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Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant
Baltimore, small boats are harder to hit than missiles. Missiles mostly follow a trajectory according to laws of physics. and you also have million $ budget to hit them. The boat can maneuver and is subject to waves and wind and you are using simpler munitions to hit a boat. Also, in this case, US Navy is covering large areas so sensors and munitions might be at far distance. So, even if everything is done right, the boat movement while munition is flying is affecting results. Look at Iraq/Afghanistan time videos of shooting moving vehicles – a somewhat simpler problem as the aircraft is closer and the car is moving on the road.
December 11, 2025 1:21 pm at 1:21 pm in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2484791Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel> the late rebbi of habad never attended any yeshiva … even during his yeshiva years ….
he probably learnt either by himself or under his father r levi
so what I wrote was accurate : the only institutions he attended were universities …
.
I am confused – are these your words or you are quoting Talmidei Chachomim.The eplanation you gave sounds like something from chatgpt or from a seminary girl perusing resumes – “the only institution he attended …”. I presume he learned from his father. His youth was during WW1 and post that. R Soloveichik I believe also learned only with his father (after the mother discovered that his early chabad rebbe was not rigorous enough) and later with visits to R Chaim Ozer. R Eliezer learnt in the desert from only his father. Yitzhak learned from his father …
And his university studies were while running away from tzoros in Eastern Europe in late 20s. He did not even study humanities, just some modern physics, calculus and mechanical engineering. how does this pasel someone?!
again, if these are your own suggestions, that’s ok. I was afraid that some learnt people are saying this.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel> absorbing ‘losses’ by establishing a medina , and thereby ‘gaining’ a home for the many pleitim
help me understand this shitah. So, if the pleitim had nowhere to go and risked their lives or ruchniyous otherwise – it was still prohibited
to work wth the medinah to save those people? maybe I did not hap the whole message here.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant> there are virtually no “misnagdim” today;
not fully so. I heard from some yeshiva yidden when mentioning “chosid” in gemora clarifying “real chasidim”. This might be be real misnagdus, but a reaction to those who claim to be “chassidim” but then not demonstrating appropriate middos. I did not see such attitude towards chassidim who are mentchen.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantRocky> asking questions to a gadol you have never met before for a personal issue for 20 second answer
previous minhag was to send a shailah with detailed description – usually not by the person himself, but by a local rov who can describe halachik issues involved.
what is new – asking questions about personal life rather than halocha from the rav who does not know you.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant> their own Shulchan Aruch that no other community has.
lots of communities have, or had, their own halachik books. Alter Rebbe was just slick enough to re-use the popular name (as did Kitzur).
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantcommon > expecting monetary support for a young couple, regardless of the financial needs of the couple or the financial strain on the parents GOES BACK TO EUROPE
supporting by those who want to have a learning son in law – YES,
building an extra room in the house for the new couple to live in – YES
expecting parents’ support for full expenses – NOAlways_Ask_QuestionsParticipantMaseches Taanis lists holidays we had during BM times.
December 10, 2025 11:53 am at 11:53 am in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2484264Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA> Kiruv, especially in Eretz Yisroel, is more “successful” than you think, but this isn’t a numbers game. And who could ignore the revolution going on for decades in the former Soviet Bloc nations (led to a large extent by, well you know which group…) where tens of thousands of Jews have returned to their roots and built families of Shomrei Mitzvos?
Agree on most of your points. There are different types of chabadniks – some have a goal of induction into Chabad, others are satisfied in having their students stam ehrliche Yidden. Similar thing with others who use the word “kiruv”. There is also an issue what happens when these BTs “graduate” into regular communities – they often do not get sufficient support there the way they were getting from their original teachers.
Similar with USSR – majority of those Yidden are in US and Israel. While there lots of successes, lots are lost. In US, many are outside of observant communities. In Israel, they are physically closer, I wish more people were paying attention to their neighbors …
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantThere is nothing wrong, and a lot of right, celebrating a miracle that happened to someone and to his ancestors. If chassidim feel attached to a Rebbe to whom a miracle happened, what is wrong with that?
That said, relationships between chassidim/misnagdim and Russian government was “complicated”. People from both groups tried to use the government against the other at some moment, and the government, in turn, used the fighting to impose themselves on the Jewish community.
