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Weekly Chasidic Story #1144 (s5780-07/
13 Mar-Cheshvan, 5780)
For Generations to Come
The Lubavitcher Rebbe told the teacher twice, The education of
Jewish children is a conduit for blessing both material and spiritual
for you and your family for generations to come.
Connection: Weekly Reading of Vayera -- "I have known him [Avraham],
so that he will command his children and his household after him, and they will
keep G-d's way, doing charity and justice" (see Gen.18:18-19).
Story in PDF
format for more convenient printing.
For Generations to Come
In 1973, just before the outbreak of the Yom Kippur War, I [Mrs. Zlata (Freiman)
Hertzel] had traveled from Israel where I was living to New York to attend my
brother's wedding, and while there, I came to see the Rebbe.
Before the audience was to take place, Rabbi Leibel Groner, the Rebbe's secretary,
instructed me to write down my requests on a piece of paper which would be handed
into the Rebbe in advance. I did as he instructed - I wrote that I was married
with children, that I was teaching in the Chabad school in Lod, and that my
children were in daycare which was costing more than the money I was making.
I wanted the Rebbe's advice - should I leave my job and stay home with my kids,
instead of borrowing every month to make ends meet?
When I walked into the Rebbe's office, he had a big pile of letters on his desk
and he reached into it to extract my letter - he pulled it out just like that
without even looking for it. He read it quickly and then answered my question
with this statement:
"I see you are teaching the children of Israel at the school Reshet Oholei
Yosef Yitzchak, which is named after my holy father-in law," he began.
"You should know that the education of Jewish children is a conduit for
blessing - both material and spiritual - for you and your family for generations
to come."
Then he repeated those words again, and I felt that the audience was over.
It was only after I left that the Rebbe's words started sinking in. I thought:
"The Rebbe is telling me that my job educating children is a conduit for
blessings. So clearly, there is only one thing I can do - keep working."
I called my husband, Meir, and after I told him what the Rebbe said, he concurred
with my decision.
Before I could return to Israel, however, the Yom Kippur War broke out and the
news we were hearing was not good.
My husband was drafted into a combat unit on a moment's notice and, because
I was still in New York, he distributed our children amongst our neighbors and
relatives. I was informed that he was sent to the front lines at Ismailia, Egypt
but that's all I knew. I immediately asked Rabbi Groner for another audience
with the Rebbe, but he could not schedule it as I had just been to see the Rebbe
a few days before. However, after I broke down in tears, he suggested that I
wait outside the office and ask for a blessing for my husband when the Rebbe
came out.
My heart was pounding, but I mustered the courage to approach the Rebbe as he
passed by and make my plea. The Rebbe responded, "When you return to the
Holy Land, you will find that all your loved ones are healthy and whole. Be
sure to keep in touch with me and let me know the good news. You can call me
collect."
He said this three times - once in English, once in Yiddish and once in Hebrew
- and I knew his words would come true. I was trembling with excitement because
I was sure it was going to happen exactly as he said. And indeed it did.
I had a hard time getting a plane ticket back to Israel because all the flights
were commandeered for returning soldiers, doctors and other essential personnel.
But I begged the airline - telling them that my husband was in combat and I
had no idea where my children were - and so they let me on the plane, even though
I would have to sit on the floor.
Once I was on the plane, a soldier gave up his seat for me, and I told all the
other passengers what the Rebbe had said. I believe they were greatly encouraged
by his words. Even people who were not religious. All the men present put on
their yarmulkes - those who didn't have them covered their heads with napkins
- and the plane turned into one praying synagogue. It was very amazing and moving
to see this.
At some point during our flight, the plane started zig-zagging in the sky because
we had encountered a dogfight between our planes and Egyptian planes. I was
so scared that I burst out crying when this was happening, but one of the soldiers
said to me, "Why are you crying? Your Rebbe told you that everything would
turn out all right for you and your loved ones." And that reminder calmed
me down.
When we landed, the airport was absolutely dark, and there was no public transportation
of any kind - everything had been turned over to the war effort. But I managed
to make my way home, and I located my children.
The war lasted close to three weeks. When the dust settled, though many Israeli
soldiers had been killed and injured, my husband came home safe and sound just
as the Rebbe said he would. As the Rebbe had requested, I made sure to call
New York to report that all was well with my family.
After the war, I returned to work, and I kept on working. I have now been a
teacher in the Oholei Yosef Yitzchak system for thirty-five years. I never wanted
to block the conduit that was bringing blessings to me and my family. Yes, there
were financial difficulties at the beginning, but after a time, my salary increased
and I no longer needed to borrow money to send my children to daycare. I saw
the blessings increase from year to year. I saw my children growing up, being
educated, becoming successful in marriage, in raising their own children. I
saw the Rebbe's blessing in action from generation to generation.
And today I would say to anyone involved in Jewish education: "It's a huge
thing that you are doing; it's the most important thing in the world. Our children
are our most valuable treasure, and they are in your hands."
For this reason, I never retired. People say to me, "What? At your age,
you are still working? How do you have the energy for this?" And I answer,
"I do it for the blessing and for the happiness it brings me."
Today, I live in Upper Nazareth (Nazareth Illit) where I am the principal of
a girls' high school. The girls are bussed in from the entire region, and they
are so pleased to come, so pleased with the school - the good education, the
good teachers, the good atmosphere. Our school even won a regional prize for
excellence. And I really see the Rebbe's blessing all around me, still flowing
after more than forty years.
~~~~~~~~~~~~~
Source: Adapted by Yerachmiel Tilles from a mailing of
"JEM - Here's My Story" (jemedia.org), as part of their extraordinary
"My Encounter with the Rebbe" project, documenting the life of the
Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi M. M. Schneerson of righteous memory, in one of the
1000+ videotaped interviews conducted to date.
Mrs. Zlata (Freiman) Hertzel is the principal of the Chabad Girls School
in Nazereth Illit, in 1996 her husband, Meir, passed away. She was remarried
to Rabbi Yeshayau Hertzel, the Chief Rabbi of Nazaereth Illit where she was
interviewed in May of 2015.
Connection: Weekly Reading of Vayeira -- "I have known him
[Avraham], so that he will command his children and his household after him,
and they will keep G-d's way, doing charity and justice" (see Gen.18:18-19).
Biographical note: Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson, the Lubavitcher
Rebbe: [11 Nissan 5662 - 3 Tammuz 5754 (April 1902 - June 1994 C.E.)], became
the seventh Rebbe of the Chabad dynasty after his father-in-law's passing on
10 Shvat 5710 (1950 C.E.). He is widely acknowledged as the greatest Jewish
leader of the second half of the 20th century. Although a dominant scholar in
both the revealed and hidden aspects of Torah and fluent in many languages and
scientific subjects, the Rebbe is best known for his extraordinary love and
concern for every Jew on the planet. His emissaries around the globe dedicated
to strengthening Judaism number in the thousands. Hundreds of volumes of his
teachings have been printed, as well as dozens of English renditions.
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.
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