Baltimore, MD - June 16, 2017- - When HaRav Moshe Heinemann spoke at the recent Mishnah Berurah Kollel siyum celebrating the first-time around completion of the important halachic work penned in 1904 by Rabbi Yisrael Meir Kagan—perhaps, best known as “The Chofetz Chaim”—he mentioned the famous photo of his Rosh Hayeshiva, Rav Aharon Kotler, z’l, holding the Mishnah Berurah. He did this, the Rav said, because he wanted to show how important it is to learn this sefer.

Fifth grade Torah Institute of Baltimore rebbi, Rabbi Moshe S. Juravel, not only recognizes the importance of learning Mishnah Berurah, he administers a very unique “Kollel” devoted solely to learning it. Participants are quite diverse—geographically, as well as age- and learning level-wise. In fact, since they do not all learn the Mishnah Berurah together under one roof, some of them have never met one another--or Rabbi Juravel.

“The group is very spread out, from Israel to Lakewood, ” notes Rabbi Juravel. “I send kollel members the material they need to learn, along with test questions, by email, snail mail, and fax. We’re not sitting together, learning together as a group.  They are all different ages—bochurim, some close to retirement age, and everyone in-between—talmidei hachomim and laymen, alike. Everyone does it at his own pace. But, the common thread is that every single one is trying to sit and learn through the Mishnah Berurah and comprehend all the details of it; my material sheets help them get it clear.”

Although everyone learns at their own pace, they are basically—within the same month-- at the same place at the same time, covering the same ground. Rabbi Juravel sends out a test once a month, to help everybody gauge how successful they are in comprehending and remembering the material.

Rabbi Yitzchok Lemberger, who joined the Mishnah Berurah Kollel about six years ago, is one of its original members. He got involved in it because he was chavrusas with Rabbi Juravel before relocating to Detroit, after his remarriage this past year. Despite his move, he continues to learn in the Kollel. He opts to learn it daily, for a half-hour, and review it on Shabbos.

“Mishnah Berurah is a complicated sefer to learn because it throws a lot of explanations and various cases—offshoots from the direct case in the Shulchan Aruch, or variances on that case--bringing in a lot of different sheetos about a lot of different cases in the Shulchan Aruch; it can get a little murky,” admits Rabbi Lemberger. “To have it broken down into pieces, so you can see that this is the direct halacha, is a wonderful tool. It doesn’t make the learning of Mishnah Berurah easier, but it makes it easier to classify and clarify, so when you are finished, your really have all the details in order. This is a study aid, where you can learn line by line, statement by statement; this is not a way for a person to pick up the Cliff notes on the Mishnah Berurah.”

There is a monetary reward incentive, compensated according to your test mark (if you get 100 on your test, you get $100; a 90, you get $90; an 80, you get $80; a 70, you get $70; and below 70, you get nothing), but, as Rabbi Lemberger explains, that is secondary to the fact that there is a system to help you work out the Mishnah Berurah. Siyumim are held whenever a volume of the sefer is completed. That is the one time that most of the participants get to see one another, if ever.

Another Kollel member, who joined more recently, is Rabbi Boruch Heinemann, who learns Mishnah Berurah together with his ninth-grade son, Yehuda.

“We have both benefited tremendously from Rabbi Juravel’s Mishnah Berurah Kollel,” notes Rabbi Heinemann, who enjoys the 45-minute learning seder in Mishnah Brurah with his son. “Rabbi Juravel’s chazara sheet is so extensive, you cannot miss a single word; he has a question about every line in it. It’s unbelievable what he did. You really come out with a tremendous clarity l’maaseh, because you must answer the questions; that is the genius of it. The program is very thorough and makes things very clear. It’s a very unusual program.”

“I write a very detailed review sheet and send out 250-350 cases the Mishnah Brurah deals with, in fifteen pages,” explains Rabbi Juravel. “It’s been very successful, despite the fact that participants come and go. We have more than twenty participants, however, only twenty get paid; others do it voluntarily.”

The Mishnah Berurah Kollel recently celebrated its completion of chelek daled with a siyum in the Juravels’ new simcha hall, housed in the former Hattery. Mrs. Shulamis Juravel cooked for the siyum and participants were joined by their wives, Rabbanim, and friends. Over the years, every time a volume is finished, a small siyum was made. The Rosh Kollel of K’hal Chassidim of Baltimore’s “Kollel Le’Horoah,” HaRav Hershel Rosenfeld honored the Kollel with his presence and used a story to illustrate how amazing a place Baltimore is. The Kollel has already begun learning chelek gimmel, for the second time.

As HaRav Heinemann said at the siyum, the Mishnah Brurah is the foundation that had such siyata dishmaya. The Chofetz Chaim started to write it when he was 68 years old to help out klal Yisrael, and he wasn’t sure he would live long enough to finish it. That’s why he wrote chalek gimmel—about hilchos Shabbos--before he wrote some of the other volumes, because he thought it was so important. Hashem helped him and he finished it, living to 106.

“I feel that this Kollel had such amazing siyata dishmaya,” concludes Rabbi Juravel, who shared the story of how it came about with the siyum participants. “A fellow came over to me and asked me to start a program of learning Mishna Berurah with tests, which he would totally fund for approximately $2300 a month, for ten years, in memory of his parents. He, himself, actively participates in the learning of the Mishnah Berurah, and prefers to remain anonymous.”

“We just finished chelek daled—halachos that are barely applicable today, for situations set up in communities of long ago—however, in the middle of our Mishnah Berurah I found a line which illuminated a Gemorah that I have been teaching for 40 years; it is just amazing what you can do with it. It shed a whole new light on it!”

For further information about the Mishna Berurah Kollel, contact Rabbi Juravel: 410-358-9215 (home); 410-258-4379; or email: msjuravel@gmail.com.