I produced this track! These guys are legit top tier talent. This was for a music video but these guys just nailed their vocal takes. And the guy on piano is me 👋
It broke my heart just a little when you asked if dancing was illegal then. It made me realize how lacking the holocaust education is for anyone other than Jews. No, dancing was not illegal. Being a Jew and being alive was “illegal”.
Just wanted to share, the "man" in this story is my wife's great grandfather, Rabbi Dr. Leo Goldman. I never got the chance to meet him, but I've heard incredible things. He was a very special man
This song was written by an incredible Jewish singer/songwriter Abe Rotenberg who knew a lot of holocaust survivors who inspired a lot of his songs. He’s writing here about how he met an older gentleman on a plane who told him a story. After they were liberated from the concentration camps him and other survivors that were from his home town, vilna (capital of Lithuanian), decided to go back home to look for loved ones. It took them months to get there and when they did they went straight to the synagogue (shul) which had been wrecked. They looked towards the eastern wall , which is the direction Jews pray towards and where the arc that the Torah scrolls are kept is, and they noticed that the arc was empty. It was a holiday called Simchas Torah, which is a holiday celebrated by dancing with the Torah scrolls, and without them they wouldn’t be able to. But then they noticed 2 little children in the corner (there weren’t many children because most of them were murdered and because of the holocaust most Jews hadn’t been able to have children over the past couple of years..) so they picked the children up and danced with them in place of the Torah scrolls (children are considered the purest like a Torah…) and they finally felt some relief seeing that there were still children that could carry on the Jewish nation for future generations…
As an Orthodox Jew, it's both hilarious and frustrating to watch you try and figure out what's going on. It's like watching a game show where the audience knows the answer but the contestants don't. Definitely entertaining.
Hahah, I can totally see that aspect of watching these videos for the Jewish community. I've mentioned this before I think in a much earlier video, but they really need to teach more of these things in school. Whether it be in the world religion class, or in history, etc. Education is so important, and I think everyone has such a basic knowledge of certain events but there is so much more to them.
Good catch on the shoe vs shul or you would have gone viral again like with Tanya! On a more serious note, my father is one of those children survivors having lost nearly all his aunts an uncles ( a total of around 20) and both his grandparents and of course all his cousins. So In just one immediate family probably close to 75-80 people. It’s hard for us to understand how anyone can deny this tragedy. My father is now almost 84- both a rabbi and a PHD. When we call someone a survivor that’s what we mean. Rising from the ashes of complete and total trauma and still standing strong
So Sorry to hear that your father and family had to go through something like this. Hopefully his life, and others have had a much happier/prosperous life since surviving. All the best!
Thank you. Also didn’t see anyone address your question about the eastern wall ( maybe someone did but I didn’t see it). We pray to the east toward Jerusalem and the Temple Mount. So he meant the eastern wall of the shul known as the mizrach ( eastern) Vant ( wall). The western wall is the only remaining wall of the original wall surrounding the temple in Jerusalem.
As a religious Jew, I admire the way you try to understand the song, its background, etc. You are doing an amazing and thorough job! You can see that the music comes from deep within your soul Thank you so much!
This song was written by Abie Rotenberg (one of the greatest jewish composers -- many great English songs). 1) Vilna was a town in Europe that was home to many jews before the 2nd world War. 2) you are correct, survivor is referring to the holocaust. 3) Shul=synagogue, sifrei torah=torah scrolls 4) Simchas Torah is a holiday when we reach end of the Torah after reading a portion every Shabbos (kind of like siyum from dirshu video). Families come to shul and we dance and sing with the Torah scrolls after which we begin the first portion again. There are many different customs and traditions on simchas Torah, I'm sure you can find videos online. 5) jews pray towards the east: Jerusalem The song in summary: Jews returned to their home town empty handed and alone after being liberated from concentration camps and attempted begin life again, the want to celebrate the holiday Simchas Torah and dance in defiance of the attempt to exterminate them--they were still here! They find the synagogue destroyed and their Torah scrolls gone so instead they dance with the children because they are the future of the Jewish people.
@@PortuguesePai Yanky is known as being a trained professional cantor, many consider him to be the cantor with the greatest tone control in the world. When you hear Yanky sing Chazzanus (cantorial pieces), it's astounding. The reference to the Eastern Wall is that the holiest (and front) wall of any synagogue is the Eastern wall (because we face East (Jerusalem) when we pray, whether or not we are in a synagogue). Torah scrolls are stored in a section at the front of the shul. SO a barren eastern wall with no scrolls in the ark would be the front of the synagogue. Vilna = Vilnius, Lithuania If you are interested in seeing a video showing the type of dancing done in Shul (synagogue) on Simchas Torah, review the following song by Mordechai Shapiro, Benny Friedman, and Matt Dubb. ruclips.net/video/zyxAQ8RpzPI/видео.html
Thank you for another amazing reaction video! Vilna was in Lithuania (Today it's Vilnius, the capital). "Survivor," as you guessed, refers to surviving the Holocaust. Lithuania was completely wiped of Jews during the Holocaust. Very few Lithuanian Jews survived/escaped. With regard to the children...very, very few children survived the Holocaust. It was a most unusual sight to see children in concentration camps and immediately following the War. A famous child-survivor is former chief Rabbi of Israel, Rabbi Israel Meir Lau who was 8 1/2 years old at the end of the War. In his book, Out of the Depths, he describes the shocked reaction that many had upon seeing him in concentration camp and following Liberation. Also, Jews pray in the direction of Jerusalem/ the Temple Mount, which is East if you live West of Israel. The "Eastern Wall" is the important wall in every synagogue, as it is the wall that all the congregants face. The "Western Wall," also known as the "Wailing Wall," is a portion of the actual wall that surrounded the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Jews in Israel pray at this wall. It is the only remaining wall following the destruction of the Temple.
