About 30 years ago, an American rabbi visiting Miami,
Florida gave a lecture on the life and accomplishments of the famed "Chafetz
Chaim" (Rabbi Israel Meir HaCohen Kagan, 1838-1933). He described the life
of the great sage who lived a humble life as a shopkeeper in in the village of Radin, in
Poland, yet was recognized throughout the Jewish world as a great scholar, tzaddik (righteous person) and leader.
There was another story the rabbi wanted to tell, but he hesitated, for
he only knew part of it. As he stood at the lectern, he thought for a
moment and then decided that he would tell it anyway. He rationalized
that even an unfinished story about the Chafetz Chaim would have a
meaningful message.
He began to relate an incident about a teenage boy in the Chafetz Chaim's
yeshiva who was found smoking a cigarette on Shabbat -- the sacred day of rest. The faculty and student body were shocked, and some of the faculty felt
that the boy should be expelled. However, when the Chafetz Chaim heard
the story, he asked that the boy be brought to his home.
At this point, the rabbi interrupted the narrative
and said, "I don't know what the Chafetz Chaim said to the boy. I
only know that they were together for a few minutes. I would give
anything to know what he said to this student, for I am told that the boy
never desecrated the Shabbat again. How wonderful it would be if we could
relay that message -- whatever it was -- to others, in order to encourage
them in their observance of Shabbat." The rabbi then continued with his
lecture.
After his talk, the hall emptied of everyone except for one elderly man,
who remained in his seat, alone with his thoughts. From the distance, it
seemed he was trembling, as if he was either crying or suffering from
chills. The rabbi walked over to the elderly man and asked him, "Is
anything wrong?"
The man responded, "Where did you hear that story of the cigarette
on Shabbat?" He did not look up and was still shaken. "I really
don't know," answered the rabbi. "I heard it a while ago and I don't
even remember who told it to me." The man looked up at the rabbi and
said softly, "I was that boy." He then asked the rabbi to go
outside, and as the two walked together, he told the rabbi the following
story:
"This incident occurred in the 1920's when the Chafetz Chaim was in
his eighties. I was terrified to have to go into his house and face him.
But when I did go into his home, I looked around with disbelief at the
poverty in which he lived. It was unimaginable to me that a man of his
stature would be satisfied to live in such surroundings.
"Suddenly he was in the room where I was waiting. He was remarkably
short. At that time I was a teenager and he only came up to my shoulders.
He took my hand and clasped it tenderly in both of his. He brought my
hand in his own clasped hands up to his face, and when I looked into his
soft face, his eyes were closed for a moment.
"When he opened them, they were filled with tears. He then said to
me in a hushed voice full of pain and astonishment, 'Shabbat!' And he
started to cry. He was still holding both my hands in his, and while he
was crying he repeated with astonishment, 'Shabbat, the holy Shabbat!'
"My heart started pounding and I became more frightened than I had
been before. Tears streamed down his face and one of them rolled onto my
hand. I thought it would bore a hole right through my skin. When I think
of that tear today, I can still feel its heat. I can't describe how
awful it felt to know that I had made the great tzaddik weep. But in his
rebuke -- which consisted only of those few words -- I felt that he was not
angry, but rather sad and fearful. He seemed frightened at
the consequences of my actions."
The elderly man then caressed the hand that bore the invisible scar of a
precious tear. It had become his permanent reminder to observe the
"holy Shabbat" for the rest of his life.
Biographical note: Rabbi Israel Meir HaCohen Kagan (1838-1933),
popularly known as "the Chafetz Chaim" after the title of one of his
many influential books, was one of the most important and beloved
rabbinical scholars and leaders of the 20th century. His other works
include Mishna Berura, an authoritative,
almost universally accepted compendium of Jewish Law, and Shmirat
HaLashon, about proper and improper speech.