Weekly Chasidic Story #1341 (5783-48) 27 Av 5783 (Aug. 21, 2023)

 

"The Worth of Miracles"

She placed her son under the table in the room where the Rebbe known as the Tzemech Tzedek received people for private audience.

Connection: Marriage and Divorce are topics presented in the weekly Torah reading, Ki Teitzei.

 

Story in PDF format for more convenient printing

 

The Worth of Miracles


My saintly maternal grandmother - the Rebbetzin Rivkah, wife of the Rebbe Maharash, told us that a certain aguna (a woman abandoned by her husband) once came to her father-in-law, the saintly Rebbe (the Tzemach Tzedek). She brought along her son, who was a lad of eleven or twelve. The boy was totally mute, and also hard of hearing.

This was during the time when agunot were only permitted to enter the antechamber, while the door (to the Rebbe's room) remained open. The Rebbe would sit there and listen to each one's petition and history. Then, he would reply to the attendant, Reb Chaim-Dov,[1] "Tell her to travel to such and such a place" or "tell her to consult Rabbi so-and-so," etc.

This aguna would come to the Rebbe several times a week, bringing her son. At the same time, she would bring food.[2] Several weeks passed, but so many people had come that her turn to enter had not yet arrived.

Once, she placed her son under the table in the room where the Rebbe received people for yechidus, (private audience), cautioning him that when the Rebbe began to receive people, he should rise from his hiding place and hand the Rebbe her petition. The lad followed his mother's instructions, and sat under the table, hidden by the tablecloth and unseen by anyone.

The procedure was that the attendant would stand near the table, while the other attendant- Reb Elia-Leib[3]- would assign the order in which the chassidim were to enter. Suddenly, the lad emerged from his hiding place. Reb Chaim-Dov became very angry and shouted, "Sheigetz!"

To this, the Rebbe remarked, "Simple faith lights up the eyes; greatness is given to certain individuals only for the good of the Jewish people.[4]"

He then turned to the lad and uttered the following holy words: "Go and tell your mother that your father is still alive. She should travel to Denenburg."

"This agunah had been sitting in my home and weeping about her misfortune. Her husband had been missing for seven years. Now, several rabbis had given her permission to remarry, but only on condition that the Rebbe agreed.[5]

"Suddenly, her son entered and cried out in a loud voice, 'The Rebbe told me to tell Mother that Father is alive, and that she should travel to Denenburg.' At this, the agunah fainted.

"This double miracle -- the prophetic information about the husband's whereabouts, and the mute boy's suddenly regaining his speech -- caused a great commotion. At this, my mother-in-law, Rebbetzin Chaya-Mushka (wife of the Tzemach Tzedek), remarked:

"'Just look at what everyone's gotten so excited about! At my father's (the second Rebbe of Lubavitch) and my grandfather's (the first Rebbe of Lubavitch) court, miracles lay scattered about, and no one bothered to pick them up. Just look at what is happening, and what's caused so much excitement! Grandfather said that he would prefer it if people understood Chassidut. As for getting excited about miracles, we leave that for the Polisher and Hungarian [6] chasidim!

Translator's note: I heard an addendum to this story, told by elder chassidim. The Tzemach Tzedek used to admonish his sons when they sent people to him for a miracle, for he claimed that he was not a Vohlynian Rebbe who performed miracles. When they reminded him of our present story, he denied that any miracle was involved. Rabbamin and other communal officials of many different cities would visit him regularly for yechidus, and they would tell him of the recent doings in their hometown, And so, when he read the aguna's description of her missing husband, he realized that it was a man whom a recent visitor from Denenburg had described. His son, the future Rebbe Maharash, then reminded him of the mute boy who suddenly regained his speech. To this, the Tzemach Tzedek replied, "I had no idea that the boy was unable to speak!" In other words, the miracle had not been deliberate, for he had been unaware that one was even needed. But, the moment the Rebbe uttered the words, "Go and tell your mother…" that the boy automatically regained his speech.