10+ years later during Napoleon invasion of Russia, Alter Rebbe was a daas yachid who supported the Czar. While all other chassidim/misnagdim weere looking to an end of Russian occupation of Poland, Alter Rebbe was (1) fearful of assimilation that would follow liberation (2) realistically felt that the Czar is not going anywhere … (and Lubavitch was more to the east of other groups).
Was being freed from the prison related to the future cooperation? I don’t know.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantHere is what I read in the name of Chazon Ish about mussar:
some people make a mistake thinking that middos are important for mitzvos bein adam lehavero, and yiras shamayim is important for mitzvos towards Hashem. And this is a mistake – if you did not work on your middos, it means you are in total power of yetzer hara. It is that yetzer hara is more often showing up in relationships with people than towards Hashem. But if you don’t know how to deal w/ yetzer hora in general, then the moment you have a difficulty in mitzvos to Hashem, this person will fail also.December 9, 2025 10:02 am at 10:02 am in reply to: Proposed Solution to the Arab-Zionist Conflict: Non-Denominational State #2483707Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel> it is disingenuous to use rav shach’s name in advocating for NK folly
disingenuous?! yankel, we all have lost our minds if we let ourselves quote talmidei chachomim in a way to improve our personal positions. It is a free-world disease of “free speech” where each side brings best arguments for their side, hoping for the other side to not find good arguments. We all absorb that and start using in the Jewish world. This is my biggest takeaway from discussions here – how assimilated we all are.
Just think – a T’Ch was holding certain positions and some guy in a basement has hutzpah to extract a quote from a T’Ch that fits him, disregarding the full views of the author. This is bigger bizayon of Torah than any anti-religious author is capable of.
December 9, 2025 10:02 am at 10:02 am in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2483706Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel, as you, I acknowledge variety of opinions about L Rebbe with minor comments:
> product of years of university studies without yeshiva studies
whoever said that is probably somewhat biased – several years that L Rebbe spent when he was about 25-30 y.o. in U of Berlin and an engineering studies in Paris were way past his yeshiva years.overall, criticism coming from people who did not show same level of care about Jews as a whole can be disregarded. Not because they are not knowledgeable in Torah – but because their views do not take into account relevant issues. Maybe a good analogy is a sanhedrin requirement to have
young children to make sure the judge has rahmonus.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant> No weapons of mass destruction to be found. Just civilians who had their lives cruelly turned upside down and forever changed
some people just play games with facts, not caring about real people. Maybe ask Iraqis how many votes would Saddam get in recent elections.
If you look at various democracy indices – they were 0.1 (out of 1) and below under Saddam and are 0.2 to 0.4 now, a pretty good number for the region they are in.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel > he answered that that they are –after all , baalei mussar ….
funny, thanks!
There is a story about one R Salanter’s dvar Torah. He would usually post maarei makamos on the door before the speech. So, someone who did not like mussar that much changed that message to different sources. R Salanter was standing quiet for several minutes and then started speaking using the posted sources. Someone who noticed tiold him after – this is real gaonus that it took you just several minutes to come up with the speech according to new sources. Oh, no, he answered – I spent those several minutes pondering whether speaking to the new sources would be a sign of gaavah. If it were, then I would have just left the bimah.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantSo, Israeli gov protects the bochur from going to a medina reshoyim and HaRav is unhappy? What a contrast with R Elchonon who warned Yidden not to go to a country that has minhagim against Torah.
December 9, 2025 10:02 am at 10:02 am in reply to: Lna’ar Hazeh Hispalalti? The Dissonance of Redemption #2483635Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantEvalim, you have a good point. I don’t want to argue with that. I just want to say that what may seem “normal” to you may not be so normal to others.
> They aren’t consumed by hate for the state and don’t have deep hashkofos about what the early zionists did? It’s just not an issue. (Until they started arresting them)
Seeing (maybe a small number) jumping on buildings, gas stations, unfinished buildings, while the rest of the crowd passing by; as well as overall idea of ignoring the needs and views of the rest of the society – as much as some want to celebrate this, as much others do not want to be a part of. We discussed both sides here in detail, so we don’t need to rehash, but this is just one part of calculation that come for some. As Chofetz Chaim himself felt that he did not want to be torn between two groups he would have to visit …
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantFood on yohrtzeit seems to be a sephardi thing, except that they do not call it “yohr” or “tzeit” of course
December 4, 2025 10:32 am at 10:32 am in reply to: Proposed Solution to the Arab-Zionist Conflict: Non-Denominational State #2481553Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant> directly and unambiguously due to the Zionist Project radicalizing them
as one of my Israeli friends wondered – “is worth being cousins to people who kill their brothers?” Arabs & Muslims produced multiple wars and atrocities against each other in the last 80 years. We listed them here before. This proves that their attitude is not due to only Jewish influence.
