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The Or Sameach, Rav Meir Simcha Hakohen of Dvinsk ZT"L Yarzheit 4th Elul By D. Sofer This article originally appeared in Yated Neeman, Monsey NY. and is reprinted here with their permission It is nearly Elul. Students will soon return to their yeshivos and kollelim and all of us are beginning to prepare for the Yamim Noraim both emotionally and practically. It is at this awe-inspiring time that the call of Rav Meir Simcha Hakohen of Dvinsk should ring clearly in the ears of all lomdei Torah: “Far vos iz geffallen di shkida?” “Why have we regressed in our steadfast study of Torah?” This call stemmed from Reb Meir Simcha’s very essence, which was all Torah, in line with the mishna in Pirkei Avos “Hafoch ba v’hafoch ba d’chola ba,” “Probe it and probe for all is in it” (5:26). Rav Meir Simcha was known for his original chiddushim, brilliant analyses and most of all, his deep love of Torah. “One Sukkos,” relates Rav Leib Bakst, Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivas Ateres Mordechai in Detroit, “Reb Meir Simcha was studying with Rav Yechezkel Chefetz. In the middle of their studies, they encountered a very difficult passage of the Tosfos, whose meaning eluded them. After hours of strenuous efforts to understand the Tosfos, Reb Meir Simcha said, ‘Let’s pause for a moment and pray that we merit love of Torah.’ “‘Why pray for love of Torah?’ Reb Yechezkel asked in surprise. ‘Isn’t it better to pray that we understand the Torah, as it is written, “And illuminate our eyes in Your Torah?”’ “Reb Meir Simcha smiled and replied with a parable: ‘A mother leaves her child with a babysitter. The child begins to cry and doesn’t calm down even when the babysitter offers him a toy or a drink. When his mother returns, she rocks him and then picks him up, and within moments he stops crying. “‘The babysitter also tried to calm him. Why did the mother succeed in soothing him while the babysitter failed? How does the mother know precisely what her infant needs? The answer is simple. Her love for him is so deep that she and her child are like one entity. “‘As a result, she knows what hurts him and what is bothering him. From the nature of his cry, she knows whether he is thirsty, in pain or wet. A baby’s cries are clear signals that only a mother can decipher. Her understanding of his needs is an integral part of her makeup. “‘So it is with us. If we truly love the Torah, it will become an integral part of us, and we will be able to decipher its innermost meanings and understand its intentions. That is why we must pray for love of Torah.” ILLUSTRIOUS BEGINNINGS Reb Meir Simcha was born in Baltrimantz in 5603. His father, Reb Shimshon Klonimous, was an outstanding talmid chacham who was very wealthy. Reb Shimon Klonimous was also known for his hospitality, and his home was a meeting place for talmidei chachamim. One of the talmidei chachamim whom he had hosted for a lengthy period was Rav Meir of Tiktin, the Maharam. Out of gratitude for Rav Shimshon’s kindness, Rav Meir of Tiktin blessed Rav Shimshon that his wife would give birth to a son who would illuminate the world with his Torah. Later, they merited a similar blessing, this time from the rav of Baltrimantz. The rav was persecuted by some of the wealthy residents of the town, who even deprived him of his livelihood. When Rav Shimshon Klonimous’ wife learned of this, she rallied to the aid of the rav and his family, providing them with all their material needs. As a result, the rav blessed her that she would she would give birth to a son who would gladden his parents. Within a year, these two blessings were realized when Rav Shimshon Klonimous ’ wife gave birth to a boy. They named him Meir Simcha—Meir after Rav Meir of Tiktin, and Simcha in deference to the blessing of the rav of Baltrimantz. SAVED BY A MIRACLE Reb Meir Simcha grew up in an era when one of the harshest decrees ever imposed on the Jewish people loomed over Russia—the Cantonist decree. This decree, which was in effect from 5597-5615 (1837-1855), was issued by Czar Nikolai and mandated that the Jewish community hand over a certain quota of children to the Czarist army. The children’s military service began when they were 8, and lasted for approximately 25 years. Since the Czar’s real intention was to sever these children from their religion and convert them, no Jewish parent would willingly let his child be drafted. When the special “recruiting” seasons arrived, Jewish parents tried o hide their children, while the Czar sent soldiers to kidnap them. Under the alien and harsh circumstances of the Czarist army, many of the Cantonists, or kidnapped Jewish children, would succumb to their Russian officers’ “persuasions” and convert. Others died, while a few adamantly refused to convert, despite the hardships they suffered. When these unfortunate Cantonists finally returned to their families—a quarter of a century after their abductions—they were totally ignorant of their faith, and very boorish in their behavior. Many, however, did return to a full Jewish life in their final days. One Erev Shabbos, a knock was heard at the door of the home of Reb Shimshon Klonimous Hakohen, Reb Meir Simcha’s father. Reb Meir Simcha’s mother opened the door and saw a stranger on the threshold. “Rebbetzin,” the stranger whispered, “keep an eye on your son Meir Simcha. Tonight, the Czar’s soldiers will try and kidnap him.” Then he disappeared. When her husband returned from shul, the rebbetzin