“The Jews all looked at each other in amazement. But there was more to come…”
An original translation by R. Yerachmiel Tilles
“ENOUGH!” The Shpoler Zeide called out. “That’s the final blow!”
His Chassidim from a rural area outside Shpole had been suffering for years under the heavy yoke of their cruel local lord, a high-ranking member of Poland’s nobility who owned all the land in that area. He was constantly raising the rents on their homes and the leases for their businesses. But that he did to his non-Jewish tenants too. What hurt more were his vicious anti-Semitic twists.
He would make Jews that were indebted to him sing and dance in front of his aristocratic friends during their drunken parties, so that they could enjoy themselves laughing at the Jews. He had tried to force them to open their businesses on Shabbos. But his most recent depravity was the worst: he had issued a degree that in all buildings on his extensive properties, there had to be hanging a depiction of “that man” from Nazereth, around whom the gentile religion centers.
Over the years, whenever any of the Jewish tenants happened to be in Shpole, they would ask the Rebbe to bless them and pray for their relief from this tyrant. But this was too much. It was unthinkable. They all gathered as one and came to the Zeide together. When the tsadik heard this latest tale of woe, he was furious.
“I’ve waited a long time for that wicked man to change his evil ways. But this is intolerable. He has to be taught a lesson. It is time for him to hear the Ten Commandments. There is no choice.”
The Chassidim circled around him were astonished by his words. They had no idea what he had in mind. But before anyone could muster the courage to ask for an interpretation, the Rebbe had already started speaking again.
“Listen carefully, please; this is what you must do. I know that every year for Shavuot you all travel to the city in order to celebrate the festival with a large congregation. This year, don’t leave. Instead, stay home and gather together at the home of the tenant with the largest property for the prayers and the communal holiday celebrations.
“Before the holiday, send a small delegation to the poritz (‘lord of the land’), tell him about your arrangements, and invite him to come and hear the Festive Morning Prayers, and to bring all of his noble friends with him.
“As for you, prepare yourselves and purify yourselves properly for the holy occasion of the Receiving of the Torah. I, also, shall come to join you. So now, go home in peace and don’t worry.”
The astonishment of the listeners didn’t lessen at all at hearing these instructions. Indeed, it heightened—stay at home? Invite the poritz! Still, no one had the nerve to ask the tsaddik for an explanation. They quickly filed out of the Rebbe’s room and hurried home, eager to relay the Rebbe’s words to the other Jews in their area and to carry out his commands.
The villagers that went to invite the landlord met a pleasant reception, to their surprise. He happily accepted their request. Having heard individual Jews singing their prayers before, he figured to himself that a whole congregation of them should prove to be quite an entertaining spectacle for him and his fellow aristocrats. He promised the tenants that he and his associates would definitely attend. He then dismissed them and immediately launched preparations for a huge party for all the Polish aristocrats in the region, the highlight of which would be the spectacle of the Jewish prayer that would take place on the grounds he had leased to one of his tenants. The invitations he sent out featured his promise for a “highly amusing surprise.”
The Shpoler Zeide arrived early in the morning before Shavuot Eve, with a large number of Chassidim accompanying him. They quickly realized there would not be enough room on the farm for so many people. The Rebbe told them to go to the nearby hill, and raise up a large awning there, under which they would set up a platform with a table on it for the Reading of the Torah.
Shavuot morning arrived. The grassy lands around the hill were crowded with hundreds of Jews, waiting in nervous anticipation to see what would happen. A significant number of gentiles—all the dukes, counts and lords, and other wealthy landowners and nobility in the region—also waited eagerly, looking forward to the special surprise their host had promised them.
The Rebbe approached the platform to lead the prayers himself. A hush fell over the assembly. The Jews began to pray with enthusiasm. The gentiles—seeing an old man with a long beard, covered from head to knees with an oversized white shawl with strings dangling off it to the ground, chanting loudly the words of the prayers while all his limbs seemed to be trembling and shaking—all laughed heartily. But when he called out in an impressively powerful voice, “Shema Yisroel…echad,” their laughter ceased instantly. It was as if a lion had roared. They were gripped by terror. They tried to hide it with nervous smiles. How could a puny, absurd Jew make them afraid? But they couldn’t shake the mood as the Zeide’s voice continued to reverberate off the hillside, until, a few minutes later, the praying Jews stood absolutely still and silent.
