Friday, January 20, 2012

Thoughts on the Parsha

Even though we're on vacation, a couple of thoughts.  First an old one from the first month on the blog three years ago:
Reviewing the Parsha with my head already on vacation, I was struck by a certain passage. When defending themselves to Paro, the heroic midwives defend themselves with a statement that would serve us well to remember as we head to our various exotic & less exotic destinations: כִּי לא כַנָּשִׁים הַמִּצְרִיּת הָעִבְרִיּת - The Jewish women are not like the Egyptian women. As integrated as we are into our American culture, with all of the benefits - of all types - that we get from it, it's important to keep in mind that we are different, and that should be evident for all to see.
Since that was last week's Parsha, I'll give over a nice dvar Torah I received from my neighbor, Rabbi Dan Lifshitz:
"This was the Aaron and Moshe to whom G-d said take the Children of Israel out of Egypt.... This was Moshe and Aaron."  (Exodus 6:26-27)
Rashi explains that the transposition of the names between the first verse and second verse indicates that the two brothers were equal in status.  The Shelah asks a fairly obvious question on this explanation.  The Torah later tells us "there never again arose a prophet in Israel like Moshe (Deut 34:10)."  If so, how does Rashi tell us that Aaron was his equal?  The Shelah answers that Moshe developed over time.  When he first went with Aaron to speak with Pharaoh, the two of them were on par, but by the time Moshe went up on Mount Sinai to receive the Torah, he had become the greatest of the prophets.

The Ktav Sofer suggests a reason for Moshe's "promotion."  Moshe was known for his humility.  When he was a simple shepherd tending Yitro's sheep in the desert, it was easy for him to be humble.  When he first approached Pharaoh's palace together with his brother, it was still relatively easy.  But after Moshe brought plagues upon the Egyptians, after he stood up to Pharaoh, after he became "very great in the land of Egypt, in the eyes of Pharaoh's servants and the people (Exo. 11:3)," most people would have become prideful to some extent.  To Moshe's credit, his head never got bigger, even as his accomplishments grew more and more impressive.  By maintaining his humility in the face of his rise to greatness, Moshe earned the position of the "master of the prophets."  Humility is not the most celebrated trait in today's world, but in G-d's eyes, it is cherished indeed.  Shabbat Shalom

Monday, January 16, 2012

MLK Day

Here is a post from a previous year on Martin Luther King Day:
This morning on my way in to school, I heard Martin Luther King Jr.'s famous "I have a dream" speech, almost in its entirety.  Aside from how great and powerful a speaker he was, what struck me was that virtually all of his dreams for the future; all of the aspirations for America that he demanded have pretty much been fulfilled, and then some.  All of his fantasies, that at the time must have seemed as absurd as the cell phone or the internet, every last one of them is now so much a part of the American culture, that dissent is (appropriately) not tolerated in polite company.  While bigotry of all kinds (he references Jews and  gentiles joining hands at the end) is not dead in America, I think it is relegated to the fringes of society in a way that would have been virtually unimaginable just a generation ago.

On Rosh Chodesh Iyar, we spoke the idea that I heard from a Rebbe in Israel that אייר stands for אברהם, יצחק, יעקב, רחל, and that while the אבות each have the מידה that they represent, רחל represents the כח החלום.  Today is a day that to continue to learn this lesson of the power of dreams, of seeing slightly beyond what seems realistic.  There is a lesson here for us all when it comes to our own personal growth.  We have spoken before about how we should always try to have personal goals that we strive for.  We can think about these similar to college applications.  First, you want to make sure that you have your "safety school" - so take something that you are currently proud of, and commit yourself to maintaining that level of achievement (I'm davening well, I've been very sensitive to the needs of my friends or family, I have been making strong, mature decisions lately, I learn some Torah lishma, I volunteer my free time to help others etc.).  Next, you have your target schools that you aspire to, here you are looking slightly beyond where you are now, but these are very doable, realistic goals.  This category is the bread and butter of growth, as almost all progress is gradual, and there is nothing to be gained by setting yourself up for failure.  The message that I see in Martin Luther King Day, is to also also have your "reach" school - to set a longer term goal right now seem to be way out of  range, but approach it with a blend of anxious patience.  Both as individuals and societies, people have a tendency to prove predictions wrong, and to be capable of growing far faster than anyone, or almost anyone dreamed we would.

