Rabbi Doniel Staum, LMSW
Rabbi, Kehillat New Hempstead
Rebbe/Guidance Counselor – ASHAR
Principal – Ohr Naftoli- New Windsor
STAM
TORAH
PARSHAS
VAYETZEI 5776
“THE OWNER OF MONTICELLO ”
A few years ago,
Rabbi Zechariah Wallerstein[1]
related the following personal extraordinary story:
“There was a
popular pool-hall on the main street in Monticello
that had a dance club in the back. It was a terribly sinful place where kids
went to hang out. The worst was on Motzei Shabbos during the summer, when there
would be a crowd of about two hundred fifty Jewish boys and girls ‘hanging
out’.
“It was an
untenable situation and we felt that we had to do something. I went with a few
friends to discuss the matter with Rabbi Dovid Feinstein shlita. I told Rabbi
Feinstein that we had an idea which we hoped could at least put a damper on the
frivolous partying that was going on. A group of couples, including my wife and
myself, planned to go to the pool-hall on Motzei Shabbos and mingle with the
rambunctious crowds and schmooze with them. The thought was that between the
eight of us, many of the boys and girls would recognize us. If they felt
uncomfortable by our presence perhaps they would leave. It would at least
prevent the boys and girls who stopped by to ‘see what was going on’ from
joining.
“We also
arranged to have the bowling alley in Kiamesha rented out for the boys, so
those boys who we were able to convince to leave would have an incentive of
where they could go. Rabbi Feinstein
agreed to our plan.
“On Motzei
Shabbos eight couples came down to the pool-hall. It was a wild party, replete
with raucous music, smoking, and gender-intermingling. After walking around and
schmoozing with some of the kids, two of my friends and I decided that we
should go into the club in the back to see if we could have any effect there. I
knew some of my students were back there and that they would feel embarrassed
if they saw me walk in. But when we tried to enter the club, the guard at the
door told us “we were too old”. I
reasoned with him that we only wanted to walk through. Finally, he relented and
told me that if I really thought there was ‘stuff’ going on in the back I could
go in myself, look around, and leave immediately.
“I was about to
walk in when suddenly the owner of the pool hall rushed over and told me I
couldn’t go in. “Forget it. All of you Rabbis have to get out of here.” I told
him that if he wouldn’t let me in the back I would stay and shoot pool. But he
was adamant, “We don’t want your money and we don’t want you in here. Just get
out!” As he said it, three bouncers began to physically shove us out. The
bouncers pushed us out of the hall and literally threw us down the steps
outside the pool hall.
“I began
screaming at the crowd of teens gathered at the top of the steps. “Do you see
how low you’ve fallen? Three Rabbis are thrown out right in front of your eyes
and you don’t say a word?!”
“Meanwhile the
owner of the club looked down at us from the top of the steps and
condescendingly said, “Rabbis, you’re not going to win this! You don’t know who
you’re messing with. I own Monticello !”
“A police
officer was standing nearby and saw what was happened. He called to us to get
out of there. I couldn’t believe it. We had just been pushed out for no reason
and the cop was siding with the assailant. I realized the owner must truly be
very influential in Monticello .
“The ‘Rabbis
getting thrown out of the pool hall’ immediately became the talk of the
mountains. The next day we had a meeting and I found out that the owner of the
hall owned a tremendous amount of real estate and town houses in Monticello . It truly
seemed as if he owned Monticello .
So we went back
to the owner and told him that we felt bad about what happened. We told him
that we weren’t out to ruin the kid’s fun; we just didn’t like the sinful
atmosphere that was being promoted. So we offered to rent out the pool hall for
the boys and a bowling alley for girls. Everyone could have a good time, albeit
separately. The owner agreed to rent the pool hall to us for a large sum of
money.
“That Motzei
Shabbos we invited the boys to the pool hall and twenty boys showed up (fifteen
girls showed up at the bowling alley). I decided that for the next week I had
to come up with a better ‘draw’, so I invited Yossi Piamenta to play in the
pool hall with his band. It would be a free night of pool, music, and pizza. I
was sure we would have a big crowd.
But that second
Motzei Shabbos, again only twenty boys showed up.
“After the
‘concert’ the owner of the pool hall turned to me and said, ‘You see Rabbi you
were wrong! The boys and girls need each other. You’re trying to stop something
that you just can’t stop. You brought in Piamenta, free pizza, free pool, and
look who came. You see that you’re wrong. So I’ll tell you what I am going to
do. On Wednesday night I am going to host the craziest party Monticello has ever seen. I will have free
beer, free admission, free food and rocking music. They are going to have the
wildest time of their lives.” I pleaded with him not to do it, but he wouldn’t
listen. “You can’t stop it Rabbi; they need each other!” He was right; there
was nothing I could do. I left feeling very defeated.
“That Tuesday I
was driving by the pool-hall when I noticed signs plastered all over the
building on every side, “Closed by the Fire Department”; “Do not enter”;
“VIOLATION!”; “For Sale”.
“We had no idea
what happened until the next day. I have a friend who is very involved with the
politicians in Monticello .
