Another visit to an ancestral grave, in Mannheim, Deutschland.
2 years ago I tracked down my paternal grandfather's great-grandfather's grave: Yosef Stein my closest ancestor (and last in a long line - Stein name is German and originated there) buried in Germany.
1/5
While I knew a bit about him growing up, including that he is buried in Mannheim, as far as family stories and traditions go I didn't know much
Yosef was also the Zaide (grandfather) who I share with the closest non-Hasidic (multi-generational) family I have >
2/5
> 2nd and 3rd cousins whose existence my family has ignored since WWII, including his second wife.
I don't know why so much of his history (he only passed away in 1915 - I was raised with far more details of ancestors who lived a lot earlier than that) wasn't talked about >
3/5
> some known details hidden, and some details lied about (like place of birth, second wife, and made up gravestone wording). The fact that he and many of his kids and grandkids didn't fit the stereotypical "image of a Hasidic grandfather" seems to be most likely.
4/5
To me graves aren't about the dead, it's about the living. It's about finding ourselves and places that help us realize -
That sometimes, no matter what our family says and does, our own "stepping out of line" might just be part of a family tradition.
Or not, and that's fine. 5/5
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A favorite Hasidic teachings:
Noah* utterly failed. He failed his mission, and life.
He was supposed to argue with the Divine, and to do more to save the people of his generation.
Creating your own surviving arc is failure 🤦♀️
* of Biblical Arc fame - this week's Torah portion
The source of the idea is Zohar (3:15a):
"And he didn't ask mercy for the world, and the water came, and all the people died. That's why it's called Noah's waters. Noah's water of course, because it was his fault. For he didn't ask mercy for the world."
This (likely) is the Shofar my great-grandfather smuggled into, and blew in Auschwitz!!!!
I grew up with this story. He writes about it, but we THOUGHT THE SHOFAR IS LOST.
The @MJHnews has had it for a while, NOT KNOWING WHO IT BELONGED TO.
Yesterday, as I visited the @MJHnews in Manhattan, I came across the Shofar, and this is what it says next to it:
"We do NOT KNOW by whom, and we do not know who blew it."
I felt like I was gonna faint, reading it, and seeing it!!! 2/
This is what my (maternal) great-grandfather writes about it:
"Shofar Blowing in Auschwitz:
By the great mercy of God and with miracles, I managed to bring in 1 Shofar into the camp. ON ROSH HASHANAH DAY I WENT FROM BLOCK TO BLOCK, WITH THE SHOFAR IN MY HANDS, TO BLOW IT." 3/