PERSPECTIVES → INBOX Issue 898 · February 9, 2022

 Inbox: Issue 898

"To be the rebbi of a generation requires more than genius, depth, and clarity. It requires equal parts of ahavas Yisrael and ahavas haTorah"

 Inbox: Issue 898

 

Simple Solutions [Step Up to the Plate / Issue 897]

The piece on Rabbi Sholem Fishbane and the kashrus industry was very important and informative. However, I would like to point out a couple of simple solutions to some of the pitfalls the article alerts us to.

Regarding parlor meetings and other institutional venues, we can take a lesson from the unforgettable askan Shlomie Gross a”h (whose tenth yahrtzeit is on 22 Adar) and his distinguished eishes chayil, tichyeh. As related in ArtScroll’s biography on Shlomie:

To the Grosses, “low-key” was the approach in any public venue. When Shlomie made a parlor meeting, his wife served salads, chocolates, cakes, and candies. Even if the organization wanted a lavish affair, Shlomie and his wife would not allow an elaborate menu of hot dishes to be served. It was simply not their style.

Shlomie was upset when a mossad he supported delivered a very expensive bottle of wine to his door on Purim. He felt that offering extravagant gashmiyus was not the way to raise money for ruchniyus.

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