Your argument of historical attitudes work to justify the “anti Z” position of 100 years ago. This position had a basis in history at that time, but it just happened to not be an accurate decision. You might come up with theological explanations why Hashem did not provide correct navua to tzaddikim,
and these are interesting to explore, but at least acknowledge the simple facts before going into theology.Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantHappy, sorry I did not hap the issue first. You are talking public policy, not a personal gripe.
You are right. Seems that Aguda puts priority on accommodating those who are already machmir on shabbos and are trying to have a comfortable shaharis while making it hard to those who are struggling with the schedule of shabbos and might suffer a lfinancial loss and even those who might not keep shabbos under such stress. My guess is that the second group is larger and issue is more important indeed, although they are less likely to be Aguda members, which explains the organization’s stand that is, unfortunately, pretty consistent.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantR Twersky always suggests to ask such shailos of rabbis who are bokehs in psychology or are willing to work closely with professionals. Look at his books for more details.
I don’t know about schools in your area, but I saw cases where school request parents to put kids on medication as a condition of enrollment, while it is quite possible that the kids need better teachers. [As one rav, who byh had a double-digit of kids graduating from such schools, observed – everyone behaved in a class by the most respected rav and but almost everyone misbehaved in many other classes]. So, maybe start with paying attention if behaviors vary with the teacher.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantThe reason this is important is because you work for a big company that requires you to work fixed hours, does not care about your timeline and would not even let you take half a day to work from home. Find a better employer or have your own business and you feel better.
It is actually a halachik question – controlling time is equivalent to avdus. It is reflected in halocha: if you are an employer, you should give employee time before dismissing them, but should allow them to leave any time (except if suffering losses) – if you force him to give you a notice, you are making him an eved. So, choose the job or a business where you can better control your own time to make yourself a free person.
December 3, 2025 10:27 am at 10:27 am in reply to: Proposed Solution to the Arab-Zionist Conflict: Non-Denominational State #2480864Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantin respect to the sad argument who is our worse enemy at certain time period, maybe we are not very good at predicting that, and finding explanations bdieved is not really a kuntz. As R Soloveitchik writes – the anonymity of the Ish that Yaakov is fighting symbolizes exactly that – we are not able to tell where the danger might come from. His example is that socialists were preaching that capitalism is causing antisemitism, and then they came to power and became even worse ones.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantchief > saying not to bury Chassidim in Slutsk is a red herring
this is not a good argument, who knows what was the original cause – if there was animosity and even no burial place, then chasidim will not live there.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantWhen looking for info about Slutsk, I found this funny story:
Rabbi Yoshe-Ber used to give the following explanation about why Misnagdim fast on the day of yahrzeit, and Hasidim make a feast with a lechayim.Before the giving of the Torah, when Jews did not know how to learn, and they saw that Moses our Teacher was late, they surmised that he had passed away, and they made a feast: “And the people sat down to eat”. Year later, when Moses our Teacher indeed passed away, it was already after the giving of the Torah. Jews knew how to learn, and they did not make a feast. They only observed mourning, as it states in the verse: “And the Children of Israel wept over Moses.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI think karpas also includes ponevezh and kosova, hometowns to some well-known rabbis!
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel> calling gdolei hador by their first name
maybe rav vilna gaon?
in my stylebook, when name is personalized with a place or another marker, it is used without rav. I might be wrong, but this is why I say that.
If I recall correctly, R Kotler called R Soloveichik – Bostoner Rav, not Rav Bostoner Rav, and R Soloviechik called R Kotler Kletzker Rosh Yeshiva, not Rav Kletzker Rosh Yeshivaon the other hand, R (just for you) Chasam Sofer called Moses Mendelsohn RaMaD – rav Moshe mDasau even when denouncing him, and other Rabbis of that generation did not all hold by the denouncing – while posters here use his name without rav and with bad words and protest putting him in the same list as R Hirsh – even as R Hirsh puts him on the list with Rambam (both respecting and criticizing – both of them). And mods seem to be not even allowing posts with his name in the title when the post is entirely a quote from R Hirsh (unless mods are simply overworked and do not start any new threads).
