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Chabad.org » The Jewish Woman » Women's Narrative » Personal Stories » Life Lessons » Zaidy's Yom Kippur
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Zaidy's Yom Kippur


I stand in shul, shifting my weight from one foot to the other, trying to ignore the groans of my unhappy stomach. I flip through the machzor to see how many pages remain until the end of the service. My mind begins to wander; I am transported back to another Yom Kippur, years ago.

In my daydream, I am a child again and my grandparents have come to spend the High Holidays with my family. My grandfather is in his early seventies, although to me, with his long white beard and bushy black eyebrows, he looks at least a hundred years old. That Yom Kippur I tried hard to stay in shul instead of running outside to play with my friends. I sit in my seat listening intently and trying to follow along. Suddenly, my ears perk up to the sound of a familiar voice ringing out--it is an old voice, but powerful and steady. It is my Zaidy; he is saying the mourner's Kaddish for his father, whose yahrtzeit (date of passing) is Yom Kippur.

My thoughts shift to another Yom Kippur in Communist Russia. Rabbi Aryeh Lieb Kaplan has just arranged a minyan in a private house in Chiali after being exiled there for the illegal activities of spreading Jewish teaching and observance in his hometown of Kiev. It is an old voice, but powerful and steady... The ever-watchful KGB, infuriated at Aryeh Lieb's persistence in his "crimes" even in his place of exile, send a goon squad to beat him up on his way home from the clandestine Yom Kippur prayer group. Aryeh Lieb's friend is beaten to unconsciousness and Aryeh Lieb just manages to drag himself to the nearest Jewish family to tell them about his injured friend before he collapses and dies. He leaves a young widow and four orphans. One of them is Zaidy.

Yet another Yom Kippur flashes through my mind. There's a picture of Zaidy, but he's young and strong. He is surrounded by ruthless criminals in a dingy prison cell, locked up, like his father, for the heinous crime of practicing Judaism in Communist Russia. In prison, each inmate receives one piece of daily bread. Zaidy knows that he must save that bread for after the fast or he will die of starvation. However, if the bread isn't stuffed into his mouth the moment it is handed to him, it will be grabbed by one of many greedy hands. Zaidy approaches "The Chief" of the cell--a hardened criminal whom all of the other inmates fear and respect. Zaidy presents his dilemma and miraculously The Chief decides to help. The Chief puts the bread on a high ledge and warns the inmates that he'll kill anyone who touches it. Many hungry eyes stare at the bread, but no one touches it.

Later, Zaidy needs to know when the fast is over but there is only one small window high up on the wall of the cell and there is no way to tell the time. Zaidy approaches The Chief again and explains his dilemma: he needs to know when it is completely dark in order to break his fast. The Chief gives orders and a human pyramid is formed - one criminal on the shoulders of another until they reach the window. The inmates repeat this pyramid every couple of minutes, reporting on what they see, until Zaidy confirms that the fast is over.

The voice of the cantor breaks through my reverie and brings me back to my open machzor. As I resume my prayer, I once more think of Zaidy and my great-grandfather. I feel them smiling down on me.


Zaidy, Moshe Binyamin Kaplan, o.b.m., passed away at the age of 87. The story of his Yom Kippur in prison is just one of many of his heroic acts in order to keep Judaism in Communist Russia.

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By Devorah Leah Riesenberg   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Devorah Leah Riesenberg is on the staff of Chabad.org

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Oct 11, 2008
So inspiring! Few of us realize just how lucky we are until we read stories like this!
Posted By Miriam Adahan

Posted: Oct 7, 2008
within our mind
Each of us has two sides of our mind, the positive side and the negative side. When we realize that a thought now comes from the negative side we have to remind ourself that we can go to the other side, positive or stay within the negative side. We MUST THINK of our nature be it positive or negative. We can CHANGE our thoughts as we choose.
Posted By Philip A. Goldman, philadelphia, pa/USA

Posted: Nov 8, 2006
A Touching Story
Beautifully written and so touching! I'm crying! You must write more Devora Leah.
Posted By Melissa B, Baltimore, MD

Posted: June 6, 2006
zaidy
This story reminds me of something my mother said to me a couple of years ago. My own Papa O"B"M, belonged to an Orthodox Shul when my mother was a little girl; anyways, my mother saw me swaying as I recited the Shmonah Esrai during High Holiday services one year. When I sat down, she whispered to me, "Papa would be so proud." Your story brought back that memory.
Thank you.
Posted By Dan S, Buffalo Grove, Il, USA

Posted: Dec 16, 2005
Thank you for sharing this touching story.
Posted By Anonymous, san leandro, ca

Posted: Nov 22, 2005
Zaidy's Yom Kippur
That is a truly inspiring story, and told mostly through the clear eyes of a child. I hope you will post more of the same. I thank you for lifting my mood.
Posted By Anonymous, Berkeley, CA

Posted: Oct 11, 2005
zeides story
I love Zeides story, i'm lucky my family did not have to go though this terrible tragedies, but i think that Zeides stories are the ones we can not afford to not tell to the new generatons. Pleses keep writing, you do it so well i get tears in my eyes.

sorry for my pour english.
Posted By ines ades, beachwood, cleveland, ohio

Posted: Oct 9, 2005
Very inspiring... makes us all think about what our yom kippur should be devoted to. This article truly touched me.
Posted By Anonymous, toronto, Ontario

Posted: Oct 9, 2005
Proud Father
A moving story, beautifully written by my daughter.
Posted By Shmuel Kaplan, Baltimore, Maryland

Posted: Oct 8, 2005
Inspiring tribute
Thank you Devorah Leah for a very inspiring and well told story of her Zaidy, a wonderful tribute to his memory! I look forward to seeing more of her wriiting
Posted By Anonymous, Baltimore, MD



 


Life Lessons
From the Outside Looking In
Freedom From Want and Fear
My Father’s Tzitzit
The Shabbat that Kept Rose
Fear of Heights
My Name is Miriam
Hamantashen
Zaidy's Yom Kippur
The Reunion
Lessons From Beyond
Shapes on the Screen
Division Street Princess
Road Work
Connecting Roots
Uncle Hershey
Showing 91 - 105 of 124