My father, Rabbi Shabsi Katz, was born in Lithuania to a Chabad family. When he was a small child, he came with his parents to Johannesburg, South Africa, where he was educated until he reached yeshivah age – at that point he went to London to attend Jews’ College (now called London School of Jewish Studies) where he eventually obtained his rabbinic ordination.
When he returned to South Africa, he married my mother and took up a position as the rabbi of Pretoria, the capital city. This was in 1954. And that is where he stayed until he passed away in 1991.
Because of his Chabad background – though he was educated as an English rabbi – he developed a friendship with the late Rabbi Yosef Wineberg, the famous Chabad “globetrotting rabbi,” who persuaded him that he should meet the Rebbe.
Once he did so, he became strongly connected to the Rebbe and made many trips to New York to seek the Rebbe’s advice on apartheid, his role regarding that issue, and many other issues.
At his first audience he was accompanied by my mother, and I recall both of them speaking about that experience many times. Uppermost in my father’s mind was concern about the future as South Africa was in the throes of unrest then, and he wanted to know if perhaps our family should leave.
The Rebbe responded that he was aware of all the problems in the county. “As Jews, we know what it means to suffer under a system that makes you into second class citizens,” he said, “And we can never condone such a system.”
He spoke favorably of Helen Susman, the feisty Jewish member of the South African parliament who had challenged apartheid, quoting some of her speeches and saying that we should be proud of the fact that we are represented in that way because that is the Jewish way.
My parents were absolutely stunned that he knew so much about South Africa and its politics.
As far as my father’s involvement in all that, the Rebbe was against it. He said, “You have problems in your community, you have all sorts of issues … drug abuse … kids were going off the rails … assimilation, intermarriage. These concerns need to be your focus as a community rabbi.” As he summed it up, “Put out the fire in your own house before you run and try to put out the fire next door.”
Also, he advised him to stay put: “You need to stay there. You have government connections, and you need to use them to make a difference in your community. You need to be involved in uplifting Judaism in Pretoria, so this is where you need to stay. And this is where you need to be a role model.”
Then he told my father, “My experience in the military was with the navy. So I will tell you that the captain is always the last one to leave the ship. He has got to make sure that everybody is taken care of. And that is your job – that is why you have got to stay there.”
As the audience drew to a close, the Rebbe asked my father, “Are you going to listen to me?”
My father replied, “My experience in the military was with the army, and I know that when a soldier comes to a general and gets an order, he has to listen to the order. I have come to a general, I have my orders, and I know what I have got to do.”
The Rebbe didn’t care for that answer. He said, “It shouldn’t be like that. You shouldn’t do it because I said so … You should stay out of conviction, and you must do it with love.”
That is how that audience ended.
Three years later, my father returned for another audience with the Rebbe. As he walked in the door, the Rebbe greeted him with, “Are you still in Pretoria?”
“Yes,” my father replied.
“Out of conviction and with love?” the Rebbe asked.
“Yes,” my father again replied.
As for me, I began to pursue a law degree but, with the Rebbe’s support, my father encouraged me to transfer to yeshivah. And, after receiving my rabbinic ordination and getting married, I returned to South Africa as a Chabad emissary in Johannesburg.
Although I never had a personal audience with the Rebbe, I communicated with him frequently by letter, and he also influenced my life profoundly.
The most dramatic story I have to tell concerns the blessing the Rebbe gave my wife when she was at death’s door.
In 1987, shortly before Rosh Hashanah, my wife – Messody – had given birth to our third child, and about a week later she began to experience complications. She was hemorrhaging and had to be rushed to the hospital, where she was pronounced in critical condition. As I learned later, the doctors didn’t think she was going to make it.
Dr. Rodney Unterslak, our family doctor, was there and he said to me, “You should call the Rebbe. Call and get a blessing right now!” He knew how dire things were although I still didn’t. I tried calling but could not get through. Fortunately, the head of the Chabad House at the time – Rabbi Yossi Hecht – was able to reach his father, Rabbi J.J. Hecht, who had a very close relationship with the Rebbe.
Rabbi J.J. Hecht caught the Rebbe as he was leaving to pray at the Ohel, the gravesite of the Previous Rebbe. Immediately, the Rebbe gave his blessing for “complete and speedy recovery.” Meanwhile, I was sitting and waiting, reciting Psalms.
A short while later, the surgeon came out of the operating room, still wearing his scrubs and mask. I waited with apprehension to hear what he would say.
He walked straight over to me and he said: “I don’t know what words you read in that book, and I certainly don’t know whom you called, but you read the right words, and you called the right people. Just a few minutes ago, there was a dramatic turnaround in your wife’s condition, and we managed to save her. She is going to be okay.”
I started laughing and crying all at the same time – I was in such a state.
As it turned out, just when the Rebbe pronounced his blessing is when my wife experienced a dramatic reversal of her condition. And, thank G‑d, she recovered completely and went on to have more children.
But there is a fascinating postscript to this story.
A day or so later, my father received a phone call from his friend Rabbi Yosef Wineberg, who asked him, “How is your daughter-in-law?”
My father answered that she was doing better, but he expressed surprise that Rabbi Wineberg knew she had been ill.
“You are not going to believe me, but the Rebbe told me,” Rabbi Wineberg replied. “He told me ‘Call Rabbi Katz in Pretoria and find out how his daughter-in-law is doing; then let me know.’”
When I heard that I was astonished. With all that the Rebbe had on his mind, he thought to place a call to find out how a woman in South Africa was doing! To me, that was absolutely incredible.
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