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Did you know that the forgotten founder
of Zionism went on to play a leading
role in Agura Israel or that Rafatal
Abramsky was responsible for the
continued presence of the Muslim wack on
Harabas? It turns out that the margins
of history tell the real story. Behind
the times dives into the big concepts
and overlooked moments that carry vast
meaning all through the lens of Torah
and rabbitic thought. Behind the times
with Rabbi Ephraim Zalma Galinski and
Gdalia Gutag.
Evening was approaching when coming from
Radin we arrived at the wooden hut which
served as the summer home of the Ketim
the acknowledged greatest rabbitical
sage of our time.
Walking through the smoked filled
kitchen of the cottage, we stepped into
a small room. We were standing now
before the 92-year-old sage of small
stature, wearing a black silk robe, a
black summer cap on his head, sitting in
an armchair.
A spark of real joy came over his face
with our arrival. With subdued
satisfaction, he said, "Asalam alalaykum
to you." And then we approached each one
of us offering him our hand. Strangely
enough, every one of the guests bent
over the Kovet's hand in humility and
kissed it. What was it that made us feel
so solemn? We are used to holding our
heads rather high. How did it come about
that in the nearness of this man, all of
us suddenly became humble,
self-conscious, and yet elevated?
Everyone was keenly aware we were
standing before the single greatest
hakic authority of our time. Still,
there was another element which had a
powerful effect.
Though none of the conditions which stir
the senses were present, no resounding
speech, not even an extraordinarily
intricate thought, that in itself was
what made such an overwhelming impact.
No adorements, just humanity, pure and
simple.
That, my dear Fry Galinsky, is one of
the most extraordinary descriptions of
God that I've ever encountered.
>> I happen to agree.
And where does this come from Rafim? It
comes from a group. This were the words
of Rivosi Kalabach the famous Kalabach
dynasty who was later killed in the war.
Rav Lasrov of Au alona Hamburg and
Vansbeck. And these words appear in his
remarkable diary of the 1929 Karan Hatra
study tour which brought a whole group
of sophisticated German rabbis and
intellectuals
to a journey across the literature
worlds and the worlds of Eastern Europe.
The reason I kind selected this for our
I think pre-sh or episode of behind the
times is that I have never seen such
compelling analysis of what gdole are.
I've never seen a such a compelling
contemporary account of the loftiness of
the pre-war Yeshivas the beauty of
Lintyra and it's really an ode or a song
in the very as we're going to see later
in this diary of Yasvi Kalabah
>> and I want you to address while you're
mentioning it that what was missing in
Germany I mean he was a
>> right and he there was a yeshiva in
Germany and they probably learned
at a high level, but what is what was
missing? Like what did he feel?
>> I think we're going to be able to see in
his own words later what it was and the
value in this little known and I'll just
say for listeners this comes this diary
is printed in a book by his by his son
by Rabio Kalabak's son
who's not the singer was a cousin. The
book is in English called issu hoodie
the life
>> originally was was the mash in Berlin
just a few years ago
>> right and he was a tremendous I want you
to know that why I was learning in 30
some odd years ago they used to bring to
these these like
>> right it was called miz I think and it's
beautiful stuff it's really
>> very beautiful I think they reprinted
after he passed away they reprinted
So, so the I think primarily a refrain
what I want to see over here is just to
let this song of the Torah come out is
so beautiful just on its own doesn't
need any commentary. But there's another
point over here which is that I think
that in this meeting between the two
worlds and we're going to get into why
indeed this was what how different these
worlds were and and that will become
obvious but I think we see the seeds of
our world because our world today is
people like to think it's just the
regeneration of the old pre-war Eastern
European world that is emphatically not
the case it is a melding of the pre-war
different Jewish worlds different from
worlds that made up that that great
disparate Jewish world. And I think I'd
like to explore that.
Okay. I think Robert Fry the best
jumping off point is just to acknowledge
what it was the situation before the war
when it involved the yeshiva and and
everywhere else because today for
example here in Israel they talk about
back in before the war the was the was
not that was not the center of the Torah
world. It was Lithuania and it's Poland
and everywhere else was in the sense
that what I mean by that is that people
did come. Americans came to Lithuania,
right? We had a few from England, we had
from Germany, we had from different
parts from Western Europe and they would
come to grow and some of those some
>> remind yourself of Bavl of old, right?
Everyone coming to BL
>> as in like there was a Torah center,
right? Correct. There was and right
through history there's been times when
the Torah center was in Germany there's
been times when the Torah center was in
France there's the Torah center has
moved Russia Poland different places it
was Lithuania largely before the war at
least when it came to the what is known
classically as the yeshiva world and we
know they weren't the only Germans to go
to go that direction that time but in
1929 remember a lot of what we know as
for example Schlomma Vulba was to come
from Frankfurt urin was to come as Well,
and there was a very strong traffic, but
that was seems to have been more in the
1930s, I think, and so 1929 was early
and it was a kind of opening up of
different worlds to each other.
