INTRODUCTION:
Should historical facts and truth matter to the Torah Jew?
Surprisingly to some, yet clearly to others, the answer is
very often ‘no’.
In this article, we will look at how various segments of the
Torah community have gone out of their way to deliberately prevent well-documented
information about numerous Torah leaders from being published – even in
instances where the leaders themselves were open and happy about sharing their
views and practices with others.
I have drawn extensively from the work of Rabbi Professor
Jacob J. Schacter[1]
from Yeshiva University, who holds a PhD from Harvard University and ordination
from Yeshiva Torah Vodaas.
R. ELIYAHU ELIEZER DESSLER (1892-1953):
YATED NE’EMAN:
Some years ago[2],
in the Chareidi (ultra-Orthodox[3])
publication, Yated Ne’eman, there appeared a short biography of R.
Eliyahu Eliezer Dessler which was authored by one of his most devoted students,
R. Aryeh Carmell.
[Yated Ne’eman (a ‘firmly secured peg’ –
Isaiah 22:23) is a Chareidi publication which was founded in 1985 by R.
Elazar Shach and R. Yaakov Kanievsky. Its ideology is anti-Zionist (both
secular and religious). The paper is well-known for not publishing pictures of
even modestly dressed women. For example, on April 3, 2009, it published a
manipulated picture of Israeli cabinet ministers. Two female cabinet
ministers were digitally removed and replaced instead with two other male
ministers. See Writing Women out of
Judaism.]
This particular biographical feature discusses the
influences the young ‘Elya Leizer’ Dessler was exposed to while growing up. His
father R. Reuven Dov was a student of R. Simcha Zissel Ziv who, in turn, was a
student of R. Yisrael Salanter, the founder of the Mussar (Ethics)
Movement.
R. Yisrael Salanter wanted to establish Jewish learning
institutions based on Torah and Mussar. His student R. Simcha Zissel,
however, felt that the students needed something more than just ‘Torah and
Mussar’ so he opened a yeshivah in Grobin where they studied Russian
language, history, geography and other secular subjects in addition to Torah.
R. Reuven Dov studied in that yeshivah, and when he later
taught his son who was to become the renowned R. Eliyahu Dessler, he introduced
his child to amongst other secular literature, Uncle Tom’s Cabin in
Russian translation.
This fairly benign piece of biographical information (which
the author had heard directly from R. Eliyahu Dessler himself while studying
under him) soon erupted into an outrage by some of the readership.
In a letter to the editor, one reader expressed the sentiment
that by including the information that R. Dessler had read Uncle Tom’s Cabin,
the author was doing nothing to strengthen ‘emunah, Torah and yiras Shomayim’
(faith and fear of G-d); and that “special care should be taken to
insure that such errors shall not be repeated in the future.”
Credit, though, must be given to Yated Ne’eman for
not retracting the story.
R. ARYEH CARMELL:
Schacter points out that this seemingly innocent piece of
information about Uncle Tom’s Cabin was actually omitted in another
biography of R. Dessler, in the introduction to Sefer Michtav meEliyahu also
authored by R. Aryeh Carmell. In that biography, however, he makes no mention
of his teacher, R. Dessler, involving himself in any secular studies.
However, in R. Carmell’s English translation of sections of
the same work (probably intended for a different audience) which he called Strive
For Truth, he does mention that R. Dessler underwent secular studies.
In Strive For Truth, R. Carmell actually offers even
more information about the secular influences on R. Dessler. He writes that R.
Dessler’s brother-in-law, R. Daniel Moshovitz, who was the Rosh Yeshiva in Kelm
between the two world wars, was very interested and familiar with the works of
Immanuel Kant and he would quote sections of it by heart to his students. R.
Carmell suggests that this was how R. Dessler himself was indirectly influenced
by Kant - which is why his views on free will and determinism in Sefer Michtav
meEliyahu are similar to those of Kant.[4]
AHARON SURASKI:
Schacter mentions another author, Aharon Suraski in his Marbitzei
Torah uMussar,[5]
who also omitted any reference to R. Dessler’s secular study curriculum.
This selective writing of the history of revered Torah
leaders is commonplace and has actually become a norm and standard:
VILNA GAON (1720-1797):
The Vilna Gaon was known to have had a positive view on
secular studies. He told his student, R. Baruch of Shklov, to translate Euclid’s
Elements into Hebrew. In the introduction to that translation, R. Baruch
writes that he heard from his teacher that “for each measure of secular
wisdom a person lacks, so will he lack a hundred measures of Torah, as Torah
and secular knowledge are inextricably connected.”
