Exploring the Jewish Woman's Unique Potential
By Mrs. Leah Kohn
Part I:
"DO NOT FORESAKE THE TORAH OF YOUR MOTHER" (PROVERBS 1:8):
RABBI
MEIR SHAPIRO'S ATTACHMENT TO HIS MOTHER'S ADVICE
In the days of Rav Meir Shapiro's boyhood - the last decade of the
nineteenth century - Jewish learning took place at home. Families would
hire a tutor, who would live with the family and leave only for holidays.
Such was the case in the home of young Meir Shapiro. One late night - the
night after Pesach when the family tutor should have already returned from
his vacation earlier that day - Meir awoke to the sound of his mother
crying. He found her in tears, reciting psalms and praying that the family
tutor should return immediately. Meir tried to console his mother,
suggesting that the tutor would surely come back soon. His mother refused
to be comforted, responding that even a single day of Torah study foregone
is like losing something precious that can never be retrieved. What's
more, she mused, perhaps the family had not paid him enough and for that
reason he had not returned. "For such a great and mighty Torah," she
concluded, perhaps their sacrifice had been too small, even though
financially it had always been difficult to come up with the tutor's
stipend. Such was this woman's profound attachment to Torah, which she
communicated to her son.
The lasting impression of his mother's words is evident in Rav Meir's two
great contributions to Jewish learning, not to mention his scholarship and
personal righteousness. Rav Meir's "Daf haYomi" (literally, "daily leaf")
resounds with her conviction to daily Torah study. (Daf Yomi is a program
of learning the entire Talmud one leaf a day - two sides of a page, with a
full cycle completed every seven years.) Today, tens of thousands
worldwide participate in this process, which was inspired by the maternal
advice Rav Meir absorbed about how a each day carries it's own unique and
irretrievable opportunity for Torah knowledge. He is quoted as saying, "We
have to spend time with Torah every day, by studying the daf yomi, because
every day that goes by without Torah study is something precious lost that
can never be gotten back; and who knows what the next day may bring?" In
gaining support for Daf Yomi, Rav Meir proved to be truly his mother's
son. What's more, he was vociferous about the fact that it was his mother
who had provoked these great accomplishments.
Rabbi Meir's second creation - the Yeshivas Chachmey Lublin ("The Yeshiva
of Lublin Scholars"), founded in 1924, gained world renown as an institute
of Torah learning that produced top scholars and Talmudists. In promoting
the school, Rav Meir made full use of his mother's sense that no effort -
financial or otherwise - is too extreme, given the greatness of Torah. In
fundraising, when a potential contributor of means offered a modest sum,
submitting that business was not good or the like, Rav Meir would
respond, "But, my dear sir, for such a great and mighty Torah, this is too
small a sacrifice." Again, his mother's voice remained a guiding force,
and the adult Rav Meir always credited her influence.
In terms of maintaining a significant hand in Rav Meir's development, his
mother used both intellect and emotion. In this regard, her approach was
distinctly feminine, inasmuch as goodness was mingled with clarity and
consistency of action. Thanks to this approach, her message of strength
was articulated in a way that was palatable to Rav Meir's young mind.
In his biography of Rav Meir, A Blaze in the Darkening Gloom, Rav Yehoshua
Baumol writes, "[his mother] used to speak directly to his heart, in a
variety of ways that his heart would absorb and remember." As women, may
we never forget that each of us has the potential to speak and influence
others straight from the heart.
Please Note: A portion of the information in the preceding essay was taken
from: A Blaze in the Darkening Gloom: The Life of Rav Meir Shapiro by Rav
Yehoshua Baumol Feldheim Publishers
Text Copyright © 2004 by Mrs. Leah Kohn and Torah.org.