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FAITH
AND THE HOLOCAUST
Lecture
#16b:
"Hester
Panim" and God's Presence in the Holocaust
Part
2
By
Rav Tamir
Granot
B. The
Rebbe of Klausenburg: "No place is devoid of Him" – God exists in
Auschwitz
Rabbi
Rabinowitz
wrote his Binat Nevonim some forty years after giving up his position as
Rebbe of Munkacs, and he makes no claim that his book presents a specifically
Chassidic world-view. Let us see
how the Rebbe of Klausenburg (Sanz) addresses the same existential problem, but
as someone who continued to be a leader of chassidut even after the
Holocaust, establishing Chassidic centers and viewing the rehabilitation of
chassidut as his life's mission.
First
of all, it is necessary to understand why chassidut faced an almost
impossible theological and existential crossroads in the wake of the
Holocaust. For chassidim, the
assumption of Divine immanence (i.e., His Presence within this world, as
manifest within reality) is the very core of the religious experience and the
primary meaning of Divine worship.
The faith that God "fills all the worlds" (Tikkunei Zohar
5a, 6b) and that "there is no place that is devoid of Him" (ibid. 91b, 122b) is
the gateway to drawing close to Him.
It is this belief that gives meaning to prayer, to love of God, to one's
attitude towards the world, and to everything that a religious Jew is involved
in. Therefore, the religious
concept of hester panim (the hiding of God's face), in its simplistic
sense, is inconceivable. On the
other hand, the possibility that God is here with us while tremendous horror is
going on seems equally inconceivable.
This conundrum of faith seems insoluble.
How,
then, can we preserve the Chassidic religious experience and the tenets of its
faith without suppressing the significance of the Holocaust? The Rebbe of
Klausenburg offers the following insight:
One…
who reaches such a level fulfills the verse, "Even though I walk in the valley
of the shadow of death, I fear no evil because You are with me" (Tehillim
23:4). For the whole world is full
of His glory, and no matter where I go, He fills all the worlds, and even in
She'ol that is beneath, and in the depths of She'ol, and in the
kelippot (husks or shells), there is no place that is devoid of Him. With this knowledge and awareness, [this
person] is not afraid of anything except God… and God will do what is good in
His eyes. This is known to every
Jew and to anyone with even the tiniest spark of faith in God. (Shefa Chayim,
Divrei Torah 14, vol. 5788, Chanuka)
The
Chassidic assumption of divine immanence assumes here psychological and
existential significance, and God's Presence becomes meaningful in a very
personal way.
God is present and is watching and is able to save us; therefore, a person with
faith has no reason to fear anything – even in the very depths of
She'ol. Although the Rebbe
presents this level of religious faith as an obvious fact that is known to every
Jew, he is clearly describing a supreme religious experience. And as noted above, the greater the
chasm separating the absurd picture presented by reality and the perception
demanded by faith, the greater the existential and religious challenge.
How
can such a religious experience be anchored – or even entertained at all – in a
reality so full of injustice and horror? The Rebbe of Klausenburg does not
retreat into ideological theory, but proposes ways of dealing with this
existential challenge based on his own experience:
If
[the believer] is put to this test and he fortifies his faith, then he cannot be
punished; if despite his disturbing thoughts he rallies with all his might so as
not to fall into despair, and repeats to himself with joy and strength, "God
will help; God will help! He – blessed be His Name – is with me at all times; He
will not forsake me, nor will He abandon me"…
It
is an important principle in the Torah to fulfill the verse, "I place God before
me always," [meaning,] that one should always see before his eyes the Name
Y-H-V-H, blessed be He and blessed be His Name, and in all of one's endeavors
and in all of his ways, he should trust in Him alone.
(ibid.)
The
first piece of advice is to repeat simple statements of faith to give oneself
encouragement and to suppress the disturbing thoughts of despair. The second piece of advice speaks of
focusing on God's Name – imagining the letters in one's mind. The mind's concentration on the letters
serves to orientate one's entire personality, arousing the feeling of
closeness.
The
Rebbe's own experience during the period of the Holocaust was one of constant
Divine Providence, not one of hester panim. The sense of God's Presence hovering
over him and accompanying him even through the valley of death was not an
ideology that developed only later on; it is unquestionably an existential fact,
not mere theory:
When
he stepped inside the gates of the camp, and noticed three young Torah scholars
in front of him who had arrived together with his "transport," he immediately
began telling them holy words [of Torah], and to fortify their faith, and to
accept their suffering with love.