However, in a popular biography of the Vilna Gaon the
assertion is made that R. Baruch was mistaken and that the Gaon would never
have made such a statement.[6]
Schacter refutes this notion outright because this was not
the only statement of the Gaon’s positive view on secular wisdom. There was no
compelling reason for R. Baruch, a highly respected judge and member of the
Polish rabbinic elite to have misrepresented his teacher’s position. Until now,
for two hundred years no one had questioned the authenticity of his statement.
Furthermore, this statement was made seven years before the Gaon passed away so
there would have been plenty of time for the Gaon himself to have set the record
straight if he felt it necessary.[7]
And there is no evidence that any contemporaries of R. Baruch ever question the
authenticity of his statement.[8]
R. SHIMSHON REFAEL HIRSCH (1808-1888):
The same thing happened to R. Shimshon Refael Hirsch who
established the Torah Im Derech Eretz system where Torah study is to be
accompanied by secular study as well. The opponents of this system, who believe
in Torah study alone, maintained that R. Hirsch only intended this system for a
short and specific period in history (hora’at she’a) and not as an
ideology for the future.
R. BARUCH HALEVI EPSTEIN (1860-1941):
R. Baruch Halevi Epstein, author of Torah Temima,
wrote in his memoires[9]
how Mrs Rayna Batya, granddaughter of R. Chain Volozhiner, studied Mishna
and other works. In a 1988 English ‘translation’ of these memoirs, her
studying the Mishna is conspicuously absent. This was intentionally
omitted because women, in some circles, are discouraged from studying the
Talmud. [See Women
Studying Torah?]
R. NAFTALI TZVI YEHUDA BERLIN - THE ‘NETZIV’ (1816-1893):
The popular perception is that the Netziv closed down his famed
Volozhiner Yeshiva rather than allow secular studies as part of the curriculum,
as then demanded by the Russian authorities under influence from the
Enlightenment Movement. Schacter, however, shows that “There is absolutely
no doubt whatsoever that the Neziv allowed secular studies in Volozhin,” although
he did so begrudgingly.[10]
R. SHRAGA FEIVEL MENDLOWITZ (1886-1948):
R. Shraga Feivel Mendlowitz was one of the primary founders
of Orthodoxy in America in the early 20th-century. He was involved
in the founding of, amongst other institutions, Torah Umesorah, Beis Medrash
Govoha in Lakewood, Telshe Yeshiva and he headed Yeshiva Torah Vodaath in
Brooklyn.
In a biography of R. Mendlowitz, there is a section entitled
‘Against Going to College,’ where his strenuous opposition to attending
college is meticulously laid out. The biography asserts that R. Mendlowitz felt
that one attending college could never become a great Torah scholar and the
heretical views prevalent at such institutions would be too much to overcome.
But, the biography continues, when it became apparent that
some students were indeed attending college, it was decided to open a new
institution which would offer controlled secular programs under careful
scrutiny and oversight. R. Mendlowitz consulted with R. Aharon Kotler who
rejected outright the notion of any secular studies whatsoever. Acting on his
advice, apparently, R. Mendlowitz dropped the idea entirely.[11]
Schacter, however, shows that in fact, a very different story
took place. According to the archives of the Board of Regents of New York
State, which contain the original records of this new institution which was to
be called the American Hebrew Theological University, it would ordain Orthodox
rabbis and offer a high standard of secular studies. A prerequisite for
admission into this school would be a B. A. degree.
The records show that R. Mendlowitz together with R.
Yitzchak Hutner were original members of its Board of Trustees.
The abovementioned biography also omitted the fact that R.
Mendlowitz gave a lecture in Mesivta Torah Vodaath on the teachings of (the
‘Zionist’) Rav Kook.
And, to add ‘insult to injury’, it further omitted the fact
that R. Mendlowitz celebrated the founding of the State of Israel with the
recitation of the blessing ‘Shechchiyanu.’[12]
R. PINCHAS HIRSCHPRUNG (1912-1998):
Schacter does not bring this example, but R. Pinchas
Hirschprung, from whom I was fortunate enough to get my ordination, wrote about
how while running from the Nazis and after being completely fatigued, he had
contemplated suicide. [See A
Tribute to R. Pinchas Hirschprung.]
His biography is recorded in a book about great rabbis but there is no mention whatsoever of this piece of critical information which could serve as a source of inspiration and hope for those at the depths of despair - and which he himself was even prepared to share in his own written memoirs.
His biography is recorded in a book about great rabbis but there is no mention whatsoever of this piece of critical information which could serve as a source of inspiration and hope for those at the depths of despair - and which he himself was even prepared to share in his own written memoirs.
