maandag 14 oktober 2024

Why Hungarian Rabbis Didn’t Join Agudah

 


The kohein gadol performed five immersions and ten hand-washings on Yom Kippur. (Yuma Chapter 3, Mishnah 3)

In 1922, the Munkaczer Rebbe, Rabbi Chaim Elazar Shapiro, known as the Minchas Elazar, traveled to Gur, Poland to meet with the Gerrer Rebbe, Rabbi Avraham Mordechai Alter. The subject of their meeting was the Agudath Israel organization, which had recently spread to many Polish Chassidic communities, including the Gerrer community. The Minchas Elazar agreed with the importance of founding a unifying Orthodox organization, but objected to some of the Agudah’s innovations, notably their policy of establishing farming colonies in Eretz Yisroel. “This,” he said, “is an imitation of the Zionist pioneers, and it serves no purpose for religious Jewry, physical or spiritual. Instead we must support the Old Yishuv through the charity of Rabbi Meir Baal Haness, as established by our fathers and teachers.” He respectfully told the Gerrer Rebbe that although he might not be aware of everything done by the Agudah, the Agudah activists were using his name and prestige to promote their activities. He proposed to modify the platform of the organization, and then he and other Czechoslovakian and Hungarian rabbis would lead their communities in joining it.

The Gerrer Rebbe replied, “True, this is how it should be. But what will people say? You and I both have enemies, and they will say, ‘They met together and suddenly spoiled all the arrangements for the organization that, until now, would encompass the whole world.’ Besides, I have no power to do this, according to the Agudah by-laws. How will we do it?”

“You will choose ten rabbis, and I will choose nine rabbis, making a total of 21,” said the Minchas Elazar. “You will be the head, and we will meet together in Warsaw no later than the first of Tammuz of this year, to discuss this plan and put it into practice.”

The Gerrer Rebbe agreed to the plan. Before leaving, the Minchas Elazar added one final word of caution. “Please do not let any of those close to you who are strong Agudists change this decision that we have reached together.”

“Why do you suspect that any of my household or close followers would be against this?” said the Gerrer Rebbe. “We have no personal interest. I am only the honorary president, and our sole objective is to work for the benefit of the public.”

“Even the greatest of men can have personal interests,” said the Minchas Elazar. “The Gemora in Sanhedrin 18b says that the kohein gadol may not participate in the conference of rabbis who decide whether to add an extra month to the year, lest he be affected in his decision by personal interest. He knows that on Yom Kippur he will have to immerse himself five times in a mikveh, and if an extra month is added to the year, Yom Kippur will be later and the water will be colder and more uncomfortable for him. The question is: what kind of personal interest is this? The adding of the month takes place in Adar, seven months before Yom Kippur. The water was not so cold in any case, since they would place pieces of heated iron into the mikveh to warm it up (Yuma 34b). This extra month might mean that the water was a tiny bit, perhaps 2 degrees, less warm. And there are times when the weather is warmer in Cheshvan than in Tishrei, especially in Eretz Yisroel, where, as Chazal say, the end of summer is hotter than the summer. If you took a simple Jew today in the month of Adar and asked him if he would pay even one penny so that the mikveh on Erev Yom Kippur that coming year would be 2 degrees warmer, he would laugh at you. All the more so that the great kohein gadol, who entered the Holy of Holies, should be above such concerns. So why is he unfit to participate in the conference?

“The answer is that Chazal kept to the rules of disqualifying a judge because of personal interest even in the most extreme cases, so that in case some great man in future times is affected by personal interests – through his family members or disciples – no one will think badly of him. A man cannot be a witness for his own relative, no matter how righteous he is – even Moshe and Aharon (Bava Basra 159a).

“Nevertheless, we are relying on the Rebbe and his followers to make sure this gathering of 21 rabbis takes place by the appointed time.” (Tikun Olam, Chapters 18 and 20)

In the end, Rabbi Menachem Ziemba, a close follower and associate of the Gerrer Rebbe, set forth the Minchas Elazar’s proposal at a meeting of the Moetzes Gedolei Hatorah. The Moetzes was prepared to meet with the Hungarian gedolim, but only on condition that they be elected democratically by a congress of Hungarian rabbis, just as the Moetzes of Poland was an elected body. This requirement was an almost insurmountable obstacle, in view of the difficulties of convening a rabbinic congress from the many different countries and regions that were formerly part of the Austro-Hungarian Empire: the Carpathians, Russian, Czech, Slovakia, Hungary, Romania and Galicia. This was an abrupt change from the original agreement between the Minchas Elazar and the Gerrer Rebbe, that each would select a number of rabbis on his own (ibid. Chapter 23).