suggested that they hide Reb Meir Simcha in the large linen trunk in the bedroom. She then emptied the trunk and placed Reb Meir Simcha inside. She prayed he wouldn’t be found. That Friday night as the family was seated around the table, two kidnappers burst inside their home and began to ransack the house. But a miracle occurred, and they skipped over the linen trunk in which Reb Meir Simcha was hidden. ‘A SMALL, WHITE-WINGED ANGEL’ The eulogy delivered at Reb Meir Simcha’s funeral by Rav Avraham Moshe Vitkin, Rav of Baltrimantz at that time, sheds much light on the exceptional characteristics Reb Meir Simcha displayed as a child. “He would pore over his studies day and night,” said Reb Avraham Moshe, “and like a small, white-winged angel, would cause the beis medrash in which he studied to fill with light, joy and sweetness—the sweetness of Torah, which knew no bounds. “The elders of our town, who remember him when he was only ten, relate that his voice—the voice of Yaakov—would resound in the beis medrash. As he studied, he would detach himself from his surroundings. People would speak with him, but he didn’t hear them. His eyes were open, but he didn’t see what was taking place around him. He was so immersed in his Torah thoughts that it was very difficult to converse with him in mundane matters. “He had only one love—the love of Torah. The Gemara was his father, diligent study, his mother, Torah chiddushim, his brothers.” In 5620 Meir Simcha married Chaya, the daughter of the wealthy Reb Tzvi Paltiel Makovsky of Bialystock, who supported the young couple for a number of years. In time, Chaya opened a business, enabling her husband to continue his studies undisturbed. She often explained the verse “Kol haben ha’yilod ha’yeora taslichu’hu, vechol habas techayun, “Every male who is born shall be thrown into the river, and every female let live,” to mean that the man should cast himself into the sea of Torah, while his wife should sustain him. THE GEMILAS CHASSADIM BEIS MEDRASH Bialystock was a thriving city, and most of its many tradesmen were wealthy Jews. This prosperity had a very positive effect on the spiritual fiber of Bialystock, which was graced by 60 batei medrash where Torah learning could be heard the entire day. Illustrious talmidei chachamim presided as Bialystock’s rabbanim, leaving deep impressions on its residents. In this city of Torah, Reb Simcha Meir attained great spiritual heights. Reb Meir Simcha studied in the Gemilas Chassadim Beis Medrash, Bialystock’s most prominent Torah center, founded by Rav Moshe Zeev, author of Mora’os Hatsova’os and Agudas Aizov. Reb Meir Simcha’s main study partner at that time was his brother-in-law, Rav Shmuel Lipschitz, one of the most eminent talmidei chachamim of Bialystock. “When Reb Meir Simcha was studying in Bialystock,” Rav Eliezer Menachem Man Shach once related, “a very prominent Torah personality of the city visited the Rav of Brisk. The first question Rav Yosef Dov Halevi Soloveitchik asked the visitor was, ‘How is the lamdan of Bialystock?’ “‘Bialystock has many lamdanim,’ the visitor replied. “‘I mean its greatest lamdan, Reb Meir Simcha,’ the Rav of Brisk asserted.” After the petira of Rav Yom Tov Lipa Halperin, the Rav of Bialystock, Reb Meir Simcha was considered the primary candidate for that position. However, certain wealthy members of the community, who thought that his negative attitude toward the Chovevei Tzion movement was “too extreme,” thwarted his appointment. THE TWO LUMINARIES OF DVINSK Reb Meir Simcha remained in Bialystock for 23 years. During that period, he was offered many prestigious rabbinical positions, but he refused to accept them. When he was 40 he reluctantly accepted the position as rav of the non-Chassidic community in Dvinsk. Only a year after Rav Meir Simcha’s installation as the non-Chassidic Rav of Dvinsk, the city, which had always been home to Torah greats, assumed special distinction because Rav Yosef Rosen, the Gaon of Rogatchov, became rav of its Chassidic community. Although nearly every Lithuanian city at that time had two communities, a Chassidic one and an Ashkenazic one, in Dvinsk these two communities were like one when it came to their love and reverence for these two gedolei Yisroel. The relationship between these two gedolim was also unique, and each would comment on the other’s greatness in Torah. The Rogatchover would send all who approached him for a blessing to Reb Meir Simcha, saying, “Go to the Kohen.” Reb Meir Simcha, in turn, would refer problems involving much research to the Rogatchover, saying, “It will take me all night to examine this question. Ask the Rogatchover. He will answer you on the spot.” Following Reb Meir Simcha’s death, the Rogatchover paid him the greatest tribute that can be given to a Torah scholar. Prior to the funeral, the Rogatchover went to Reb Meir Simcha’s beis medrash and ordered its trustees to bury Reb Meir Simcha’s shtender in the grave alongside him. The practice of burying a shtender in the grave of a talmid chacham is performed only when it is absolutely certain that the shtender can testify in Heaven to its master’s total dedication to Torah. DVINSK’S 10TH MAN In Dvinsk, Reb Meir Simcha wrote his remarkable Torah chiddushim and devoted himself to leading his flock. He was beloved by all members of Dvinsk’s society, and many approached him for advice and brachos. His home was open to everyone, and he was attentive to the needs of all his constituents. Although he was offered