Most people are unaware of that he too had a vast knowledge
of secular wisdom, including Spinoza, Heine, Shakespeare, Kant and particularly
Freud.
THE PROBLEM WITH HISTORY:
To go back to our first example of R. Dessler’s
misrepresented biographies: Although, ironically in his adult life, R. Dessler
took an absolutely negative view of combining Torah with any secular study,
this does not change the fact that he had studied such literature himself. Yet
we see that across the board, the issue of R. Dessler having studied secular
literature as a child was a thorny issue for many of those who recorded and
read his biographies.
Why is such information about reading Uncle Tom’s Cabin
and undergoing secular studies considered to be such a contemptuous issue which
certain authors and publications feel the need to hide from their readers?
The answer, as Schacter sees it, is that:
“...historical ‘truth,’ per
se, as an independent value in and of itself, has not fared well in Jewish
tradition.
It has already repeatedly been
noted that the entire enterprise of history as we understand it today was not
valued by Hazal [our Sages of blessed memory][13].”
THE VALUE OF HISTORY:
R. OZER GRODZENSKI (1863-1940):
R. Ozer Grodzenski writes (translation mine):
“The great Torah [scholars]
from time immemorial never paid attention to delve into the history of the
Jewish people...
And even those small numbers
of great [scholars] who did busy themselves with history did so only occasionally
and in passing.”[14]
R. YAAKOV EMDEN (1697-1776):
One notable exception to the rule was R. Yaakov Emden who
did believe in the value of history and openly disagreed with the view of R.
Ovadiah Bartinoro (1445-1515) - best known for his commentary on the Mishna
- who considered the study of (gentile) history to be sefarim chitzonim
or external books which deprived the reader of his share in the world to
come.
But R. Emden wrote:
“[T]he scholar is obligated to
know at least those [historical][15]works
composed in Hebrew. It cannot be otherwise. It has significant implications for
the explanation of biblical verses and rabbinic statements as well...”[16]
THINGS BEGIN TO CHANGE:
Schacter explains, however, that in the 19th-century,
due to the anti-traditionalist agenda of some secular historians of the
Enlightenment Movement, a new ‘traditionalist’ history began to emerge, in
order to counter the secular alternative.
In the world of the 19th-century, almost every
Jewish ideology including Zionism, Chasidism, Reform and Orthodoxy, had to show
some historical authority as justification for its emergence.
Schacter writes:
“In fact, the greater the
perceived danger posed by this new emphasis on [Enlightenment][17]
history, the greater was the effort expended to present a version of the past
more in keeping with traditionalist values. The result was that historical
writing which hitherto enjoyed, at best, only a secondary status in traditional
Jewish life was catapulted, for purely defensive purposes, into a position of
some prominence and significance.”
SUBJECTIVE PORTRAYAL OF HISTORY:
Of course, the difficulty was in assessing which group told
the most objective history. Schacter quotes his teacher Professor Isadore Twersky, who cited his teacher,
Professor Harry Austryn Wolfson, who said that:
“Scholarship is not what you happen to
know about a subject; scholarship is what there is to know about that
subject.”
Schacter cites the British historian Edward H. Carr who wrote:
“The facts are really not at
all like fish on the fishmonger’s slab. They are like fish swimming about in a
vast and sometimes inaccessible ocean; and what the historian
catches will depend partly on chance,
but mainly on what part of the ocean he chooses to fish in and what
tackle he chooses to use—these two factors being, of course, determined
by the kind of fish he wants to catch. By and large, the historian will
get the kind of facts he wants.”[18]
BASIC FACTS ALWAYS REMAIN FACTS:
While this indeed is true of the inevitably biased process
of recounting history, Schacter is quick to point out that:
“Even if a story can be
explained in multiple ways, each reflecting the particular bias and
orientation of the storyteller, the facts of the story that can be known and are verifiable must be
told as accurately, honestly and truthfully as possible...
Differing interpretations of various historical events...is
one thing...[but][19]
to engage in conscious overt lying and distortion of reality is quite another.”
Our concern, in this article, is with how the ultra-Orthodox
community views its relationship to (not the interpretation, but rather
to) the indisputable facts of the history they record.
DISTORTION OF FACTS:
Whether R. Dessler, for example, read Uncle Tom’s Cabin
is not subject to the vagaries of interpretation because it is a fact!
By intentionally withholding that information it becomes, no longer a matter of
interpretation, but an act of intentional distortion instead.
This tactic of intentional distortion is not infrequent and has
become part of the strategy of the ultra-Orthodox style of retelling history.