In the midst of speaking to them, he asked them with great emotion: "Do
you believe that the Creator, blessed be His Name, is here with us?" At once,
the young men answered and called out together: "We believe it!" Again the Rebbe
called out to them, with growing fervor: "Then remember it well and do not
forget. For the Creator of all
worlds is here with us, and He will redeem us… I promise you that in the merit
of this faith, you too will be redeemed, and will merit to be liberated and to
emerge from here alive…"
For
the Rebbe, the faith that God is with us is not the question, but rather the
solution. Moreover, it is the only
way of surviving the storm. This
does not imply that such faith is to be taken for granted, or that it comes
automatically. The Rebbe himself
had to work on fortifying his faith, and the excerpt above describes his attempt
to strengthen the faith of others.
The
experience of closeness to God is expressed not only at the extreme crossroads
of "to be or not to be," but also in other areas. One example is the ability, in the midst
of the inferno, to arrive at intense closeness to God, despite the complete
erasing of any objective religious context. Holocaust survivors who were in the camp
together with the Rebbe have recounted how, on Shemini Atzeret of the year 5705
(1944), he found some way to evade going out to work. When the other prisoners returned to the
camp, they found him engaged in an ecstatic dance of hakafot, with some
torn pages from a Mishna in his hand instead of a Sefer Torah. Such ecstatic dancing characterized him
throughout his life, even in his old age.
What makes this description special, of course, is its broader context: that he
achieved such a psychological, physical and experiential state even in the midst
of Auschwitz, and in such a deplorable state of health and malnourishment – all
out of sense that God was with him.
The
following is another story that he told about his first days in Auschwitz. It, too, shows the existential
importance of faith in God's closeness:
I
arrived in Auschwitz… It was Erev Shabbat; a Friday morning at 10 AM…
After we arrived, they gave out food to people who were picked out as being fit
for work. It was some meaty food
for breakfast, and everyone jostled to get a share… They encouraged me to come
and eat what was being handed out, but I said that under no circumstances would
I eat the non-kosher food of this wicked one who had taken from me all that I
had… under no circumstances would I eat non-kosher food… and thus I quite simply
maintained a fast all of that Friday… By evening I was already very hungry and
weak…
Again
the next day, on Shabbat, I heard them shouting and announcing to come and eat…
but I didn't go… So I sat, brooding alone… When the barracks emptied out and no
one remained, I suddenly burst into rivers of tears – although I was not one to
weep, for I had taken upon myself to accept with love whatever would happen, as
God has commanded us. But at noon
on that Shabbat I burst into terrible weeping. I said, "Master of the universe, I am
left alone and with nothing. You
have taken everything from me… I am left solitary and bare – on top of all of
that, should I go and eat non-kosher food?! I do not wish to eat non-kosher
food! I'm not eating it!"
As
I sat alone speaking like this, a frightened man entered the barracks and came
directly to me, asking: "Are you the Rebbe of Klausenburg?" The very question
caused me fright, since the murderers usually led the rabbis and scholars first
to the ovens… But as we spoke, someone else came and called to me: "You have to
come right now; right by the door there is someone waiting for you…" I had no
choice but to go to the door, although I feared that perhaps it was the
kapo or one of the S.S. men, and here I had no possibility of escaping or
hiding… But when I drew close to the door, I saw an elderly Jewish man who asked
me, in these words: "Was the Rebbe of Kashanov your uncle?" I stood confounded…
How did this person know about me, that I was here, in Auschwitz? And how did he know that the holy Rabbi
David of Kashanov, may his memory protect us, was my uncle? Of course, I answered, "That's true –
the Rabbi of Kashanov was my uncle…" He quickly handed me a loaf of bread and a
bowl full of jelly, saying: "I brought it so you would have something to eat; I
brought it so you could keep yourself going…" And in the blink of an eye this
mysterious person disappeared… I never saw him again…
I
saw then, quite tangibly, that there is a God in the world… and I was vindicated
(also in the eyes of those around me, who had previously adjured me not to keep
myself distant from the foods prepared by the wicked ones) for not having wanted
to eat non-kosher food… And then I accepted upon myself anew that come what may,
under no circumstances would I eat non-kosher food… especially when the Holy
One, blessed be He, was arranging food for me… Afterwards, I recited a blessing
over the bread, and found water to wash my hands, and I sat down to eat a
Shabbat meal… Throughout the year that I spent imprisoned by the Nazis, may
their names be blotted out, I ate no non-kosher food, despite everything that
happened to me in the camp. And
even without desecrating Shabbat… and Heaven protected me, none of the wicked
ones found out who I was… I had already been, on a few occasions, like someone
walking in between life and death; they wanted to annihilate me… but I saw with
my very senses that the Holy One, blessed be He, protects and saves those who
observe and study the Torah, and the merit of my forefathers also protected
me…"
The
faith in God's Providence assumes a very tangible expression here in the
personal miracle that the Rebbe experienced, according to his description,
making it possible for him to survive.