rabbinical positions in many prestigious cites such as Kovno, Pinsk and even New York, he refused to leave Dvinsk. His devotion to his flock reached its height during World War I when Dvinsk, which contained a large fortress, was the target of frequent German bombardments. At that time, many people asked Reb Meir Simcha if they should leave the city, and he would invariably reply, “Every bullet and bomb has an address. If Heaven hasn’t decreed that a person be hit, no harm will befall him.” When the danger increased, most of Dvinsk’s residents left the city. Only those who lacked the financial means to escape remained behind, along with Reb Meir Simcha, who refused to abandon them. When his close followers pleaded with him to leave Dvinsk, he replied, “I won’t leave my destitute brothers at such a time. I will suffer with them. As long as there are nine other Jews in the city, I will remain and be its tenth man.” During that period, Rav Meir Simcha did his utmost to ease the suffering of his fellow townspeople, encouraging and inspiring them. He took a particular interest in the lot of local women whose husbands were on the battlefront, and would personally help them compose letters to their husbands. He and his wife also addressed their material needs, preparing firewood for them and providing them with money. Reb Meir Simcha’s conduct during that period became a guideline for posterity. In one of his letters, Rav Yaakov Yisroel Kaneivsky discusses the futile attempts of people to elude their destinies and to flee to more “secure” places, where they imagine that their chances of being saved are greater. He writes, “It is known that during the war, the gaon Rav Meir Simcha would advise people not to leave [Dvinsk], saying that every bullet has an address.” One time, when Reb Meir Simcha was in Vienna, he met Dvinsk’s mayor who offered to take him home in his rented vehicle. Reb Meir Simcha turned down the offer, saying that he preferred to return in the company of Jews. The mayor returned home alone, and Reb Meir Simcha crowded into a wagon with many Jews. On the way back to Dvinsk, the mayor’s car was hit by enemy fire, and all of the passengers were killed. On another occasion, a bomb actually fell on Reb Meir Simcha’s home, lodging itself in the wall of the room in which he was studying. The bomb didn’t explode, and the frightened neighbors called the police to remove it. Reb Meir Simcha refused to allow the police to touch the wall, saying, “If Hashem wills it, the bomb won’t explode and nothing will happen to me.” His followers were stunned by his position and feared for his life, but he remained firm in his trust in Hashem. The members of his community firmly believed that Reb Meir Simcha was the bastion of the city, and that in his merit it would not be destroyed. And so it was. Dvinsk was bombarded time and again by the Germans, but wasn’t destroyed. In addition, a Jewish committee was founded at that time for the benefit of the refugees who had fled Poland’s war zones and escaped to Russia. Among other things, the committee decided to save the many Torah scrolls located in the synagogues in outlying areas and bring them to Petersburg, which was considered the safest place. Knowing that the leaders of the various kehillos would not hand over their Torah scrolls without Reb Meir Simcha’s approval, they asked him to endorse their plan. But Reb Meir Simcha refused to approve it. The members of the committee were shocked. “What is wrong with our plan? All we want to do is to save the Torah scrolls from the Germans?” they asked in dismay. “Jews know from experience that they shouldn’t concentrate themselves in one place. Hashem was kind to the Jewish people and scattered them among the nations, so that if one community is harmed, Jews will still remain in other communities.” The members of the committee were astounded by his wisdom and abandoned their plan. In the end, Petersburg fell into the hands of the Communists, who closed all of its synagogues and seized all of its Torah scrolls. All of the other cities, whose Torah scrolls the committee had sought to collect, remained under Polish rule, and their vibrant Jewish communities lived on. STORMY TIMES The period in which Reb Meir Simcha lived was one of many changes and upheavals in both the world at large, and for the Jewish nation in particular. Ideas that were not consistent with Torah Judaism had surface 200 hundred years earlier, and now they began to gain momentum, manifesting themselves in movements such as Chovevei Tziyon, the Bund, and the Alliance (Kol Yisrael Chaveirim), all of which posed genuine threats to traditional Judaism. To counteract these Zionist and Haskala movements, the gedolei Yisroel founded chareidi organizations such as the Irgun Hakehillos Hachareidios in Hungary, the Kahal Machazikei Hadas in Galicia, the Hisachdus Hachareidim in Germany, Knesses Yisroel in Poland and the Histadrut Hachareidim in Russia. These organizations, whose activities were limited by the authorities, especially during the time of the Czarist regime, would hold secret meetings in Vilna, Kovno and Petersburg, which resulted in many initiatives to protect Torah-true Judaism. Reb Meir Simcha was very involved in these efforts, and along with other gedolei Yisroel, played an active role in these organizations. In 5653, he attended a meeting of rabbonim convened by Rav Yitzchok Elchonon Spector in Kovno. This meeting was called as a result of rumors that the Russians were about to