~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Source: Compiled and supplemented by Yerachmiel Tilles from the English translation in Chayenu (Shoftim 5771/2011) of an excerpt of a letter from the sixth Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef-Yitzchak Schneersohn (grandson of Rebbetzin Rivka) dated 2 Av 5688 (July 19, 1928) that was published in "Igros Kodesh of the Rebbe Rayatz," vol. 2, #394.

Connection: Marriage and Divorce are topics presented in the weekly Torah reading, Ki Teitzei.

Biographical notes:
Rabbi Menachem-Mendel Schneersohn, the 3rd Lubavitcher Rebbe [29 Elul 5549 - 13 Nissan 5626 (Sept. 1789 - April 1866)], the third Rebbe of Chabad, was known as the Tzemach Tzedek, after his books of Jewish Law responsa and Talmudic commentary called by that name. He was renowned not only as the Rebbe of tens of thousands of chasidim, but also as a leading scholar in his generation in both the revealed and secret aspects of Torah.

Rebbetzin Rivka Schneerson (1833- 10 Shvat 1914) a maternal granddaughter of Rabbi DovBer, the 2nd Rebbe of Chabad-Lubavitch, at age 16 married her first cousin, Rabbi Shmuel, who later became the fourth Lubavitcher Rebbe. Surviving her husband by 33 years, for many years she was the esteemed matriarch of Lubavitch, and chasidim frequented her home to listen to her accounts of the early years of Lubavitch. She is the source of many of the stories recorded in the talks, letters and memoirs of her grandson, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak (the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe). Today's Beis Rivka network of girls' schools, founded by Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak in the 1940's, are named after her.

 

Footnotes:

[1]Reb Chaim Dov served as the Tzemach Tzedek's gabbai-attendant for 36 years. He was famous for keeping absolutely secret anything he happened to overhear.
[2]Apparently, for the other people waiting for yechidus.
[3]He was the Tzemach Tzedek's secretary, who later became his personal attendant.
[4]I.e. all this ceremony at the Rebbe's court resulted from the Tzemach Tzedek's greatness. But this greatness was given to him "only for the good of the Jewish people." And who deserved it more than this agunah, with her simple faith in tzadikim?
[5]Apparently, there was some sort of evidence that the husband had died. The rabbis deemed this evidence sufficient to permit her to remarry, but they were not absolutely certain. Therefore, the permission was given on condition that the Tzemach Tzedek agreed.
[6]Compiler's note: In the original, "chasidim of Vohlynia." (Volhynia is a historic region in Central and Eastern Europe, between southeastern Poland, southwestern Belarus, and western Ukraine. -Wiki) I took the liberty to update it to the contemporary colloquial expression. --YT





Yerachmiel Tilles is co-founder and associate director of Ascent-of-Safed, and chief editor of this website (and of KabbalaOnline.org). He has hundreds of published stories to his credit, and many have been translated into other languages. He tells them live at Ascent nearly every Saturday night.

To receive the Story by e-mail every Wednesday--sign up here!

"Festivals of the Full Moon"
("Under the Full Moon" vol 2 - holiday stories)
is now available for purchase from ASCENT
* ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ *

Book 1 of Yerachmiel Tilles's 3-volume set, "Saturday Night, Full Moon",
is also available for
purchase on our KabbalaOnline-shop site.


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Yerachmiel Tilles is co-founder and associate director of Ascent-of-Safed, and chief editor of this website (and of KabbalaOnline.org). He has hundreds of published stories to his credit, and many have been translated into other languages. He tells them live at Ascent nearly every Saturday night.

To receive the Story by e-mail every Wednesday--sign up here!

"Festivals of the Full Moon"
("Under the Full Moon" vol 2 - holiday stories)
is now available for purchase from ASCENT
* ~ * ~ * ~ * ~ *

Book 1 of Yerachmiel Tilles's 3-volume set, "Saturday Night, Full Moon",
is also available for
purchase on our KabbalaOnline-shop site.


back to Top   back to this year's Story Index   Stories home page   Stories Archives
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