And so the proposed meeting between Polish and Hungarian rabbis never took place. “In retrospect,” wrote Rabbi Moshe Goldstein, a Munkaczer Chassid, “perhaps this was the best thing, and so it was arranged by Divine Providence, so that later when more serious problems with the Agudah became well known, and their leaders had already been entrusted with the fate of the Jewish people, there would be at least one portion of the Jewish people that escaped untainted by this breach” (ibid. Chapter 25). Goldstein wrote these words in 1936. What would he have said, had he seen how the Agudah activists in 1947-49 led their followers into full-fledged participation in the Zionist enterprise, without the benefit of any ruling even from their own rabbinical council?

Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik of Brisk was invited by the German architects of Agudath Israel to their founding conferences in 1909 and 1912, but afterwards he withdrew his support from it. Family members relate that Rabbi Chaim gave the following analogy to explain his opposition to the Moetzes Gedolei Hatorah: In the old times, everyone had a candle in his house to give light. It was a small candle, but a candle nonetheless. And even if someone did not have a candle in his house, there was always a candle in his neighborhood that he could use. But then they built an electric power station to supply light to the entire city at once. Once the electricity was running, nobody kept candles in his house anymore, and if, G-d forbid, the power station stopped working, the entire city would be in the dark, with no source of light. (Mikatowitz Ad Hei B’Iyar, p. 56)

Rabbi Chaim in his wisdom foresaw that a worldwide Orthodox organization could be a good thing, but could also be a very bad thing. As long as every rabbi is independent, even if some rabbis err, there will always be some still on the right path. But when all rabbis subscribe to a single organization, if something goes wrong with that organization, all of its members go down with it. With eerie accuracy, Rabbi Chaim’s analogy foreshadowed events that took place many years after his passing.

For the sin we committed before you under duress…” (Yom Kippur Machzor)

Why must we repent for such a sin? Isn’t there a rule that a person is not blamed for something he was forced to do (Kesubos 3a)? The Siddur Hagra answers that we enjoyed the sin we were forced to do. Today people say it would be dangerous to give up the state. But these same people don’t act like they’re being forced to sin. They enjoy the state, visiting it all the time and sending their kids to schools there.

woensdag 9 oktober 2024

Mikatowitz Ad Hei B'Iyar (Quote)


Mikatowitz Ad Hei B'Iyar  (Quote)

Rabbi Chaim Soloveitchik of Brisk was invited by the German architects of Agudath Israel to their founding conferences in 1909 and 1912, but afterwards he withdrew his support from it. Family members relate that Rabbi Chaim gave the following analogy to explain his opposition to the Moetzes Gedolei Hatorah: In the old times, everyone had a candle in his house to give light. It was a small candle, but a candle nonetheless. And even if someone did not have a candle in his house, there was always a candle in his neighborhood that he could use. But then they built an electric power station to supply light to the entire city at once. Once the electricity was running, nobody kept candles in his house anymore, and if, G-d forbid, the power station stopped working, the entire city would be in the dark, with no source of light. (Mikatowitz Ad Hei B’Iyar, p. 56)

Rabbi Chaim in his wisdom foresaw that a worldwide Orthodox organization could be a good thing, but could also be a very bad thing. As long as every rabbi is independent, even if some rabbis err, there will always be some still on the right path. But when all rabbis subscribe to a single organization, if something goes wrong with that organization, all of its members go down with it. With eerie accuracy, Rabbi Chaim’s analogy foreshadowed events that took place many years after his passing.

https://torahjews.org/2023/11/29/parsha-pearls-yom-kippur/

 

maandag 7 oktober 2024

Samson Raphael HIRSCH Kommentar zu Owinu Malkenu


Samson Raphael HIRSCH

Kommentar אבינו מלכנו




 

„Jisroels Gebete“ 3. (unveränderte) Auflage 1921 Seiten 629-631

 

Samson Raphael HIRSCH אבינו מלכנו

 


Samson Raphael HIRSCH  


אבינו מלכנו

 

 

Avinu Malkenu English translation of his Commentary

אבינו מלכנו : God is our Father and our King. Fatherlike He never withholds His compassion from us, like a King He commands over our destinies and requires of us that we obey Him. This is the thought which, during the ten days of our “return” to Him, guides us forth again and again from our errors, back to the feet of our God as His servants and as His children.

חטאנו לפניך : Our past errors which have persisted into the present and which we have not managed to overcome are the cause and reason for our persisting exile which is to end in redemption.