On the purely halakhic level, the Rebbe maintained that it was completely
permissible – even obligatory – to eat the non-kosher food. The exception that he made for himself
and the risk that he took upon himself arose from the subjective feeling that
God was watching over him and taking care of his needs. Such foods bring impurity and dullness,
even when it is permissible to eat them.
If my soul recoils at them, then my subjective faith concludes that God
will surely not cause me to stumble.
In
summary, in the view of the Rebbe of Klausenburg, God's Presence is not a
question but rather life-giving strength, a source of consolation, and the
greatest – to a considerable extent, the only - core of
hope.
C. The
Subjective Faith of the Believer; God's Closeness and His
Deliverance
Let
us recall the Rebbe's words to the young men: "Then remember it well and do not
forget. For the Creator of all
worlds is here with us, and He will redeem us… I promise you that in the merit
of this faith, you too will be redeemed, and will merit to be liberated and to
emerge from here alive…"This is an innocent religious conviction that not only
is God right here, but that He is going to redeem me, personally. This feeling is given very clear
expression in the following testimony:
When
one of the prisoners in the camp – a broken, dejected man - sighed in despair,
"We're going to remain here…," our Rabbi – may his merit protect us – called out
to him sternly, "You have no right to say such things concerning me. I honestly believe that both you and I
will be delivered and will leave here.
If you do not believe as I do, say whatever you want only about yourself,
but not about me…" The man asked him, "On what basis do you say that, Rabbi?"
And he answered confidently, "God is with us here, and He will surely save us…"
(Lapid Ha-esh, p. 168)
Is
there any necessary connection between the sense of God's closeness, the faith
in His Presence, and faith in His deliverance? It is clear to me that the Rebbe
knew perfectly well that even if God was present, He was not going to save
everyone, and there was no guarantee that there would be deliverance or a happy
ending for any particular individual.
When
the Rebbe uttered these words, his entire family had already perished in
Auschwitz, and the fate of European Jewry was quite clear. In other words, the Rebbe did not have
the "luxury" of believing, as religious people in normal times sometimes do,
that surely everything would be alright, since God was watching over them. Nevertheless, it seems from his words
that the Rebbe genuinely believed that God would save him.
Perhaps
the explanation lies in the realm of psychology. Religious faith is expressed in the
statement that God is present, but the statement that "God will save me" belongs
not to a person's belief, but rather to his psychology. It is an expression of
self-encouragement and fortification, with no real component of faith or
knowledge.
However,
in my humble opinion – and especially in light of the Rebbe's speeches after the
Holocaust – his words accurately express a direct subjective certainty that God
was indeed with him and was going to save him. One could not conclude from this
subjective feeling that God was going to save everyone else, as well. Clearly, this was not going to
happen. It is equally clear that
the Rebbe had no answers to the great questions of Divine justice in the
Holocaust. Nevertheless, his
subjective religious feeling was one of God's closeness and faith in His
deliverance.
I
assume that at the time, the Rebbe could not have explained to himself why
specifically he should be chosen for God's deliverance. He had certainly learned from his
internal religious experience that God's Providence covers everyone and
everything, but he could not have known at that time why specifically he would
be saved, while others would not.
The reason became subjectively clear to him years later, after his
deliverance was a fact of reality, and he interpreted this as a mission. I quote here from the Rebbe's speech at
ceremony for laying the cornerstone of Kiryat Sanz (in 5717 – 1957), and then
from his speech at the inauguration of the Laniado hospital, which he had
initiated and established:
Many
times I have thought about why I alone, of all of my household and family,
remained alive… This day I say that it was all only so that, with my own hands,
I could lay the cornerstone here for Kiryat Sanz.
I
must give praise and thanks to the blessed God for the fact that we have
succeeded – with the end of the terrible Holocaust – in reviving dry bones… the
survivors that remain after the bloodbath… Who, in His great mercy and kindness
has left us a remnant on the day of His wrath, and that we have established,
with the help of heaven, the She'erit Ha-Peleta organization… For the
past twenty-five years the beneficent God has allowed me to establish and build,
in the land of our forefathers, areas that are faithful to God and to His Torah…
in which institutions of Torah and charity have been built… including, in all
its glory, the Kiryat Sanz hospital….
It
is obviously impossible to explain, in terms of Divine reward and punishment,
why one person was saved and another was not. But faith in God's Providence forces me
to understand that if I was saved, it must have been for a purpose; it is not
for nothing. God expects something
of me, and therefore He takes care of me and saves me. Therefore, the fact of my deliverance
itself entrusts me with a mission.
D.
God's Providence over all of Am Yisrael
Thus
far, we have examined the significance of the individual's faith in God's
Providence concerning himself. On
the national level, too, the Rebbe of Klausenburg negates the claim that God
hides His face completely.
