In Love with Everything Holy --- In meeting Reb Shraga Feivel, a stone had been lifted
by Rabbi Judah Mischel
Maybe it was ordained On High that I should have to take a
circuitous route to meet my rebbi — that I should first be required to
survey the vast landscape of Yiddishkeit.
I grew up on Grove Street in old Monsey, our family the only Modern
Orthodox baalei teshuvah — perennial outsiders in a predominantly
yeshivish neighborhood. We were raised to be open, accepting, and
respectful of all. My parents chose their Jewish destiny; we were always
made very aware of our responsibility to think for ourselves and “do
our own thing” in avodas Hashem. Our background allowed us the
opportunity to explore the Torah’s many different pathways.
After a year in Eretz Yisrael, when I was trying to learn Torah
seriously for the first time as a student at Yeshiva University, the
challenge of “finding my place” in avodas Hashem was real. I was drawn
to chassidus, engaged intellectually with Modern Orthodoxy, enamored of
“the yeshivah world,” and ideologically at home in religious Zionism.
There was so much beauty and opportunity in the diversity of Jewish
communities. Yet so much seemed scripted, and the search for self, more
like deciding which box to fit into, which set of cultural norms to
adapt. As aspiring bnei Torah, did we really have to choose one way to
the exclusion of all others?
While perusing old copies of the Jewish Observer between classes on
the fifth floor of the YU library, I got my answer. I finally met the
tzaddik who would become a formative influence and inspirational force
in my life: Reb Shraga Feivel Mendlowitz ztz”l. A tribute marking Reb
Shraga Feivel’s 35th yahrtzeit penned by Rav Yitzchak Chinn, a close
talmid, took my breath away.
The piece described an episode that took place in 1943, just a couple
of blocks from where I’d eventually grow up in Monsey. Reb Shraga
Feivel was sitting outdoors with a group of yungeleit, and asked one to
turn over a large stone embedded in the ground. As he did, swarms of
insects scurried about in every direction.
Said Reb Shraga Feivel: “Do you see those creatures? For their entire
existence under that rock, they believed the world to be a dark, dreary
place. By overturning that stone, you have revealed a whole new world,
filled with light and beauty. In exposing them to the sun and sky,
you’ve introduced a new dimension of reality into their lives.
“That is our mission in this world — to roll the heavy stones off
souls and reveal the Yiddishe neshamah, to allow the ohr haShechinah to
shine. When we have moved the boulders, we can lift our eyes to the
Heavens, behold our Creator, and know our Yiddishkeit.”
In meeting Reb Shraga Feivel, I felt as though a stone had been lifted — and a new ray of light was shining in.
Reb Shraga Feivel defied definition and categorization; not tethered
to any specific one of the shivim panim laTorah, he embodied the
infinite expansiveness of Yiddishkeit. Reb Shraga Feivel’s way of
learning Torah revealed its awesome unity: plumbing the commentary of
Rav Shimshon Raphael Hirsch to explain challenging passages in Tanya —
and vice versa. Chassidus, mussar, nigleh and nistar — for Reb Shraga
Feivel, it was all One.
Even while quoting freely from the writings of Rav Avraham Yitzchak
HaKohein Kook, Rav Shraga Feivel maintained a close friendship with and
deepest respect for Reb Yoelish, the Satmar Rebbe. At Torah Vodaath and
Beis Medrash Elyon, classic yeshivah learning was complemented with
shiurim on Tanach and tefillah, the teachings of Reb Tzaddok HaKohein of
Lublin with insights on the intricacies of biblical grammar. Rambam’s
Shemonah Perakim and Rebbe Nachman’s Sippurei Maasios, Chovos Halevavos,
Ramchal and the Tzemach Tzedek.
Fusion implies bringing together of separate, individual parts to
form a complete whole. Reb Shraga Feivel didn’t “fuse” discrete parts;
he was drawing from a higher source.
“The Tree of Life was in the center of the Garden” (Bereishis 2:9).
Reb Shraga Feivel taught: No matter how disparate the various ideas and
approaches in Torah that we learn may seem to be, they are all different
approaches to the Eitz Chayim. As long as the Tree of Life is “b’soch
haGan” — and Torah is at the center — it can be approached from all
directions.
Reb Shraga Feivel carried the dialectic within himself: charisma and
humility, passionate activism and hisbonenus, intellect and emotion. A
gadol who saw himself as a regular person, “Mr. Mendlowitz” shunned all
honorifics and trappings of kavod. A public figure, constantly
surrounded by talmidim, who relished privacy and quiet. An idealist with
two feet firmly on the ground, Reb Shraga Feivel upheld unwavering
fidelity to his Hungarian upbringing, while attuning his incredible
sensitivity to the needs and realities of the postwar American Jewish
community.
Uncompromising in his dedication to truth — at a time when ideology
mattered — Reb Shraga Feivel was unabashed in voicing staunch opposition
to innovations he felt threatened tradition, but still managed to
maintain respectful working relationships with those he vehemently
disagreed with.
“Hashem sefasai tiftach” — in asking the Ribbono shel Olam to open
our mouths and sing His praise, we aim to emulate His infinite nature,
to be big, expand our boundaries, open our borders. As Reb Shraga Feivel
would say: “Der seichel iz elastish” — the mind is elastic. If we are
intellectually honest, it can be stretched from one extreme to another.
Hotziah mimasger nafshi.
Reb Shraga Feivel’s natural expansiveness validated drawing from
approaches in Yiddishkeit that seemed to conflict: “Some souls drink
from Tanya. Others from the Ramchal. Still others from Rav Hirsch. I
drink from all of them, though at any given time, I might drink from one
in particular.”
