Rabbi Sender Haber

Rabbi, Monsey, NY

The only person in the area who was willing to take apart my hard drive works out of a basement in Portsmouth. He turned out to be a really nice Lebanese fellow who was just dying to spend five hours on my computers, adding hardware, running software, and charging me a fraction of the going rate.

Apparently, I owe a debt of gratitude to Saul Goldstein. Saul immigrated to Miami from Europe about the same time that my new friend’s grandfather came over from Lebanon. They started a business together and remained partners for forty two years. “When grandma died, grandpa was real sad”, I was told, “but when Saul Goldstein died, it was the end of the world for grandpa. He only lasted a few weeks after that”.

Saul Goldstein was probably just another poor European immigrant, but he made a strong impression on that kind Lebanese family. When the Six Day War broke out, they didn’t think of tanks – they thought of Saul Goldstein. Decades later, when my friend eats with wayward Jews he tells them not to order ham – because Saul Goldstein wouldn’t. And when I entered his basement in Portsmouth, VA, I was given special attention – because that is what Saul Goldstein would have done.

True greatness is not about big headlines; it is about an impression that lasts for forty years.

Too often, we judge ourselves and others by the wrong standards. Everyone wants to change the world; but only a select few are available to help Mom with the dishes. We are addicted to momentary honor and handicapped by our need for glory.

Rav Gustman was one of the leading Talmidei Chachamim of the last generation. One day an angry young man entered his Yeshiva and slapped him across the face. The students were taken aback, but Rav Gustman reacted by telling two stories:

“When I was twenty years old”, he said, “I was chosen to serve with two senior scholars on Rav Chaim Ozer’s Rabbinic Court in Vilna. One day I arrived late at a session and the entire crowd, along with the greatest scholars of Vilna, rose in my honor. ”

“Several years later” he continued, “The Nazis held my family at gunpoint. They spat at me and yelled at me and shamed me before killing my wife and children before my eyes.”

“I experienced the pinnacle of honor and the depth of scorn. Since then, I am been incapable of feeling either honor or humiliation.”

Truly effective people focus on what everyone else calls “small stuff”.

We live in a world where the most thoughtful man can be vilified because he allowed a run and the lowest of the low becomes a hero for pitching a shutout inning. We can name the inventor of the atom bomb but we have no idea who came up with the ballpoint pen. We tell everybody where we graduated from but seldom thank the person who taught us to tie our shoes.

P.J. O’Rourke once wrote: A very quiet and tasteful way to be famous is to have a famous relative. Then you can not only be nothing, you can do nothing too.

We need more Saul Goldsteins.

By Rabbi Sender Haber

Rabbi Sender Haber is an acclaimed Teacher and Community Rabbi. He currently resides in Chestnut Ridge, NY.

2 Comments

  1. Mommy

    i hate to proofread, but this is really important.
    1.Rav Gustman’s young man was a talmid who was angry at him and didn’t stand up when the Rav came into the beis medrash. (I don’t think he could have slapped him and lived with some of the literal heavyweights in that place).
    2. Rav Gustman was 18 when appointed to the Vilna Beis Din
    3. They did not kill his wife, or his daughter. They survived the war in the woods, living on berries that rav chaim ozer had shown him and taught him about in a seemingly meaningless walk a few years earlier. The daughter died shortly after the war. The rebitzin lived long enuf that my friend Ruthi remembers her fondly. (Michael Steinberg is a talmid muvhak – and the brother of Dr. Abe who used to visit us in buffalo when he interned at roswell.)

    Reply

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