Sunday, April 25, 2021

Shidduchim

 Rabbi Aharon Rakefet(Personal communication): Rav Aharon Kotler  gave a shiur at Chevron Yeshiva. All were very attentive to his brilliant Torah analysis - except for one. There was a bachor sitting in the back who seemed bored and inattentive - sitting with his feet propped up. Rav Aharon Kotler angrily walked to the back of the room to confront this arrogant young man. Rav Aharon Kotler had a deep impatience with anyone who was not interested in Torah - especially to his own insights which he had worked for hours to understand properly. [My brother – Rav Dovid Eidensohn - who learned in Lakewood under Rav Aharon told me that he had a special briefcase to carry his chidusshim. When he was finally given permission to leave communist Russia with minimum belongs - he personally carried that briefcase. At the border he was stopped and the official perused the papers and asked him whether they were state secrets. When Rav Ahron told him it was Torah chiddushim - the guard laughed and told him he could keep the "nonsense" and cross the border to freedom. Rav Ahron was furious and started yelling at the official for his chutzpah and contempt for Torah. Fortunately there were others who quickly got him past the check point - or he probably would have been sent to jail or worse.] Rav Aharon stood over the bachor and demanded to hear what he thought of the shiur. Rav Dov Schwartzman nonchalantly replied, "The Kletzer is a great Torah genius - but his shiur is based on an error. He forgot an explicit mishna." Rav Aharon fainted from the shock and when he recovered said -"that is the one I want as my son-in-law."

3 comments:

  1. "Rav Aharon FAINTED from the shock..."
    Sounds like hyperbole to me.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Rav Aharon was before my time, but everything i heard about him is great.

    ReplyDelete
  3. DT, you asked a few years ago about feedback, if there are sources for feedback in the Torah and Talmud?

    If you are still looking for sources - there is an explicit concept in both.

    In oral law, we learn "mitzvah goreret mitzvah, aveira goreret aveira "
    I would say that in part, there is conditioning, to do more of each.

    In the Torah, there is "im bechukotai telechu", and also if you walk with me with keri". This is also a feedback system.

    ReplyDelete

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