The Devoted Nazi with
Three Jewish Grandsons
One Shabbat, there was a man who came to
the synagogue of Rabbi Berel Wein, in the Rechavia section of Jerusalem,
accompanied by his three young sons, whom it turned out were of the ages 9, 7
and 5. Even with their long peiyot, they didn’t look Jewish with their
stunning blond Aryan hair and shining blue eyes.
Additionally, the boys were unusually
well behaved, not running out of their seats and around the shul like
many little children do.
After the prayers, Rabbi Wein, a famous
Jewish historian and educator, greeted the father and asked him where he was
from. The guest said he was from Rechovot [a city near Tel Aviv]. When Rabbi
Wein next asked where his family originally came from, the man became
uncomfortable. Rabbi Wein apologized, and asked if he was perhaps a baal
teshuva, a returnee to Torah-observant Judaism.
The man explained that he was really a Gior,
a convert to Judaism, and that he had been born in Germany. With that off his
chest, he continued to tell of how he embarked on his unusual and fascinating
spiritual journey to Yiddishkeit. Not only was he a German, but also his
father was a dedicated Nazi and war criminal who had spent 10 years in prison
after the Second World War.
The son went to study microbiology in a
college in the United States and there he for the first time met and became
friendly with many Jews. In Germany he had learned about that sordid chapter of
his nation’s history in which his people brutally mistreated the Jews, and he
could never understand why people like his father could so hate the Jews who in
his eyes were such nice good people.
After graduating from college in
America, he enrolled in Hebrew University in Jerusalem, seeking post-graduate
degrees and to pursue his interest in Judaism. He earned a doctorate degree in
microbiology, and subsequently became involved in researching many life-saving
cures. At the same time he studied with some rabbis and converted to Judaism,
breaking all contact with his father who as an officer of an SS Storm Troopers
brigade had been responsible for the murder of many thousands of Jews.
Shortly before he met Rabbi Wein, the
man had received a phone call from his mother informing him that his father was
dying and that he should come and see him one last time. The convert spoke to
his rabbis and they told him that one had to have a sense of gratitude to his
biological father, even if he was a despicable Nazi war criminal.
So he boarded a plane with his three
young sons and landed in Germany. He went to the hospital where his father was
being treated. His father could barely look at his beautiful offspring because
they all looked so Jewish and religious. After exchanging greetings and some
small talk, the son, unable to control himself, declared firmly: "Clearly
you must have done some good deed that you merited three such wonderful
grandchildren. What is it that you did?" he asked his father.
The grandfather at first was unable to
think of any good action of his that might have resulted in what happened.
Finally he recalled that once he led a group of murderous SS troops into a
Catholic orphanage in Warsaw Poland in 1942. They were looking for Jewish
children hiding as Catholics.
At first the grandfather was unable to
detect any such children. But then towards the end of inspection he noticed
three boys whom he was positive were Jewish. And for some strange reason, which
he himself to the end of his life could not understand, he felt a sense of pity
for them and turned his eyes as they quickly escaped from the danger he
represented.
The son shouted, "Father, why
couldn’t you have found a fourth or fifth child to save? Neither my wife nor I
have infertility problems, yet since the birth of our youngest child five years
ago we haven’t been able to conceive and bear any more children. I now realize
that the three sons we are blessed with are due to that one sole good deed you
did!"
~~~~~~~~~~~~~~
P.S. When Rabbi Lazar Brody, the renowned Torah orator and
translator of "Garden of Emunah," told this story in the
Flatbush shul of the Sephardic Lebanese Congregation, he drew the following
lesson: G-d has gratitude and doesn’t deny the reward owed to a person, even if
that individual is a despicable Nazi war criminal! So if a Nazi can get such a
reward as having three righteous grandsons, can we even imagine just what He
will give as a reward to those of us who have served Him all of our lives with
all of our strength?
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