Description:
Who are
the great revolutionaries of the twentieth century? Any well-informed
person would probably begin with Lenin and Gandhi -- and many
familiar names would follow.
Ilya Essas
would probably not be on the list. But Ilya -- now Eliyahu
-- Essas is one of this century’s greatest Jewish revolutionaries.
Essas
was a leader of the refuseniks, their teacher, their rosh
yeshivah, the firebrand who gave them courage when the secret
police were pounding on their doors. Trained as a brilliant
mathematician and secretly taught by his parents to be a proud
though silent Jew, Essas discovered the Torah in a musty corner
of the Vilnius Academy library. From that moment, his life
was changed.
He became
the spark plug and inspiration of the Russian teshuvah movement.
He refused to live for himself. His life belonged to his students
and the cause of his newfound Torah Judaism. Incredibly, he
made himself an accomplished Torah scholar when it was a crime
to teach Torah in the Soviet Union. Incredibly, he was ordained
a rabbi. Incredibly, he developed of students who are themselves
leaders of Jewish life, in Russia, Israel, and America.
The Soviet
Union of Essas’s dangerous struggle is gone -- but the story
is as important as ever.
This book
soars with the grandeur of the Jewish spirit; the vitality
of Jewish roots that lay buried but not dead under the blood-soaked
ice of Communist atheism for sixty years; the lush new growth
of Jewish awareness; the success story of Eliyahu Essas and
his valiant revolution.
And if
any Jew ever imbides the poison of despair, this book is its
antidote.