Sunday, January 15, 2012

Mrs. Kahan's Reading List


In addition to the books, articles, and movies that have already appeared on other teachers' reading lists, here are a few more favorites:
1. By Faith Alone: The Story of Rabbi Yehuda Amital by Elyashiv Reichner. This book, which I found very inspiring, describes Rav Amital's thought and his approach to avodat Hashem.
2. "The Source of Faith is Faith Itself" by Rav Lichtenstein. This is a short article, which highlights the importance of relationships and experience in developing faith in Hashem.
3. Rabbi Shalom Carmy's articles in Tradition, and particularly "The House I Lived In: A Taste of Gooseflesh" in the Summer 2011 volume.
4. "The Commonsense Rebellion Against Torah Authority" by Rav Soloveitchik. This article, which you may read in eleventh grade Chumash, gives a (to me) compelling explanation of the value of halakhic ritual and of submitting to halakhic authority.
5. Fear No Evil, Natan Sharansky's autobiography.
6. Two movies, both produced by Menachem Daum. The first is "Hiding and Seeking" (this also appears on Ms. Wolf's list), which is a documentary that explores faith and tolerance after the Holocaust. The second is "A Life Apart," a documentary about Chasidic life that I find moving, partly because it is reminiscent of my own experience when I lived in a Chasidic community.

Amazing Story about Timmy Tebow

Check out this story.

I've come to believe in Tim Tebow, but not for what he does on a football field, which is still three parts Dr. Jekyll and two parts Mr. Hyde.

No, I've come to believe in Tim Tebow for what he does off a football field, which is represent the best parts of us, the parts I want to be and so rarely am.

Who among us is this selfless?

Every week, Tebow picks out someone who is suffering, or who is dying, or who is injured. He flies these people and their families to the Broncos game, rents them a car, puts them up in a nice hotel, buys them dinner (usually at a Dave & Buster's), gets them and their families pregame passes, visits with them just before kickoff (!), gets them 30-yard-line tickets down low, visits with them after the game (sometimes for an hour), has them walk him to his car, and sends them off with a basket of gifts.

Home or road, win or lose, hero or goat.

Remember last week, when the world was pulling its hair out in the hour after Tebow had stunned the Pittsburgh Steelers with an 80-yard OT touchdown pass to Demaryius Thomas in the playoffs? And Twitter was exploding with 9,420 tweets about Tebow per second? When an ESPN poll was naming him the most popular athlete in America?

Tebow was spending that hour talking to 16-year-old Bailey Knaub about her 73 surgeries so far and what TV shows she likes.

MORE FROM TIM TEBOW

For Tim Tebow's take on being named America's most popular athlete, click here.

"Here he'd just played the game of his life," recalls Bailey's mother, Kathy, of Loveland, Colo., "and the first thing he does after his press conference is come find Bailey and ask, 'Did you get anything to eat?' He acted like what he'd just done wasn't anything, like it was all about Bailey."

More than that, Tebow kept corralling people into the room for Bailey to meet. Hey, Demaryius, come in here a minute. Hey, Mr. Elway. Hey, Coach Fox.

Even though sometimes-fatal Wegener's granulomatosis has left Bailey with only one lung, the attention took her breath away.

"It was the best day of my life," she emailed. "It was a bright star among very gloomy and difficult days. Tim Tebow gave me the greatest gift I could ever imagine. He gave me the strength for the future. I know now that I can face any obstacle placed in front of me. Tim taught me to never give up because at the end of the day, today might seem bleak but it can't rain forever and tomorrow is a new day, with new promises."

I read that email to Tebow, and he was honestly floored.

"Why me? Why should I inspire her?" he said. "I just don't feel, I don't know, adequate. Really, hearing her story inspires me."

It's not just NFL defenses that get Tebowed. It's high school girls who don't know whether they'll ever go to a prom. It's adults who can hardly stand. It's kids who will die soon.

For the game at Buffalo, it was Charlottesville, Va., blue-chip high school QB Jacob Rainey, who lost his leg after a freak tackle in a scrimmage. Tebow threw three interceptions in that Buffalo game and the Broncos were crushed 40-14.

"He walked in and took a big sigh and said, 'Well, that didn't go as planned,'" Rainey remembers. "Where I'm from, people wonder how sincere and genuine he is. But I think he's the most genuine person I've ever met."