It was so interesting to me to see how even an English song has so much in it that was difficult to understand. Growing up with these terms and concepts, they almost feel like general knowledge that anyone would understand. But it makes sense that someone who hasn't grown up with these words and ideas wouldn't get it. Thank you for trying your best. And you got a lot of it!!!! The story is a Holocaust survivor who goes back home and realizes its "Simchas Torah," a holiday where we dance in "shul" (synagogue) with "sifrei torah," scrolls of the bible. Because they had no torah scrolls and everything had been destroyed they danced with the children, a sign of hope for the future, instead. They end with the words "Am Yisrael Chai" which means The Jewish nation lives on!
Great song choice!!! Yanky was famous for his incredible singing long before his brother Shulem came on the scene. They are both so talented, and their different voices blend together so beautifully!!
I know you are getting so many suggestions every day, but I'm still pushing for your reaction to Moshe Tischler! Definitely worth checking out, if not for a video review then at least for yourself. ruclips.net/video/rdjh-o9_OnM/видео.html ruclips.net/video/T1mn2-q2rJA/видео.html
The guy on the piano is Aryeh Kunstler. I don't think we've seen him in any of your other videos. But he is a very talented musician (mostly guitarist) and singer in his own right. Definitely worth checking out too! Very nice songs in both English and Hebrew.
Vilna is a city that had a massive Jewish community before the Holocaust, after they where liberated allot off survivors went back in hope of finding their lives ones, traveling at that time to along time due to the war. A sefer Torah (Torah school) is the bible handwritten and considered one of the holiest items in Judaism. Simchas Torah is a Jewish holiday where Jews Finnish reading the whole torah so to celebrate we sing and dance around a bima (a special table where we read the Torah) with all the Torah scrools. Vilna was under Soviet rule (if I am not mistaken) and the shul (synagogue) was boarded up but the went in either way, the Nazis used to murder allot of Jews in their synagogue and that is the scene described in the song. Around 3-4 million Jewish children where murdered in the Holocaust, so allot of people thought there wouldn't be a next generation of Jews but these children should the Jews will survive so they held them up and danced with them. Thanks for this video!
Sefer Torah (say-fehr. sifrei plural; see-fray Torah) = Torah scroll/s. One of the most sacred items we have. Contains the five Books of Moses in the Old Testament.
It's about survivors returning home to Vila after the concentration camps. This song is based on a true story of an American Soldier seeing survivors on the holiday of Simchat Torah dancing with children instead of Torahs since their synagogue and torah scrolls were destroyed, but the children are our future. 🌟 ruclips.net/video/rtF9BnSWaXk/видео.html It was very dangerous for Jews to return to their cities, there were multiple cases of Jews who survived the Concentration camps , coming home only to be killed in organized pogroms by the locals. When my family members returned home to find others living in their houses after surviving Auschwitz, the neighbors just looked at them and said " We didn't think you would return
In defiance we would dance. No- dancing was not illegal. But after what had happened to the Jews it took defiance to dance. And they did. They were an unbelievable generation. They started families, they worked, they sang, they danced. Am yisroel chai.
By the way, this song was composed and written by Abie Rottenberg, the same composer and lyricist as "Memories" (a song you reacted to). I would love to see you react to one of Abie's songs with Abie actually singing it! I really think you would love his voice.
Shul is a synagogue. Simchas Torah is the holiday in which we celebrate the time in which we received the Torah. An interesting take on this song, I was lucky enough to share Shabbat dinner with the daughter of the man who inspired this song. After the holocaust ended, all the synagogue’s Torah’s had been burned,; so when it was time to dance in celebration of our receiving of the Torah, there weren’t any Torah’s to dance with. A man in a Russian soldiers uniform (as the area that he lived in fell under Russian rule) took this five year old boy onto his shoulders and they danced with the children in place of the Torah. This boy remembered this experience his until the day he met the daughter of the man who danced with him that night in Vilna. This boy was one of the hidden children of the holocaust; Jewish children hidden among Christian families for their lives. This boy grew up to make it his mission to find all those hidden children and bring them back to Judaism, the way this Russian soldier did for him.
The chorus is the most touching for me... after the horrific pain of the holocaust, when it came time for the holiday Simchas Torah, they danced with such joy and sincerity as if the world had done no wrong. On this holiday we dance with the Torah scroll, but they had no Torahs because they were all destroyed by the Nazis. Nonetheless they danced in defiance and held the surviving children as if they were Torah scrolls. They were as precious as the holy Torah scrolls. Tears!
hey, i think these videos are great! would be interesting to see you do a reaction video with an orthodox-raised person who can give context on all these beautiful and heart-wrenching songs - let me know
So Many children and men and women were killed in the Holocaust, there were survivors but to find these children was a huge sense of hope for them. Children are the future
Sifrei Torah are the Torah Scrolls that we read from in shul (Synagogue) on the Sabbath and holidays. One specific holiday is called; Simchat Torah, where we dance with these scrolls to celebrate...
A Sefer Torah or Torah scroll is a handwritten copy of the Torah, meaning the five books of Moses. The Torah scroll is mainly used in the ritual of Torah reading during Jewish prayers
During WW2, jews from all over Europe were rounded up and murdered in concentration camps. After the liberation they tried to return to their home towns, but most of them no longer had homes or families. Here is the story of the people of Vilna trying to revive their little town. They want to celebrate the Holiday of Simchas Torah, when we dance with the Torah scrolls to celebrate the completion of the yearly learning cycle, but their SHUL (synagogue) had been ransacked. (The Nazis, may they burn in He11, often rounded communities up in synagogues, and murdered them there. But shooting, or by simply burning down the building with the jews trapped inside). When these people realized they had no Torah Scrolls (Sifrei Toirah) to dance with in their ransacked Shul, they danced holding the children instead, because the children were a reminder that despite the Nazis' greatest effort, there WOULD be future generations, there WOULD be a future to the Jewish nation.
Good summary. One correction. Vilna was not a small town. It was the capital of Lithuania and a large city. Before WWII had a huge Jewish community--roughly 55,000. The vast majority were murdered in the Holocaust. Only 400 return.
Thank YOUUUU! You did it ! 👏 Thank you 😊 This song was about Jews returning home after surviving the Holocaust There is some very moving back story to tgis son, composed by Abie Rotenberg , a brilliant composer. Now its time to check out Yonina and A Couple Of Basches !