>> There's one point that you have to try
to explain to the listeners, and that is
>> the influence of German jewelry
>> on on things happening to the Jewish
world in general. Because today if
you're going to tell someone in the
street from the yeshiv someone yes you
say like like German jewelry was like
playing a central role right it it push
doesn't make sense because today we're
in a situation where German jewelry is
like is
>> well it's essentially Russian Russian
speaking German jury and ao a post kov
kiraov situation agreed and I think it's
very important to understand that the
effect of what had happened was like
this the German jury going back the in
in the generation of Shimshal Hersh the
early to mid 19th century German jewelry
experienced what I would call a
near-death experience it was an ancient
the center of the terror had been
literally in the land called Ashkanaz
and what had happened then was that
reform had mounted an assault such a
successful onslaught that they created a
situation where this ancient center of
Torah reform ruled they closed amic They
closed down Khadorim. They legally took
over the the what the government
recognized as the Jewish community and
created a situation was it was there was
almost nothing left. The neo orthodoxy I
suppose you is called of Rimsh and there
were others of his time right of his
time. They fought back. They created
individual communities or whether they
did or they didn't separate from the
overall community structure in a process
known as astritz but whatever it was
they created a new orthodoxy. Now, when
you have I I suppose you could if we're
starting with the imagery of death or
near-death experience, you let's
continue like this. If you have a
disease that nearly kills a patient, but
the patient survives,
>> he's much stronger.
>> He's much stronger. When it comes to
that particular disease, it won't get
him. What had happened was that German
jury had figured out a whole
>> how to deal with modernity.
>> How to deal with modernity. And by the
way, that is the power the unique theme
of Rashim Shimala's writings in that he
is the one writing and giving the
hashkaf of that the Torah can overcome
the western modernity. He was the one
>> we must stress over here right the
entire base yakov movement
>> was it an outcome
>> of rah hers's approach to kite
>> correct
>> how was that because
was listening to shirim by a local in
Vienna and he was a raers and this is
where she was inspired to take these
ideas and give it over to the Jewish
girls all over Europe right you have to
understand in those days and I have I
had a grandmother who's nifa at the age
of 104. Yeah.
>> And and she grew up in in Krakco.
>> Yeah.
>> And you have to understand even
>> she was a talida.
>> No, she wasn't talida but she grew up in
that generation
>> and she remembers like even the
daughters of the greatbases
>> Yeah.
>> were falling away. Wow.
>> Because there was no structure for
Jewish education for girls.
>> So they were the intelligent ones were
going out to library.
>> They were aristocratic. these daughters
of these great rebalan
they were hanging out with goes
aristocrats and the continuation is
understood what where will that lead to
right and and this saved like a whole
chunk of Yiddish guy in Europe so our
verse at the end had it played a very
major role in the survival of East
European jewelry
>> so let's get back to that later because
I want to just talk towards the end
about there were more components of
refraramine than that it wasn't just an
educational philosophy and it was habits
of community and of Torah life. He
created new habits, new institutions and
new ways of doing things that we accept
totally for for as usual now. Meaning we
just take it for granted nowadays that
these things exist. But no, these habits
of mind were have go back to that battle
that rear guard action fought by Rav and
the battle successfully won. And that is
the background that I think to
understand what had happened because in
the process neo orthodoxy in the
Germanic model looked very different
looked very different I think it was
Romesh Shapiro who went to the hers
community where his son-in-law was there
the Schlomma Buuer and he'd seen earlier
in the day that someone had taken around
Frankfurt and was you know western
Europe Germany was a very advanced place
compared to well compared to anywhere in
the world at the time in the in the 30s
it would have been in the late 20s and
Rome Shapiro they showed him there's a
new thing called ice cream it's very
interesting so so later on they took him
to you know hers's community or his
son-in-law's community then and they
showed him and he ds he was asked if I'm
not mistaken what did you think of it he
said it's like ice cream it's very tasty
but very cold
>> wow
>> that that is if I'm not mistaken if I'm
not mistaken that is the thing and by
the way I'll Just add another thing I
think it was the Ponovich Rav who was
asked about if I'm not going to make my
facts wrong as well pre-war very famous
Rav and he was uh asked when Schlomma
Buer who was Dr. Solomon brought it to
when his son-in-law was nifed up and
there was a struggle kind of a
competition who's going to be the next
Rav and they asked the punish to be the
thing and he said unforgettable line
came up with an unforgettable line he
says he said in Yiddesh he said
no crank was it doctor the western
European Jews the extra Jews are still
ill and they need a doctor in other
words they need a rabbi doctor they're
not ready for a a real rav in the old
style because They they've got caught up
with the secular education and their
abonim and those who know the great
yeish rabbon after after even those who
rebuilt Germanite
elsewhere of monk in London he had a
degree in what else William werdsworth
the poetry of Wdersworth right and there
was this insistence until just a few
years ago until for example the last the
late the last generation of raon in in
in
>> Washington Heights
>> Washington Heights and in London there
was an insistence that they have.
