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Hesped for a Talmid

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YU Torah

The Rav offers a chidush (a novel insight) in the laws of mourning that just as a student must mourn a rebbe muvhak, so too a rebbe must mourn a talmid muvhak—a primary, irreplaceable student. The Rav argues that this logic should work both ways: if a talmid is obligated to mourn a rebbe whose teaching shaped him, then a rebbe should likewise mourn a talmid who shaped the rebbe. Drawing from sources ranging from Chumash to the Talmud, he shows how great figures—from Yaakov mourning Yosef to Rabbi Yochanan mourning Reish Lakish—were devastated not merely by familial loss, but by the loss of a student who was essential to their own spiritual vitality and intellectual creativity. The Rav then applies this insight personally, describing his own grief for his student, Rav Moshe Tzvi Twersky. He portrays him as a talmid muvhak who not only learned from his rebbe but inspired him, corrected him gently, and provided quiet strength. His presence offered the kind of inspiration that, according to Chazal, a great talmid provides to a rebbe—an inspiration without which teaching and creativity are diminished. The Rav concludes that with his student’s passing, he feels a deep loneliness, as though something essential has been torn from his life, and he therefore mourns him fully, as a true talmid muvhak. Mourning for a Talmid Muvhak Yaakov mourning for Yosef Rabbi Yochanan mourning for Reish Lakish What a Talmid does for a Rebbe Mourning for Rav Moshe Twersky

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