The Chief of the Fire Department called him up and told him that they shut down
the pool-hall. My friend replied that he had never asked them to do so. The
Chief replied, “It has nothing to do with you. On Sunday morning we went into
the building to perform a routine safety check. When we went into the basement
we found that the owner of the pool-hall had antique cars that he was
repainting and refurbishing. He had so much paint, solvent, chemicals, and gas
in the basement that if one cigarette butt would have been thrown into that
basement the building would have blown sky high, and you would have had over
two hundred dead Jewish kids.”
“The non-Jewish
Chief continued, “You should know that your G-d watches out for your children.
That building was on top of a time-bomb. There was so much solvent without
egress that half of Monticello
could have easily blown up. I want you to know of every group that we deal
with, we have never had another group that cares about their children like you
Jews do.”
“That Motzei
Shabbos we again rented two different bowling alleys for the boys and girls,
but this time it was relatively full. About two thirty in the morning, in
between driving back and forth from the girls in Kiamesha to the boys in Liberty , I drove back to
the pool-hall. It was almost exactly the same time as when we were thrown down
the steps just a few weeks prior, except now it was completely deserted. I
stood at the bottom of the steps, looked up toward the sky and screamed,
“Hashem, YOU OWN MONTICELLO![2]”
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
“Yaakov departed from Be’er Sheva and he went
toward Charan. He encountered the place and spent the night there… And he
dreamt and behold! A ladder was set earthward and its top reached heavenward;
and behold! Angels of G-d were ascending and descending on it.”
The Bais HaLevi
notes that a person can travel to a new destination for one of two reasons. He
can either be trying to distance himself from the city he departed from, or he
may be seeking to fulfill a goal/mission in the city of his destination.
In Yaakov’s
situation, he had both goals in mind. Yaakov was both fleeing the wrath of his
brother Eisav, and seeking to fulfill his parent’s instruction that he go to the
home of his mother’s brother in order to seek a wife for himself. The wording
of the pasuk actually alludes to these dual purposes: “Yaakov departed from
Be’er Sheva”; he had to escape the city of Eisav for his own safety. “And he
went toward Charan” in order to fulfill his father’s instruction that he search
for a wife.
The Viener Rav[3]
explains that the saga of Yaakov is symbolic of the events that transpire in
every person’s life. We all have missions in this world that we are here to
fulfill. At times we find ourselves in situations that we never dreamed we
would be in. We must remember that there is a higher purpose that we may not be
aware of, which plays a strong role on the course of life.
The pasuk in
Tehillim[4]
states: “From G-d, the footsteps of man are firm, his way shall He approve.”
The Ba’al Shem Tov explained that at times a person will travel to another
city. In his mind he is traveling there for business, with the goal of
generating profit. However, in heaven they may have arranged that he end up in
that city for a spiritual purpose that he may never become aware of. This is
what the verse is saying. Ultimately it is G-d who prepares the footsteps of
man.
This idea is
also a source of encouragement for a person who sets out to accomplish
something and invests a great deal of time and effort into his project, only to
find that he was unable to meet his goals. Although from his vantage point his
work was for naught, from the perspective of Heaven his efforts may have been a
tremendous success.
To Yaakov, his
journey must have seemed compulsory and distressing. He was obliged to leave
behind the sanctity and purity of his father’s home because he had adhered to
his mother’s instruction to dupe Eisav out of the blessings. He would now have
to forge his own path, alone and far away. But in truth his journey would soon set
a trajectory in motion which led to the building of the foundation of Klal
Yisroel. Yaakov returned from Charan with four wives and eleven children[5],
and it was those children who became the progenitors of the Chosen Nation.
This was part of
the symbolism of Yaakov’s dream. At the moment when Yaakov was sleeping alone
on top of Mount Moriah it seemed as if he was alone and
forsaken. The vision of the ladder symbolized that there is an inextricable
connection between world and the celestial world, with angels traveling up and
down the ladder. Yaakov’s journey was not merely as it seemed. There was a
higher purpose that would emerge from the whole ordeal, even though at that
moment Yaakov could not realize what that purpose was.
As a nation we
have experienced Yaakov’s odyssey many times. When we were expelled from Spain in 1492
and we fled on ships, it seemed that we were escaping a world which had
deserted us. But at the same time we were forging ahead to a new world.
European Jewry was being established and a new trajectory that would last four
hundred years was being set in motion.
When our parents
and grandparents escaped the horrors of Nazism before, during, and after World
War II, they were not only fleeing the ashes of the crematoria, they were also
coming to Eretz Yisroel and America and other havens to build the next chapter
of Torah living and flourishing.
Yaakov’s venture
symbolizes the path of life, on a national and individualistic level. Life
leads us in many directions, and we must always remember that G-d prepares the
path of man. Sometimes we are not privy to how/why things occur. But the ladder
reaches heavenward and the angles are perpetually ascending and descending.
“Yaakov departed
Be’er Sheva toward Charan”
“Hashem, YOU OWN
MONTICELLO ”
[1] Rabbi
Wallerstein is the founder of Ohr Naava for woman, as well as a noted lecturer.
Rabbi Wallerstein gives two chaburas weekly, at Ohr Yitzchok for boys and at
Ohr Naava for girls. His lectures can be viewed at torahanytime.com and other
forums.
[2] Rabbi
Wallerstein admitted that after he made his declaration, a fellow stopped to
ask him if he needed help.
[3] Shemen
Rosh; Rabbi Asher Anshel Katz shlita
[4] 37:23
[5] Binyamin,
the twelfth child, was born on the way back.
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