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantguys, don’t get the bait from the several posters posting nonsense. everyone already know what they’ll post. By addressing them on such sensitive issues you might (1) violate one of the halochos of LH – praising someone who is not considered 100% tzaddik by everyone in the world as you are causing someone to respond negatively (2) by diverting conversation to the trolls, we are not discussing underlying issues (3) this also turns away both readers and posters who might have contributed to the discussion
serious comment: regardless of what anyone thinks of the merits of the letter, it is reflecting what some of the public that is generally religious thinks.
it should matter to everyone. What words or actions can change that?for example, a sephardi charedi politicians replied to an accusation – “we are davening for soldiers 3 times a day”. I don’t know whether this sentiment will move the public by itself, but even that may be said bysome non-Sephardim only conditionally – “we are saying tehilim and keeping soldiers quietly in mind”. Maybe saying something – anything – explicitly – could be a step in the right direction?
December 2, 2025 10:53 am at 10:53 am in reply to: Proposed Solution to the Arab-Zionist Conflict: Non-Denominational State #2479946Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantujm> prior to Zionism Jewish life under Muslim rule was far far better than Jewish life under the rule of non-Muslims
true in many cases, but not all. You can’t average over all Muslim regimes. Still, 20th century is different and Hafez Assad is no Salahdin – it is filled with murderous regimes, many socialist but some muslim. This is not due to Zionism, but overall trends. Afghanistan, Yemen, Somali were able to oppress a lot of people far removed from zionist influence.
December 2, 2025 10:53 am at 10:53 am in reply to: Are there any limits actually enforced by the moderators? #2479945Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantShimon> Some Chassidim who were there were surprised.
This is very concerning. Does it mean the rebbe did not have a chance to explain himself in the years before?
What is the point of a rebbe having chassidim if they don’t absorb pretty basic ideas.
Maybe the rebbe thought that this is self-evident and did not bother to explain?Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantGiven how much Torah and Torah-observant Jews came out of chassidus, it is clear that the foundations were true. It is quite possible that the opposition at the time did not see why these innovations were needed; or/and initial movement made some bad moves first and they were corrected, whether on their own or under Gaon’s pressure. In any case, a founder could not be have been totally wrong.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI don’t know about Beis Levi, but R Moshe Soloveitchik, Chaim Brisker’s son was a Rav at a chabad town and initially hired a chanbadnik as a teacher for his son, RJBS (until the mother caught up with the fact that the son is learning chassidus at the expense of Gemorah).
December 1, 2025 4:24 pm at 4:24 pm in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2479743Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantyankel > both are true
And this is not new. RJBS writes in the 1950s (under previous rebbe) that he can’t balance 3 things – (1) brilliance of Baal Hatanya; (2) ignorance of popular chabad literature (3) the heroism of the shluchim going and saving Jewish neshomos in all places
We know that even Mordechai was demoted in the Sanhedrin after he got involved in communal affairs.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI think discussing merits of Torah learning instead of serving is unbecoming – as it is clear, and and was expressed here to, that most proponents of not serving are in reality against anyone from their community to serve, whether they are learning or not. Thus, any such discussion is based on lies – just a red herring argument and is a disgracement of True Torah Learning. Those who follow this argument think that any argument is OK when dealing with anti-Torah establishment. So, if you seriously argue against their fake position, you are being treated as anti-Torah.
November 30, 2025 4:14 pm at 4:14 pm in reply to: Proposed Solution to the Arab-Zionist Conflict: Non-Denominational State #2479149Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipant> that a non-denomination/non-ethnic/neutral State in the Holy Land would be absolutely safer for Jews
Many seem to be skeptical of such, but – why don’t you start such a state under any of neighboring states? There are several new opportunities right now – putting a frum peace corps in yellow-line Gaza, Southern Lebanon, Southern Suria – just go negotiate with the locals.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantR Soloveitchik was not frozen out of aguda, he is listed on moetzes website, he left on his own.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantthis headline is totally different from another article:
“Ben Yeshiva” from Beit Shemesh “Arrested” For Draft DodgingAlways_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI don’t want to take sides in this discussion. I’ll also bli neder get to learning chassidus when I am finished with nigleh. [just a tiny dig: when I see people engaged in serious chassidus who seemingly did not yet learn how to be nice to a shul member or a goy b’shuk – I am wondering whether money spent on the spodek were well spent].