Side note there are two different types of Torah scrolls. The round one you saw in the other video is the sefaradi (Spanish origin) version. The Ashkenazi (central European) version is rolled on 2 poles and looks like 2 rolls next to each other.
As many have commented this song was written by Abie Rotenberg (one of the greatest jewish composers -- many great English songs) He has many compositions whose message would resonate with all people not only jewish. I'm surprised you didn't review him yet.
This is a beautiful song. I really enjoyed it. It made me realize how little most people know about the Holocaust and its aftermath. I would love it if you would review the song Minyan Man by Shlock Rock. As much as this song is about the Jews surviving and coming back even after the horrors of the Holocaust, Minyan Man is about Jewish life here in the United States and about Jews connecting. It's very soulful. Please review Minyan Man.
On the "Eastern Wall", Shuls/ Synagogues are oriented to face Jerusalem. In Europe, (west of Israel), the eastern wall of a Shul is the front of it. The Western Wall in Israel is the easiest wall to access of the Temple Mount's platform walls.
During the Holocaust, in which six million Jews were murdered, most of the survivors were younger middle age people, say from 20~40. Other ages survived as well, but very few children. Over a million and a half of those murdered were children. The story recounted in the song is of a group of survivors trying to celebrate Simchos Torah - a holiday that celebrates the learning of our Torah - without any Torah scrolls to dance with. Instead, finding two children survivors they decide to hold the children, recognizing that they represented the survival of the Jewish people. Motifs: Vilna - an actual city, however it represents Torah learning, due to the Vilna Gaon who had lived there roughly three hundred years ago and made the name of the city synonymous with Torah. Survivor - The remnant of Jews who survived the labor and death camps of the Nazi regime, having lived through utter hell, who tried to rebuild their lives in the coming decades. Children - The promise of renewal Am Yisroel Chai - The promise of eternal Jewish survival in spoken form
Yankie is a very famous cantor at the Lincoln square synagogue. He gives concerts around the world. Shul is synagogue. Vilna was a Jewish village where lots of Jews were deported to concentration camps during the holocaust. Most of the Jews died and not many survivors. They are singing about the survivors looking for more survivors. Simchas Torah is a Jewish holiday where we dance with the Torah
Hi, the song is about a gentleman who is a survivor of the holocaust, who returned to Vilna to his Shul (synagogue), it was simchas torah (Jewish holiday) he and others ran to the shul seeing it was barricaded and inside the Torah was gone. They could not dance with it, but they danced with the children instead as they were the continuation of the Jewish people.
@PortuguesePai firstly I love your videos. The original version is from Abie Rotenberg. You definitely won't regret hearing the original. Here is a link: ruclips.net/video/iEh_XxmekFo/видео.html If you want to hear some of his classics I would recommend. Memories. Who am I. Dreams come true.
Vilna was a thriving Jewish community in Poland, perhaps looking for any family surviving the Holocaust. Simchas Torah is the holiday celebrating the Jewish Torahs. Very joyous.
The story is about a man who survived the Holocaust, and decided after the Holocaust to go to vilna (in Lithuania I think) he went there and there were a bunch of other Holocaust survivors. They went and realized that day was a holiday called simchat torah on simchat Torah the Jewish people dance around with sefer Torah or Jewish bible scrolls (the things you said with the blue velvet and the crown.) While there the Jews found some lone children and saw a bullet hole through the prayer book, siddur. They are dancing and praising God even though they've been through the Holocaust. Also, a shul, or you might've heard shoe, is a Jewish synagogue. Hope this helps you understand
"Shul" mean synagogue, "sefer tora" it is the holy book. the song is about after the holcost, that they didnt had "sefer tora" do dance on the annual day of endeing the book, So they danced with the children, as they are the continuation of the Jewish people.
Vilna ... a city in Europe that was a bastion of Judaism before the Holocaust which wiped out the city. Shul... Synagogue ... the old man was relaying his story after the war when the survivors regrouped back in Vilna their hometown which was all destroyed with no hebrew scriptures survived in the synagogue but all of them danced and celebrated on the Holiday.... they broke into the locked up Synagogue.... and covered with blood stains and bullet holes... then started dancing....which we celebrate Simchas Torah... rejoicing with the holy torah scrolls, but none survived the ravaging of the Natzi fires that destroyed all of the holy books.... Then.... a child.... a Jewish child survived! Survived the concentration camp...Appeared in the Synagogue .... the future of our faith.... a child was there! So instead of dancing with the torah scrolls .... they danced with the children... This is a song describing the survivors experience after surviving the death of the Concentration Camps...
Very nice review. (I think you should try to focus on the singing as well like you did in earlier videos. not only the lyrics) Thank you. We love your work.
Maybe you should get some info on the plot so you can still react to the vocals and story as well but not with frustration. (Just trying to help) thank you
A new video from yesterday live: Hanan Ben Ari Medley | @Freilach ft. @Benny Friedman @Shulem Lemmer @Itzik Dadya & @Yedidim ruclips.net/video/MO2rgwQBFR8/видео.html
Others have done their share of explanation, here are my additions: - "Vilna" is Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. After WWII, Lithuania was occupied by the Russians, who turned it into a Communist state. I don't know if the "barricades" around the _shul_ were because it was a religious site (much religious practice was banned, or at least restricted, under Soviet rule) or because it was, otherwise, an unoccupied ruin. - "Shul" is the Yiddish word for synagogue. It is related to the English word _school,_ both from the German word _schule_ (a school). - "Sifrei Torah" are the Torah (or _Toirah,_ as it's pronounced here) scrolls, which you appear to recognize from other videos. - "Simchas Torah" is a holiday celebrating the end of a cycle of Reading the Torah. It's the last day of _Sukkos;_ just under a month ago for us. Part of the celebration includes dancing while holding the Torah scrolls. The Nazis had surrendered in May, in the Spring, while _Sukkos_ and _Simchas Torah_ are in the Fall. - Under the Nazi occupation of Vilna, the synagogue would have been stripped of its religious articles - the _siddur[im]_ (prayer books), the Torah scrolls, etc. - and the Ark, where the scrolls are kept, on the eastern wall of the _shul,_ would have been laid bare. The Nazis often carried out massacres in the synagogues, hence the "bullet holes and blood stains." A final note: The incident recounted in not fictional. One of the children the survivors danced with has been identified as Abe Foxman, who was the president of the ADL from 1987 to 2015. His parents had left him with a Catholic nanny during the War, which is how he survived. Most other children were killed by the Nazis.