Where's your academic degree? And that
was the resonance of the Ponovich's
remark. He said, "You've built something
remarkable. You've saved Yiddish kite,
but they're still ill. They need a
doctor. But there's something that we're
missing over here." Okay. Yeah. And this
is
>> the reason why they played a role in
this story that we're talking about, the
Kona. Yeah.
>> Is because historically at that Kufa,
Germany was at its peak.
>> Yeah. And it's like it's it's equal to
where America is today.
>> Correct.
>> And that is why this all this emanated
from Germany. They're like coming from
the place that has the money that has
the power and has
>> the organizational
theim develop their skills and we're
going to see. So I think rebime I think
we can jump with that introduction. I
think we can jump straight into a few
just absolutely beautiful scenes.
Whether you agree or not with the rest
of the analysis, they stand on their
own.
First of all, a good Israel to the Karan
Hatra was a major international
fundraising rescue effort that begun
after the first world war because there
was collapse of the whole east the whole
economic model that had uh underpinned
the yeshivas and Tyra and it collapsed
and so then the agura had to look not
each yeshiva for itself but altogether
itself and what happened was someone had
an idea in 1929
a good karan initiative
under Dr. Leia Deutslander took place
officially reframe what this journey was
a study mission there was a delegation
of leading western European rabonim and
journalists and community figures they
were traveling through the great Torah
centers of
>> I'm assuming that they we're talking
about all from
>> they were all right absolutely this
modern but right
>> they were under the ages
>> right right for sure
>> and they were and their purpose was they
it was a factf finding mission like
you're going to send in other words you
these people all are influential They've
got balabat in back home. They might
control a fund or whatever it is. And
they want to see for themselves what is
it they're supporting over here. And at
the head of the group stood Kabak who
was then one of emerging as one of the
leading figures of German orthodoxy. And
he was I think it's worth saying who he
was because the Kalabak name is a very
iconic name and continues to have major
associated with it. The father of this
of this clan was Rabbi Dr. Salomon
Schlomman Kalibah who was the Rav of
Lubec. Lubec's in the German north in
near the Baltic. I think near the Baltic
or somewhere around there and near
Hamburg and and he was a if you see
pictures of Rabbi Schlomma Kalak the
original one he was a you know a
tremendous rabbitic presence not
interestingly enough not didn't look
like the standard clean kind of type of
German rov he was fullbearded tall
literature couple and yamula he had a
whole lot of ch sons each of about half
of whom became rabbon in that final
generation German rabbitic generation
before the holocaust about five of them
were kalabach and they were supported in
turn by some of the others for example I
think one of the other brothers became a
banker he was wealthy he supported his
brother's efforts and they were all sort
of in the hersian way you had you had
the rabbis and the doctors and they were
all and sometimes at the same time but
crucially the father was very close and
for some reason had links to galam of
Eastern Europe and there's a
correspondence between them so there was
this connection and just to carry on
from that point that two of his
children, two of Rabbi Dr. Schlimmer
Kalabach's children, one of them
and the other two, the other one I think
it was Emanuel Kalabach, both of them
were chaplain in the German army during
the first world war and they were
instrumental in the first world war in
saving Polish jury working handinhand
with the IM Gabba to streamline and
professionalize.
>> He was positioned in Eastern Europe.
Yes, he was part of the German
government of occupation, but he was a
chaplain for the army who seat desmire
was able to win favor with the generals
and basically shunted to the side the
reform Jewish leadership who were being
consulted. Remember in the first world
war the Germans spent four three or four
years in Poland occupied it. They had a
chance to revolutionize everything and
they tried to and the under the reform
rabbis who were allied with the German
occupation authorities there was the
idea that they're going to destroy the
system as backward and primitive and it
was literally gazeras
>> and he stood in their way
>> and the two brothers were able to work
made contact with I don't remember how
it goes together with another Kash
German Rav whose name I forget who they
were able to win the competence of the
German authorities and they had the
confidence because they walked the walk
and taught the talk they were clearly
university trained sophisticated people
and this was something that the German
authorities that was how you qualified
if you didn't have those credentials you
couldn't get in the door and they were
able
>> that is very interesting that two German
rabbis like enabled continuity of
authentic Jewish life in Poland
>> yes it's a very big story
>> between the two world wars
>> it's a very big story and the and the
relationship I've written about it years
ago and after I did somebody the story
of these two brothers focusing on the
two brothers and this after I did
somebody made contact and he's he said
yes we're descendants and we have the
kis given by the IRA MS to our
grandfather and yeah it's a story in
issue hood you speaks extensively about
in the book over here and it's a
wonderful thing but anyway so so that
was the background to the mission who
were who was on this mission so names
fry I think you'll be familiar with
Rabbi Dr. Leo Yung. That's a big name.
Okay. Rabbi Leo Young. I think that's
the way you pronounce it, right?
>> Yeah.
>> Even though it's written Jung.
>> Yeah. Well, it's pronounced as Yung. He
was he and he is he was an uncle of my
wife's grandfather. So the Roth he was
an uncle of the Rothschilds from Zurich.
