin. Until
along came the shlichim of the Vaad LeHatzoloh and
launched their activities in the area, the results of which
members of the delegation had come all this way to see.
On the first day of the delegation's stay in Azerbaijan, its
members paid a visit to the city of Kubah. Some members of
the delegation were whisked there in a special helicopter,
while another group traveled by bus. Upon their arrival in
Kubah, scores of children and Jewish bochurim from the
local yeshiva flocked to greet them. All were bedecked in
their finest clothes, and bursting with excitement to greet
the guests who had come from afar to boost their morale and
give them the feeling that all Jews are linked one to
another.
HaRav Kashei opened the reception, in which he surveyed all
the operations being implemented in Kubah, and the
achievements of the talmidim there.
Following his presentation, several talmidim spoke,
and thanked members of the delegation, led by HaRav
Mattisyahu Salomon, for coming to such a remote corner of the
world, and for everything that the Vaad LeHatzoloh had done
for them through the years.
The audience was visibly moved, many even to tears, by the
words of HaRav Salomon, as he praised the mesirus
nefesh of the Jews in Kubah in keeping Judaism alive and
observing the mitzvos, in defiance of all social trends and
the forces of the environment.
"Your zchus is incalculable," said HaRav Salomon. "You
are carrying on the heritage of the Jewish nation. We came
here to strengthen you and you have ended up strengthening
us. `Oh, let our eyes behold and our hearts rejoice' over
what is unfolding in front of our eyes."
HaRav Shraga Feivel Cohn, one of the great halachic
poskim in America today, and a former shaliach of
the Vaad LeHatzoloh in Eastern Europe, asserted that the
talmidim of the Kubah Yeshiva are "like a lily among
the thorns." They spread a wonderful fragrance in every city
through their Torah learning, which distinguishes them and
sets them apart from the other young people of Kubah. They
are led by their rosh yeshiva, Vaad LeHatzoloh
shaliach Rabbi Adam Davidoff, who toils day and night
to infuse the Jews of Kubah as a whole, and the youth in
particular, with Torah and Yiddishkeit.
Following the speeches, the children and yeshiva
bochurim of Kubah burst into spontaneous songs for the
kovod of the Torah and in honor of the guests, and
everyone was swept into the lively dance circles that quickly
formed.
Next on the agenda, members of the delegation made their way
to the local Bais Yaakov school. Although the school is
housed in an old and derelict building, everyone's hearts
went out when they went inside and experienced this great
enterprise for the chinuch of bnos Yisroel in
the path of our Jewish traditions. The school principal
described the running of the school to the distinguished
guests, and how the girls are educated to develop into Jewish
mothers in the footsteps of their predecessors throughout the
generations.
HaRav Salomon spoke in the school too, stressing the
importance of the kedushoh of the Shabbos, the
chinuch to shemiras Shabbos, and about how
every girl should aspire to build a Jewish home in the
future.
"Always remember to keep the Shabbos and observe the mitzvos
of the Torah," he said, and blessed the girls that they
should merit to build homes founded on Torah.
At the shul of the local kehilla, numerous Jews from
the little town came to welcome the delegation and bask in
their presence for the short time that was left of their
stay. The large shul was filled to capacity when leaders of
the community greeted the new arrivals and thanked them
repeatedly for taking time from their busy schedules to
support and encourage a community so distant and disconnected
from any Jewish populace.
Next on the agenda was a moving pidyon haben for a 14-
year-old boy from the community by the name of Yisroel
Yisroelov. He has recently drawn closer to Yiddishkeit
and Torah thanks to the efforts of the Vaad LeHatzoloh.
There was also a ceremony for a bar mitzva boy as he put on
tefillin for the first time, and many pairs of
tefillin were given out to boys who had recently
become bar mitzva, as presents from the Vaad.
Members of the delegation were profoundly moved by these
proceedings, and could not conceal their admiration at the
awesome and devoted avodas Hashem that was being
practiced, both for the boys and yeshiva bochurim, and
for the Bais Yaakov girls.
That overwhelming joy and excitement was expressed in the
enthusiastic dancing which exploded in the shul right after
mincha, when everyone joined hands with the bar mitzva
boys who had received the tefillin and put them on and
the bechor who had had the pidyon.