But my question is – how can you insist on carefully following minhagei Baal Shem tov or any Rebbe – when chassidus itself started as a change of their tradition – not just “nusach sefard” that is still ashkenaz, just sefard-style, of course, but also creating separate kehilos, diverting community taxes. So, after such a radical revolution (and I do understand that there were good reasons for that) – now suddenly we can’t change anything in the levush for 200 years.
Did someone write about this question?
November 27, 2025 11:16 am at 11:16 am in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2477831Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantMaybe the best things each of us can do is to think how to alleviate this problem. Grab your kids and go visit such chabad family and help them out for a week or two and let your kids socialize with their kids, and then stay in touch remotely, and then visit once in a while and maybe invite kids to visit your community. “Adopt a chabad”.
Maybe this is how the isolationist community can participate in the outreach activities – by assisting the outreachers without exposing themselves to the dangers of the world out there.
November 27, 2025 11:16 am at 11:16 am in reply to: Proposed Solution to the Arab-Zionist Conflict: Non-Denominational State #2477825Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantin the non-denominational state, you will get exemption from the army service if you can recite by heart either Quran or Shulchan Oruch, or you can do half each.
November 26, 2025 5:07 am at 5:07 am in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2477149Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantHaimy on empirical studies –
you have to be careful extrapolating statistics from average population with 1.5 kids per family where parents are not involved with kids and kids watch whatever they want online with, byh, large families with dedicated families.Just a practical thing – many families got a chance to discontinue medications that schools required kids to take and the kids had a chance to learn how to function on their own. Not all families used that chance, of course. Some doubled down so that kids do not bother them too much.
November 25, 2025 6:13 pm at 6:13 pm in reply to: Declare Neturei Karta to be Non-Jewish Rodfim and Enemies of the Jews #2476838Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantIf we learned anything from the last century, we should be humble in our (collective) ability to predict what will happen in the world, and we should be observing and reacting to what is happening, trying to do it together rather than fighting each other. Nobody won cultural and religious wars of 1930s Poland.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA, I agree on polls especially on such specific edgy issues. Still, there are some core convictions that people hold pretty steady. It might look “ironic” and frustrating that 5% of people who change their minds based on some silly news article decide elections, but it is really part of the “mechanics” of a modern democracy. Given that politicians have more information about voters than other way around, we usually get roughly two competing groups, each of them is capable of calculating a set of competitive positions that add up to about 50% of votes. So, they fight for that remaining 1% and everyone is focused on that, but the bottom line is that we get a government that is reflective of at least 45% of population if you disregard hot topics. In essence, the system works such that both candidates are acceptable. This is way better than what Chinese or Iranians get. We should be modeh on that. In US, you can see the other alternative – in state and city elections, you get non-competitive 70-30 elections, leading to corrupt and lazy governments. Or fractured elections, where an extreme candidate get enter without having large support (see Weimar Republic and NY City).
But, the original question was whether Israeli SC will be able to overcome a large majority opinion of public or they are truly stiffling of democracy, as muslim overseers are in Iran. I don’t think we decided this one way or another. Maybe like yir hanedahet this never happened yet. Then, the best way to check, as I mentioned before, try to take a position that large majority of Israelis support (if this even possible) and see how it goes. Just saying – SC will overturn it anyway, we should not even try, is a childish position – used to excuse irresponsible behavior.
November 25, 2025 9:13 am at 9:13 am in reply to: Is Chabad Sacrificing Their Youth In The Quest For Outreach #2476729Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantRight, is it a given that kids need to be in company of similar age kids, so that they learn things from each other? The class based learning is simply to enable teachers to say a lecture to multiple students at the same time. Something that technology already solved. Maybe a kid can benefit more from being around mature adults plus siblings?
November 24, 2025 10:11 pm at 10:11 pm in reply to: Chazon Ish [ZTL ZYA] and Military Draft Exemptions #2476572Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantrambam’s brother chose to become a merchant. He was raised in the same family as Rambam, so surely he had an option to zitz and learn.
passport taken away – I already quoted a sefer that if the czar knew how valuable Torah learning is, he would put a soldier with a bayonet near each Yid, and when the Yid gets distracted by reading YWN, the chayal will kick him with the bayonet.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA, right, that is why I asked whether anything changed in last 6 months.