So So he was a very
>> he had a lot of influence in in America.
He was like very charismatic
>> and so bringing him along was a very
savvy move because he enabled them to
tap in the yeshiva suddenly were able to
tap into funding from you know Manhattan
funding that's
>> I'm wondering if it's because of that he
became one of the prime sources of
funding for the basako movement
>> very interesting so that may this is
maybe the link who else there was names
I'm less familiar with over here as you
say was as chairman of the American
basaku committee etc but there were
others such as there that Dr. Adolf
Deutsch of Budapest Professor Alladada
first from across Germany. I looked up
this name and never heard it but you
actually see these were academics are
still the internet hasn't forgotten them
and they were from ger you know from
Germany from Hungary Holland and Austria
different parts as well and what they
happened is and there's beautiful
pictures in this book is you see all the
yasers there in their different their
traveling clothes you know the the soft
cloth caps and the the literally
traveling clothes of the late 1920s and
they're traveling by car through the
rough roads of Poland can you imagine
how bad they were right Poland Galitzia
Lithuania Slovakia, Hungary, parts of
this were very underdeveloped parts of
Eastern Europe. And they visited nearly
40 cities, 40 places in 17 cities,
including Lublin, VNA, Radin, and
Presborg. Now, actually, that's
interesting. They got Slovakia, right?
So, Buddha Preborgs and Slovakia. So,
they weren't just going for the
literature worlds. We're going
literature and also and also Hungarian
worlds. And the pictures from that you
know are just meeting a meetings of
worlds you know like you know very
evocative o over that
fry let me just quote over here let's
begin to quote him because the diary
here is so rich over here these are the
records of kalabach and he says like
this was it a summertime excursion or a
study tour an exploration trip or a
visit to the census of Torah a
pilgrimage or a religious service. What
indeed was this event orchestrated by
the Karan Torra which brought together
20 people from seven different countries
representing 15 different professions. I
love that very yakisha touch to saunter
across Czechlovakia, Galitia, Poland and
Lithuania from Vienna to VNA. It was all
of these and more and like everything
precious and genuine had achieved beyond
all initial aims. It was a total novelty
in Jewish communal life. This is
beautiful. The brothers journey to seek
our brothers and to see them. Thus the
journey assumed a symbolic character. It
became a harbinger of kibbus galyas of
the great reunion and recognition of
those who belong together.
>> So saying beyond the practical
>> purpose of the mission, the fact that
they were meeting each other was an
importance of itself.
>> Correct. And I I think that's a very
good expression of what's happening
here. It's a meeting of worlds. And as
we said, remember how separate these are
the German Western European experience
now fundamentally different from life in
Eastern Europe. And I think Kafraim it's
fair to say that after the war of course
you're getting the rebuilding of the
fume world not these worlds didn't
disappear but they live side by side in
flatbush you go to the yeshiva of
flatbush monthox institution which is
down the road from kimberlin which is
right and you're seeing across people
are not geographically separated by
hundreds of miles and different state
borders these worlds have melded but
>> yeah but the ideals are still there
>> the ideals that's what I'm saying the
ideals are still there but they exist
you might side by side you could d in
shakas with the yakas you know after
with the you know with the yeshivish
with the in the yeshiva and go and s you
know what I'm saying and it's easy you
could do it all within half an hour's
driving in most places in the world that
remains true but what is so novel about
this was that these worlds were meeting
genuinely for the first time and frime I
I think what we're about to see is on
our first stop the visit to Ramir
Shapiro and let's go ahead. Do you want
to go ahead and close?
>> I'm wondering that Rome Shapiro they
probably knew him from his trips abroad.
He was someone who fundraised all over
the world. I'm really doubting if this
is the first this first time they're
meeting him in his
>> Yes. I don't know when he came to I
don't know when he came. As I said he
did come to Frankfurt etc. I don't know
where he
>> came to America. Yeah, he was in America
for a good
>> well he had to fund raise right through
the 20s for his yeshiva. I think it was
open in the early 30s and let's just
read this extract over here cuz it's
really beautiful and just just comments
over here at the table in Lublin. We
were joined by a very large number of
students of the yeshiva as well as many
admirers from neighboring cities who had
come to honor the guests of the special
savas. The lubliner of Rome Shapiro sat
at the head of the table in his festive
silken garment. the enormous fur hat on
his head.
>> He doesn't even call it a stryman.
>> Yeah, I love I love that. I love that.
That is just so quintessential. You see
the distance? Who wouldn't who who would
call it that in this day? 300 surrounded
him. All of them spiritually mature men.
There are no words to describe the
atmosphere of these hours.