There's not an ounce of artifice or phoniness or Hollywood in this kid Tebow, and I've looked everywhere for it.

Take 9-year-old Zac Taylor, a child who lives in constant pain. Immediately after Tebow shocked the Chicago Bears with a 13-10 comeback win, Tebow spent an hour with Zac and his family. At one point, Zac, who has 10 doctors, asked Tebow whether he has a secret prayer for hospital visits. Tebow whispered it in his ear. And because Tebow still needed to be checked out by the Broncos' team doctor, he took Zac in with him, but only after they had whispered it together.

And it's not always kids. Tom Driscoll, a 55-year-old who is dying of brain cancer at a hospice in Denver, was Tebow's guest for the Cincinnati game. "The doctors took some of my brain," Driscoll says, "so my short-term memory is kind of shot. But that day I'll never forget. Tim is such a good man."

This whole thing makes no football sense, of course. Most NFL players hardly talk to teammates before a game, much less visit with the sick and dying.

Isn't that a huge distraction?


Not everything Tim Tebow does on one knee is controversial. Ask Zac Taylor.
"Just the opposite," Tebow says. "It's by far the best thing I do to get myself ready. Here you are, about to play a game that the world says is the most important thing in the world. Win and they praise you. Lose and they crush you. And here I have a chance to talk to the coolest, most courageous people. It puts it all into perspective. The game doesn't really matter. I mean, I'll give 100 percent of my heart to win it, but in the end, the thing I most want to do is not win championships or make a lot of money, it's to invest in people's lives, to make a difference."

So that's it. I've given up giving up on him. I'm a 100 percent believer. Not in his arm. Not in his skills. I believe in his heart, his there-will-definitely-be-a-pony-under-the-tree optimism, the way his love pours into people, right up to their eyeballs, until they believe they can master the hopeless comeback, too.

Remember the QB who lost his leg, Jacob Rainey? He got his prosthetic leg a few weeks ago, and he wants to play high school football next season. Yes, tackle football. He'd be the first to do that on an above-the-knee amputation.

Hmmm. Wonder where he got that crazy idea?

"Tim told me to keep fighting, no matter what," Rainey says. "I am."

Saturday, January 14, 2012

A Personal Favorite

Has anyone read Life of Pi, by Yann Martel?
It's not a math book, it's about faith, man and G-d. (Pi is the protagonist's name). I found it to be very compelling. The book is almost all a mashal which is fun to read, telling the story of a boy and a tiger and their unexpected friendship. After reading it I debated the take-home message at the end of the book with friends and would love to hear what other people's thoughts are!

I also second The Chosen appearance on a couple of people's lists. It's a real classic, so very rich with themes for thinking Jews.

Friday, January 13, 2012

Two More Suggested Reading Lists

This is it from the old ones, but let's see if anyone wants to give a new one or update their old one.

Mrs. Appel's Reading & Movie List

  • Dr. Seuss, Oh, The Places You'll Go
  • For an interesting dialog about contemporary (or at least, 1990s) Orthodoxy: Haym Soloveitchik, "Rupture and Recontstruction: The Transformation of Contemporary Orthodoxy", in Tradition 28:4 (1994) -- along with Dr. Isaac Chavel's response and Dr. Soloveitchik's response to Dr. Chavel, the latter two published in Torah U-Madda, January 1, 1997
  • Heschel, The Sabbath
  • The poetry of Leah Goldberg
  • Chaim Potok, The Chosen
  • Thornton Wilder, Our Town
  • Harper Lee, To Kill a Mockingbird
  • David Ben-Gurion's speech declaring Israel's idependence, recording:http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=EJObtrw_E6g&feature=related
Movies:
  • Schindler's List
  • Life is Beautiful

Mrs. Kraft's Reading List

For thinking about Judaism on a deeper level and to be inspired at the same time:
1. Living Inspired by Rabbi Akiva Tatz
2. World Mask by Rabbi Akiva Tatz
3. The Thinking Jewish Teenager's Guide to Life by Rabbi Akiva Tatz

For the very intellectually sophisticated reader dealing with issues of faith in G-d:
1. Forgive Us, Father-in-Law, for We Know Not What to Think: Letter to a Philosophical Dropout from Orthodoxy by Rabbi Shalom Carmy
2. Faith and Doubt by Rabbi Norman Lamm