I don’t see better answers. I also see Israeli trust on courts being consistently low for number of years without much change. It might be that any change that increases confidence of some part of population, it decreases confidence in the other.Here are a couple of tidbits I found:
gallup collected in Jul-Aug 2025:
confidence in courts 43% (v 46% a year before) – all at the expense of Bibi’s supporters (fell from 47% to 37% in a year)israeli voice index – confidence in democratic rule in mid-40s for last 15 years
I am obviously further away from the events, but I also have contact with all of these groups. Our town has representatives of all, maybe except NK, BH.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI agree on differentiating between simply using secular knowledge and getting involved in research. And also that there is a lot of bad stuff in and around science. If you are interested in psychology, start with works by R Twersky. In economics or game theory, start with Prof/R Aumann. You can probably find a kosher scientist in any area 🙂
The first issue is more of a social one – what can we introduce into our homes without generating negative effects.
The 2nd one is also of two parts: applied research and “real” research. Applied research is similar to to simply “using” secular knowledge, except this “usage” happens at professional level – developing better iphones is not much different from using iphones.
As to actually participating in science as Jewish thinkers (as opposed to just being Jews who do science) – R Hirsh highlighted probably two most significant persons – Rambam and MM (or RAMAD as Hasam Sofer calls him – Rabbi Moshe from Desau). R Soloveitchik studied philosophy and tried to integrate it with his Jewish views, but I don’t think he is known in philosophy outside of Jewish circles. Maybe Einstein can be counted – it seems that his complex formulas were guided by a principle that the whole world needs to be described by one set of equations. His rejection of quantum physics was based on “God does not play dice”.
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI found an interesting story reported by R Moses Schick in response to rumors that he saw Hasam Sofer throwing MM’s Biur to the ground. He says the real story was that Hasam Sofer was giving a dvar Torah at his house while visiting and asked for Chumash to quote psukim. Rav’s other chumashim were in shul and he had only Biur in the home. Knowing HS’ attitude, someone told him that “there is no chumash in the Rav’s house” … when HS later commented to someone about lack of chumashim in Rav’s house, Rav Schick explained to him what happened and explained that he is basing himself on another Gaon who studied Biur [maybe R Akiva Eger? AAQ]. R Schick also said that he went through whole chumash and did not find any problems. Hasam Sofer referred him to a particular verse in Devorim [presumably 2:10-12].
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantI agree that R Hirsh insists in primacy of Torah v science. What unites him with MM, I think, is the strong position that Torah can co-exist with modernity, that we can speak the language of scientists – at the times where so much scientists were attacking religion. I’ll take it as homework to look at what R Hirsh thinks of Kant and of relationship Torah v science. I can only recall his grandson R Breuer saying that Kant came to the border of Judaism but did not cross in.
My suggestion on MM and Kant was that MM had a first-hand exposure to what the new ideas are. So, he could predict what these ideas will do to Jews unprepared to meet those ideas (as R Hirsh discusses about Avraham raising Yitzhak near Gerar to get exposure to the non-Jewish thinking). This is my sevorah, not something I can proof from texts so far, but it makes sense (to me).
Always_Ask_QuestionsParticipantYYA, on R Hirsh on MM, I would have to ask you to trod to sefaria and read the 18th letter. It is not long. I posted new threads twice, once with my comments, 2nd with just quotes from R Hirsh, but this did not show up. I hope it is because of MM name in the subject, not because R Hirsh is not frum enough. I’ll be interested in hearing your opinion on that. He indeed criticizes, as you are suggesting, both Rambam and MM for not making Torah primary viz-a-viz sciences.
Interesting you mention lubavitch. I heard the following moshal from a chabad rabbi, not sure what the origin is: an assimilated Jew came to MM and said that he almost succeeded at emancipating himself from Judaism, but sometimes he has very severe doubts that make his life hard – and asked for an advice how to deal with these doubts. Sure, said MM, here is a simple advice: in the morning do natilas yadayim, then take this water that has tumah, and drink it. And this will help you rid of the doubts. The Yid did that and indeed had no more doubts! Then, he thought about it and realized that this means that the tumah that he drank was a real thing, therefore … etc. So, he did teshuvah, and, indeed, never had any more doubts, as MM predicted.
This story probably summarizes at the uncertain place of MM in Jewish history.
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