Baku
Vaad LeHatzoloh only began its operations here in the capital
city of Azerbaijan after quite a few years of working in
Kubah. Once, on its way to Kubah, one delegation which
included the Admor of Novominsk currently Rosh of the
American Agudas Yisroel, passed through Baku. Since they had
to stop there for a few hours, members of the delegation went
searching for a shul.
When they finally found one, it consisted of a few elderly
Jews who barely made up a minyan. When these
congregants suddenly saw Jewish people come and join them in
prayer, they began begging them to come to their town and
take care of the children there who knew nothing about their
Jewish identity.
Up until that time the shlichim of the Vaad LeHatzoloh
had no idea that there were many Jews in Baku.
When they started to clarify what was going on in the town,
they uncovered an extremely desolate situation. Not a single
family in that large shul kept Shabbos or kashrus, and
the Jews were heavily assimilated among the goyim.
Naturally, the Vaad decided immediately to launch Jewish
operations in this city too, but it had to allot a realistic
budget for such an enterprise. One of the members of the
delegation that stopped in Baku right away decided to donate
$50,000, and that was how the Baku operation started.
Jews in the city of Baku date their origin back to the days
of the destruction of the Second Beis Hamikdosh. Since
mountains encircle the region -- the Caucasus mountains --
the Jews became disconnected from their brethren in other
states. Up until the arrival of the Vaad LeHatzoloh staff,
nothing was known of the existence of a Jewish community
there.
HaRav Moshe Kashei, who arrived in Azerbaijan some eight
years ago, gave a tremendous boost to the operations and
during these years he generated a veritable revolution. With
his own hands, and with a huge dose of siyata
deShmaya, HaRav Kashei created `something out of
nothing.'
Lacking any Jewish framework, any basis for Jewish life, the
great majority of the Jews had already forgotten their Jewish
origin, and there was no one to remind them of it, until
along came the Vaad LeHatzoloh and its faithful
shaliach, HaRav Kashei.
It is difficult to comprehend how in such a short period,
HaRav Kashei managed to pull off such a massive revolution.
Just to get a feel for the extent of it, we will merely
mention here that at the event organized by students of the
various Jewish institutions in honor of the distinguished
delegation, held in the local hall, about 3,000 Jews
attended!
Today, there are numerous Jewish institutions and enterprises
in Baku, all the fruits of HaRav Kashei's endeavors. For
starters, there is a Jewish boys' school, a yeshiva, a Bais
Yaakov girls' school, a kosher kitchen, a soup kitchen for
elderly Jews in the community, a kosher food store, new shuls
constructed with the help of HaRav Kashei, kosher
lemehadrin shechita, and a modern and sophisticated
mikveh. In Kubah too, the Jewish agenda has branched
out to include schools for girls and for boys, a Jewish
college, shuls, and a mikveh.
When our delegation arrived at Baku from Kubah, a packed
program awaited them, despite the advanced hour. There was a
bas mitzva party for five Bais Yaakov girls, in which the
role of the Jewish daughter was discussed and her obligation
to carry on the heritage of the Imahos with their
mesirus nefesh.
HaRav Salomon explained to the girls that the concept of a
bas mitzva means that a Jewish daughter accepts upon herself
the yoke of the mitzvos, and realizes that she has to carry
on her Jewish heritage. She must know that the purpose of her
life is to keep the mitzvos, and that for a Jew this is the
only reason for living. "Mitzvos mean eternity and Olom
Habo," he said.
HaRav Moshe Kashei, the giant director of this whole Yiddishe
enterprise, electrified his audience when he announced that
there would be a special ceremony to allot Jewish names to
the bas mitzva girls. This was aimed to strengthen the girls
and safely secure their links with the Jewish people, now and
in the future.
"A Jewish name is a must," announced HaRav Kashei. So, one by
one, the girls went forward and picked themselves a Jewish
name. Thus, Sabina became Shoshanna, Suba became Leah,
another girl chose Chana, and so it went.
Members of the delegation were visibly moved by this unique
ceremony, in which, for the first time in their lives, they
watched girls of quite a mature age choosing Jewish names for
themselves with immense joy and enthusiasm at having reached
such a milestone in their lives. In HaRav Feivel Cohen's
speech, he called on the girls to be sure to use only their
Hebrew names from now on. By doing so, they would completely
disconnect themselves from their old goyishe name,
thereby ridding themselves of any trace or residue of their
previous lives among the goyim.
End of Part I
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