HOME | CONTACT US | DONATE LoginLOGIN Ask the RabbiASK THE RABBI
Chabad.org - Torah, Judaism and Jewish Info Chassidic Thought
 
Chabad.org » Learning & Values » Kabbalah & Jewish Mysticism » Chassidic Thought » Anthologies » Food: an Anthology » Too Good to Be Good
PrintSend this page to a friendShare this
Comment7 Comments

Too Good to Be Good


At a chassidic get-together (farbrengen) held in the early years of Chabad Chassidism, Reb Shmuel Munkes was doing the honors. The merry chassid danced about the participants, pouring the vodka and serving the farbeisen—the food to follow the l’chayims.

Among the dishes which had arrived from the kitchen of Reb Nosson the shochet was a bowl of roasted lung, a most tasty delicacy. But for some reason, Reb Shmuel was reluctant to part with this particular dish. Throughout the evening he pranced about, pouring the l’chayims and serving the food, with the bowl of roasted lung snug and elusive under his arm, deftly sidestepping all attempts to free it from his grasp.

Soon the chassidim grew weary of Reb Shmuel’s game, and demanded outright that he hand over the bowl and its mouth-watering contents. But the waiting chassid ignored their angry demands and kept up his dodging dance. Finally, a few of the younger chassidim decided that Reb Shmuel’s prank had gone on long enough. They rose from the table, and soon the bowl and its bearer were cornered. But with a final leap and twist, Reb Shmuel dumped the roasted lung into the spittoon, and broke out in a merry kazatzka dance.

The younger chassidim sat down to consider the gravity of Reb Shmuel’s crime, and decreed that a few well-placed stripes were in order. Without batting an eye, Reb Shmuel stretched himself out on the table and received his due. He then set out in search of more farbeisen to keep the farbrengen going. But the hour was late, and the best he could come up with was a plate of pickled cabbage donated by one of the residents of Liozna.

Upon seeing the replacement dish, the expressions on the faces of those who had already imagined the taste of roasted lung grew as sour as the kraut set before them. But soon a commotion was heard in the hallway. The town’s butcher ran in, a most stricken look on his face. “Jews! Don’t eat the lung!” he cried. “There has been a terrible mistake.” It seems that the butcher was out of town, and the butcher’s wife mistakenly gave the shochet’s wife a non-kosher lung to roast for the farbrengen.

Now it was the elder chassidim who sat in judgment upon Reb Shmuel. The audacity of a chassid to play the wonder-rabbi! By what rights had Reb Shmuel taken it upon himself to work miracles? Up onto the table with you, Reb Shmuel, decreed the court.

After receiving his due for the second time that evening, Reb Shmuel explained: “G‑d forbid, I had no ‘inside information’ regarding the roasted lung. But when I entered into yechidut (private audoience) with the Rebbe for the first time, I resolved that no material desire would ever dictate to me. So I trained myself not to allow anything physical to overly attract me.

“When the bowl of roasted lung arrived, I found that my appetite was most powerfully roused. I also noticed that the same was true of many around the table. To be so strongly drawn by a mere piece of meat? I understood that something was not right.”

PrintSend this page to a friendShare this
Comment7 Comments

Told by Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak of Lubavitch   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Translated by Yanki Tauber in Once Upon A Chassid (Kehot, 1994).

The content on this page is copyrighted by the author, publisher and/or Chabad.org, and is produced by our content partner, Chabad.org. If you enjoyed this article, we encourage you to distribute it further, provided that you comply with the copyright policy.
 

Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Apr 18, 2012
too good to be good
Great story, Rabbi Yitzchak...I'm reminded of Abraham asking his chief servant not to take Isaac, his promised son, to his brother's house to seek a wife, If she [Rebekah] won't come...make me a vow you won't take my son to her.. Was it possible Father Abraham knew his son would not be mature enough to resist all the temptations of those gods in a strange land? thus, saving his beloved son from falling prey to the allurements of false icons?? After all... Father Abraham was himself "called out " of the land of his nativity, in UR of the chaldees [idolatry}.Let us be good , to do good. abstaining from the very appearance of evil at all cost. Shalom.
Posted By Raymond Bastarache, Plaster Rock NB, Canada

Posted: Apr 16, 2012
Depressing and a Lesson
This is a very depressing story and a lesson to be told by others
Posted By Eugina G Herrera, New York, New York

Posted: Apr 15, 2012
Forbidden is Sweeter
Basically, this story comes to tell us that we desire something more when it is forbidden. The excitement of doing something wrong adds taste even to plain water (as in the saying, "Stolen waters are sweet)." Think of how Prohibition failed, and how one argument for fighting illicit drugs is to legalize, control and tax them, taking away the romanticized rebellion factor.
Posted By Anonymous, Far Rockaway, NY

Posted: Apr 15, 2012
Beautiful story and poweful lesson
if you find this story horrible, try learning Chassidut, a Chabad rabbi near you will be happy to help. chabad.org/centers
Posted By Barry Langer, melboune, austrailia

Posted: Apr 15, 2012
The comment by Ms. Smith makes some sense of a story that I found troublesome. What a silly story and message. The Rabbi twice was flogged, once for his own craziness and the second time for his own luck in preventing the consumption of treife food. Really? Is this how we want to approach our relationship with HaShem? Modern life is difficult enough to learn from this story.
Posted By Alan S. , Long Island , NY

Posted: Nov 1, 2010
This is a horrible story. After all, what does it represent?
Posted By Anonymous, Silver Spring, MD

Posted: Nov 1, 2010
Too Good to be Good
I just wanted to say I loved this. There is a great lesson there on the danger of lusting after anything. It can not be good to have that kind of overwhelming feeling of desire for anything.
Posted By Rheachel Smith, Polson, Mt



 


Food: an Anthology
The Sages of the Talmud on Food
The Chassidic Masters on Food
Kosher Marks
Bread, Guilt and Grace
Sitting in a Café
The Summer of the Kishka
Cooking the Year
A Set of Dishes
Herschel Goat
Shemurah
Too Good to Be Good
The Rabbi and the Ox
After the Fast
Cholent
Blintzes
Barrels in the Snow
Hard to Swallow
The Gift
The Onion Plot
Holy Lunch
The Development
Spiritual Molecules
Anorexia of the Soul
Eating
Packaging
Three Pertinent Points of the Purim Pastry
Meat
Reverse Biology
Eating on the Job
The Seven Species and Seven Attributes