From Reb Shraga Feivel came “insider” confirmation that
the search for truth and the fulfillment of ratzon Hashem is more about
“a Torah perspective,” as opposed to “the Torah perspective.” “Taamu
u’reu ki tov Hashem,” for a searching Jew, Reb Shraga Feivel catered a
fresh, bountiful, and spiritually healthy smorgasbord of theological
opportunity.
Reb Shraga Feivel’s open heart felt the joys and pain of Klal
Yisrael, burned for Torah, and was deeply connected to Eretz Yisrael —
in love with everything holy. Sensing the Divine vitality that pulsates
through all of creation, he was a baal avodah who heard all of nature
singing Hashem’s praise. Reb Shraga Feivel enjoyed spending time in
nature, and often looked toward the sky, davening from what he called
“the siddur of David Hamelech.” When a talmid inquired of his rebbi’s
preference of davening next to a window: “He thinks I’m looking out, but
actually, I’m looking in.”
Reb Shraga Feivel’s singular focus on “looking in” — on living a life
of penimiyus, nurturing the inner worlds of others, and encouraging
in-depth limud HaTorah — inoculated against superficiality.
Every Jew
can be an “insider.” With Torah at the center, we are all equally close.
Reb Shraga Feivel suffered a heart attack when he heard that the Old
City had fallen into Jordanian hands during Israel’s War for
Independence. Doctors warned him against learning Baal Shem Tov al
HaTorah — Reb Shraga Feivel’s excitement when learning the heiliger Baal
Shem made his sensitive Jewish heart race dangerously.
“V’hasirosi lev ha’even v’nasati lachem lev basar.” In the end of
days the Navi Yechezkel promises that Hashem will remove our hearts of
stone and restore our natural hearts of flesh — a fleishige heart that
senses that every moment in this world is revelation of Hashgachah
pratis and an opportunity to draw close to Hashem. Or as Reb Shraga
Feivel would say, “Der grester glick fun leben iz leben alein — the
greatest fortune in life is life itself.”
Again and again I have returned to Yonoson Rosenblum’s masterful
biography of Reb Shraga Feivel; it is a book that changes my life at
each new stage I reread it, each time feeling a deeper yearning for Reb
Shraga Feivel’s guidance, his expansive heart filled with ahavas Hashem
and ahavas Yisrael, nuance and complexity.
Working in the Jewish community, I am privileged to see the absolute
best of Klal Yisrael. But even when everyone has only the best of
intentions, things can often get personal, and worthy mosdos of
different stripes step on each other’s toes. Dedicated professionals and
volunteers, even rebbeim and menahalim, passionate for their specific
cause, can get territorial over donors, programs — even social services.
It’s hard not to get caught up in all of it. Business is business,
people are people.
Asking myself, “What would Reb Shraga Feivel do?” invariably leads to
clarity and magnanimity, ayin tovah and expansiveness. Reb Shraga
Feivel was never confined or defined by where he worked — even by the
yeshivos he founded, nurtured, and led. When the fledgling Yeshivas
Rabbeinu Chaim Berlin was struggling with recruitment, Reb Shraga Feivel
transferred some of his most prized talmidim there, sending his best
guys to join “the competition.”
It wasn’t that Reb Shraga Feivel was so confident in his yeshivah
that he was unafraid of competition; he simply saw that in the world of
truth and penimiyus, there is no competition. Ovdei Hashem are all
working for the same Boss, at different points in the Garden, facing the
same Center.
Reb Shraga Feivel would remind his talmidim — in and out
of yeshivah — that regardless of our professional identity, we are all
“sheluchei d’Rachmana,” messengers on a mission from G-d.
As Reb Shraga Feivel’s 70th yahrtzeit approaches on Gimmel Elul, I am
thinking about the tzaddikim hatehorim described by Rav Kook — the
purely righteous who do not complain about darkness, but instead
increase light. Now more than ever, how desperately we crave Reb Shraga
Feivel’s purity, righteousness, and encouragement, to lift the stone
that covers our hearts, weighing us down and blocking out the light.
I’d grown up literally around the corner from that tree under which
Reb Shraga Feivel sat with his talmidim decades earlier, feeling like a
perennial outsider. Maybe my not being born to a particular derech with
set minhagim and clear mesorah was Hashem’s way of setting the stage for
the unlikely kesher I feel with Reb Shraga Feivel. If in our search for
meaning we are motivated l’Sheim Shamayim, then we are all insiders.
When we aspire to live each moment with penimiyus, we will find our
place in the Torah world, cleaving to the Eitz Hachayim, the Tree of
Life at the center of our lives.
Enough complaining about our generation and all that is lacking!
“L’oro neilech” — the time for us has come in our search for dveikus to
do the heavy lifting, for the ohr haShechinah, for Soul-Glow.
Tzaddikim b’mitasam nikra’im chayim — Reb Shraga Feivel zy”a, chai v’kayam!
Originally featured in Mishpacha, Issue 722. Rabbi Judah
Mischel, executive director of Camp HASC and former rebbi at Yeshivas
Reishis, is a popular teacher of chassidus and founder of Tzama Nafshi,
an organization dedicated to fostering Jewish education and inspiration.
He lives with his family in Ramat Beit Shemesh, where he is a talmid
muvhak of mashpia Rav Avraham Tzvi Kluger and translator of his works.
http://www.mishpacha.com/Browse/Article/10876/In-Love-with-Everything-Holy