📖 The Scholars and the Simple Saint[1]
In the sacred halls of Mezeritch, two towering minds of Torah stood immersed in fiery debate. Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi, the Alter Rebbe, and Rabbi Levi Yitzchak of Berditchev, the defender of Israel, were wrestling with a perplexing passage in the Rambam. These were men whose brilliance lit up the world of revealed Torah, and yet this particular halachic ruling defied their understanding.
They paced, they gestured, they offered deep and subtle interpretations—each trying to justify the Rambam’s words, each probing the depths of divine wisdom. Their voices rose in passionate learning, not in argument but in the sacred dance of Torah l’shma—for its own sake.
Then, from the side, Rabbi Zusha of Anipoli approached.
He was known not for sharp pilpul or scholarly finesse, but for his burning heart, his humility, and his closeness to God. Seeing the two sages so animated, he asked gently, “Brothers, what are you discussing?”
They smiled. Rabbi Zusha was not known for engaging in complex halachic analysis and did not believe he would have the head to even comprehend the question, let alone the answer.
“It’s a difficult Rambam,” they said, “one that doesn’t seem to make sense. We’re trying to understand it.”
But Zusha didn’t let go. “Tell me the Rambam’s words,” he pleaded. “Let me hear the difficulty.”
They reluctantly explained the passage and the contradictions it seemed to raise.
Zusha listened intently. Then his face fell. His eyes welled with tears.
“Zusha doesn’t understand,” he whispered. “Zusha doesn’t know the Rambam’s meaning.”
He turned away and began to cry.
The Visitor in the Night
This was Rabbi Zusha’s way. Whenever he encountered something in Torah he couldn’t grasp, he didn’t dismiss it. He didn’t rationalize. He wept. He cried out to Heaven with the innocence of a child and the yearning of a soul desperate for truth.
That night, he cried himself to sleep.
And then—something wondrous happened.
In his dream, the Rambam himself appeared. Or perhaps it was Elijah the Prophet, sent to deliver the answer. Either way, the veil was lifted. The true meaning of the halacha was revealed to him—not through logic, but through divine compassion.
When Rabbi Zusha awoke, he rushed to the Alter Rebbe and Rabbi Levi Yitzchak.
“This,” he said, “is what the Rambam meant.”
He spoke with clarity, with certainty, with the simplicity that only truth can carry. The two great scholars listened—and were stunned. It was exactly right. The explanation was perfect. And it had come not from books or debate, but from the lips of a man who cried for Torah like a child cries for his mother.
And so it was said: Rabbi Zusha is a true scholar. Not because he mastered the texts, but because he mastered the heart. When he didn’t understand, the author of the teaching came to explain it to him. That is the mark of a lamdan emet—a true Torah scholar.
🌟 Takeaway: The Truth Seeker’s Reward
True scholarship is not measured by intellectual brilliance alone, but by the purity of one’s yearning for truth. Rabbi Zusha, though not a master of complex analysis, embodied the deepest form of learning—one born of humility, sincerity, and tears. His refusal to settle for ignorance, his willingness to cry out to Heaven, and his faith that the answer would come—these made him a “lamdan emet,” a true Torah scholar. When the heart is open and the soul longs for understanding, even the Rambam himself may come to teach.
[1] Toras Shalom Sefer Hasichos p. 84; Otzer Sippurei Chabad 5 p. 113