Certainly, the Divine attribute of justice was dominant during the
Holocaust, and there has to be some explanation for this, but God was still
watching over His nation. His
Providence is discernible in the miracle of Jewish survival throughout history,
and especially in exile (most particularly, despite the Holocaust), despite
continuous attempts to destroy Jews, while of our greatest enemies there remains
no trace:
The
miracle and kindness that the blessed Creator has done for Israel from the time
that they became a nation until this day, is wondrous. We suffer and wilt from
all kinds of afflictions from nations that disappeared without trace nearly two
thousand years ago, while Am Yisrael lives on…" (Shefa Chayim, Divrei
Torah, 6, vol. 335)
In
a similar vein, the Rebbe recounts a conversation that he had in Auschwitz with
a Romanian doctor, who asked him: "Tell me, Rabbi – what will be with the Jews?"
He answered, "I am certain that Hitler, may his name and memory be erased, will
disappear from the world, and we will remain." When asked on what basis he
believed this, he said, "There is no one as wise as a person with
experience. I don't understand, and
I can't tell you the reason, but reality proves that many people have risen up
to destroy us, and the Holy One, blessed be He, delivers us from them." He also
added: "We see that [the ancient promise,] 'the Eternal One of Israel will not deceive' was
a central element in the faith of our forefathers, and that 'God will not
forsake His nation.'" (ibid.)
For
reasons that are not entirely clear to us, the Rebbe was saying, God is not
saving His nation right now, and the nations have the upper hand. However, His Providence is evident in
two fundamental facts: the wondrous survival of the Jewish people, and the
annihilation of the nations that rise up against us to destroy us.
Summary
Let
us now summarize the various aspects of the Rebbe of Klausenburg's view of
Divine Providence, and his response to the problem of hester
panim:
a. Even in relation to the Holocaust,
the Rebbe does not relinquish his faith that God "fills all the worlds." God
watches over everything, and in every situation a Jew should turn to God and
await His salvation.
b. The Rebbe applies the Chassidic
tenet that "there is no place devoid of Him," and that He "fills all the
worlds," to its extreme: God is with us even in the gas chambers, in the depths
of evil, in a place that is even more lacking than the "empty space" (that comes
into being by virtue of God's "contraction" so that Creation can
exist).
c. God's Presence and His Providence
assuring deliverance are not equally manifest concerning everyone. A great many were not saved. It is reasonable to assume that the
Rebbe knew this already when he entered the gates of Auschwitz, when he said
that the Divine Presence existed in the gas chambers. He certainly knew it later on, eleven
years after the liberation. Hence,
we must ask why God does not save, and where His deliverance is nevertheless
manifest – for otherwise the connection between His Providence and His
deliverance is altogether empty.
d. The Rebbe does not explain why God
does not save despite His Presence, but he explains where we do tangibly
encounter His deliverance and His Providence: the eternity of Israel and Jewish
survival despite all of the trials and tribulations, while our enemies
fall. These are the most tangible
revelation of God's constant watch over His nation. In other words, there is no promise that
every individual will be saved, but it is firmly promised that Am Yisrael
as a whole will be delivered.
e. The existence of Am Yisrael
is unique; it is an a-historical and even anti-historical phenomenon. Despite its weakness and physical
inferiority, this nation manages to survive better than all of the nations that
have subjugated it and tried to annihilate it. Historical "realpolitik" applies only
with respect to the other nations; there is a super-historical set of laws that
apply to Am Yisrael.
f. This analysis gives rise to
the understanding that Am Yisrael can be saved specifically in Eretz
Yisrael, for here its existence is separate from that of the other
nations. While Jews exist amongst
those nations, they are subject to the cruel and arbitrary circumstances of war
between the nations, whose results are purely a function of power. This view of Jewish existence in
Eretz Yisrael is diametrically opposed to the view of secular
Zionism. Secular Zionism views
Eretz Yisrael as an arena that allows a normalization of Jewish
existence. For the Rebbe, leaving
the countries of the other nations allows Am Yisrael to live in
accordance with the laws of its abnormal existence – i.e., by God's
Providence. Therefore, there is
also no reason to fear for Jewish existence in Eretz Yisrael, even when
the situation seems threatening.
g. The Rebbe's subjective
understanding of the meaning of his survival has broader significance. He views his survival as part of the
delivering Divine Presence that finds expression in the eternity of Israel. The statement, "I survived in order to
establish Kiryat Sanz" means that God's Providence watching over him personally,
saving him individually from the Holocaust, is itself proof of the delivering
presence of God in the reality of Jewish history. The fulfillment of this mission in the
Rebbe's great endeavors is itself a continuation of the revelation of His
Presence.
Translated
by Kaeren
Fish
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