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Our Father, Rav Michoel Miller ZT”L; An Appreciation On The Occasion Of His 4th Yahrtzeit, 18 Adar


[By: A. Miller]

Our father, Rav Mordechai Michoel Miller z”l was born in 1943 in Boston to his parents, Rabbi Yeshaya and Mrs. Yehudis Miller. The spiritual climate in Boston in those years was in decline, and most of our father’s peers forsook a Torah life, with only a small minority even remaining Shomer Shabbos. At 18, recognizing the direction in which his peer’s lives’ were heading, he firmly resolved that he does not want to lead such a life, but felt a strong desire to lead a Torahdike life. At the time, Rav Leib Heiman headed a mesivta in Boston and so our father approached him to arrange for chavrusas.

Two years later, at 20, he married his devoted wife, our chushuve Mommy, Rebbetzin Chana Miller sthichy’e. While our father was accepted into Harvard and could have entered the professions, setting aside time to learn Torah every day, and live a normal olam hazeh life, our parents did not want this; they wanted a life of only Torah. Togeth er, they chose to live in great poverty and dedicate themselves exclusively to Torah learning – regardless of the difficulties, even holding their wedding in the yeshiva lunchroom instead of a normal wedding hall, so as to save money for living expenses after the chasunah. Thus began their life-long career of shunning materialism and devoting themselves solely to Torah.

Following their wedding they moved to New York where our father, upon the advice of his esteemed uncle, HoRav Avigdor Miller zt”l, went to learn by HoRav Yehudah Davis zt”l in Brighton Beach. He was the first, and for a while the only kollel member, but this did not disturb him and he learnt in the yeshiva with incredible hasmada for a few years until their money ran out. With no income, our parents sought a way to continue learning and contacted Rav Leib Heiman and asked if he would allow them to live in the yeshiva dormitory in exchange for tutoring bochurim. Rav Heiman was amazed to see a couple so devoted to Torah learning to the extent where they were even willing to live in a dormitory and immediately agreed. And so our parents with their young daughter moved into the Boston yeshiva’s dormitory, and our father, with his trademark intensity, learned in the yeshiva for a number of years. When the yeshiva closed, the family returned to New York where our father became a Magid Shiur in the mesivta of Kaminetz in Boro Park, where he taught for twenty-five years, and then, for the last twelve years of his life, served as an eighth-grade Rebbi at Yeshiva Tiferes Yisroel in Flatbush.

Our father strove to turn his hundreds of students into Torahdike talmidim. He had an enormous influence on scores of talmidim and truly concerned himself with their success – even years after they left his class. He felt that a boy who was once his talmid is always his talmid. As Rabbi Yehudah Jacobson shlita, said, “Rav Miller’s sense of achrayus was legendary. As an illustration, a talmid was unable to go to camp and so our father learnt with him throughout the summer – without pay. And he did this for several consecutive summers. And this was not an isolated incident. This was not something that he did; it was who he was. By him, it was poshut that this is what you have to do. His attitude was always: “He is my talmid; it is my achrayus to take care of him!” Our father did not teach a class of twenty-five boys, but rather twenty-five yechidim in a class. And he cared about each one individually. Our father did not teach gemara; he taught talmidim, and with his incredible depth of understanding, enjoyed great hatzlacha in helping them realize their potential.

Totty was an all-around lamdan and spoke with his talmidim not only in learning, but was also able to talk with the boys’ about literature classics, scientific analysis, vocabulary literacy, mathematical theories and any and all subjects. His talmidim loved to see him; they basked in his trademark smile and felt his warmth and genuine caring. One talmid told the family that our fathers’ smile was so warm and caring that he felt as if our father was hugging him. He created a close kesher with many talmidim who kept up with him, and were heard, even years later, quoting their mesivta Rebbi. They saw in him a true Torah personality and wanted to be close to him and be influenced by him.

Our father was an incredible masmid. Throughout the year, he would get up every day at 4AM to learn before Shacharis then go to yeshiva to teach, then immediately after yeshiva, to his afternoon seder, and then, after a quick supper, on to his night seder chavrusa. The gadlus of our father was that he kept to this schedule – every day – with absolutely and literally no exception. No matter what was occurring in his life, our father was up at 4AM the next day. During the summer, the family went to a bungalow colony within wa lking distance of Camp Morris. Every day, our father went to Camp Morris for shacharis and, immediately after davening, sat down and learned straight – with deep intensity – until 7PM, except for a few-minute break where he would eat an apple and a plain rice-cake…. On Shabbos, our father never took a nap. Immediately after the seuda, he would go to Lakewood Minyan and learn all afternoon until Mincha. And he did this every Shabbos – without exception. We were brought up in a home, where our father had an acute awareness of what we are here for. Our father would frequently tell us: “Life is short. I can’t waste it” And he literally lived his everyday-life in accordance with this recognition. Perhaps, a possible interpretation of “Tzadik b’Emunoso Yichye” is that, while we all “believe”, a Tzadik ensures that he consistently in fact lives his life, i.e. ‘yichye’, in a manner which conforms to that which he believes, i.e. b’Emunoso’.