>> What we must point out at this point of
>> Yeah. that I think me and you we're
still to see remnants of
>> for example
raving gravidsworth
>> and the people who haven't seen them
cannot they can't fathom like the Torah
knowledge of these people like today
we we hardly see these people who are
like bubbling over
>> with sha
>> I think it was particularly a product of
100% They had to be mak they couldn't
sit there and
>> in order to be accepted to
>> how many
>> 400
>> 400 just to get in Ravosnner was not
accepted
>> why
>> because he didn't pass the test
>> didn't make it in
>> he didn't make it in however
>> Rav Shapiro found him in a corner
sitting and crying
>> and he says someone who has such an ava
I'm going to accept it never and he
became like the major po in the
>> I only heard him once I met about 20
years ago I went into yeshiva's
yeshiva and bene and I heard this be I
walked in everyone's sitting down I and
I stood at the back and I heard this
beautiful clear voice come out
>> but I looked
>> the was like
>> yeah but it was like the pronunciation
very clear very and then I looked around
I said I couldn't see I thought it was a
recording or something listening he was
sitting down he was so small when he was
sitting down I couldn't see him so
>> he was so aristocratic he was like he
was a real like obelander from the
That's where he grew up. I saw his
father's cave just behind the chb's cave
in Vienna.
>> But so you have to understand these are
people who knew Shas
>> and I remember Kry was the first time I
heard Rob Krys was he was masid of
Rudman and Harov when I was a young boy
and I came to listen to the hespit and
he simply closed his eyes. Christ was a
ro of
>> of Antwerp and he was a of
>> he closed his eyes and he was just
reading off Gumaras
Milo
>> of Gumaras that talk about has sped him
about other you know
it was fascinating and like you said
about the sweetness of of the of the way
he just read those garas
>> these are all products of because this
was a bit
>> because until those days there was no
central yeshiva in Poland at all.
>> Yeah.
>> If you had a good rob in a good town and
you had a good
>> This is why ended up in literature yes,
>> right? 100%. And he he really he made a
revolution. Yeah.
>> And this is where he's visiting a place
where he says at the table 300.
>> Yeah.
>> It's really fascinating what he did.
>> Fascinating. And there and to hear him
continue to describe this. I just want
to there's something absolutely unique
about Rabbi Kalabak's way of because he
was an outsider and a brilliant man at
Tam himself but coming from an entirely
different world a world where the mus of
gleam in that way wasn't had had stopped
you know had since ceased long ceased
and he describes therefore the series of
rabbon he met in a way that is I've
never seen anything like this listen to
this over here in Lublin we experience
experience for the first time time the
overpowering strength of the personality
of Shapiro is a genius a brilliant
orator and organizer teacher and leader.
The reason that his personality makes
such a deep impression is that it is
entirely uncomplicated rooted only in
Talmudic Judaism in the four cubits of
then he says and I just emphasize this
it is just it is I think this is so
important to hear this how to analyze in
our day and age
>> how to analyze how to read
right he says let me continue it is
nothing short of fascinating that in
such a strictly circumscribed foundation
meaning such limited background, no
secular knowledge, no world. A modern,
free and self-confident individuality
can be built and developed that someone
of such posture and disposition and with
a spiritual out outlook of very specific
character projects a Judaism that is
universal without boundaries and
circumstances.
Ra the re what I want to just bring out
here is this point. He's picking up on
the fact that Shapiro was brilliant in
the authentic oldfashioned sense of the
world. He was handsome man with a
tremendous presence. You know that
picture of him with this holding the
little was a mele, right? He brought
that malus to to to the Polish
parliament the same way he was a was a
member of the parliament. And what is
fascinated
in his objective way is the fact that he
is so free and open and powerful and
shal having grown on nothing but Torah
and that's what it is and I think that's
the that the that I personally find this
and part of the reason why I raised this
I want to talk about this the single
best definition of Tyra that or the
ability of Torah to elevate that is
possible to find that I've ever read
because that is exactly it. How is
something so wide built on something so
narrow? That's Torah. It looks narrow
but it contains the world. And that's so
opposite the prevalent way of looking at
things today. Then in order to be a
broad-minded person, you have to have an
academic degree. Right. And so there's a
big
>> about what they call Liba.
Liba is the basic core curriculum of the
secular curriculum.
>> But the bottom line is do those people
who learn the core curriculum of the
Israeli educational system do they come
out better Jews or better human beings
than people who don't
>> and they're equipped it's fair to say to
be programmers etc better better than
that. I don't think anyone's going to
argue that. But I think what he's
getting at is the ability of
>> he's talking about the personality right
building the personality.
>> Yeah. And of you know there's bits more
there's quotes over here as he says to
be able to so thoroughly understand his
fellow human beings
when he desired nothing else but Torah
amits us listen this phrase such
simultaneous breadth and narrowness of
the inner soul this antinomy of the
spiritual structure that is carabath the
son's own English that is what totally
overwhelmed us impressing itself
unforgettably upon our spirit it is
absolutely it's absolute first class.
This I it should be more widely known
and I'm happy we're getting a chance to
see it cuz it's riveting over here.
>> The next step on the way is meeting the
two giants of of literature jury. We're
talking about
I once came across a a pamphlet. I
believe no one have had ever seen this
pamphlet in the last few years. It was
like a printed small pamphlet from a
yard site evening dedicated to Rabbi Dr.