R. AHARON FELDMAN AND ‘GEDOLIM BOOKS’:
Some time ago, R. Aharon Feldman - Rosh Yeshiva of Ner Yisrael in Baltimore - criticised what he called
the ‘Gedolim Books’ which are the biographies of the great Torah
personalities of our times. He wrote:
“All gedolim are presented in
a stereotyped fashion, their lives all following the same trajectory from child
prodigy to precocious[20]
adolescence to marrying a pious woman and, finally to Torah greatness...
They often overlook the fact
that certainly these men must have surely had their moments of self-doubt,
error and human frailty . . . . Great men are, of course, humans as
well; on the contrary, they are great because they overcame their
human shortcomings...”[21]
R. YITZCHAK HUTNER (1906-1980):
R. Yitzchak Hutner similarly wrote (translation mine):
“Everyone talks excitedly
about and exemplifies the pure speech of the Chafetz Chaim. But who knows about
all the battles, struggles, terrible hindrances, failures and regressions until
the Chafetz Chaim found his victory over the evil inclination.”[22]
R. AHARON LICHTENSTEIN (1933-2015):
R. Aharon Lichtenstein wrote about how a listener at the
funerals of two very different people, R. Aharon Kottler and R. Moshe Feinstein,
would have walked away thinking that there was little difference between them:
“It is astounding that
talmidei hakhamim who were habituated to noting the finest distinctions in
a halakhic sugya could so utterly fail to delineate and define persons
they had known and admired; and it seemed unlikely that this was simply because
they were now overcome by grief.”[23]
Schacter points out that the problem is even greater
because;
“Not only do they present a
stereotypical portrait of their subjects and ignore descriptions of their
struggles, they actually make statements that are not true.”
R. SHIMON SCHWAB (1908-1995) ON RECORDING HISTORY:
In defending the deep state of the ultra-Orthodox style of
recording history, R. Shimom Schwab (although, ironically, a product of the Torah
Im Derech Eretz approach) remarkably wrote:
“What ethical purpose is served by preserving a realistic
historic picture? Nothing but the satisfaction of curiosity.
We should tell ourselves and
our children the good memories of the good people, their unshakable faith,
their staunch defense of tradition, their life of truth, their impeccable
honesty, their boundless charity and their great reverence for Torah and Torah
sages.
What is gained by pointing out
their inadequacies and their contradictions?
We want to be inspired by
their example and learn from their experience...
Rather than write the history
of our forebears, every
generation has to put a veil over the human failings of its elders and glorify
all the rest which is great and beautiful.
That means we have to do without a real history book...
We do not need realism, we need inspiration from
our forefathers in order to pass it onto posterity.”[24]
DR. HAYM SOLOVEITCHIK ON ‘ORTHODOX’ HISTORY:
Dr. Haym Soloveitchik writes about how some within the ultra-Orthodox
camp write their own history:
“These works wear the guise of
history...
This historiography weaves features and values of the
present with real and supposed events of the past...
[T]his ‘history’ filters
untoward facts and glosses over the darker aspects of the past.
Indeed it often portrays event as they did not happen...
Yet we do not feel that we are
lying, for when values are
being inculcated, the facts of experience - empirical truth – appear, somehow,
to cease to be ‘true.’”[25]
PLAYING WITH HISTORY IS PLAYING WITH FIRE:
Schacter characterises the seriousness of the issues at
stake when we (re)write history in this manner:
“What
is at stake here are no less than the hotly contested and sharply debated
issues which go to the heart of contemporary Orthodoxy, i.e., attitude to
secular studies, Zionism, and women and Torah study.
In such circumstances, ignoring the truth, and
certainly distorting it, is fraught with much more serious implications...
In a real sense, to consider this entire matter as relevant
merely to ‘history’ is to trivialize it significantly.
For, indeed, distorting the words of a gadol [Torah leader][26] is
not just distorting history, it is distorting Torah.”
ANALYSIS:
The Halachic process essentially allows for a
spectrum of permitted possibilities under any given set of circumstances. This
is because the legal language is so carefully structured that Halachic
decisors are able to make use of every subtle nuance to determine an
appropriate outcome.
No one would suggest that we limit our classical sources to
narrow the material from which the skilled Halachic practitioner can draw
on.
Why then are we so persistent to sever and restrict possible
future outcomes when it concerns our living personifications of Halacha,
the Torah scholars; and why do we choose to misrepresent in such a wholesale
fashion the facts surrounding them until they fit with our personal and
contemporary paradigm constructs?
This surely precludes the possibility of us ever being able
to learn from them.
[1]
Facing the Truths of History, by Jacob J. Schacter. [The Torah u-Madda Journal, vol. 8 (1998-1999): 200-276.]
[2]
January 7th 1994.