The family jokes that our father never came on time for davening. It’s true; he always came early. To him, on-time meant, at the very least, twenty-minutes before the scheduled time. We children often could not understand why he was rushing to, say, Mincha, when it was starting in thirty minutes and it was only a six-minute walk….

The hallmark of our father’s personality was his midah of Emes. This midah permeated every facet of his life. Our father despised sheker and could neither tolerate nor relate to any behavior that was not entirely genuine. While Emes is typically understood as “being honest with others”, and our father was renowned for his remarkable honesty, we refer here, primarily, to his extraordinary self-honesty. As an illustration, once, in his later years, his son-in-law, Rabbi Avrohom Goldberg, asked him why he does not wear a kapota, as by then he was a Rebbi for over 30 years and many of his contemporaries wore a kapota. His answer t ypifies his approach to his Avodas Hashem. He replied, “You know, when I was a young man and for a short tekufa learned in the Matesdorfer Yeshiva kollel, the Rov asked me to grow a beard as the chasidishe bochurim in the yeshiva could not relate to a yungerman without a beard. So I grew a beard. And I felt that I lost fifty-percent of my drive to grow in learning since I already had a beard and felt like a choshuve person. If I were to wear a kapota, I would lose all my drive.”

Totty had no shtick. He was an absolutely real person and was only concerned about p’nemius. Once, when an old talmid met him and asked what he was involved with, our father answered, “I am working on the sub-basement”. He meant that he was working on his inner self; his inner p’nemius. This is all that mattered to him. He gave no credence whatsoever to any and all externals.

Our father was not a man of means, yet he somehow managed to send substantial checks to nu merous talmidei chachomim in New York and Eretz Yisroel every month – for over thirty years. How did he do this? Those that know the family well, know, that, our father was able to do this because he – and our Mother shtichy’e – literally did not need anything for themselves. They, by choice, lived b’dachkus gadol that it is hard to believe; we usually associate such a standard of living with the gedolei Eretz Yisroel. Whether it was two tiny rooms off the kitchen in the Mountaindale yeshiva, the dormitory in the Boston yeshiva, a basement, an attic, and finally when they bought their house, they always lived in such a plain simple manner. And they were joyful. They felt they had it all as they were leading such a full meaningful life. For himself, he needed nothing. Literally. For others, his generosity of spirit knew no bounds. Literally.

Our father lived with Hashem and often spoke about how Bitachon is a matter of experience – not faith. He freque ntly related how Hashem has helped him and how if we only take the time to think, we can see Hashem’s hashgacha protis so clearly. When asked how he was doing, our father, with great exuberance, would invariably reply, “Wonderful! What could be better? I am alive! And I am learning!”

Four years ago, on Shabbos Parshas Ki Sisa, the 18th of Adar, our father sat at the dining room table learning mesichta Tamid. He completed the mesichta and then got up to wash for Shalosh Seudos when he was suddenly niftar – marking his siyum on his personal “Mesichta Tamid” – his lifelong perpetual non-stop Avodas Hashem.

An appreciation of our father is of course incomplete without speaking about his life-long helpmate, our Mommy shtichye, who, for nearly forty-six years, devoted herself with extraordinary single-mindedness solely to the cause of “Totty learning”. There are no words, however, that are adequate to this task, so we will simply quote wha t our father himself so often told people: “My wife makes me feel like a million dollars! All my Torah and ruchniyusdike growth is to her credit!” And he meant it. And, dearest Mommy, we, your children and grandchildren, know it….

Our father used to tell us that we should daven not only for arichas shanim, but also for arichas yomim, meaningful days. Totty, you not only merited arichas yomim – you personified it. May we, your children and grandchildren, be g’bentched with the sechel and wherewithal to follow in your ways so that we too, can be zoche to true arichas yomim – meaningful days.