Kil Yakov Weinberg,
>> the Sudesh,
>> right? I think I told you many times
before that the Sudesh has an adopted
son, not officially adopted son, but
Sudesh had no children,
>> right?
>> And there was a Talmud of his by the
name of Shaw Vangort.
>> Yes.
>> He brought over the Sudesh to
Switzerland in order to to help him
heal.
>> Is he not not around still? All right.
Schol Shaw Vangorn was a Talmet of the
Sudesh probably from the seminary and
after the war the Sudesh was in a bad
mically healthwise and he brought him
over to Switzerland.
>> Yeah.
>> And he took care of him like with
doctors and all that. He managed to you
know bring him back to life and then he
was killed in a train accident.
>> So it's his son.
>> So his son now the cards flipped. You
understand the sudesh like adopted the
children
>> of ravine
>> of ra vangot.
>> So his son baba vangot he organizes like
once a yard site
>> the sudes
>> sudes. So after one of these evenings so
they printed out a pamphlet of
summarizing what they were talking about
and one of the speakers there was his
name was
Lifchitz. Yeah.
>> Who was once a mashak in Kenya many
years ago and he was like a he had to be
in Switzerland for something. I think he
was learning psychology at that time by
P. Is that right? Right. In in
Switzerland and he was like a yadinoi of
the sudesh. And you have to understand
he says the sudesh was a very critical
person.
>> Yeah. I mean you can even see it in his
writings like he can talk about someone
but he can point out like where
right there's no one above that right
but when he spoke about he had tears in
his eyes
>> that's what
so so he I once asked
like what
>> why was it
what's going on so he tell he told me
the following story that that he was so
moved by the personality of because of
personal encounter that he had with the
worth listening to. He was a young
yeshiva. Yeah.
>> And he was traveling by train
>> and he asked like a few local bums the
train where to get off
>> and because he didn't understand Russian
properly so he got off the wrong place
and he was beaten up like by some
custom. Yeah. and and then he decided
that he's going to learn Russian and
heard about it and the next time he came
to that area where the Sudesh was he
sought him out and he said bring him
into
>> but the Sudesh was a famous ilo
17 years old right
>> that he should be focusing not on
language but on learning
>> right exactly so he said the first thing
was that he walked into the room and got
up for him so said as soon as I saw that
my heart fell Okay. had something in
mind, right? And turned to him and he
says, "You see all these swarm over here
and see some see all these swarm?
>> Who are they written for?
>> Who's going to learn them?" Like the
university students are going to learn
who's going to learn you're the one
you're the one that that they wrote the
safer for. and he took him by his hand
and he started crying while he held his
hand and he begged him not to learn
Russian but to focus on tooning
>> because he understood that
>> by the way the Swedes was a professor in
I think languages by the way so I don't
know if he he listened to the thing his
direction but he was very impressed by
sincerity
and as above Kalbach's descriptions are
fascinating but one more personality of
similar power and nobility was on our
agenda before the conclusion of our
journey. It seems that this was one of
the last visits strictly in the order
that it appears.
>> Right. Right. Raiser Gudens Genski to us
children of the modern world was perhaps
even more important and
>> consequential
>> consequential in his uniqueness. While
made us experience a portion of other
worldliness,
a sbatical stillness of eternity, we met
in a person who was closer to our level
of life. These two great men could in a
certain sense be compared one to another
as
this is unparalleled stuff. I've often
felt it's a failing of the way I you
know that we write biographies and that
we talk about Gdali in the end they all
sound the same and that is such a cliche
that it's talk about a cliche about a
cliche but it's something we must
overcome because you see it can be done
look at the genius of that look how
penetrating that insight is to compare
to Mashiach what's the difference
between Mashiach and is
Mashiach is say the world will continue
as the Ram says the world will continue
as before it will just be on an elevated
plane but the physical reality will
remain the same
>> that's correct right and so the that is
the ability to totally be in this world
and be a normal human being and yet be
elevated whereas is this taste of right
which is supernatural or exist existence
of holiness that is not of this world.
That is an remarkable and startling
insight.
>> 100%. If you allow me, I once
interviewed a very important figure in
yeshiva history, right?
>> And that is you probably know the name
Rebie Leon
>> from London
>> from London. He was a Yadaminoi of the
Panov for many years when the Panov came
to to London to raise funds for
Panovich. And I had the privilege of
sitting with him and Coen, the head of
the the rabbitical board for the Hebrew
Mishbaka.
>> Yeah.
>> And they're friends from way way back.
And
>> the beginning of Panovich,
>> right? And they and we sat there for
probably over an hour, maybe close to
two hours, speaking about his
discussions with the Panov. And spoke
about and he said, it's a long story.
I'm not going to tell you the whole
story what we heard over there, but one
thing was very interesting. He said that
the was like a malik.
>> Okay. He said and he gave an example. He
says when we used to sit in meetings
with
>> Yeah.
>> the would actually read our minds and
you say he would point to each one
sitting at the table.
>> Yeah.