pass a law forbidding shechita. Reb Meir Simcha, who was one of the chief spokesmen at the meeting, called on his colleagues to make an all-out effort to cancel that decree. Three years earlier, in 5650, Rav Eliyahu Meizel had tried to unite all of the chareidi organizations and form one central organization. However, secular elements thwarted these plans. Later on, in light of the growth of the various Zionist movements, these efforts were renewed and, at a meeting held in the town of Bad-Hamburg, near Frankfurt, the idea to establish a Worldwide Agudas Yisroel were finalized. At this meeting, which lasted for three weeks, the gedolei Yisroel devised ways to unite and counteract the Zionist influence. Reb Meir Simcha was one of the gedolei Yisroel who participated in this convention. Three years later, in Sivan 5672, the founding convention of Agudas Yisroel was held in Katowitz. Among the gedolim who attended were Rav Chaim Halevi Soloveitchik and Rav Chaim Ozer Grodzinski. Reb Meir Simcha was also invited, but due to his poor health could not attend. However, he dispatched a letter of blessing to the convention. At the convention, the Moetzes Gedolei HaTorah was formed. Reb Meir Simcha was among the 12 gedolim chosen to serve on the Moetzes, even though he was absent from the convention. ESTEEMED BY ALL It is related that when the Chofetz Chaim learned of the petira of Rav Naftoli Trop, the Granat, on motzaei Rosh Hashanah 5689, tears fell from his eyes. After reciting the Boruch Dayan Ha’Emes blessing, he said to Rav Elchonon Wasserman, who was present in the room, “Who will protect the generation now that Rav Naftoli has passed away?” Then, after a few moments of silence, he mentioned the names of some other gedolim who had protected the generation, such as “Hakohen.” According to Rav Elchonon, the Chofetz Chaim was referring to Reb Meir Simcha Hakohen of Dvinsk, who had passed away three years earlier. Rav Eliezer Menachem Man Shach once related, in the name of Rav Yitzchak Zeev Soloveitchik, that although Reb Meir Simcha and the Rav of Brisk disagreed on a crucial point at the meeting of gedolim in Vitebsk, at the end of the meeting, the Rav of Brisk visited him. “How is it possible to visit him when the two of you disagreed so adamantly?” the Rav of Brisk’s gabbai asked him. “True we disagreed,” replied the Rav of Brisk, “but does that mean that I should ignore the fact that Reb Meir Simcha is the gadol hador?” MAGNUM OPUS Reb Meir Simcha, who worked tirelessly to protect his fellow Jews from the influences of the Maskilim and the Zionists, and guided them during some of world Jewry’s most difficult times, is widely acclaimed for his two monumental works, the four-volume Or Same’ach, and Meshech Chochma. The first volume of Or Same’ach, a collection of Reb Meir Simcha’s Talmudic chiddushim, was published in Warsaw in 5664. Later on, two more volumes appeared. The fourth volume was published after Reb Meir Simcha’s petira by Rav Menachem Mendel Zak, the rav of Riga. Or Same’ach, which is studied by Torah scholars all over the world, serves as a fundamental work that, in its brilliance, penetrates the inner cores of the various sugyos of the Talmud. It is widely acclaimed for its straightforward, in-depth approach. Although Reb Meir Simcha had written the Meshech Chochma on the Torah during his youth, it was published posthumously. In this work, his vast knowledge, wisdom, piety and purity come to the fore. It, too, is a basic work that constantly guides Torah scholars. One of the most famous and oft-quoted pieces of Meshech Chochma is in Parshas B’Chukosai, where Reb Meir Simcha elaborates on the Galus cycle. He literally predicted that “when people will think that Berlin is Yerushalayim—then a storm will come and uproot the Jewish people and transplant them to a different country.É” This is but a sample of his most brilliant insights. A PERPETUAL FLAME On the fourth of Elul (parshas Shoftim) 5686, Reb Meir Simcha passed away. Since he was niftar at the Metropol Hotel in Riga, the Jews of Riga demanded that he be buried in their city, while the Jews of Dvinsk insisted that he be buried in the city where he had served as rav for so many years. The question was brought to the rav of Riga, Rav Menachem Mendel Zak, who ruled in favor of Dvinsk. In Riga, eulogies were delivered by Rav Zack as well as several other rabbonim. From there, the funeral set out by train to Dvinsk. At every station on the way, hundreds of Jews, among them rabbonim and community heads, awaited the train so that they could join the funeral entourage. Dvinsk itself was in a state of deep mourning, and all of the Jews of the city came to accompany Rav Meir Simcha on his final earthly journey. As related by Rav Nosson Meir Wachtfogel, the Rogatchover said at the levaya, “When a fire breaks out, and a man’s possessions or family are in danger, he reveals remarkable and even super-natural strength in his efforts to save them. This strength is not newly acquired, but latent. “[But] the fire that burned in the Or Same’ach was perpetual, and didn’t have to be activated by unusual circumstances. Love of Torah without limits burned in him. Every day, he discovered new powers within himself and continued to grow in Torah. Empowered by the fires of Torah, which burned in him, he made remarkable chiddushim.” May the fire kindled by the Or Same’ach continue to glow forever. And may it inspire lomdei Torah all over the world to upgrade their diligent Torah study this Elul.