On why bad things happen to good people:
Kol Dodi Dofek (Hebrew) or Fate and Destiny (English translation) by Rav Solovetichik

Just good and enjoyable (and secular) reading on having the correct perspective and being productive, etc.:
The 7 Habits of Highly Effective Teens by Sean Covey

For Inspiration:
Just One Word. Amen by Esther Stern

To increase your kavanah in tefila:
Pathway to Prayer by Rabbi Mayer Birnbaum
The Art of Jewish Prayer by Rabbi Yitzchok Kirzner
Rav Schwab on Prayer by Rabbi Shimon Schwab

Shabbat Reading

I'm also in the middle of reading the parsha essay by Rabbi Eitan Mayer (Menahel Chinuchi at Midreshet Moriah and guest speaker at Mishmover).

In general, if you are looking for some good reading material on the parsha, his essays are a good stop.  On theme he keeps reverting to in this weeks piece are the unavoidable connections between the beginnings of שיעבוד מצרים and the Holocaust, which had already caught my attention just reviewing the Parsha while reading Rabbi Lau's book, but Rabbi Mayer's analysis and application are well worth the read.

Even More Reading Suggestions

Rabbi Prince's Reading List

  • All books by Rabbi David Aaron
  • All Books by Rabbi Aryeh Kaplan
  • All Books by Nechama Lebowitz
  • Discover by Rabbi Dov Moshe Lipman
  • By His Light – Essays of Rav Aharon Lichtenstein
  • Ner Uziel - By Rabbi Uziel Milevsky
  • Off the Derech – by Faranack Margolese
  • תורה לדעת – Rabbi Matis Blum
  • הררי קדם - "Harerei Kedem I & II" by Michal Zalman Shurkin
  • On Repentance: The Thought and Oral Discourses of Rabbi Joseph Dov Soloveitchik
  • A Student's Obligation: Advice from the Rebbe of the Warsaw Ghetto
  • The Promise – Chaim Potok

Mrs. Sinensky's Reading, Movie, Game & Activity List

  • The Matrix (movie)
  • Redemption, Prayer, Torah Study in Tradition 17:2, R' Soloveitchik (my favorite Rav Solovetchik article)
  • Wit, Margaret Edson (play that's fun to analyze)
  • Halachos of Brachos, R' Forst (super-practical, well organized, clear, comprehensive book about Brachot. Great to learn with a friend!)
  • Set (the game-great for sharpening your Gemara skills. Someone once told me that it should be renamed the "tzad hashaveh" game!)
  • Watch your favorite T.V. show and write down all the "hidden" messages that you can pick up on
  • Abraham's Journey, R' Soloveitchik (Essays about the life and character of Avraham Avinue. I read it on Pesach and couldn't put it down!)
  • The Sabbath, Heschel (A book that will change your perspective on and appreciation of Shabbat and Chagim)

Ms. Gordon's List

  • As a Driven Leaf - Milton Steinberg
  • Jewish Matters - Articles by different authors on different topics (God, Faith, Tzniut, Prayer etc.)
  • Exodus or Mila 18 - Leon Uris
  • O Jerusalem - Larry Collins and Dominique Lapierre
  • Anything by Rabbi Jonathan Sacks (Chief Rabbi of England)
  • Anything by Rav Aharon Lichtenstein (Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivat Har Etzion and Posek of Maayanot)
  • Lonely Man of Faith - Rav Yosef Dov Soloveichik
  • The Modest Way - Rav Ellensohn's book on Tzniut. Has all opinions and sources with English translations.
  • Jewish Literacy - Rabbi Joseph Telushkin
  • The Alchemist by Paulo Coelho
  • Movie: Hiding & Seeking

Rabbi Besser's List

I think I'm going to enter my list piecemeal, to allow me to give it some more thought, and talk a bit about why I'm recommending the books that I do, without having a post so long that no one reads it. I'll start with four.

