Marcheshvan is based on the word “mirachshefin,” the movement of the lips as they continue to reverberate after the intense avodah of Tishrei. Lingering images of inspiration


IT’S ALL IN A NAME
In different times the Chol Hamoed visits to the Kosel were followed by the biannual meeting of giants Rav Chaim Kanievsky and his father-in-law Rav Elyashiv ztz”l. These days Rav Chaim still visits the Kosel on Chol Hamoed then stops off at the succah of his talmid Rav Yisrael Meir Druk. In a particularly festive mood this past zeman simchaseinu Rav Chaim greeted neighborhood children in search of brachos and asked one little boy what his name
was. “My name is Chaim ” replied the child. Rav Chaim’s smile grew even wider. “My name as well ” said the master of Torah.

DETERMINED TO CARRY ON
Yeshuos Yaakov is the formal name of the shul but the informal name is Meah Shearim shtiblach. Over a hundred years old the shul is a hub for minyanim learning round-the-clock Tehillim vigils — and once a year for festive dancing. The authentic Meah Shearim community bound by geographical proximity family ties and a shared history are made even closer by a shared ideology that often pits them against the majority. In their spirited dance one hears undertones of their determination to carry on.

IN IT TOGETHER
Ever since Rav Leizer Yudel Finkel replanted Yeshivas Mir at the tip of Meah Shearim the yeshivah has developed a character of its own —classic litvish decorum with Yerushalmi warmth and color. With the passage of time the influx of students from chutz l’Aretz would add their own voices and accents to the din. At the Simchas Beis Hashoeivah it all comes together. The American and European talmidim the Israeli avreichim the visiting alumni they all stand in a circle and rejoice. In this picture one of the Gruman tribe a family of Toldos Avraham Yitzchak chassidim famed for their creative merrymaking and Yerushalmi charm carries the evening in the hallowed beis medrash.
Create a free account to keep reading.