אין לנו מלך אלא אתה : And yet,  despite this physical banishment and spiritual estrangement we still have no other than God to guide our lives and to shape our destinies. Therefore, עשה עמנו למען שמך, we also wait on no other but God to shape our future and we appeal to that abundance of loving-kindness which is guaranteed us by His very Name that implies His eternal readiness to grant us a new future.

The term Shana tauvo summarizes all our hopes and inmost yearnings for the future. Now we enumerate them, one by one, the hopes and wishes which we cherish in our hearts  for the year that is to come. Naturally, the first of them is the plea for the removal of גזרות קשות, all those troubles that inhibit the growth of all that is good.  It is most significantly in keeping with our exiled state that this is immediately followed by כלה, הפר, בטל (and in some communities also by) prayers for protection and help in the perils prepared for us by the hostile peoples  in whose midst we live. Unfortunately our sad experiences re ample proof that those pleas are more than justified even today, and that is only the part of our  thoughtlessness to demand the elimination of those verses from the prayer book because “they are no longer timely”. It is only after this that we add מנע, כלה and שלח asking that we may be spared from all physical pain and also from those social evils which are not necessarily the result of hostility directed specifically against the Jewish people (משחית, שבי, חרב). It is significant that the prayers for deliverance from physical suffering and social evils should take precedence over החזירנו בתשובה, the prayer for Divine aid in our efforts at selfcorrection We would have been justified in expecting this last plea to come first, preceding all the others,  for there can be no doubts that the improvement  in our lot is dependent upon the extent to which we better our ways.

Unfortunately, history has shown that ameliorations in our material status frequently resoled in our spiritual regression. It has been proven repeatedly that יאי עניותא לישראל oppression actually benefits the people of Yisroel, and serves as a challenge to our people to muster all its spiritual and moral grandeur. It was in the midst of sufferings of exile that we truly proved our constancy, and it has been  mostly in times of economical disaster and social catastrophe that we have resolved to sin no more. All too frequently prosperity has caused our nation to waver in its loyalty, and any improvement of our  lot, either social or economic, all too often helped relegate to oblivion all our solemn resolves to turn over a new leaf. It may well be that this prayer for perfect teshuva was deliberately put after rather than before the plea for the betterment of our situation, both material and  spiritual, in order to warn us to rid ourselves, at long last,  of the moral weakness which deprived us of the ability to cope with happiness and prosperity and which has been the cause of all our  troubles.

כתבנו בספר : Statements in the Holy Scriptures such as מחני נא מספרך אשר כתבת, מי אשר חטא לי אמחנו מספרי (Exod. 32:32,33) Psalm 69:29, 56:9 and Malachi 3:16 all indicate this thought: Since all there is was brought into being by the “Word” of God, and since all that which is yet to be will come about also only at His “Word”, all the works and ways of His sovereignty together may be construed and taken as the content of one single “Book” of God, and etc. actually means, “Number us among those who through Your Providence, will be allotted a good life.”

נקום לעינינו . Throughout its long existence, the people of Yisroel sorely-tried like no other nation in history, has borne again and again the most outrageous atrocities, maltreatments and cruelties without ever raising an avenging hand against his foes and oppressors and without even attempting to work retribution upon the peoples and rulers who had unleashed upon it their excesses of fanatical inhumanity. The one motive, which, more than anything else, has protected Israel from the base impulses of vengefulness, is represented by the recital of those portions of our prayer book  which teach us that we must commit to no other but God all vengeance and retribution for the hurt we may sustain at the hands of others. Our regular perusal of the statements in our sacred literature  with reference to the promise and reassurance that God sees all that we must bear, and reserves for Himself the right to exact retribution for every hurt that we have suffered at the hands of our foes, has kept us free from the lust of vengeance. It is due only to our trust in the truth of these promises that we have found the strength to submit to murder without ever becoming murders ourselves, to bear strangling without becoming hangmen ourselves, and to tolerate robbery at the hands of our foes without  ever robbing in return. It was only trough these our prayers that, in the midst of a populace that derided, hated and mistreated us we could remain loyal to the rulers of the lands to which we have been dispersed and keep alive within our heart sentiments of human sympathy for their peoples, so that our relationships with the nations in whose midst we have lived have always been marked by kindness and humanity on our part. These appeals to God have helped us remain human und kind  in the midst of all the inhumanity round about us.     

 (Prayer Book pp. 623-627. –Feldheim Ed.1969  - translated from German into English by the Samson Raphael Hirsch Publications Society )

Why Hungarian Rabbis Didn’t Join Agudah

  The kohein gadol performed five immersions and ten hand-washings on Yom Kippur. (Yuma Chapter 3, Mishnah 3) In 1922, the Munkaczer Rebbe...