Intersecting Lives of Yakob and Yom Tov

“I am a Jew, and it is forbidden for me to marry a Gentile. I thank you for your good intentions, but it is impossible for me to fulfill your request.”

Intersecting    Lives    of    Yakob    and    Yom    Tov

The newest bride and groom were the great-grandchildren of Reb Yaakov Potash z”l — the real-life person who was canonized in the ever-popular song “Yakob” and Reb Yom Tov Ehrlich z”l the legendary composer who made him famous through the song that bears his name — sung at Potash’s own wedding 66 years ago.

1946

In a tiny hall on the outskirts of Paris a year after the war ended a group of refugees had gathered to celebrate the marriage of the young chassan Yaakov Potash and his kallah Yentel — who except for the chassan’s one surviving brother were the two lone remnants of their families murdered by the Nazis. Suddenly silence fell upon the hall as the chassan’s close friend a talented young composer by the name of Yom Tov Ehrlich related that he had met the chassan inSamarkand Uzbekistan and had written a song in his honor. Reb Yom Tov then began to sing relating Yaakov’s personal story:

“In the state of Uzbekistan between the Dijan mountains on the border of India and Afghanistan …”

The song describes the heroism of the chassan when the gentile town chieftain sought to take him — by force if necessary — as a son-in-law.

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