Tea with the Rebbetzin

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Home page -> Targum Authors -> Bulman, Rebbetzin Shaindel -> Tea with the Rebbetzin
Tea with the Rebbetzin

Tea with the Rebbetzin

Shaindel Bulman

 
Tea with the Rebbetzin
 

Tea with the Rebbetzin


Wisdom. Laughter. Insight. (And a steaming cup of tea.) Welcome to the world of Rebbetzin Shaindel Bulman.
This wonderful and uplifting book of stories from Rebbetzin Shaindel Bulman, beloved rebbetzin to the renowned Rav Nachman Bulman, zt”l, is a unique brand of her wisdom and personal warmth. Rebbetzin Bulman has served many cups of tea, and visitors to her home know they will find a listening ear, practical advice – and, always, a good story.  Now readers can enjoy her warmth and humor, her unswerving emunah, and her unequaled optimism in this engaging collection of stories.


Author: Shaindel Bulman
CoverType: Hardcover
Pages: 226

List Price: 18.99
Online Price: $17.09

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Tea with the Rebbetzin

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 Book Excerpt from Tea with the Rebbetzin
 
Tea with the Rebbetzin - Shaindel Bulman

Tea with the Rebbetzin
By Shaindel Bulman

Rebbetzin Shaindel Bulman, wife of Rav Nachman Bulman, shares her trademark warmth, humor, emunah & optimism in a classic collection of Jewish stories & insights.

Buy Tea with the Rebbetzin at a special online price at www.targum.com

The Salad Bowl

Soon after my engagement, a very elegant, conceited, self-righteous relative of my parents came to the house, and brought me a beautiful, highly polished, wooden salad bowl. The manner in which she presented it to me said, “I know you won’t know what to do with this, but I’m giving it to you anyway.”

I duly admired it, told her how beautiful it was, and how much I appreciated it, and thanked her profusely.

But she wasn’t finished. She said, “You can buy some magazines to show you how to use it.”

Just then, my chasan came to visit. She showed him the bowl and condescendingly asked, “Do you know what this is for?”

He said, “Of course. It’s a shissel tzu hocken fish.” (A chopping bowl for making gefilte fish.)

I was thrilled that he had unwittingly taken her down a few pegs.

Wilmington

This is a story that my husband used to tell.

“The rabbi of a shul in Wilmington, Delaware was going to be away for a Shabbos in the middle of the winter, to attend his sister’s wedding. So he contacted his yeshivah and asked them to send someone to speak in his stead for that Friday night.

“Although I was only nineteen at the time, the yeshivah sent me. This was my first experience in an ‘out-of-town’ community for Shabbos.

“They gave me the address of the home in which I was going to be sleeping. When I got there I found an old Yiddish-speaking couple. Before I left to go to shul, the woman gave me a key to the house. I asked her ‘Is there a place where I can hide it outside of the house? There is no eiruv here.’ She smiled sweetly and answered in Yiddish, ‘Just put it in your pocket, no one will find it there.’

“I looked around outside and found a place for it. “When I got to the shul, I found a bare minyan of old men. I can honestly say, the davening on Tishah B’Av was more cheerful. I wondered why these few people needed a speaker.

“After the davening, I went to the old-age home where I had been told to go, because that was the most kosher place to eat. Once there, I was given a bowl of corn flakes and milk. I asked for - and somehow they found - two little rolls, over which I could make Kiddush and Hamotzi.

“When I finished eating this ‘Shabbos seudah,’ I walked back to the shul with tears in my eyes. What had I gotten myself into? It was cold outside, and even colder in my heart.

“This time the shul was filled with men and women, elegantly dressed, who had come for a mini-service. I gave a drasha and my job was done. There was a chazan who conducted the rest of the ‘service.’

“When that was over, everyone was invited downstairs to the social hall for an ‘oneg Shabbos’ of tea and cake.

“The next morning, I went back to shul, and again there was the same bare minyan of older men. The davening of Pesukei D’zimrah was very cold and dry.

“Just before Shochein ad, the door to the shul suddenly burst open and in walked my classmate Shmuel, with his eight brothers and their father. The father’s beard was full of icicles. They had trudged about a mile across the snow-covered city, because Shmuel had told them I was there, and they had felt sorry for me. The father went over to the amud and davened in a full, beautiful voice.

“After davening, they took me home with them for the rest of Shabbos.

“At the beginning of the Second World War, the father had brought some relatives to America, as refugees from Europe, and had helped them establish homes in Delaware. We stopped to make Kiddush in the house of the relative closest to the shul. There I had a special treat - petcha. After that, every few blocks, we stopped off at their various relatives to warm up. “At home, we had a wonderful Shabbos seudah, with singing and divrei Torah. After the meal I was a given a bed in a room next to the father’s beautiful, wood-paneled study. When I woke up, I heard the sound of the father learning - it was music to my ears.

“I’ll never forgot the chessed of my friend Shmuel and his family who restored that Shabbos for me.”

And he never did. He repeated the story many times during the rest of his life.

Buy Tea with the Rebbetzin at an online discount at www.targum.com

 

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