  • As a Driven Leaf (Milton Steinberg) - I add my vote to the others but attach a warning: What makes the book so wonderful (in addition to the issues of faith & doubt highlighted by Mrs. Goldberg) is what scares me a bit too. It is the fictionalized story of a real historic figure -Elisha ben Avuyah (Acher) - a Tana who became a heretic. For the first half of the book, the primary characters are Rabbi Akiva, Rabbi Meir, Bruriah, Ben Azzai etc. Many of the Talmudic figures we study every day, and getting to know them in a real-life way is thrilling. And much of the story is based on legitimate sources. The disclaimer is, that it's not real-life. The gaps filled in by the author dwarf the actual historic content, making the finished product truly fictional. That said, the glimpse into their lives, the very readable style, the big issues raised in an intriguing but not ponderous way, and just the wonderful drama make this a book you will love.
  • A Return to Modesty (Wendy Shalit) - This is unlike any other "Tzniut" book you'll ever read. Ms. Shalit's story makes the book so unique. She grew up non-observant, and what drew her to Orthodoxy was the appeal of the rules of tzniut. Therefore, with no pre-existing agenda, she lived the secular system, straight through the typicalUniversity campus and found it wanting, and found what was missing in classic Judaism's halachik and philosophical view of women. Using all sorts of data (very much including womens' magazines), she makes the case that modern sensibilities about gender relationships are doing major damage to women, and that the formula to repair that damage lies in the roots of our tradition. You can disagree with her at the end, but her perspective is eye-opening. (Disclaimer: I'm not endorsing the cover, which was not chosen by the author, and was removed from my copy).
  • Turbulent Souls (Stephen Dubner) - The memoir of a successful journalist, raised as a fervent Christian, who lapsed into a secular adulthood tracing his Jewish roots.
  • The Geography of Bliss (Eric Weiner) - I read it on Ms. Socken's advice, and though it took me a bit to get in to, I ended up enjoying it a lot. A reporter for NPR travels to the happiest and least happy countries on Earth to see what lessons about happiness he can learn. The chapters that spoke most to me (though I doubt many of you will choose the same ones) were Iceland (which contains what I consider to be the single most important line of the book - I won't give it away) & Thailand.
I'll give some more a different time, but I have midterms to grade. Please let us know what you think of the blog so far, submit questions you would like to see addressed or helpful suggestions at questions@maayanot.org.

2012 me talking for a second:  For now I'll make one addition to my list - the book I'm in the middle of right now.  Out of the Depths: The Story of a Child of Buchenwald Who Returned Home at Last By Chief Rabbi Israel Meir Lau.  Read the article, but his story is truly remarkable, and the book is very uplifting, even though it's very much a Holocaust book.

Ms. Bieler's Reading List

  • Articles from the Tradition journal
  • Articles from the Journal of Halakha & Contemporary Society
  • The Phantom Tollbooth, Juster & Feiffer

Ms. Wolf's Reading & Movie List

  • Hiding and Seeking (movie)
  • The Lonely Man of Faith, R' Soloveitchik
  • As A Driven Leaf, Milton Steinberg (historical fiction based on the Gemara)
  • Exodus, Leon Uris (historical fiction about Israel)
  • Mila 18, Leon Uris

Thursday, January 12, 2012

More Reading Suggestions

Let's stay in the Tanach department with:


Mrs. Cohen's Reading & Movie List

  • Awakenings (inspirational movie)
  • My Left Foot (inspirational movie)
  • Kol Dodi Dofek, ed. Woolf (one of Rav Soloveitchik's most famous articles--must read!)
and

Mrs. Schapiro's Reading List

  • Orthodox Forum Series (several books on timely topics such as feminism, relating to non-Jews, relating to non-traditional Jews, etc. Sometimes the Enlish is difficult but there's always http://www.dictionary.com/)
  • Me'am Lo'ez, translated by Aryeh Kaplan (Enlish translation of pesukim and various midrashim on Tanach)
  • If You Were God, Aryeh Kaplan

Happy Birthday to Us!!!

Three years ago today were the first real posts on this blog and the day that we truly opened for business.  Continued thanks to Mrs. Sinensky who was a real driving force towards getting it off the ground and building it into something substantial - it didn't start counting visitors until that summer, six months later, and we are already close to 600 posts and over 22,500 page views.  In celebration, I will re-post some of the early material, including our kick-off - suggested reading lists from your faculty / administration as we head into vacation.
Let's start with Ms. F - 

  • The Source, James Michener (historical fiction about the Crusades)
  • Sabbath Shiurim, Rabbi M. Miller
  • Shiurei HaRav, Epstein (lectures of Rav Soloveitchik)
  • http://www.tanach.org/ (awesome Parsha material from R' Menachem Leibtag)
  • http://www.vbm-torah.org/ (more awesome Parsha material from Yershiva Har Etzion a.k.a "Gush")
  • A Return to Modesty, Wendy Shalit (discussion of Tzniut from a secular perspective)
  • The Magic Touch, Gila Manolson (about negiah)

Parsha Questions - Shemot

I think there are still questions coming from someone else, but just to get it going, here's something that caught my eye this year and maybe some of you who are learning / teaching Shemot, or did it in years past can help me out.

