The Honoree Who Didn’t Like to be Honored

Motzoei Shabbos Story: When New Haven businessman and philanthropist R' Dovid Deitsch kept being honored by the Oholei Torah school in Crown Heights, he complained about it to the Rebbe and received a telling answer...

by · COLlive

By Dovid Zaklikowski for Hasidic Archives

New Haven businessman and philanthropist R’ Dovid Deitsch, who supported the Educational Institute Oholei Torah in Crown Heights, was once asked by the board whether he would agree to be honored at the annual dinner.

His answer was no.

“He vehemently refused,” the late R’ Mendel Shemtov, a Crown Heights businessman and activist, recalled. “In his eyes, for a Chassidic Jew it was totally out of the question.”

In the end, Dovid’s brother R’ Sholom Deitsch convinced him to tolerate being honored for the sake of the school. Dovid accepted the honor begrudgingly.

At the gala dinner, Sholom gave his older brother a standing ovation. “He felt so happy for the kavod [honor] that his older brother was getting,” Sholom’s youngest son, Avrohom Moshe Deitsch, said.

In the years that followed, the Oholei Torah dinner honored many distinguished people, but no dinner passed without a celebration of Dovid Deitsch.

Ads for the dinner itself, placed in local Jewish newspapers, were another source of embarrassment to the businessman, as they invariably included a paragraph of praise to himself: “We would like to honor our chairman of the board of directors of Oholei Torah, the great philanthropist and selfless activist, indefatigable communal achiever, and leading personality.”

Though he tolerated the honor for the sake of the school, the public adulation bothered Dovid. He even once complained about it to the Rebbe.

“I can’t stand this,” he said. “I go to these dinners, and everyone wants to take a picture with me, and they put my picture in the papers. I don’t like it and I don’t want it.”

“Nu?” the Rebbe replied (paraphrased). “I don’t like it either, but it makes people happy, so we have to do it.”

 

An excerpt from the forthcoming book Yards of Kindness: The Life of Dovid and Sara Deitsch, available at HasidicArchives.com.

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