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This is a biography like few others.
It is the story of a distinguished rabbinic and chassidic family of Hungary, a
family that exemplified scholarship, piety, generosity and aristocracy of merit.
The author, the renowned Muzsayer Rebbetzin, was a niece of the revered Satmar
Rav ztl and her husband was the scion of a great rabbinic family in his
own right. As we read about their spiritual strength, we come to understand how
they could live through the horrors of the Holocaust with their faith and
optimism intact, and how they could find the reserves of spirit to rebuild when
the fires and chimneys ceased their grisly work.
For the lasting message of this remarkable and inspiring
memoir is that there is always hope, that the Jewish spirit is never extinguished
and Jews don't surrender. To the Nazis, The Final Solution was their plan to
annihilate the Jewish Nation. But for the Jewish people there is always hope,
because the Creator pledged, I will not have rejected them to obliterate them,
to annul My covenant with them, for I am HASHEM. This is the true secret of the
astounding growth of Torah life, and the heroes and heroines of this
extraordinary book exemplify those who planted the seeds and nurtured them to
maturity.
A highlight of this panoramic book is a chapter on the
miracles that brought the Satmar Rav to safety.
Rebbetzin Rubin begins with the idyllic world of pre-War
Eastern Europe, taking us warmly and movingly into the world of chassidic courts
and rabbinic responsibility. When the extermination began, she was a young
newlywed. Her father, a Polish national, had been one of the first to be dragged
away, and she and her husband were plunged into a life of terror, separation,
and slavery -- but never hopelessness! Always they knew that there was a
Merciful Father and that there would be a future -- if not for them, then
for others.
Providence decreed that Grand Rabbi and Rebbetzin Rubin be
part of that future, as they survived to create a thriving community in the
Flatbush section of Brooklyn. In telling her story, the author tells the story
of Jewish eternity. It has seldom been told as well.