When Moshe first encounters the סנה (burning bush) it says וַיֵּרָא מַלְאַךְ יְקֹוָק אֵלָיו בְּלַבַּת אֵשׁ מִתּוֹךְ הַסְּנֶה וַיַּרְא וְהִנֵּה סְּנֶה בֹּעֵר בָּאֵשׁ וְהַסְּנֶה אֵינֶנּוּ אֻכָּל:  The Malach appears to him, he then responds, and then Hashem Himself repies back.  Who or what is this malach?  Was there an angel there, and if so, what did it do?  I can't remember if I saw this anywhere, but I'm inclined to believe that malach over here doesn't mean angel but agent of Hashem, in this case referring to the סנה itself.

In general, it's interesting to keep your eye on who is doing the talking in all instances of prophecy - Hashem or a malach, and why.  Maybe I'll follow up on this one day.

Wednesday, January 11, 2012

Keep 'Em Separated

Rachel Klar & Mairav Linzer asked (on our Facebook page): Is a person allowed to buy an already planted orchard of hybrid fruit?"

I think (I had to double check with my chavruta) that it depends what kind of כלאים is the concern.  For regular hybrid crops, כלאי זרעים, the prohibition is just to plant them so that would be OK.  If one of the crops is a vine of grapes, כלאי הכרם, then there is an איסור הנאה that would also likely prohibit maintaining the hybrid.

Thanks for asking this question - not typical for our blog at all!

Tuesday, January 10, 2012

Kol Hamevaser - Maayanot Nachat

Two of my favorite things are talking Jewish education and seeing Maayanot alumni doing great things, so it was an unusual pleasure to see this, the latest issue of Kol Hamevaser (when I was in college it was just "Hamevaser" - inflation?), Yeshiva University's journal on Jewish thought.  This issue is dedicated almost entirely to topics in Jewish education.

First, the introduction to the magazine is written by the Associate Editor and Maayanot alum, (inaugural bekiut champion and blog contributor) Gabrielle Hiller.  Additionally, Rachel Weber (blog contributor and current Tefilla Workshop leader) has a great article relevant to us all called "Single-Sex Education: Still Le-ka-tehillah."  I remember the day she came to interview Mrs. Kahan for the piece (she is quoted extensively).  It's a great read and a compelling case.  I was reminded of this other great moment of Maayanot history in Jewish journals.

Finally, a relevant article written by Hannah Dreyfus (don't know where she went to school) about tefila in schools (Teaching Prayer: Obstacles, Goals, and Strategies) was very interesting.  I'm on the outside during Shacharit, but does this ring true?
Titters and giggles are clearly audible from the back row. The teacher prowls alertly up and down the aisles of the small synagogue, rushing over angrily to squash the small rebellions that sporadically break out as the minutes of obligatory silence creep by. Creases in the siddur expertly shield cell phones from view. Some students settle for a more passive approach, staring sleepily into space, siddurim opened laxly to any arbitrary page. Some mutter the words, eyes focused absently, uncomprehendingly. The lone, pious few close their eyes tightly, swaying back and forth, trying to concentrate, battling an overwhelming tide of disregard, apathy, and open resentment. The all-too-familiar picture of a tefillah classroom.
I hope not, but you would know better than I would.  She has some interesting thoughts, but in the end she acknowledges many of the challenges that we are all familiar with.  Again, a good read.  Check it out, there's a lot of other good stuff too.


Sunday, January 1, 2012

What a True Chareidi Leader Says

Much has been written about the harassment of young girls on their way to school in Ramat Beit Shemesh. See this letter by one of the rabbinic leaders of the Passaic community, which tells the story of a Chareidi leader of yesteryear and how he responded to the sight of children walking in the street in a way the leader did not approve of.
In case you didn't get to the end of the story, R. Yosef Chaim Zonnenfeld, one of the leading anti-Zionist rabbis of his time, showered blessings on the heads of the Zionist children who walked in front of him. May all leaders find the strength of character to do the same.