The repetition of the festival Amidah prayer was followed by the joyous singing of Hallel and chanting of the Akdamot (a prayer special for Shavuot). The festival joy was palpable. The Rebbe signaled for the Torah scroll to be brought out and rolled to its proper position in the Torah portion of Yitro for the Shavuot reading (Ex. 19-20). He then gazed at the surrounding crowd and slowly swiveled his head. It was clear that he was searching for someone. His gaze finally settled on a tall, very distinguished-looking man whom nobody else seemed to know. The Zeide summoned him to be the Torah reader.
Everyone murmured in surprise, but they were soon pleased by the choice. The guest’s voice was both musical and powerful. When they reached the section of the Ten Commandments, the atmosphere altered radically. It had been a beautiful, clear, spring morning. The sun was shining brightly, and the sky a solid sheet of pastel blue, with not a dot of cloud to be seen. Suddenly, the heavens darkened, and tremendous peals of thunder boomed down upon them. Fright took hold of everyone.
The reader’s voice rose in volume and intensity. “I am G-d who brought you out of Egypt.” A Jew stood next to the landlord to translate word by word, but amazingly, the nobleman realized he was able to understand directly, without aid, even though he didn’t know a single letter of Hebrew. “You shall not have others’ gods before Me. Do not make any statue or image….” The lord trembled and felt weak in his stomach as he thought of how he had demanded the Jews put engraved images of non-Jewish worship on their walls.
When he heard “Remember the Shabbat day that it should be holy,” his knees buckled. His throat was constricted. Why had he tried to force the Jews to open their businesses on their holy day? “…The seventh day is the holy Sabbath of G-d.” He felt he was close to fainting.
His friends were similarly affected. They too felt they understood the commandments directly, as if the Holy Tongue were their native language. Each one thought upon his sins and was seized with fear. Their faces were deathly white. Many of them fainted.
After a few moments which seemed like an eternity, the reading drew to a close and the noblemen recovered somewhat. Deeply embarrassed, they slipped away by ones and twos.
After the festival Musaf and the conclusion of the prayers, the Jews sat down to the traditional dairy meal. Between courses, the Shpoler Zeide said he would now explain the mysterious events that had taken place. The excited chassidim listened attentively.
“I assure you that your landlord and the rest of those noblemen will remember for the rest of their lives how they heard the Ten Commandments here today, and they will never afflict you again. To accomplish that, I was forced to trouble Moshe Rebbeinu (‘Moses, our teacher’) himself to come here and to read the Torah. I had no choice. That man went too far. You have a great merit, my friends, to have been here today.”
The assembled Jews all looked at each other in amazement. But there was more to come.
“You should know that your landlord, the duke, is not just a regular gentile. He has in him a spark of the soul of Jethro, the priest of Midian, who came to the Jews in the desert before they reached Mt. Sinai and acknowledged the existence of G-d…and that Israel is His chosen people” [Ex. 18:11].
After the holiday ended, the landlord sent a pair of messengers to his tenant’s house to request that the Rebbe come to see him. The tsadik agreed and went with them to the castle. The two men spent hours together alone, behind locked doors. The next morning the Shpoler Zeide returned home. He never told anyone what he had spoken about privately with the lord.
From that day on, the landlord’s attitude towards his Jewish tenants changed dramatically. They were able to live in peace and prosperity, without any unfair pressure from the lord. Not only that, but he paid with his own money for the construction of a synagogue for the Jews that lived on his estates. He did insist, however, on designating the location: that it be built on that spot on the hill where the holy rabbi had come to pray.
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Source: Translated and adapted by Yerachmiel Tilles from Shemu V’tchi Nafshechem #258, as heard from Rabbi Moshe Weber.
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Rabbi Yerachmiel Tilles is co-founder of Ascent, webmaster and managing editor of KabbalaOnline.org and ascentofsafed.com. He has hundreds of published stories to his credit.
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