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The Girl Who Had To Be Jewish



Rabbi Zalman Serebryanski, a senior chassid from Russia and dean of the Lubavitch Rabbinical College in Melbourne, Australia, once brought a girl to Rabbi Chaim Gutnick. "Please, help this girl convert," he asked.

Rabbi Gutnick listened to the girl's story. She lived in Balaclava, and from her youth had felt a strong attraction to Judaism. Whenever she heard stories of the Holocaust, she was deeply touched. She had been reading and studying about Judaism for a long time, and now wanted to convert.

Rabbi Gutnick was moved by her sincerity. Nevertheless, he did not want to perform the conversion. The girl was still living at home with her non-Jewish parents. Would she be able to practice Judaism in her parents' home? Would her interest continue as she matured into adulthood? Since he could not answer these questions, he decided to let time take its course. If the girl was still interested when she was older, she could convert then.

Rabbi Gutnick's refusal plunged the girl into deep depression, to the extent that she had to be confined to a hospital. The elder Reb Zalman, stirred by the depth of her feelings, continued to visit her from time to time.

After several weeks, he called Rabbi Gutnick, telling him of the girl's condition and asking him whether perhaps he would change his mind because of the strength of her feelings.

Rabbi Gutnick answered that the reasons which had dissuaded him from performing the conversion were still valid. Nevertheless, he promised to write to the Lubavitcher Rebbe describing the situation. If the Rebbe advised him to facilitate her conversion, he would happily comply.

Reb Zalman told the girl that the Rebbe was being consulted, and her condition improved immediately.

Rabbi Gutnick did not receive an immediate reply to his letter. But at a later date, at the end of a reply to another issue, the Rebbe added: "What's happening with the Jewish girl from Balaclava?"

Rabbi Gutnick was surprised. The girl and Reb Zalman had both made it clear that her family was Anglican!

He and Reb Zalman went to confront the girl's mother. At first, she continued to insist that she was Anglican, but as the sincerity of the two rabbis impressed her, she broke down and told her story. She had been raised in an Orthodox Jewish home in England. As a young girl, she had rebelled against her parents and abandoned Jewish life entirely, marrying a gentile and moving to Australia. She had not given Judaism a thought since. She loved her daughter, however, and would not oppose her if she wished to live a Jewish life.

Once the girl's Jewishness was established, Rabbis Serebryanski and Gutnick helped her feel at home in Melbourne's Lubavitch community. She continued to make progress in her Jewish commitment, and today is a teacher in a Lubavitch school.

But Rabbi Gutnick still had a question: How did the Rebbe know she was Jewish? At his next yechidut (audience with the Rebbe) he mustered the chutzpah to ask.

The Rebbe replied that, at Reb Zalman's urging, the girl had also written him a letter. "Such a letter," the Rebbe declared, "could only have been written by a Jewish girl."


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By Eli & Malka Touger   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
From To Know and to Care by Rabbi Eliyahu and Malka Touger; published by Sichos In English

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: May 14, 2009
Converted jews and jewish soul
What was not kept in mind or missunderstood by someone ore maybe also others:

Gerim (the pre-conversion converts) do not have a jewish soul >withing their bodies< ! There is a soul, supposed to be in their body (and that sould was at the giving of the Torah at mount sinai), but it's not already in their bodies. One receives it in the mikweh - naked like a baby, surrounded by water/fluid like a baby, one receives his nefesh elokit like a baby, starting a new life like a baby..
Posted By arnonym, Vienna, Austria

Posted: Jan 9, 2009
I cried
I read this and I cried, I am a woman, who was not born to a Jewish mother, and have been wanting to know what the steps are for "converting" to the Jewish family. I believe now that the "conversion" is just a matter of heart. I hope that my understanding is correct. I look forward to learning the rest in the comming years.
Posted By Anonymous, SterlingPeace, Kansas

Posted: Dec 18, 2008
A reply to an above statement.
"This story seems very unfair to converts. If converts are born with a Jewish neshama then they also could write such a letter. It does not make sense that the Rebbe could distinguish between a born Jewess and girl with a Jewish neshama based on a letter. "

I agree, so then the girl must have written something in her letter to distinguish her inherent Jewish identity to the Rebbe.
Posted By Aviva
via chabadofseattle.org



 


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