listen, you are the smartest non-Jew who asks questions about Jewish stuff that I've encountered! your curiosity is just formed so beautifully into your wonders and questions! the eastern wall: when a Jew is praying in the Holy Temple (which in Hebrew is called Beit Hamikdash), he has to stand with his face turning to the Holy of holies - the western room of Beit Hamikdash, which is the holiest place in the whole entire world! if you're out of the Beit Hamikdash - you shoud aim yourself towards it, if you're out of the Temple mount - you aim yourself towards it...etc..etc...zoom it out with your imagination... so, if you're out of the land of Israel, you aim yourself at it. so - as most of the Jewish diaspora went to the west side of the world - most of the Jews abroad got used along those almost 2000 years, to Daven to the east which is the direction to the holy land. and so, the eastern wall of the shul, became a thing, the Rabbi of the community would get a seat there, and the more important people would try to get to sit at that side, but also the Ark - the cupboard in which the Torah scrolls are placed, is mostly built towards Jerusalem - and Israel too. so that's basically what it meant.
Vilna was a very Jewish city in Lithuania Yes it’s the story of a man who survived the Holocaust It was very hard to get transportation after the Holocaust, because of the bombings and the war It was a long journey back hto his hometown of vilna When he got there it was simchas Torah, the holiday when we celebrate starting the Torah from the beginning again We dance with the Sif-ray torah or torah scrolls But there were no Sif-ray torahs to dance with cuz the nazis destroyed them And then they noticed 2 children and they hadn’t seen children in so long! The nazis killed most of the young So they danced holding these children Saying: they are our future of our nation, we will live They tried to kill us but we will still live!!!
This is such an intensely poignant song, and it was very moving watching you grasp the story as it unfolded. And it was very satisfying to see you correctly make the connection from the lyrics about "holding the sifrei Torah up high" back to the previous video where you saw them doing that. You can hear the little boy who is mentioned in the song tell the story in the link below. ruclips.net/video/T4PyohECRn0/видео.html
Vilna is Vilnius, capital of Lithuania. Lithuania had a large thriving Jewish community, and was an important cultural center, with a high concentration of yeshivas (Talmudic institutes) probably the highest in all of Europe. Lithuania was invaded early in the war, i believe in 1941.Something like 200,000 Lithuanian Jews were murdered by the Germans (and their more than willing local collaborators).
A "shul" is the Yiddish word that Orthodox Jews use for synagogue, and a Siddur is indeed the praying book. "Sifrei Torah" - are the Torah books that are in every shul, used to read from every Shabbat (Saturdays), holidays and twice a week - Mondays and Thursdays.
I produced this track! These guys are legit top tier talent.
This was for a music video but these guys just nailed their vocal takes.
And the guy on piano is me 👋
number one producer! it was nice meeting you a few years ago!
Aaahhh I love Your music Aryeh 🤩
@@BengalsBrix was nice meeting you too!
R' Aryeh! A beautiful arrangement for this song. Brought me back to the feelings I had hearing the original version. Yei'ashir kochacha!
@@Meow-ks3dj Thank you so much!
It broke my heart just a little when you asked if dancing was illegal then. It made me realize how lacking the holocaust education is for anyone other than Jews. No, dancing was not illegal. Being a Jew and being alive was “illegal”.
Well said
Germany is the only place where non Jews get an extensive education about the holocaust.
Just wanted to share, the "man" in this story is my wife's great grandfather, Rabbi Dr. Leo Goldman. I never got the chance to meet him, but I've heard incredible things. He was a very special man
That is amazing. That's such a special thing to have in your life Alec. Hopefully his story will go on with you and your family 🥰
I didn't even know it's a true story!
@@annonimiss6422 What's more amazing is that years and years later they got the chance to reconnect and find each other
This song was written by an incredible Jewish singer/songwriter Abe Rotenberg who knew a lot of holocaust survivors who inspired a lot of his songs. He’s writing here about how he met an older gentleman on a plane who told him a story.
After they were liberated from the concentration camps him and other survivors that were from his home town, vilna (capital of Lithuanian), decided to go back home to look for loved ones. It took them months to get there and when they did they went straight to the synagogue (shul) which had been wrecked. They looked towards the eastern wall , which is the direction Jews pray towards and where the arc that the Torah scrolls are kept is, and they noticed that the arc was empty. It was a holiday called Simchas Torah, which is a holiday celebrated by dancing with the Torah scrolls, and without them they wouldn’t be able to. But then they noticed 2 little children in the corner (there weren’t many children because most of them were murdered and because of the holocaust most Jews hadn’t been able to have children over the past couple of years..) so they picked the children up and danced with them in place of the Torah scrolls (children are considered the purest like a Torah…) and they finally felt some relief seeing that there were still children that could carry on the Jewish nation for future generations…
Great explanation thank you
As an Orthodox Jew, it's both hilarious and frustrating to watch you try and figure out what's going on. It's like watching a game show where the audience knows the answer but the contestants don't. Definitely entertaining.
Hahah, I can totally see that aspect of watching these videos for the Jewish community.
I've mentioned this before I think in a much earlier video, but they really need to teach more of these things in school. Whether it be in the world religion class, or in history, etc. Education is so important, and I think everyone has such a basic knowledge of certain events but there is so much more to them.
Haha this is such an accurate analogy
@@PortuguesePai you can reach out for any questions
Facts 😂😂
Dude you’re amazing. You really get it. You have a soul of fire.
