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The Rabbi鈥檚 Daughter 鈥 a Lecture by Prof. Shnayer Leiman

Leiman 2Despite the substantial research done on the Holocaust, there is much we will never be able to know about the European Jewish world it destroyed. Yet new discoveries are still possible鈥攅ven seven decades later. On Wednesday, January 7, 2015, Prof. Shnayer Leiman presented new evidence of spiritual resistance by a group of women during the Holocaust and succeeded in identifying its two surviving members in a lecture delivered in memory of Mrs. Esther Manischewitz z鈥漧 at Congregation Bnai Yeshurun in Teaneck, NJ. The lecture marked the inauguration of the , which will enable the transmission of higher Jewish learning to the broader Jewish community.

A yellowed Lithuanian identity card dated February 1940 recently came to Prof. Leiman鈥檚 attention. This piece of paper, which granted its holder permission to live in Vilna, featured the letterhead of 鈥淵eshivat Maharsha鈥 from Ostrow and the surnames and initials of the two Rashei Yeshiva, Rabbis J. Berkowitz (Berkovicius) and D. J. Chazanowitz (Chazanovicius).

Vilna Residence Permit_Leiman Lecture

This Ostrow yeshiva was one of many that transferred to Vilna during an eight month period between Hitler鈥檚 invasion of Poland and the Soviet Union鈥檚 entrance into WWII, during which Stalin granted independence to Lithuania, with Vilna as its capital. Therefore, Rav Chaim Ozer Grodzinski, the preeminent rabbi in Vilna and one of the leaders of Lithuanian Jewry, instructed Polish yeshivot to relocate to Vilna. In a list held in the YIVO archives cataloging these yeshivot (reproduced in Anonymous, 讘住讜驻讛 讜讘住注专讛 , second edition , Bnei Brak, 2000, pp. 395-396), Yeshivat Maharsha from Ostrow is indeed recorded as having moved to Vilna along with 57 students. What became of the yeshiva after moving to Vilna is unknown, but in a memoir written by Joseph Foxman, who survived the Vilna Ghetto (and lived to become the father of the ADL鈥檚 Abraham Foxman), Prof. Leiman discovered information which indirectly alludes to figures connected to it. In his memoir, Foxman includes a discussion of 鈥淭he Circle of Faygele, the Rabbi鈥檚 Daughter.鈥 Faygele was the daughter of a Rabbi Trachenburg from Volhynia, and was 21 when she was imprisoned in the Vilna Ghetto. Once there, she organized a group of rabbi鈥檚 wives, Beit Yaakov teachers, and students, and formed what became known as the 鈥渨omen鈥檚 Beit Midrash.鈥 Faygele and other learned women (and occasionally men as well) would instruct women of the ghetto in Chumash with Rashi and other mefarshim, Pirkei Avot, and even Shulhan Arukh and works of Mussar (all in Yiddish translation). The women鈥檚 Beit Midrash operated until 1943, at which point it was broken up by the Nazis and its members were sent to various concentration camps. Faygele herself survived until nearly the end of the war, but ultimately there were only two survivors from the women鈥檚 Beit Midrash. (For a full translation of Foxman's account see Prof. Leiman's article .) The names of many of the women involved in this study group are given in Foxman鈥檚 memoir, including that of a certain 鈥淩ebbetzin Berkowitz鈥 and her daughter. With one of the Rashei Yeshiva of Ostrow having been a Rabbi J. Berkowitz, this is the first hint at a possible relation between the Ostrow Yeshiva and the Women鈥檚 Beit Midrash of the Vilna ghetto, but the 1970 printing of Foxman鈥檚 memoir gives no more information. The original 1957 edition, though, mentions that Rebbetzin Berkowitz and her daughter were the two survivors of Faygele鈥檚 learning group. But was this the wife of the Rosh Yeshiva of Yeshivat Maharsha at Ostrow? And what became of her and her daughter after the war? To answer these questions, Prof. Leiman had to venture further afield.

Crowd Shot_Leiman

Prof. Leiman first succeeded in identifying the Ostrow Rashei Yeshiva in a rare sefer called Helkat Yosef, originally published in 1938 in Bilgoraj,  (available at ). The author, Rabbi Yosef Berkowitz, the assistance of his brother-in-law, Rabbi David Chazanovitz, who shared with him the burden of the administration of Yeshivat Maharsha. The sefer also contains an endorsement letter from Rav Chaim Ozer Grodzinski. Yet the question of the identity of Rebbetzin Berkowitz remained open鈥攗ntil Prof. Leiman consulted the 1959 edition of Helkat Yosef, published by Rav Chaim Yaakov Goldvicht, the founder of Yeshivat Kerem B鈥橸avneh (available at ). In his to this edition, Rav Goldvicht reveals that the author was his wife Miriam鈥檚 father, and that she had survived the Vilna Ghetto with her mother. We also learn of the author鈥檚 fate in Rav Goldvicht鈥檚 short biography of Rav Berkowitz: he died on Tisha B鈥橝v 1941, along with his brother-in-law the co-Rosh Yeshiva and thousands of other Vilna Jews. Having solved the mystery of the fate of Rabbi Berkowitz鈥檚 wife and daughter, Prof. Leiman concluded his lecture by translating from Yiddish the final lines of Foxman鈥檚 essay regarding Faygele鈥攚ho heroically maintained the women鈥檚 Beit Midrash in Vilna during the Holocaust: 鈥淢ay these lines serve as a monument for the unknown grave of a holy Jewish woman who taught others how to live by sanctifying God鈥檚 name, and who herself sanctified God鈥檚 name. May her memory ever remain sacred.鈥 This essay was written by Binyamin Weinreich, RIETS 鈥18 and Revel 鈥16.

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