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Opinion

The holy man who would never leave his room

The inspiration of Rabbi Kanievsky, who died recently, is more relevant than ever on Pesach

April 14, 2022 09:09
1.507215-1024px-Rebchaim
3 min read

Jews become famous for all sorts of reasons. Benjamin Disraeli as a successful prime minister. Theodor Herzl for his vision to create a national home for the Jewish people. Volodymyr Zelensky for his inspirational leadership of a country under siege. Few Jews become famous simply because they rarely leave their own home — and during their time at home, spend week in, week out, year after year, doing exactly the same thing, following the same identical schedule. 

For three quarters of a million people to attend the funeral in Israel of someone who fits this description, a person who held no official position and rarely spoke in public, should make us more than curious. It should encourage us to reflect on the values he stood for and the lessons his life may have for us all.

The man was Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky. Many Jews in Israel, Charedi and otherwise, gave him an honorary title, the “Prince of Torah”. For that was what he was. He simply studied Torah all day, according to an incredibly exacting schedule, thereby achieving remarkable depths of knowledge and wisdom. With time, this led thousands to his door to seek advice and guidance and to receive his blessing. 

Over 20 years ago, Rabbi Kanievsky was already famous in the Charedi world but less widely known elsewhere. I was studying in the Ponevezh Yeshiva in Bnei Brak. Together with a few friends, I had the privilege of joining him and his wife, Rebbetzen Batsheva Kanievsky — a living legend in her own right — for Shabbat lunch in their humble, simple home. His words were few and he continued learning when not eating. Yet to observe first hand someone whose every move was calculated based on the requirements of Jewish law at that precise moment in time was a remarkable experience. Even more significantly, his was a home built entirely around a life of Torah learning. Rabbi Kanievsky did not have a dining room — he had a “Sefarim Room” (Room of Books), the place in which he learned. 

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Judaism