Good catch on the shoe vs shul or you would have gone viral again like with Tanya! On a more serious note, my father is one of those children survivors having lost nearly all his aunts an uncles ( a total of around 20) and both his grandparents and of course all his cousins. So In just one immediate family probably close to 75-80 people. It’s hard for us to understand how anyone can deny this tragedy. My father is now almost 84- both a rabbi and a PHD. When we call someone a survivor that’s what we mean. Rising from the ashes of complete and total trauma and still standing strong
So Sorry to hear that your father and family had to go through something like this. Hopefully his life, and others have had a much happier/prosperous life since surviving. All the best!
Thank you. Also didn’t see anyone address your question about the eastern wall ( maybe someone did but I didn’t see it). We pray to the east toward Jerusalem and the Temple Mount. So he meant the eastern wall of the shul known as the mizrach ( eastern) Vant ( wall). The western wall is the only remaining wall of the original wall surrounding the temple in Jerusalem.
And shul is a Synagogue
@@Ari-rz6bj qwertyuiopasdfghjklzxcvbnm
As a religious Jew, I admire the way you try to understand the song, its background, etc. You are doing an amazing and thorough job! You can see that the music comes from deep within your soul
Thank you so much!
This song was written by Abie Rotenberg (one of the greatest jewish composers -- many great English songs).
1) Vilna was a town in Europe that was home to many jews before the 2nd world War.
2) you are correct, survivor is referring to the holocaust.
3) Shul=synagogue, sifrei torah=torah scrolls
4) Simchas Torah is a holiday when we reach end of the Torah after reading a portion every Shabbos (kind of like siyum from dirshu video). Families come to shul and we dance and sing with the Torah scrolls after which we begin the first portion again. There are many different customs and traditions on simchas Torah, I'm sure you can find videos online.
5) jews pray towards the east: Jerusalem
The song in summary: Jews returned to their home town empty handed and alone after being liberated from concentration camps and attempted begin life again, the want to celebrate the holiday Simchas Torah and dance in defiance of the attempt to exterminate them--they were still here! They find the synagogue destroyed and their Torah scrolls gone so instead they dance with the children because they are the future of the Jewish people.
Well explained.
Dam Izzy, coming in clutch with all the info as always 👍🏼. Definitely a deep/impactful song.
IZZY is the Jewish Google lol.
@@PortuguesePai Yanky is known as being a trained professional cantor, many consider him to be the cantor with the greatest tone control in the world. When you hear Yanky sing Chazzanus (cantorial pieces), it's astounding.
The reference to the Eastern Wall is that the holiest (and front) wall of any synagogue is the Eastern wall (because we face East (Jerusalem) when we pray, whether or not we are in a synagogue). Torah scrolls are stored in a section at the front of the shul. SO a barren eastern wall with no scrolls in the ark would be the front of the synagogue.
Vilna = Vilnius, Lithuania
If you are interested in seeing a video showing the type of dancing done in Shul (synagogue) on Simchas Torah, review the following song by Mordechai Shapiro, Benny Friedman, and Matt Dubb. ruclips.net/video/zyxAQ8RpzPI/видео.html
@@PortuguesePai thanks, my pleasure 😊
Thank you for another amazing reaction video!
Vilna was in Lithuania (Today it's Vilnius, the capital). "Survivor," as you guessed, refers to surviving the Holocaust. Lithuania was completely wiped of Jews during the Holocaust. Very few Lithuanian Jews survived/escaped. With regard to the children...very, very few children survived the Holocaust. It was a most unusual sight to see children in concentration camps and immediately following the War. A famous child-survivor is former chief Rabbi of Israel, Rabbi Israel Meir Lau who was 8 1/2 years old at the end of the War. In his book, Out of the Depths, he describes the shocked reaction that many had upon seeing him in concentration camp and following Liberation.
Also, Jews pray in the direction of Jerusalem/ the Temple Mount, which is East if you live West of Israel. The "Eastern Wall" is the important wall in every synagogue, as it is the wall that all the congregants face. The "Western Wall," also known as the "Wailing Wall," is a portion of the actual wall that surrounded the Temple Mount in Jerusalem. Jews in Israel pray at this wall. It is the only remaining wall following the destruction of the Temple.
It was so interesting to me to see how even an English song has so much in it that was difficult to understand. Growing up with these terms and concepts, they almost feel like general knowledge that anyone would understand. But it makes sense that someone who hasn't grown up with these words and ideas wouldn't get it. Thank you for trying your best. And you got a lot of it!!!!
The story is a Holocaust survivor who goes back home and realizes its "Simchas Torah," a holiday where we dance in "shul" (synagogue) with "sifrei torah," scrolls of the bible. Because they had no torah scrolls and everything had been destroyed they danced with the children, a sign of hope for the future, instead. They end with the words "Am Yisrael Chai" which means The Jewish nation lives on!
@portuguesepai I love all these so much. So refreshing for those of us who work in the Jewish music business.
Great song choice!!! Yanky was famous for his incredible singing long before his brother Shulem came on the scene. They are both so talented, and their different voices blend together so beautifully!!
I know you are getting so many suggestions every day, but I'm still pushing for your reaction to Moshe Tischler! Definitely worth checking out, if not for a video review then at least for yourself.
ruclips.net/video/rdjh-o9_OnM/видео.html
ruclips.net/video/T1mn2-q2rJA/видео.html
Reuven, is that you?
@@ydubin Yissy! I love this guy!
The guy on the piano is Aryeh Kunstler. I don't think we've seen him in any of your other videos. But he is a very talented musician (mostly guitarist) and singer in his own right. Definitely worth checking out too! Very nice songs in both English and Hebrew.
Vilna is a city that had a massive Jewish community before the Holocaust, after they where liberated allot off survivors went back in hope of finding their lives ones, traveling at that time to along time due to the war.
A sefer Torah (Torah school) is the bible handwritten and considered one of the holiest items in Judaism.
Simchas Torah is a Jewish holiday where Jews Finnish reading the whole torah so to celebrate we sing and dance around a bima (a special table where we read the Torah) with all the Torah scrools.
Vilna was under Soviet rule (if I am not mistaken) and the shul (synagogue) was boarded up but the went in either way, the Nazis used to murder allot of Jews in their synagogue and that is the scene described in the song.
