[Avodah] The Renewal Role of Sarah Schenirer
Prof. Levine via Avodah
avodah at lists.aishdas.org
Tue Apr 28 14:28:17 PDT 2015
From http://tinyurl.com/njwrn2g
There was a major difference, however, between the Bais Yaacov of
Williamsburg and the Bais Yaacov of Poland in pre-war Europe. The
Bais Yaacov movement in Poland emphasized the universal Torah
teachings of Rabbi Samson Raphael Hirsch, while the Bais Yaacov of
Williamsburg did not give Rabbi Hirsch's teachings the same emphasis.
Why were Rabbi Hirsch's teachings regarding the Torah's universal
vision no longer the main focus? Most of the teachers and students at
the American Bais Yaakov were Holocaust survivors who felt a need to
turn inward after experiencing the hatred of the Gentiles around them
and the horrors of the Holocaust. They knew that most of the
"humanistic" intellectuals and artists of Germany actively supported
the brutal persecution of the Jewish people. They also knew that most
of the "enlightened" countries closed their doors to Jews who were
trying to escape the Holocaust. In addition, they knew that most of
the Christian religious leaders of Europe did not protest the
organized murder of millions of Jewish men, women, and children;
moreover, many Christians in the countries occupied by the Germans
actively assisted the Germans in rounding up the Jews for the death
camps. In fact, a number of Jewish survivors of the Holocaust who
returned to Poland after the war were murdered in Polish pogroms! It
is understandable that these survivors felt the need to first heal
themselves before worrying about the world which had abandoned their
suffering people.
In addition, these survivors did not have the strong attraction to
secular western culture which an earlier generation of Bais Yaakov
students had once experienced, and their feelings are expressed in
the following memoir of Dr. Judith Grunfeld:
"Almost seventy years have passed since, and we have today most
unfortunately an easy enough means of demonstrating that all cultures
which we then venerated have revealed themselves to be nothing but a
flimsy veneer covering over diabolical inhumanity. European
humanitarian ideas so prevalent then, so much on the tip of
everyone's tongue, preached by leading university representatives,
have been proven utterly hollow. For they did not succeed in
preventing, and indeed could be said to be frequently instrumental in
strirring up the raging, terrible fire of man's inhumanity to man."
("Rebbitzen Grunfeld" by Miriam Dansky, p. 72)
Nevertheless, our sages teach that Torah - the Divine wisdom - is the
blueprint of creation, and that the Creator looked into the Torah
when He created the world (Genesis Rabbah 1:1). If our Creator looked
into the Torah and created the world, then when we look into the
Torah we can rediscover this world. In addition, the Torah reveals
that we have the potential to become holy vessels with the spiritual
power to transform and elevate the world; thus, no matter how much we
turn inward, the study of Torah reminds us that we must eventually
turn outward. This may be one of the reasons why a growing number of
Torah-committed Jews in our generation are rediscovering the writings
of Rabbi Hirsch, as a major theme of his teachings is the universal
goal of the Torah path.
The Bais Yaacov High School of Baltimore, under the leadership of its
principal, Rabbi Binyamin Steinberg, gave renewed emphasis to the
universal vision of the Torah. Rabbi Steinberg himself was a
Holocaust survivor, and in one of his talks to his students about
respect for other peoples, he reminded them of the Compassionate
One's promise to Abraham that "through you all the families of the
earth will be blessed" (Genesis 12:3). The following is an excerpt
from his talk:
"All the families of the earth," he declared. 'Who cares about all
the families of the earth?' you ask. Nevertheless, that's what the
Torah says...The people of Israel will be a blessing for all the
families of the earth. That means the Albanians, the Greeks, the
Chinese, the Indonesians, the African Americans - all the families of
the earth. That's what it says in my Torah! " (A Matter of Principal
- a biography of Rabbi Binyamin Steinberg by Hanoch Teller).
Before we can become a blessing to others, however, we first need to
turn inward in order to develop our unique strengths. As Sarah
Schneirer realized, we first have to renew ourselves before we can
renew the world. As the Prophet Isaiah proclaimed to our people:
"O House of Jacob: Come, let us walk by the light of Hashem! " (Isaiah 2:5)
See the above URL for more. YL
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