============================================== The Or Same'ach
The light that shone from Dvinsk by Rabbi Yaakov Feitman This article originally appeared in the Jewish Observer and is also available in book form in the ArtScroll/Mesorah Publications Judaiscope Series. It is reprinted here with permissionRabbi Meir Simcha HaKohen Dvinsk - City of Gaonim Like a woman who has been forced into many unwanted marriages, the city has been known by many names. Yet, no one speaks of Daugavpils today; Dunaburg is mentioned only momentarily when one relates a vort from Reb Reuvele Dinaburger's Rosh LaReuvaini. Even the larger area of Latgale is forgotten, and Latvia herself lies silently anonymous in the belly of the great Russian bear. But Dvinsk lives on. For as long as Jews study the monumental works of Reb Yoseif Rosen, the Gaon of Rogatchov, and Reb Meir Simcha HaKohen, the name of Dvinsk will be spoken with respect and a touch of awe! Indeed, in the century and a half of the existence of the Jewish community in Dvinsk, two of the Torah giants of all ages flourished there, in the same period: From 1888, when the Rogatchover assumed the position of Rabbi of the Chassidic community of the city, until Reb Meir Simcha's death in 1926, Dvinsk was a dual Torah center for the world. Despite differences in approach to halachic problems, in personal temperament and in deportment, Reb Meir Simcha's and the Rogatchover's "constituency" was the same: Klal Yisrael. Letters from around the globe poured into Dvinsk seeking Torah guidance. It is no wonder that Reb Meir Dan Plotski, author of the Klei Chemdah, declared with unabashed admiration upon leaving the city: "I am envious of the city of Dvinsk for having merited the presence of two such great gaonim."1 The Two Half-Rabbis The phenomenon of two rabbis in a Lithuanian city was a common one, for almost every city contained two distinct communities, the Sephardic - here referring to Chassidim - and the Ashkenazic, also known as the Misnagdim. In the case of Dvinsk, the distinction was somewhat blurred because all factions of world Jewry claimed each of the two Torah giants as their own. Reb Meir Simcha had joked good-naturedly about the dichotomy.