Around 3-4 million Jewish children where murdered in the Holocaust, so allot of people thought there wouldn't be a next generation of Jews but these children should the Jews will survive so they held them up and danced with them.
Thanks for this video!
An estimated 1.5 million children were killed in the Holocaust.
Sefer Torah (say-fehr. sifrei plural; see-fray Torah) = Torah scroll/s. One of the most sacred items we have. Contains the five Books of Moses in the Old Testament.
Been Really enjoying these videos. Would be awesome to see you do a part 2 of this video with your reactions once reading alot of these comments!
It's about survivors returning home to Vila after the concentration camps. This song is based on a true story of an American Soldier seeing survivors on the holiday of Simchat Torah dancing with children instead of Torahs since their synagogue and torah scrolls were destroyed, but the children are our future.
🌟 ruclips.net/video/rtF9BnSWaXk/видео.html
It was very dangerous for Jews to return to their cities, there were multiple cases of Jews who survived the Concentration camps , coming home only to be killed in organized pogroms by the locals.
When my family members returned home to find others living in their houses after surviving Auschwitz, the neighbors just looked at them and said " We didn't think you would return
It’s so interesting to see how little other people know about our culture! Loving this!! Very entertaining!!! Keep em coming please
“Memories” by Abie Rotenberg is a must see
Same composer. Also Holocaust related
In defiance we would dance. No- dancing was not illegal. But after what had happened to the Jews it took defiance to dance. And they did. They were an unbelievable generation. They started families, they worked, they sang, they danced. Am yisroel chai.
😭😭😭😭 omg my heart was getting emotional from this song. It’s so pretty ❤
Youre getting a crash course in Judaism faster than anyone who would be learning this from books. I love this.
Stunning song!! I give 6 million likes for this one in memory of those lost in the holocaust. Hy"d
By the way, this song was composed and written by Abie Rottenberg, the same composer and lyricist as "Memories" (a song you reacted to). I would love to see you react to one of Abie's songs with Abie actually singing it! I really think you would love his voice.
Shul is a synagogue. Simchas Torah is the holiday in which we celebrate the time in which we received the Torah.
An interesting take on this song, I was lucky enough to share Shabbat dinner with the daughter of the man who inspired this song. After the holocaust ended, all the synagogue’s Torah’s had been burned,; so when it was time to dance in celebration of our receiving of the Torah, there weren’t any Torah’s to dance with. A man in a Russian soldiers uniform (as the area that he lived in fell under Russian rule) took this five year old boy onto his shoulders and they danced with the children in place of the Torah. This boy remembered this experience his until the day he met the daughter of the man who danced with him that night in Vilna. This boy was one of the hidden children of the holocaust; Jewish children hidden among Christian families for their lives. This boy grew up to make it his mission to find all those hidden children and bring them back to Judaism, the way this Russian soldier did for him.
The chorus is the most touching for me... after the horrific pain of the holocaust, when it came time for the holiday Simchas Torah, they danced with such joy and sincerity as if the world had done no wrong. On this holiday we dance with the Torah scroll, but they had no Torahs because they were all destroyed by the Nazis. Nonetheless they danced in defiance and held the surviving children as if they were Torah scrolls. They were as precious as the holy Torah scrolls. Tears!
Surprised no one’s mentioned it yet - Vilna is the capital of Lithuania.
hey, i think these videos are great! would be interesting to see you do a reaction video with an orthodox-raised person who can give context on all these beautiful and heart-wrenching songs - let me know
So Many children and men and women were killed in the Holocaust, there were survivors but to find these children was a huge sense of hope for them. Children are the future
Shuel is a sanctuary, synagogue
) geez, you crack me up with your innocence
The pianist is Aryeh kunstler, singer, songwriter, and musician
Sifrei Torah are the Torah Scrolls that we read from in shul (Synagogue) on the Sabbath and holidays. One specific holiday is called; Simchat Torah, where we dance with these scrolls to celebrate...
just saw the name of the song on my feed and had to watch this right away (even though i wasn't planning on watching anything right now)!!
This song never gets old!
Check out Abie Rotenberg on his 5 Albums Journeys
A Sefer Torah or Torah scroll is a handwritten copy of the Torah, meaning the five books of Moses. The Torah scroll is mainly used in the ritual of Torah reading during Jewish prayers
During WW2, jews from all over Europe were rounded up and murdered in concentration camps. After the liberation they tried to return to their home towns, but most of them no longer had homes or families.
Here is the story of the people of Vilna trying to revive their little town. They want to celebrate the Holiday of Simchas Torah, when we dance with the Torah scrolls to celebrate the completion of the yearly learning cycle, but their SHUL (synagogue) had been ransacked. (The Nazis, may they burn in He11, often rounded communities up in synagogues, and murdered them there. But shooting, or by simply burning down the building with the jews trapped inside).
When these people realized they had no Torah Scrolls (Sifrei Toirah) to dance with in their ransacked Shul, they danced holding the children instead, because the children were a reminder that despite the Nazis' greatest effort, there WOULD be future generations, there WOULD be a future to the Jewish nation.
Good summary. One correction. Vilna was not a small town. It was the capital of Lithuania and a large city. Before WWII had a huge Jewish community--roughly 55,000. The vast majority were murdered in the Holocaust. Only 400 return.
@@benignuman you're right, thank you for posting that out
Bella voca fratelli contatare belli mi piacare
You should definitely re-watch on your channel, now that Izzy explained it all.
Whoa! Just today I suggested a Yanky Lemmer video called Broken Hearts. I did not know you were already watching a Yanky Lemmer video to comment on.
Yes!!! An absolute favourite of mine! Thank you!!
Also: the last line was Am Yisroel Chai (khai), the Jewish People live!
Thank YOUUUU! You did it ! 👏
Thank you 😊
This song was about Jews returning home after surviving the Holocaust
There is some very moving back story to tgis son, composed by Abie Rotenberg , a brilliant composer.
Now its time to check out Yonina and A Couple Of Basches !
*This *Song
Yes, check out yonina!
this is an awesome song. thank you.