>> And he would tell them something that
they were thinking about.
>> Was that a party trick? I mean what was
the point?
>> For some reason he was giving them like
orders. Mhm.
>> in his way of doing it. But he says we
felt that he knew what was going on in
our minds.
>> That was the
>> talking about who was a big person
himself who was a very big person
himself.
Reb, I think that the highlight of this
diary and to me the most moving thing,
it's actually printed on the back page
of the dust jacket of this ishuhi was
the song the shir the ode the praise of
Kalabak to the yeshiva to the life of
Tyra and the life of being immersed in
Tyra and this given who he was given his
stature and given his position and the
fact that he could have said no no our
way is correct. Or maybe he did feel as
a Hersian that our way is correct. But
he was able to recognize something
unique and beautiful and unrivaled in
the Torah world of Eastern Europe. This
was a rabbi who was so busy. We know he
in the book over here, the issue, he
says how his father did not have time to
prepare his brilliant dar. He did not
have a minute to prepare his dashes. And
he said you could see when he was
beginning to prepare his dashers which
is I think he spoke before Chris Torah
after Chris I don't remember which one
it was but when they were busy putting
the safe in or out
>> that's when he had
>> he said that's when he and he would
quote verbatim madrashim and gummoras
and ideas and it was beautiful stuff and
it was all he didn't have time he was
just too busy running because what
happened he was the became increasingly
as the 30s went on less and less fewer
and fewer rabbon were left in Germany
And he was the RAV of first Hamburg and
then always the other way around Altera
the Hamburg and Vansbeck and Rabonov of
one the only big rabbon left and as the
crisis of German jewelry mounted he was
one of the last addresses so so you can
understand he didn't have time not sure
he taugh whatever it was but that is
what makes this so beautiful over here
>> that even someone of such stature was we
would use the word misspoil
>> correct he says like this of the
yeshivas that he saw. The secret of this
Jewish energy, the key to understanding
its ability to conquer the power of the
bayonet and the wit of alluring fad and
fashion, which was obviously the glitter
of Western Europe, of the good life and
comforts, of the glittering
civilization, the social acclimatization
is the same in all four countries
visited. Very interestingly, he's giving
a summary of everything he saw.
Lithuania and Poland and Russia and
Presborg, namely the learning of Tyra.
And now listen to this. Young and old,
rich and poor, everyone is learning
constantly, totally immersed, living and
breathing the Tyra, be it the written or
oral one, just as the Yiddish language
is interwoven, their Yiddish language,
remember Western Europe, they don't
speak Yiddish, is interwoven and
intermingled with idioms and phrases
from the Talmud. So is their very life
pulsating and throbbing with an echo of
sacred rit.
>> This is very interesting because if
you're talking about the time the period
of history that he's visiting Eastern
Europe,
>> this is already after the secularization
takes hold of the Jewish 1929, right?
He's on his way out,
>> right? And he still feels it.
>> He still feels it.
>> He still he still feels the fact that
everyone is sitting and learning.
>> Well, I think look, first of all,
looking he's visiting yeshiva towns.
He's visiting VNA. You see that's where
everything is concentrated.
>> He's going to ground zero. He's going to
the places. He's not going to little
villages where it's dying out. He's not
going to he's going to the still the
places where it's you know you had this
introduction to the of the who is it
theesh
his introduction to his work
fascinatingly he says people come and
say what are you complaining about that
the that these the Torah is going the
but are full everything and he writes in
the introduction have you stepped
outside the base of me in Warsaw don't
you understand inside there's the
vibrant Torah world people are
everything's fine outside is death and
desolation right and that's what it was
if you were inside me if you were inside
me in in in tells you you could ignore
the fact that
>> but how many people from each village
came
>> the civilization
told me he says that his father his
father and said to him said during the
20s I'm going to America he wants he
travel to America because he wanted to
take his yeshiva there he said the Torah
world of Eastern Europe is finished.
>> Wow.
>> It's finished. The future is in America.
