HOME ABOUT US DONATE ASK THE RABBI CONTACT US
Chabad Lubavitch of Alexandria-Arlington - Your Source For Everything Jewish


Share thisPost a CommentPrintSend this page to a friendSubscribe
22 Comments Posted


"This Is My Torah Scroll"



Henryk was very young in 1945, when the War ended and solitary survivors tried frantically to trace their relatives. He had spent what seemed to be most of his life with his nanny, who had hidden him away from the Nazis at his father's request. There was great personal risk involved, but the woman had readily taken it, as she loved the boy.

All the Jews were being killed, and Henryk's nanny did not think for a moment that the father, Joseph Foxman, would survive the infamous destruction of the Vilna Ghetto. He would surely have been transferred to Auschwitz -— and everyone knew that nobody ever came back from Auschwitz. She therefore had no scruples about adopting the boy, having him baptized into the Catholic Church and taught catechism by the local priest.

He told his son that he was a Jew and that his name was Avraham

It was Simchat Torah when his father came to take him. The heartbroken nanny had packed all his clothing and his small catechism book, stressing to the father that the boy had become a good Catholic. Joseph Foxman took his son by the hand and led him directly to the Great Synagogue of Vilna. On the way, he told his son that he was a Jew and that his name was Avraham.

Not far from the house, they passed the church and the boy reverently crossed himself, causing his father great anguish. Just then, a priest emerged who knew the boy, and when Henryk rushed over to kiss his hand, the priest spoke to him, reminding him of his Catholic faith.

Everything inside of Joseph wanted to drag his son away from the priest and from the church. But he knew that this was not the way to do things. He nodded to the priest, holding his son more closely. After all, these people had harbored his child and saved the child's life. He had to show his son Judaism, living Judaism, and in this way all these foreign beliefs would be naturally abandoned and forgotten.

They entered the Great Synagogue of Vilna, now a remnant of a past, vibrant Jewish era. There they found some Jewish survivors from Auschwitz who had made their way back to Vilna and were now rebuilding their lives and their Jewish spirits. Amid the stark reality of their suffering and terrible loss, in much diminished numbers, they were singing and dancing with real joy while celebrating Simchat Torah.

Avraham stared wide-eyed around him and picked up a tattered prayer book with a touch of affection. Something deep inside of him responded to the atmosphere, and he was happy to be there with the father he barely knew. He held back, though, from joining the dancing.

A Jewish man wearing a Soviet Army uniform could not take his eyes off the boy, and he came over to Joseph. "Is this child... Jewish?" he asked, a touch of awe in his voice.

"This is the first live Jewish child I have come across in all this time..."

The father answered that the boy was Jewish and introduced his son. As the soldier stared at Henryk-Avraham, he fought to hold back tears. "Over these four terrible years, I have traveled thousands of miles, and this is the first live Jewish child I have come across in all this time. Would you like to dance with me on my shoulders?" he asked the boy, who was staring back at him, fascinated.

The father nodded permission, and the soldier hoisted the boy high onto his shoulders. With tears now coursing down his cheeks and a heart full of real joy, the soldier joined in the dancing.

"This is my Torah scroll," he cried.

Abe Foxman, the national director of the Anti-Defamation League -- the Avraham in our story -- remembers this as his first conscious feeling of a connection with Judaism and of being a Jew.


Share thisPost a CommentPrintSend this page to a friendSubscribe
22 Comments Posted

By Ruth Benjamin   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author

Originally published in Kosher Spirit
About the artist: Sarah Kranz has been illustrating magazines, webzines and books (including five children's books) since graduating from the Istituto Europeo di Design, Milan, in 1996. Her clients have included The New York Times and Money Marketing Magazine of London


The content on this page is copyrighted by the author, publisher and/or Chabad.org, and is produced by Chabad.org. If you enjoyed this article, we encourage you to distribute it further, provided that you comply with the copyright policy.
 

22 Comments Posted  |  Post A Comment
Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Oct 27, 2008
what's the song??
do you know what the song is called?
Posted By jadimeh

Posted: Oct 20, 2008
Journeys 4
This story has been put to song by Abie Rotenberg on Journeys 4. The song is very powerful and I recommend it to all.
Posted By Story put to song, Miami, FL

Posted: Oct 19, 2008
Identity
This is a beautiful story, one with a happy ending. I am happy for Abe Foxman that he was able to reclaim his Jewish identity and way of life.
Posted By Anonymous, Santa Monica, CA, USA



Post a Comment
Subject:
Comment:
  1000 Characters Remaining
Name*:
Email*:
City:   State/Country:
* indicates a required field
 


Contemporary
The Bulkhead
Mincha
The Three Visits of Elijah the Prophet
Four Boxes of Matzah
Doesn’t Everyone Deserve the Chance to Have a Child?
Two Candles for Sammy
The Blanket
"This Is My Torah Scroll"
The Other Side of the Prayer Book
Kharkov, 1995
Bubble Gum
Baruch Israelnaya
Praying in Kharkov
Reb Yankle
The Vodofskys
Showing 14 to 28 of 71

Search This Section
 

Related
  More articles on
Jewish Survival (25 articles)
Jewishness; Jewish Identity (449 articles)
Holocaust (101 articles)
Hakafot (9 articles)
Simchat Torah (11 articles)

Chabad Lubavitch of Alexandria-Arlington 5140 Leesburg Pike Alexandria, VA 22302 703-370-2774

Powered by Chabad.org © 2001-2008 Chabad-Lubavitch Media Center. All rights reserved.
In everlasting memory of Rabbi Yosef Y. Kazen, pioneer of Torah, Judaism and Jewish information on the web

JAND-J-animated-ad-on-SITE.gif