Simcha Torah is the holiday where we celebrate the completing of the reading of Torah. On it we dance with the Torah Scrolls
Side note there are two different types of Torah scrolls. The round one you saw in the other video is the sefaradi (Spanish origin) version. The Ashkenazi (central European) version is rolled on 2 poles and looks like 2 rolls next to each other.
The song started off that he met this man on a plane and the old man is now telling his story from the Holocaust
A Shul is a synogogue
another beautiful song composed by Abie Rottenberg (btw a fellow Canadian)
Yes it's a story of sadness, fear, distrucion, and courage.
As many have commented this song was written by Abie Rotenberg (one of the greatest jewish composers -- many great English songs) He has many compositions whose message would resonate with all people not only jewish. I'm surprised you didn't review him yet.
Simchas Torah is a holiday at the end of the holiday of Sukkot
We celebrate restarting the Torah and we dance with the Torah
This is where you can see the background to this amazing song. ruclips.net/video/T4PyohECRn0/видео.html&ab_channel=TomF%C3%BCrstenberg
I know the song very we, but Wow never seen this story before!
The eastern wall is with every building, we pray toward east - toward Jerusalem toward the temple
Havent watched this yet but IM EXCITED!!!
This is a beautiful song. I really enjoyed it.
It made me realize how little most people know about the Holocaust and its aftermath.
I would love it if you would review the song Minyan Man by Shlock Rock. As much as this song is about the Jews surviving and coming back even after the horrors of the Holocaust, Minyan Man is about Jewish life here in the United States and about Jews connecting. It's very soulful. Please review Minyan Man.
On the "Eastern Wall", Shuls/ Synagogues are oriented to face Jerusalem. In Europe, (west of Israel), the eastern wall of a Shul is the front of it. The Western Wall in Israel is the easiest wall to access of the Temple Mount's platform walls.
During the Holocaust, in which six million Jews were murdered, most of the survivors were younger middle age people, say from 20~40. Other ages survived as well, but very few children. Over a million and a half of those murdered were children.
The story recounted in the song is of a group of survivors trying to celebrate Simchos Torah - a holiday that celebrates the learning of our Torah - without any Torah scrolls to dance with. Instead, finding two children survivors they decide to hold the children, recognizing that they represented the survival of the Jewish people.
Motifs: Vilna - an actual city, however it represents Torah learning, due to the Vilna Gaon who had lived there roughly three hundred years ago and made the name of the city synonymous with Torah.
Survivor - The remnant of Jews who survived the labor and death camps of the Nazi regime, having lived through utter hell, who tried to rebuild their lives in the coming decades.
Children - The promise of renewal
Am Yisroel Chai - The promise of eternal Jewish survival in spoken form
The synagogue had been desecrated.
Yankie is a very famous cantor at the Lincoln square synagogue. He gives concerts around the world. Shul is synagogue. Vilna was a Jewish village where lots of Jews were deported to concentration camps during the holocaust. Most of the Jews died and not many survivors. They are singing about the survivors looking for more survivors. Simchas Torah is a Jewish holiday where we dance with the Torah
shul =which means synagogue(not shoe)
Hi, the song is about a gentleman who is a survivor of the holocaust, who returned to Vilna to his Shul (synagogue), it was simchas torah (Jewish holiday) he and others ran to the shul seeing it was barricaded and inside the Torah was gone. They could not dance with it, but they danced with the children instead as they were the continuation of the Jewish people.
@PortuguesePai firstly I love your videos. The original version is from Abie Rotenberg. You definitely won't regret hearing the original. Here is a link: ruclips.net/video/iEh_XxmekFo/видео.html
If you want to hear some of his classics I would recommend.
Memories.
Who am I.
Dreams come true.
Not a live audience
But it was a live video, no auto tune
Vilna was a thriving Jewish community in Poland, perhaps looking for any family surviving the Holocaust. Simchas Torah is the holiday celebrating the Jewish Torahs. Very joyous.
The story is about a man who survived the Holocaust, and decided after the Holocaust to go to vilna (in Lithuania I think) he went there and there were a bunch of other Holocaust survivors. They went and realized that day was a holiday called simchat torah on simchat Torah the Jewish people dance around with sefer Torah or Jewish bible scrolls (the things you said with the blue velvet and the crown.) While there the Jews found some lone children and saw a bullet hole through the prayer book, siddur. They are dancing and praising God even though they've been through the Holocaust. Also, a shul, or you might've heard shoe, is a Jewish synagogue. Hope this helps you understand
Can you check out we are a miracle by Yaakov shwekey
Beautiful song!!!
"Shul" mean synagogue, "sefer tora" it is the holy book. the song is about after the holcost, that they didnt had "sefer tora" do dance on the annual day of endeing the book, So they danced with the children, as they are the continuation of the Jewish people.
Vilna ... a city in Europe that was a bastion of Judaism before the Holocaust which wiped out the city.
Shul... Synagogue ... the old man was relaying his story after the war when the survivors regrouped back in Vilna their hometown which was all destroyed with no hebrew scriptures survived in the synagogue but all of them danced and celebrated on the Holiday.... they broke into the locked up Synagogue.... and covered with blood stains and bullet holes... then started dancing....which we celebrate Simchas Torah... rejoicing with the holy torah scrolls, but none survived the ravaging of the Natzi fires that destroyed all of the holy books.... Then.... a child.... a Jewish child survived! Survived the concentration camp...Appeared in the Synagogue .... the future of our faith.... a child was there! So instead of dancing with the torah scrolls .... they danced with the children...
This is a song describing the survivors experience after surviving the death of the Concentration Camps...
Very nice review. (I think you should try to focus on the singing as well like you did in earlier videos. not only the lyrics) Thank you. We love your work.