Yehi Zichro Boruch



7 Responses

  1. Beautiful. Thank you Akiva for putting what’s in your heart, into print. B”H we were zoche to be in his daled amos the last Shabbos of his life, when he davened with us in the Agudah. Yehi zichro baruch.

    Y.G.

  2. I was in his 8th grade class 6 yrs ago. I will always remember his straightforward honesty. Always a warm smile, he seemingly used to smile with his eyes as well. When it came to learning, everything else became nonsense. A true representative of the Torah.

  3. I hadn’t seen him at least since I moved to Eretz Yisroel 37 years ago, but I learned with him, both by Rabbi Davis and in the Yeshiva of Staten Island, and even then he was the way he is described here – no shtik, real, and pnimi.

  4. Your Father, ZTL, was my rebbe twice in Kaminetz. I will always remember him fondly and enjoyed my brief conversations with him outside Chofetz Chaim on Sundays when I would pick my son up. You could tell how happy he was to have his grown talmidim come over to talk.
    I was very saddened that my son won’t have the zchus to have him as rebbe when he enters 8th grade next year. He will continue to be missed.

  5. Your father was my 11th grade Rebbi and probably one of the finest persons I ever met.
    I can recall 2 incidents that stick out that occurred with your dad. I was not exactly the most motivated of students but your father pushed me to be involved and as a result I was. One day I cut school. The following day your dad asked me where I was. Being a 15 year old boy, I lied and told him I was sick. He said nothing further and that was the end of that, or so I thought. A week or so later, I cut school again. That night I came home and my parents were waiting for me and advised me that the principal called and deservingly so, I was suspended and grounded.
    That night your father called me and said “Moshe, do you know how you got caught?” “No” I replied.
    With that great exuberance he had he responded, “it was me!” “I’m the one who told on you.”
    Now, a little background information. I was in the 11th grade B class in the old Kaminitz and your father was given quite the challenge of getting any of us to learn. Admittedly, I entered the 11th grade intending on learning nothing and for the first two or three days I accomplished my goal. In fact, the last thing I wanted to do was develop a relationship with your father because I knew that if I did, I would feel obligated to learn in his class.
    I tried hard not to participate and to do anything but learn, but ultimately your Dad wore me down.
    It wasn’t that your father yelled or screamed or preached the importance of learning. Instead, it was simply the person your father was. Your father was just a good human being. There was nothing fake about him. The person he presented himself as,was exactly the person he was. He had no alterior motive but to do what he felt was right. There was simply no way I could disrespect a person like your father by not paying attention in class. And so, I went on to be one of his best students that year.
    Now back to our story.
    After your father called to tell me that he was the one that told on me and got me suspended, I was a little bit upset. As we all know, your father was on exceptionally bright man. He knew that I had no intention of learning anything that year and he also knew that he was responsible for me learning.
    And so I said, “Rebbi, my parents grounded me, I’m suspended from school;why didn’t you just speak to me about it yourself instead of getting me in all this trouble?”
    To which he responded, “I didn’t get you in trouble because you cut school. I got you in trouble because you lied to me. My wife saw you last week during the day and I knew you cut school. Had you told me the truth, I would never have told on you and gotten you into all this trouble. But because you lied you deserve to be in trouble and you deserve to get everything that you got.”
    I was baffled because I knew that he was 100% right.
    He then said, “I’ll see you tomorrow at my house so we can learn everything your missing by being suspended.”
    And so, until my suspension was over, I was at your house every day learning with your father.
    One other thing.
    After finishing learning one of those days, your father and I went outside and took a walk. He said to me, “most people walk by my house and say ‘look at that poor guy Rabbi Miller. His house is in bad shape. He can’t afford to have it repaired. He must be miserable.’
    What they don’t realize, he said, is that I very well may be the happiest person in this whole neighborhood. I could have been a doctor, a lawyer, anything I wanted. If I wanted to make money, I’m sure I could’ve made a lot of it. (your father was always totally honest)
    But instead of spending my life working to have a nicer car or nicer house, I spend it doing what I love. For that reason, I very well may be the happiest person around.”
    It’s almost 27 years since I had this conversation with your dad, but I still remember it like it was yesterday.
    In conclusion, your dad was one of the finest people I have ever met. the incredible thing about your father is that is that as great a talmud chuchum that he was, he was an even greater human being.
    We all know the Chofetz Chaim’s famous quote of “he who is happy is he who is content with what he has.”
    Well your father was living proof as to the accuracy of the statement.
    I am a better person for having known him and was obviously extremely saddened to hear of his passing.
    I wish you all nothing but the best and hope your all just like him.
    Moshe Eidlisz

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