He told him Bowwine said most incredible
thing. He was said because the poverty
and the reason was said poverty and the
isms all the isms that were driving it
was the incredible poverty and what had
happened. So it's not surprise these two
things coexisted. Things were going
rapidly downhill but fighting back
inside the Bish was tremendous light,
tremendous energy and still the ancient
Torah civilization. It's worth reading a
bit more of his. He says for us Hebrew
is a foreign tongue as is German to a
Frenchman. To them in contrast it is the
mother tongue. Every simpleton's talk as
natural to children's babble as to
mature pure people's talk. Then he says
like this to them the Torah is not a
lesson in religion but the very wisdom
of life the living spirit which
penetrates every fiber of existence. I
think we go back to what I asked you in
the beginning of the of this chapter was
what did he find in Eastern Europe that
he didn't have in Germany and I think
this is the nuda the nuda is that Torah
is their life
and without getting into details I can
tell you I I was visiting a different
community very fine people but there's a
difference okay just as a a side point
okay I'm accustomed where I'm coming
from Mati Shabas we you go you continue
shalashudas for 15 20 minutes after the
man you'll find plenty of minanim right
I go to a place another community with
number of wise there are enough people
there believe me 20 minutes after shabas
is over noan left and I came to the real
realization that there are some places
where yishka plays a central role or
it's something that has to be done and
let's move on shabas comes around let's
get it over with. So I mean in that vein
you have what I would sum say is a
summary the thrust of what of Kalabak is
saying was contrasting the richness of
the Torah culture of Eastern Europe
versus the poverty of the that culture
in Germany and Western Europe in which
become cut off from the life source and
the mainstream and it become people then
were spoonfed small doses of Torah with
large doses of der and I think that will
be the strongest defenders and advocates
of the ya world will say that. But I
think that is the the very very
interesting and the honesty the honest
take of Kalabak over here and just to
finish off this over here with one one
thing one extremely powerful phrase that
sums up what a yeshiva is fry what do
you think of this he says it is a quasi
people's university the yeshiva to which
no diploma guarantees admission which is
open to anyone to come and go if he
identifies with the high republic of the
Jewish spirit and is capable of
exchanging thoughts and arguments with
Abaya and Rover.
I want to end off with the fact that
this all sounds river patronizing. It's
just the it's just the Germans coming
along being wild by the Eastern Europe.
Okay, I think it was too more of a
two-way street over here. River Fry when
I think if you just pause or end the ep
end the episode here we see a very
beautiful song a song of praise of a
very great and and honest outsider and
thinker of the yeshiva world and of or
let's say of the more broadly of the
Eastern European pre-war Torah world
>> sometimes you need someone to come from
the outside
>> correct
>> and give you a fresh observation
>> and that is what this is but I think in
all fairness it's more because what
actually happened if you look at the
diary What you're seeing is that it was
actually more of a two-way street. The
pictures that we show the Eastern Europe
coming out of
May Shapiro the so these delegation from
from Western Europe I don't think they
were just after their money or wow we've
have to be care of them. I think that as
Rabbi Kalabak himself notes there's this
incredible line of frame which he says
says that at a certain point the
discoverers became the discovery. In
other words, it was clear to him that
the of Eastern Europe and the organizers
of Eastern Europe didn't just see them
as fundraisers or targets for Kira etc.
They recognized that there's some unique
value that the Jews of Western Europe,
the Orthodox Jews of Western Europe had
to bring to the table. And we talked
about that before. I think that if I
want to summarize things, I would say
that whereas the Jews of Eastern Europe
brought the immersion in Torah, the
yeshiva civilization, the great
spiritual center of gravity, the Jews of
the West had worked out and brought to
the table structure, organization,
institutional thinking,
>> which was now crucial in Eastern Europe
because different forces were coming in
>> because the the same forces that had
laid waste in Western Europe were now
assaulting. That's a subject for another
time. But I think very clearly as we
said at the beginning, what we take for
granted are the enormous from
infrastructure that we see today. We
don't move anywhere. It's almost like
with this amazing evading army, you come
the world comes to a new place. What
does it do straight away? Well, we need
Shivas bakovs kim organizations lobbying
groups to deal with the local government
professionalized misters. We tend to
think of these things as ancient and
continuous, but they weren't because
they were in truth a marriage of west
and east. And somehow after the ashes of
Europe, those strands fused into the I
think the phoenixike rebirth of the
Torah world that surrounds us today.
Beautiful
Fry. I just because this is really not
about analysis. It is about the
beautiful words of Kalabak this autumn
god gava who was died al hashem how I
think it's appropriate just to end with
his some just a few last lines of his
kind of love song and poetry for Torah
learning itself because he says like
this and excuse me if I quote from this
just to bear bear bear with but I think
that it's worth it he says oh blissful
world of the yeshiva your spicy
invigorating air makes My chest swell,
my pulse beat faster. You fortress of
Torah with open doors and wide open
windows. You great source of comfort to
Israel. Who feels in your arena the
world's agony? Who asks about cradle of
parental home about age or status, name
or origin? All differences among people
disappear like useless scales. Oh
paradise of joy will one feel so
enriched, so fulfilled, so world
transcending.
Only those who study merge into
harmonious resounding choir, the song of
the waves of the rolling seas of the
Jewish spirit, he continues, beautiful.
In this chorus, no one voice stands out.
Yet one hears the allconquering, all
humbling voice of Mosher Rabenu, of
Rabia, of Rambam and Rashi. And then his
these last words which you can imagine
he took with him all those words to back
to Germany where he would go through the
Hitler years, make the brave decision to
stay behind and eventually would go with
his community after death. He says, "It
still resounds in my ears, that roaring
stormy singong, like breakers of sound
waves upon the rock of Tyra, being grit
by longing for that station of life
affirming world oblivion, of those
fortunate ones who retreat from the
world without loathing that it
elucidates and illuminates the labyrinth
of the Jewish heart."
>> Beautiful.
Thank you for listening to Behind the
Times. We appreciate you joining us as
we explore the stories and people that
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