Maybe you should get some info on the plot so you can still react to the vocals and story as well but not with frustration. (Just trying to help) thank you
A new video from yesterday live: Hanan Ben Ari Medley | @Freilach ft. @Benny Friedman @Shulem Lemmer @Itzik Dadya & @Yedidim
ruclips.net/video/MO2rgwQBFR8/видео.html
Others have done their share of explanation, here are my additions:
- "Vilna" is Vilnius, the capital of Lithuania. After WWII, Lithuania was occupied by the Russians, who turned it into a Communist state. I don't know if the "barricades" around the _shul_ were because it was a religious site (much religious practice was banned, or at least restricted, under Soviet rule) or because it was, otherwise, an unoccupied ruin.
- "Shul" is the Yiddish word for synagogue. It is related to the English word _school,_ both from the German word _schule_ (a school).
- "Sifrei Torah" are the Torah (or _Toirah,_ as it's pronounced here) scrolls, which you appear to recognize from other videos.
- "Simchas Torah" is a holiday celebrating the end of a cycle of Reading the Torah. It's the last day of _Sukkos;_ just under a month ago for us. Part of the celebration includes dancing while holding the Torah scrolls. The Nazis had surrendered in May, in the Spring, while _Sukkos_ and _Simchas Torah_ are in the Fall.
- Under the Nazi occupation of Vilna, the synagogue would have been stripped of its religious articles - the _siddur[im]_ (prayer books), the Torah scrolls, etc. - and the Ark, where the scrolls are kept, on the eastern wall of the _shul,_ would have been laid bare. The Nazis often carried out massacres in the synagogues, hence the "bullet holes and blood stains."
A final note: The incident recounted in not fictional. One of the children the survivors danced with has been identified as Abe Foxman, who was the president of the ADL from 1987 to 2015. His parents had left him with a Catholic nanny during the War, which is how he survived. Most other children were killed by the Nazis.
The barricades where placed during ww2 when vilna was under nazi rule
Shul is Yiddish for synagogue
listen, you are the smartest non-Jew who asks questions about Jewish stuff that I've encountered!
your curiosity is just formed so beautifully into your wonders and questions!
the eastern wall:
when a Jew is praying in the Holy Temple (which in Hebrew is called Beit Hamikdash), he has to stand with his face turning to the Holy of holies - the western room of Beit Hamikdash, which is the holiest place in the whole entire world!
if you're out of the Beit Hamikdash - you shoud aim yourself towards it, if you're out of the Temple mount - you aim yourself towards it...etc..etc...zoom it out with your imagination...
so, if you're out of the land of Israel, you aim yourself at it.
so - as most of the Jewish diaspora went to the west side of the world - most of the Jews abroad got used along those almost 2000 years, to Daven to the east which is the direction to the holy land.
and so, the eastern wall of the shul, became a thing, the Rabbi of the community would get a seat there, and the more important people would try to get to sit at that side, but also the Ark - the cupboard in which the Torah scrolls are placed, is mostly built towards Jerusalem - and Israel too.
so that's basically what it meant.
I love this song!!!
BTW yes it is about the Holocaust
Okay because I haven’t seen anyone comment it yet, shul means synagogue, a Jewish building of prayer
This song needs so much explaining no one can write it in a comment
Yanky - the a sound short A like Yahoo
Vilna was a very Jewish city in Lithuania
Yes it’s the story of a man who survived the Holocaust
It was very hard to get transportation after the Holocaust, because of the bombings and the war
It was a long journey back hto his hometown of vilna
When he got there it was simchas Torah, the holiday when we celebrate starting the Torah from the beginning again
We dance with the Sif-ray torah or torah scrolls
But there were no Sif-ray torahs to dance with cuz the nazis destroyed them
And then they noticed 2 children and they hadn’t seen children in so long!
The nazis killed most of the young
So they danced holding these children
Saying: they are our future of our nation, we will live
They tried to kill us but we will still live!!!
Check out Abe rotenberg
Another beautiful holocaust song to check out is memories by Avraham Fried and MBD together. Great live performance
A shul is a synagouage- a place of worship
Simchas Torah is a holiday that celebrates the finishing of the torah-bible
Siddur is a prayer book
I love the both of them and this is a phenomenal rendition.
I do tend more towards chazanut i.e Cantoral music, so I prefer Yanks.
I love your videos
This is such an intensely poignant song, and it was very moving watching you grasp the story as it unfolded. And it was very satisfying to see you correctly make the connection from the lyrics about "holding the sifrei Torah up high" back to the previous video where you saw them doing that.
You can hear the little boy who is mentioned in the song tell the story in the link below.
ruclips.net/video/T4PyohECRn0/видео.html
Wow. That link.
Thanks for sharing that link!
Vilna is Vilnius, capital of Lithuania. Lithuania had a large thriving Jewish community, and was an important cultural center, with a high concentration of yeshivas (Talmudic institutes) probably the highest in all of Europe. Lithuania was invaded early in the war, i believe in 1941.Something like 200,000 Lithuanian Jews were murdered by the Germans (and their more than willing local collaborators).
@portuguesepai do Chuneini by Yosef Gestetner it is a new amazing artist! Amazing emotional song!
This is a true story
You got to hear this cover of Hallelujah by Shulem
ruclips.net/video/3F6qo8Un4-s/видео.htmlsi=7vRGuLC2er1wKael
He is speaking about the holacost
Yiddishe Taavos
Song by Motti Ilowitz
ruclips.net/video/8RhMdFSslbs/видео.html
like I've said b4....u are extremely perceptive.
Next can you listen to a song sung by Abie Rotenberg himself “Little Kite with Avrumy Kalter”
I think it would be awesome if you had a bit of background on the songs before starting. Maybe have a schmooze with izzy before each reaction video 😆
You gotta look into chaim green singing live song mama rochel
Vilna is a town. He is indeed a survivor of the holocaust. He is on the plane telling about his life and a shul is a synagogue.
i think you should check out "im hashem lo yivno bais" from shira choir on youtube, its fantastic and has 26 million views...
Shul is a synogogue
A "shul" is the Yiddish word that Orthodox Jews use for synagogue, and a Siddur is indeed the praying book.
"Sifrei Torah" - are the Torah books that are in every shul, used to read from every Shabbat (Saturdays), holidays and twice a week - Mondays and Thursdays.
This is another song composed by Abe rotenberg who you reacted to memory’s