The two "half-rabbis" of Dvinsk maintained a unique relationship, testing each other upon the most esoteric and abstruse Talmudic questions3 , and each humorously commenting upon the other's Torah knowledge and greatness:
On another occasion, Reb Meir Simcha characterized the Rogatchover's myriad references to any Talmudic question in the following way:
The Rogatchover, too, would comment upon Reb Meir Simcha in a similar vein, saying, "Reb Meir Simcha claims that he has no knowledge of achronim (later Torah authorities), but I know for a fact that he is an absolute master of every word in the Shach."6 Of course, the witty exchanges between the two Torah giants were merely reflections of a deep inner mutual respect and affection. The Rogatchover Gaon paid Reb Meir Simcha the ultimate compliment when he sent all those who came to him for a blessing to Reb Meir Simcha. "Go to the Kohen," he used to tell all.7 And Reb Meir Simcha would often refer questions requiring great amounts of research and erudition to the Rogatchover. ''I will have to toil all night over this," he would say, "but step in to the Rogatchover and he will answer you on the spot."8
The Enlightening "Light" Today, with the aid of a half century of evaluation, we can easily say that both the Rogatchover's Tzofnas Paane'ach and Reb Meir Simcha's Or Same'ach are true Torah classics. Yet, time has also shown that while the Rogatchover's sefarim remain the domain of a select few who have become accustomed to his terminology based on the Rambam's Moreh and the myriad references to every point, the Or Same'ach is the cherished treasure of many a ben Torah. Terse, to the point, often resplendently brilliant in its original interpretations, the Or Same'ach is a "must" in countless batei midrash. Torah classics do not achieve their status easily. There is no weekly bestseller list, and no published book review can grant instant status to a new sefer. Perhaps no other type of publication in the world receives as careful scrutiny as volumes of Torah chiddushim. Experts in the field examine every thought and idea again and again, generation after generation. Talmudic discussions are not studied in moments of light reading, but from total immersion in one minute area of thought. Very few have survived such scrutiny and maintained their lofty status. The names are engraved in our minds and hearts - the K'tzos and Nesivos, Reb Akiva Eiger ... and the Chazon Ish, Chiddushei Reb Chaim, and the Achi Ezer in many communities ... and the Or Same'ach on the Rambam. A talmid chacham main- tains a unique relationship with each of these classics. As he begins a paragraph, there is a picture in his mind's eye of a gadol baTorah, one of the tzaddikim of the generation, a man whose Torah opinions have become integrated into the eternal Torah heritage. And yet, as one examines a new sevara - a new concept - by one of these gedolim, the relationship is an intellectual one. Nothing is taken for granted, no explanation is accepted because Reb Meir Simcha has written it, or because Reb Chaim has said it must be so. Every word is reevaluated afresh, every concept dissected, every interpretation critically analyzed. It is under these incredibly exacting conditions that the Or Same'ach is today considered an indispensable Torah classic.
The Tenth Man Only once during the period from 1887 to 1926 did Dvinsk have but one rabbi. When World War I broke out, in 1914, the Russian Commander, Grand Duke Nikolai Nikolayevitch (uncle of Czar Nikolai II) ordered the expulsion of the Jews from along the Russo-German Front. Dvinsk became dangerous for Jews, with famine and disease wreaking havoc. All who could fled the city. Even the Rogatchover was prevailed upon by his followers to escape. But Reb Meir Simcha would not go. Neither the entreaties of his friends and students nor letters from gedolim around the world could persuade him to abandon his post. "As long as there are nine other Jews in that city, I will be the tenth for a minyan," he declared, and so infused hope and courage into his brethren. When he was reminded of the constant danger, Reb Meir Simcha declared, "Every bullet has a designated address and none will reach where there has been no Heavenly decree that it do so."9 o One stormy October during this difficult period, terrifying news quickly spread through Dvinsk: "They're taking the Rav!" Everyone ran into the street and beheld the shattering sight of Reb Meir Simcha surrounded by burly Cossacks carrying drawn revolvers. Only the serene visage and calm demeanor of Reb Meir Simcha saved the horrified crowd from hysteria. Despite the obvious dangers of doing so, thousands of Jews and Gentiles signed petitions attesting to the nobility of the Rav's character and his vital importance to the wellbeing of all members of that city. That very day, Reb Meir Simcha was freed and was never molested again.10 The Respect of the Gentiles The above incident illustrates one of Reb Meir Simcha's more unique qualities: his relationship with the non-Jews of Dvinsk. A Gaon following the most ancient of traditions - spending virtually all of his time studying and teaching Torah - Reb Meir Simcha developed a reputation as a Holy Man among the Gentiles of the city. Indeed it is said that when Reb Meir Simcha was incarcerated by the authorities, a certain Christian tanner presented himself in the Rav's place, imploring, "Please do not harass this holy man. For the good of the city, let him go."11 Reb Meir Simcha's reputation was so widespread that even non-Jews sought him to settle their quarrels. Some say his acceptability began with the case of the Jew and the gypsy.
Reb Meir Simcha was known to joke about this phenomenon and with a smile would say, "A Chassidic Rebbe often has many types of Chassidim, but I draw all types of followers."13 Another aspect of the singular esteem in which Reb Meir Simcha was held was the widespread belief in his ability to literally bring about miracles. A resident of Dvinsk relates the following:
Another such story was often related by an important member of the Dvinsk Koholisher Shul, where Reb Meir Simcha prayed.
The Wise Judge Despite his reputation for powers bordering on the miraculous, Reb Meir Simcha's primary traits were his incredible wisdom, his genuine concern for people, and the eloquence and beauty of every phrase.
In addition to his mastery of the technical details of halachah, Reb Meir Simcha had an amazingly accurate ear for discerning truth and falsity. This trait stood him in good stead during the Russian occupation of Dvinsk in 1919, when the Bolsheviks prohibited rabbis from adjudicating disputes according to the laws of the Torah. They were only allowed to act as arbitrators following secular guidelines.