[3]
Schacter does not use the term ‘ultra-Orthodox’ but I have because although he
refers to the ‘Orthodox’, it is clear that he is referencing the more
conservative segment of that community.
[4]
Strive for Truth 3 (Jerusalem and New York, 1989), 172-73.
[5]
Marbizei Torah u-Mussar 3 (Tel Aviv, 1976), 52-55.
[6] Bezalel
Landau, Ha-Gaon he-Hasid mi-Vilna (Jerusalem, 1978), 217, 225-26, n. 16.
[7] As
to the assertion that R. Baruch of Shklov was an enthusiastic member of the
Enlightenment, Schacter maintains that recent scholarship has shown that not to
have been the case.
[8] On the other side of the scale, the
Vilna Gaon’s harsh statement in his commentary on Yoreh De’ah, that he
couldn’t understand why Rambam was so preoccupied with his ‘cursed
philosophy’ (and hence didn’t believe in sorcery, demons, amulets etc.) was
called into question by some of those within the Enlightenment. They maintained
that such a statement was a forgery because the style does not match the rest
of his writings which are usually more cursory. Schacter, however, shows that
original writings in the Gaon’s own hand indicate them to be authentic. Thus
both sides of the religious-political isle showed distrust towards each other.
[9]
Sefer Mekor Baruch.
[10]
Schacter writes: “To my surprise, my article has been cited in support
of the very proposition it sought to disprove... See, for example,
Jonathan Sacks, One People?: Tradition, Modernity, and Jewish Unity (Oxford,
1993), 61 and Shaul Shimon Deutsch,Lar- ger Than Life: The Life and Times
of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Menachem Mendel Schneerson 2 (New
York, 1997), 71 and p. 309, n. 2. Both write that the Neziv closed Volozhin
rather than introduce secular studies into its curriculum and cite my article
as supporting evidence for that assertion.”
[11] A.
Suraski, Shluha de-Rahmana, pp. 173-74.
[12] Hillel
Seidman, R. Shraga Feivel Mendlowitz (New York, 1976), 106.
[13]
Parenthesis mine.
[14] See his approbation to R. Yehudah
Halevi Lipschitz’s Sefer Dor Yesharim, which was a traditionalist response to
Dor Dor veDorshav by Isaac Hirsch Weiss.
[15]
Parenthesis mine.
[16]
From R. Emden’s personal notes in the margins to his Talmud set. These were
later printed as Chiddushin veHagahot.
[17]
Parenthesis mine.
[18] E.H.Carr,
What is
History? (New York, 1961), 26.
[19]
Parenthesis mine.
[20]
Precocious is defined as showing mental development or achievement much earlier than usual.
[21] A. Feldman, “Gedolim Books and
the Biography of Reb Yaakov Kamenetzky,” The Jewish Observer 27:8
(November 1994): 32-33.
[22] Sefer Pachad Yitzchak: Iggerot uKetavim (New
York, 1991), 217-19, #128.
[23] “Torah and General Culture:
Confluence and Conflict,” in Judaism’s Encounter with Other Cultures,
p. 288.
[24] R. S. Schwab,
Selected Writings (Lakewood, 1988), 234.
[25]
H. Soloveitchik, “Rupture and Reconstruction: The Transformation
of Contemporary Orthodoxy,” Tradition 28:4 (Summer 1994): 84-85.
[26]
Parenthesis mine.
שֶׁקֶר שָׂנֵאתִי, וַאֲתַעֵבָה; תּוֹרָתְךָ אָהָבְתִּי. רֹאשׁ-דְּבָרְךָ אֱמֶת; וּלְעוֹלָם, כָּל-מִשְׁפַּט צִדְקֶךָ. מִפִּקּוּדֶיךָ אֶתְבּוֹנָן; עַל כֵּן, שָׂנֵאתִי כָּל-אֹרַח שָׁקֶר.
ReplyDeleteקָרוֹב אַתָּה יְהוָה; וְכָל-מִצְוֺתֶיךָ אֱמֶת. צִדְקָתְךָ צֶדֶק לְעוֹלָם; וְתוֹרָתְךָ אֱמֶת. עַל-כֵּן, כָּל-פִּקּוּדֵי כֹל יִשָּׁרְתִּי; כָּל-אֹרַח שֶׁקֶר שָׂנֵאתִי.
I hate and abhor falsehood, I love your teaching. Truth is the essence of Your word, your just rules are eternal. I ponder Your precepts, therefore I hate every false way.
You, O lord, are near, and all your commandments are true. Your righteousness is eternal, Your teaching is true. Truly, by all (Your) precepts I walk straight, I hate every false way.
From Tehillim 119. Translation from "The Jewish Study Bible."