Jerusalem, Israel - July 30, 2019 - Rabbi Hershel Schacter, z"l, was a 25-year-old chaplain in the US Army when he entered the Buchenwald concentration camp with the liberating forces in the spring of 1945. In the horror of broken bodies and bones of Holocaust survivors, he discovered a child named Lulek.

The eight-year-old boy grew up to become the Chief Ashkenazi Rabbi of Israel from 1993-2003, Rav Yisrael Meir Lau. In 2011, Rav Lau published his memoir, Out of the Depths: The Story of a Child of Buchenwald Who Returned Home at Last, in English, with forewords by Shimon Peres and Elie Weisel. Weisel wrote that he and little Lulek were in incarcerated together, liberated together, and were part of the group of 400 boys who traveled to France together. Weisel taught young Lulek how to say kaddish in the concentration camp when the boy learned from his older brother, Naphtali Lau-Lavi, z"l, that their mother was dead.

 

Today Rav Lau serves as Chairman of Council, of Yad Vashem, located in the hills of Jerusalem near Har Herzl. It was in the Yad Vashem Synagogue that Rav Lau spoke to a group of North American rabbis and members of Rabbi Schacter's z"l extended family. On each side of the synagogue was projected the black and white image of the US Army photograph of American Jewish soldiers and survivors on Shavuot of 1945. Tall candles burn brightly, as Rabbi Schacter z"l led the holiday service.

In his remarks, Rav Lau emphasized that educators have no way to explain the Shoah. He, however, quoted from King David, the words we say three times on Shabbat from Tehilim 92:
מַה-גָּדְלוּ מַעֲשֶׂיךָ ה'; מְאֹד, עָמְקוּ מַחְשְׁבֹתֶיךָ
How great are Thy works, O LORD! Thy thoughts are very deep.

Rav Lau has spoken eloquently over many decades on the subject of the Shoah and Jewish survival. However, this event at Yad Vashem was unique. Rabbi Jacob J Schacter, University Professor of Jewish History and Jewish Thought at Yeshiva University, Rabbi Schacter's son, spoke of growing up in a family of liberators, and read from his father's correspondence.

After the presentations in the synagogue, the group proceeded to the main Yad Vashem exhibition hall where the iconic image is on display. This prominent piece of the permanent Yad Vashem exhibit was the backdrop for Rav Lau to point out his tiny image sitting in the front row in the midst of the uniformed Jewish GI's.

Members of the extended Weisbord - Schacter family posed with the two rabbis, including Rebbitzen Shana Yocheved Schacter and their oldest grandson who is named for her father, and is in Israel on NCSY kollel this summer.

Rav Lau shook hands with the son and grandson of the American rabbi who reached out his kind hand in Buchenwald. That was the first step of his life after the Shoah upon liberation, as he made his way to become a leader in the land of Israel.