On another occasion, Reb Meir Simcha's keen insight into human nature rescued an innocent young man from a terrible fate:
His Special Way With Words In seeking to define the special quality of Reb Meir Simcha which allowed him to influence so deeply the members of his community, we may follow his own example in discovering the uniqueness of many gedolim who had preceded him. For instance, he would single out the Nodah B'Yehuda for the clarity of his explanations, the Tumim for his intellect, the Vilna Gaon for the comprehensiveness of his erudition, the N'sivos for his profundity and Rabbi Akiva Eiger for his methodology. A thorough examination of Reb Meir Simcha's Talmudic novellae in his magnum opus the Or Same'ach is beyond the scope of both this writer and this biographical sketch. But a clue to Reb Meir Simcha's success in human relations lies in a line from his monumental posthumously published work on Chumash, the Meshech Chochmah.
This concern with not only the content of what is said, but with the aesthetics of the framing of a statement, was a prime factor in Reb Meir Simcha's use of the spoken and written word. His every utterance radiated an elegance and refinement which granted every word he used a special and definitive meaning. Just as he believed every bullet had an address, he understood that every word had to speed directly to its target, else something infinitely precious would be wasted. Thus, in his dealings with transgressors of any kind, his words were not meant to hurt or destroy, but to nurse the spiritual wound and rebuild the ravaged soul.
The Fruits of a Torah Life Reb Meir Simcha's acumen in judging human beings was not simply a personal wisdom, developed through scientific methods, enhanced by the fortune of an excellent brain. Reb Meir Simcha's sagacity was pure Torah. He knew no other source of knowledge, and indeed he neither sought nor needed it. By the time he was seven, the Tanach was on his fingertips; by nine, he knew one sixth of the Talmud thoroughly; by ten, he was teaching himself, for there was no longer a rebbe in Baltrimantz capable of teaching him Torah.21 By the time he was in his teens, Reb Meir Simcha had become - totally and completely - a vessel for Torah knowledge. His speech reflected statements in the Talmud, and indeed even in writings he never intended to publish, the cadences of Chazal are audible in every line. An example may be found in a gloss written by Reb Meir Simcha in his youth upon a page of the Responsa of the Chasam Sofer. It was his custom to fill almost every sefer in which he studied with comments on the subject at hand. In this particular responsum, the Chasam Sofer had strongly criticized a Talmudic discourse written by the author of the K'tzos Hachoshen, who was a Kohen. Reb Meir Simcha prefaces his remarks in defense of the K'tzos with the words: "A Kohen comes to the aid of a Kohen." If we did not know otherwise, we might dismiss such a line as a mere curiosity, or perhaps a young would-be scholar amusing himself. But we are speaking of Reb Meir Simcha HaKohen, the future Or Same'ach, to whom each word is precious, and indeed, Torah. Thus, not surprisingly, the Gemara (Eruvin 105a and Chulin 49a) records that sages of the Talmud, also Kohanim, "came to the aid" of their brother Kohanim with appropriate interpretations of Scripture.22 Especially noteworthy, Reb Meir Simcha wrote his comment on an old volume in the bais hamidrash of Baltrimantz, never dreaming that the glosses would one day be published. Why then abstruse references to obscure statements in the Talmud which are not even relevant to the subject at hand? Because even then Reb Meir Simcha thought in terms of the words of the Talmud. Reb Meir Simcha's sichas chulin (ordinary talk) literally came from Mesechta Chulin, as well as all the other Talmudic tractates. Reb Meir Simcha in his teens was already a living embodiment of Torah - breathing, walking, and personally reflecting every line of the Talmud. What did he do then? He sat down for twenty-seven uninterrupted years to learn Torah.24 When Rabbi Lipele Halpern, author of the famed Oneg Yom Tov, passed away, the youthful Reb Meir Simcha was offered the vacated position of Rav of Bialystok. But Reb Meir Simcha felt he had to learn more, to delve deeper, to gain perfection, to become ... a gadol.
Three Generations: A Chain of Fiery Holiness An example of this ability to stand back and view himself objectively, to remain steadfast and "not enter to see the holy place" may be seen in an incident which occurred during Reb Meir Simcha's period of study in Bialystok.
