The Making of a Gadol

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Cash is always flying in one classroom of Yeshiva Ketana Torah Vodaas! One creative teacher awards fake money for completing assignments on time, good behavior, and of course, effort.

The boys of the class had their eyes on Chanuka, when the teacher would open the “store” and students would spend their hard-earned “money” on all sorts of fabulous prizes. *Moishy was no different. He had worked hard, all day- every day, to earn as much class cash as he possibly could. Having amassed a small fortune, it was no surprise that Moishy, the “richest” boy in the class was preparing to outbid all of his classmates on the highly coveted football.

The great day arrived with much fanfare and anticipation. It was the topic on everyone’s mind as they raced into the class that morning. Moishy couldn’t help but overhear strains of conversations as they wafted by, football, football, football.

Moishy’s mind was racing. He wanted the football just as badly as everyone else. Realistically speaking, nobody had enough money to outbid Moishy, but the next boy in line would be very excited to be able to spend his cash on the football.

And so, with middos that are the trademark of a Torah Vodaas talmid, Moishy chose not to bid on the football so the other boy could take home the prize he so desperately wanted. When the teacher approached Moishy asking why he didn’t take the football, Moishy humbly replied, “I saw how badly he wanted it, so I was mevater.” The teacher was so impressed by Moishy’s sincerity that she went out again to buy a special prize for this special student.

Moishy won a different football as a prize, after all. But he also showed the world what a real prized talmid he truly is.

Yeshiva Torah Vodaas has been mechanech generations of American gedolim for the last 100 years. This historic yeshiva is still impacting the generations of the future! As the yeshiva celebrated its 100th birthday last year, the world was engulfed by the pandemic, and all its regular fundraising was put on hold.

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This Yeshiva is not just historical, it is history in the making.

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3 COMMENTS

  1. What terrible chinuch, What happened to Schar Mitzvah Mitzvah ? What happened to appreciating the act for its own sake. To getting satisfaction from a smile or good word or compliment from your teacher. Now parents are going to have to reward the kids with presents, money or something gashmiyus for making their beds, cleaning up their rooms, helping at the Shabbos table?? Not to mention the environment of competing to be the “richest” boy!! Is this Torah??

    • @E.G.:
      Mitoch shelo lishmah bah lishmah. I am a teacher, and we definitely need to do whatever we can to keep kids motivated nowadays in the classroom. Incentives are a very normal part of education. Of course everything needs to be in moderation, and kids shouldn’t get an automatic incentive reward for every single thing that they do right in a classroom, but how sad for you to jump down the throat of a wonderful school and proclaim how terrible their chinuch is for doing something that most people need to do these days to keep kids focused and excited in class. If you disagree with incentive programs, that is fine, but there is no need to publicly bash a yeshiva’s chinuch in the process.

    • What is your issue?

      It is an explicit Rambam that you should encourage children to learn and do the right thing by offering them prizes.

      And the student being highlighted here is being praised for his vatronus and his turning down of a better prize . Not for becoming the “richest boy” (through effort and learning)

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