Transcript
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[Music]
1946 the very first y Kipper after the
war they had just finished KRA in a
displaced person Camp called feldin
which was a gathering of many of the
broken shells those those who had
survived the terrible catastrophe and
were groping to put the shattered pieces
of their lives back together they just
finished CRA and on that day General
Eisenhower the supreme commander of the
Allied Forces and later the 34th
president of the United States came to
visit a few days earlier they had been
told that General Eisenhower was going
to visit their DP
camp and when the general would come
there would have to be a represent ative
of the
camp someone to greet him to give a
speech maybe there would be a few
speeches and the representative would
have to give over their message someone
who could describe their feelings to
vent the storm inside their
souls and a dispute arose who should be
appointed for the
task the sh R in the camp the observant
in the camp they maintained that only
the kenberg rebba only the great rebba
someone although he himself had lost his
wife and 11 children he was the one who
went from one broken Nama to the next
breathing life into the Embers to
reignite the spark of yahad they said
who could better represent us than the
kenberg Reba who can better give over
our feelings only the rebba the father
of all the orphans in the camp only he
can represent
us but the more Progressive ones the
more enlightened
ones the ones who had forsaken Ty
Mitzvah they said no not the rebba we've
long forgotten about that type of
Judaism we don't want to bring that back
again it's an embarrassment to us we
want to have someone who could speak to
to the general a man of the present a
man of today someone we don't have to be
ashamed of
and there was a big argument and many
other the people insisted no only the
rebba and they prevailed but there was a
compromise the others insisted okay you
can have the rebba speak but there was
going to be three
conditions the rebba could speak first
but number one he cannot mention the
name of
God number two he cannot give any muser
he can't give any rebuke and number
three he has to speak very briefly
because we'll be appointing our
representative after him we'll have one
of our people speak following the rabba
and so Eisenhower
came and they set up a big platform a
stage and they set him up at the table
and the Clen bbba goes up to the podium
to greet him and just as he's going up
the rebba grabs a Talis he wraps himself
in the Talis and he makes
so the rebba managed to mention the name
of
Hashem he greeted the general he thanked
him he said General we will forever be
grateful to you for the part that you
played in saving the lives of a people
The Last Remnant of a Nation persecuted
hounded murdered totally innocent of any
crime we thank you for the part that you
played and we will forever be grateful
and then he turned to his brothers and
sisters to the Jewish people and he
began to encourage them he said my dear
brothers and sisters we must never
forget that we are the am Hashem we must
never forget we have a we have a purpose
in this world to proclaim the greatness
to and if the almighty saw fit to save
our
lives and we serve survive we have to
realize we have to understand there is a
purpose and we have a mission in this
world and as the rebba is speaking he's
literally tugging on the heartstrings of
all these broke injes and the people
began to cry there were many said they
hadn't cried the entire time that they
were in the camps the Wellsprings of
Tears had long dried up and the
thousands of people who were listening
were crying rivers of Tears flowed
through this
assembly Eisenhower was shaken to the
coure he was visibly and profoundly
moved and all the others who had
prepared speeches they said no they
can't speak there there's nothing left
to say there was nothing left to
say and Eisenhower turned to the kenberg
rabba and he said holy
Rabbi tell me
what can I do for you what can I do for
your
people clabel looks eyes in how in the
eye who knows what he's going to ask for
the rbba says today is y
Kipper 4 days left till suus please
General can you bring us arim can you
bring us the four species can you get us
the lul of an
asri that's all we ask for that's all we
need
Eisenhower could not believe his ears
and on that day Eisenhower dispatched a
plane to travel to Italy and to bring
them the Dal
Min upon Liberation our revered
grandfather of blessed
memory
gladin who was a survivor of all the
dark places of D of ASW
he was a student of
zba zba he had SM before the war
from he was educated he knew English and
he was appointed by the American Army as
the head of the religious Department Of
The Joint distribution committee and in
that capacity he was able to help the
survivors he imported for them
Tash he printed the first for the
survivors the D of
Thea of the V but he also
served as the translator for General
Eisenhower when Eisenhower visited
feldafing on that fateful young Kipper
and he was also the kenberg rebba
translator to Eisenhower and when
Eisenhower shipped in those DAL meim to
the DP Camp those dalim arrived at the
desk of harav M La glance
he was
the he was the Heavenly Messenger to
distribute theim to hundreds and
thousands of survivors that very first
suus after the war we are proud to share
that our grandfather was the one who
received those doad minum from General
Dwight Eisenhower and distributed those
do meim in the very first sucus
after the war to
the wishing everyone