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CHAPTER 4 Meir Tepperovitch had also been a rabbi. He ministered to a large group in an adjacent town. He also served as an arbitrator for his parishioners. In a larger city, three judges, all rabbis, served on a panel known as a Beit Din, to arbitrate any minor civil disputes within the Jewish community. The plaintiff chose one rabbi, the defendant chose another rabbi, and the two rabbis then chose the third. In Meir Tepperovitch’s town he served alone and had the respect of the entire community, for his followers considered him a tzaddik—one of the righteous—capable of complete unity with the Creator. Such a tzaddik was a man whose human foibles did not exist in consciousness, thus allowing direct communication with God. In his court, he handled all minor matters and only referred to a larger Beit Din when he thought the problem might establish a new principle. He felt that under such circumstance a consensus from three judges would be required.

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When his son, Shepsel, was ordained a rabbi, he fasted for one day and spent a day of prayer in thankfulness to the Almighty.

One cold, cloudy winter day, as Meir was worshiping, there was a revolt of Poles in the region. Russian troops ruthlessly suppressed it. It was not the Jewish community that revolted, but the Jewish shtetl area was the prime target for the looting that often accompanied such actions. Fights broke out between the outnumbered Jewish citizens and the armed looters who entered houses and stole or destroyed furnishings and other valuables. Many Jews sustained injuries.

Rabbi Meir determined the violence was getting out of hand. He searched in vain for local police, but they were conspiculously absent. The looters shot him in the abdomen while he was attempting to protect the life and property of some of his parishioners. They carried him dying to his bed. He asked for a prayer book. He also requested that they notify his son in Tiktin. Shepsel rushed to his father’s side.

As he entered the room, he saw his father lying comfortably propped up by pillows. He had a smile on his face, discerned even through his grey beard and mustache. With the noise of Shepsel’s entry, Meir’s eyes opened and his smile widened.

“Ahh, Shepsel, our Father is ready for me, and I go with peace and love in my heart for you, your family, and the Almighty. Then Rabbi Meir’s head turned ninety degrees first in one direction and then the other.

“What do you see, father?”

“I see the divine glow. I see infinity. I see the entry into God’s kingdom. I see peace and love.”

Shepsel placed his hands over his eyes and prayed a silent prayer.

Meir remained smiling, his eyes wide open, a look of anticipation on his face. He said, “Go into the library, my son. There you will find the Torah that my grandfather, of blessed memory, wrote with his own hand—every letter of every word. He passed it on to his son, my father, who passed it on to me. I bequeath it to you, Shepsel. I know you will guard it as a token of love for our family and the Jewish people. It will be a reminder to you to continue the work we have always done in the past, each in our own way, to guard our heritage against those that wish to do us harm. I love you...my son.”

Then he fell silent and with an audible sigh and open eyes, he breathed his last.

Shepsel recited the Shema in a whisper, imagining that his father was thinking it too as his soul departed the earth. Then, “Yisgadal veyiskadash shemei raba…” through copious tears and with the Torah cradled in his arms Shepsel wailed the Kaddish the prayer for the dead.

Shepsel was a traditional rabbi as opposed to his father Meir who was a Hasid. The Hasidic movement originated with Israel Ben Eliezer in the 18th century, and he arose at a time when the vast majority of his people were poor, illiterate, and helpless to control their own destiny.

The majority of the Jews, out of the mainstream of Jewish learning, felt disenfranchised, for only the privileged few, the religious scholars, could be in touch with the Divine. Into this void stepped Israel Ben Eliezer who taught that God was everywhere in all things and was served through all things including pleasures of life. Every Jew was able to reach the Divinity by enjoying the rituals of their faith, by enthusiastic praying, by singing and dancing, by deep love for their fellow man. It was not necessary to steep oneself in scholarship and intense study in order to commune with God. This was the Rabbi’s province from which they would seek guidance as the Hasidic Rabbis had a “holy soul” inherited from their ancestors.

Many of the Jews of the day embraced this concept for it liberated them from their superstitions and the depression brought on by their illiteracy and second-class status. They were now as good as the best religious scholar, because of their good acts, their intense prayer, their joy and love, their singing and dancing. They thus had camaraderie, not only with one another but also with the Almighty.

The rabbi, responsible for the intense study, the deep thinking, and the philosophical interpretations will guide them through all trials and tribulations. At the same time, the Hasidic Rabbi embraced his followers, in contrast, they thought, from other rabbis who remained aloof from their congregants.

The first Hasidic Rabbi, Israel Ben Eliezer, known as a Baal Shem Tov or BeSHT (good master of the name) was a man of total devotion and righteousness: the first tzaddik. Hasidic adherents believed that their tzaddik had a direct line to God Almighty by virtue of the purity of his soul unencumbered by human temptation and failings. Jewish folklore writes that every generation of Jews has within its ranks thirty-six righteous devoted tzaddikim, known as lamed-vavniks. The Hasidim believe that this ability is under genetic control and therefore handed down from father to son. This movement slowly grew as the average Jew remained in poverty, shackled by government fiat and anti-Semitic legislation.

Rabbi Shepsel Tepperovitch did not agree with the Hasidic movement. First, the devoted and worshipful adherence to an all-righteous, divinely inspired individual raised the fear of the growth of false Messiahs. In addition, the focus was no longer on intense Torah study as the rabbi, now responsible, was of questionable insight and scholarship as far as he was concerned. Therefore, he was certain that Jewish law would not be followed, thus threatening the deep roots of history and stability of the Jewish religion.

On the other hand, he recognized the situation of the Jews residing in the Pale of Settlement and the hatred directed toward them by the populace, which was fearful of the competition they offered. He also understood that the Czar and the Russian government were anxious to keep the Jews in their place and do everything in their power to proselytize them and limit their power by restrictive measures meant to destroy their religion. The threat was real, and he felt that the threat to the stability of the Jewish religion and his way of life was twofold: external from the Czar, and internal from Hasidism.

Those who opposed the Hasidim are misnagdim, or opposers. The leader of this movement was an Einstein of his day, Elijah ben Solomon Zalman. A child prodigy and self taught Torah and religious scholar, the Jews called him the Wilno gaon (genius from Vilna). He also steeped himself in secular scientific and mathematical studies. He felt that the Hasidic movement would result in a schism in Judaism. He led the opposition against Hasidism, going so far as to recommend excommunication and burning of books by the BeSHT. The Hasids, not to be outdone, excommunicated the gaon.

Shepsel felt himself in the middle of these extremes, but, as if that wasn’t enough, a larger force was manifesting itself that he was sure would have a profound and long- lasting impact on Judaism. This powerful force was international in scope, and he knew that its impact would change the entire structure of Judaism. Neither he nor anyone else was powerful enough to stop it. His concern and focus was to do what he could to promote the inevitable change, but not allow any destruction of emphasis on Torah and religious scholarship. He felt if that would occur; the Jewish religion would pass into history. This would accomplish from within what the anti-Semitic forces of history could never accomplish.

This movement, known as Haskalah, or enlightenment, promoted the incorporation of secular studies as a critical part of the education of Jews. This ran counter to the Rabbi Shepsel’s belief that the study of Torah was so all encompassing and difficult that there was no room or time for any other studies. Any study of subjects other then the Torah would threaten Judaism itself and could alienate the students from observing Jewish law.

A Jewish Journey

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