As if to complete the "triple braided chain which cannot be broken," it is told that when Reb Baruch Ber Leibowitz, Rosh Yeshiva of Knesses Bais Yitzchok in Slobodka, heard that Reb Meir Simcha was coming to Kovna, he put on his Shabbos clothing and went to meet him. However, when he reached the house where Reb Meir Simcha was staying, he could not bring himself to enter. "How can I approach him?" Reb Boruch Ber said. "The Rebbe, Reb Chaim Soloveitchik, called him the prince of the Torah." And he turned and went back to Slobodka. Thus we have three consecutive generations of gedolim who were so humble in their self-perception that they could not bring themselves to approach what they perceived as unattainable holiness ... What shall we say? Beyond Time and Space Despite Reb Meir Simcha's acute awareness of the decline of Torah greatness from generation to generation, when he was deeply immersed in learning Torah time and space were totally irrelevant. Since he would often pace while pondering Talmudic problems, Reb Meir Simcha occasionally found himself far from home, Gemara in hand, when he emerged from his reverie. A contemporary gadol relates that his cousin was present when Reb Meir Simcha climbed a ladder to reach a sefer on an upper shelf. Opening the sefer while still high on the ladder, he soon became engrossed in its contents and did not realize his position until morning.26 Thus we may observe in Reb Meir Simcha's work, and indeed in his life, a wonderful paradox. Living most of the day and night in the timeless universe of the Torah, Reb Meir Simcha was nevertheless one of the keenest observers and critics of the contemporary scene. His haunting prediction of the Holocaust and events leading up to it - "They will think that Berlin is Jerusalem" - is now famous and an integral part of any Torah-oriented syllabus of Holocaust studies.27 In his comments on Megillas Esther, Reb Meir Simcha discusses the then-current situation in Morocco and Romania. One of Reb Meir Simcha's most provocative statements in his Meshech Chochmah concerns the deterioration of values in each new Diaspora, leading ultimately to the next one:
(Interestingly, a theory on literary criticism that has gained prominence recently seems to echo this very same theme explicated by Reb Meir Simcha several generations ago.29) The Last Days In the summer of 1926, Reb Meir Simcha became critically ill and telegrams were sent from Dvinsk to gedolim all over the world to pray for their Rav. Reb Meir Simcha was staying at the Metropol Hotel in Riga, where he was being treated, and many gedolim visited him there. Rabbi Elchonon Wasserman later recalled that upon his suggestion that telegrams be sent to all yeshivos to say Tehillim in his behalf, Reb Meir Simcha responded characteristically with a statement from the Zohar that He Who cares for all of Israel will watch over this one of His sons also. One of Reb Meir Simcha's students, Rabbi Chaim Horash, relates (in his memoirs Simchas Chaim) of his visit to Reb Meir Simcha's bedside on 2 Elul, 1926, two days before Reb Meir Simcha's passing:
The Final Tribute His funeral was well attended, but the greatest tribute was not the formal speeches.
Even the Rogatchover Gaon, who dismissed the greatest scholars of his age with a word or phrase, paid Reb Meir Simcha the greatest posthumous compliment.
It is scarcely half a century ago, and yet ... we no longer live in Reb Meir Simcha's world, nor perhaps even understand it. But we can yearn. FOOTNOTES 1. Rabbi Zev A. Rabiner, Rabbeinu Meir Simcha HaKohen, Tel Aviv, 1967, p. 192. [Return to text] 2. Rabiner, p. 174. [Return to text] 3. See article on the Rogatchover Gaon . [Return to text] 4 Rabiner, p. 193. [Return to text] 5 Ibid. [Return to text] 6. Ibid. [Return to text] 8. S. Levenberg, The Jews in Latvia, Tel Aviv, 1971, pp. 225-227. [Return to text] 9. Rabbi S. Y. Zevin, Ishim V'shitos, Tel Aviv, 1966, p. 159. [Return to text] 10 Rabiner, p. 48. [Return to text] 12. Ibid., p. 38.[Return to text] 13. Ibid., p. 173.[Return to text] 14. Jews in Latvia, p. 266.[Return to text] 15. Rabiner, p. 186.[Return to text] 16 Ibid, p. 35.[Return to text] 17. Ibid.[Return to text] 18. Ibid., p. 187.[Return to text] 19 Ibid., p. 173.[Return to text] 21. Ibid., p. 17.[Return to text] 22. For a detailed explanation of this concept, see Rabbi Reuven Margolies, Mechkarim B'Darchei HaTalmud V'Chidutav Jerusalem, 1967, pp. 89-90.[Return to text] 23. Rabiner, p. 204.[Return to text] 25. Rabbi Moshe Sternbuch, Moadim Uzemanim, Jerusalem, 1970, v. 222, note 2.[Return to text] 26. Heard from Rabbi Yaakov Yitzchok Ruderman tz"l, Rosh Yeshiva, Ner Israel- Baltimore.[Return to text] 27. Mesech Chochmah on B'chukosei 26:44.[Return to text] 29. Harold Bloom in The Anxiety of Influence and A Map of Misreading.[Return to text] 30. For more on this custom, see Rabbi Shlomo Ashkenazi, Doros B'Yisroel, Tel Aviv, 1975, p. 309.[Return to text]
(The author is grateful to Rav Asher Bergman, author of “Ha’Or Someach,” for his help in preparing this article.)
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