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I
quickly took shelter in a nearby house, but not for long. Where could Polish
citizens, especially those who were Jewish, find protection from the
advancing Nazi juggernaut? Little did I realize then that behind the swiftly
advancing phalanxes of the German military machines were the Nazi weapons of
slave labor, starvation, torture and murder for the so-called "inferior
races." |
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European
Jews have seldom enjoyed complete freedom, but there was no hint of the approaching
holocaust while I was growing up in a tiny forest village near |
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BECOMING A RABBINICAL STUDENT |
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I
progressed rapidly in my religious studies with the village teachers, so my
proud father sent me, his only son, to a Jewish Yeshiva in Chelm. I was nine
years old when I entered. For four years I studied for the best part of the
day and was well prepared when time came for my bar mitzvah. My father soon
decided that I was ready for rabbinical school, and off I went to |
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As
I studied, perturbing questions began to creep into my thinking. Like small
barriers at first, they began to loom larger. Were the Gentiles as terrible
as my teachers said? Why did Christians follow the teachings of our Jewish
prophets? Must the school discipline be so strict and unfeeling? |
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A
growing rebellion stirred within me. Gradually, without realizing it, I moved
away from a rabbinical career. First I left the highly regarded rabbinical
seminary which I was attending for one which was less rigid. Then I shifted
again to another one with still more freedom. Encountering some financial
difficulties, I began to sell clothing items in the street to earn money.
This completely disqualified me for rabbinical training. |
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At
seventeen, I was on my own in |
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ARGUING WITH A PREACHER
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After
the meeting, I talked with the preacher. He read several passages from the Old
Testament that he said were prophecies about the long awaited Messiah of
Israel. I could give contradictory interpretations for all but one of the
passages. Daniel 9:24-26 told of the Messiah's strange departure from |
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Seventy
weeks are determined upon thy people and upon thy holy city, to finish the
transgression, and to make an end of sins, and to make reconciliation for
iniquity, and to bring in everlasting righteousness, and to seal up the
vision and the prophecy, and to anoint the most Holy. Know therefore and understand,
that from the going forth of the commandment to restore and to build
Jerusalem unto the Messiah the Prince shall a seven weeks, and threescore and
two weeks: the street shall be built again, and the wall, even in troublous
times. And after threescore and two weeks shall Messiah be cut off, but not
for Himself. |
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This
declaration raised many questions, but the one which puzzled me most was:
"Why was Messiah to be cut off?" Further study and reflection caused
my ready-made answers to melt away. I realized that my objections were based
mostly upon what others had taught me and not upon my own unprejudiced study
of the Bible. The prophetic promises which appeared to be fulfilled in Jesus
were too numerous to be explained away. As I admitted these things to myself,
I determined to read the New Testament to find out about this Jesus. |
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A GREAT DISCOVERY
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I
obtained a copy of the New Testament in Hebrew. As I read, I compared carefully
the many references I found in it to the Tenach (Old Testament). Slowly and
clearly it began to dawn upon me that the New Testament was a continuation of
the Old Testament. I reasoned that if
the Jewish Scriptures are true, the Christian Scriptures are also true.
From this it followed that Jesus must be my Messiah. |
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At
first I lacked courage to admit that I had been wrong and to confess what I
now believed. One evening in 1937 I sat in a meeting composed wholly of Jewish
people who professed Jesus as the Messiah. The speaker was a Gentile woman
who spoke compellingly and with great understanding about the |
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I
had been a believer for two years when the war broke out. |
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A TASTE OF NAZI BRUTALITY
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I
decided to leave the city and seek farm work with friends to the north. With
a certificate in hand, given to me by my pastor, I set out across the burning
city. Reaching the outskirts, I was stopped by a soldier. "Are you a
Jew?" he demanded. Without a word, I handed him my certificate. He
looked at it and then spat out: "Yes,
but you are still a Jew!". He seized a shovel and slammed it into
my back, knocking me into a ditch. There I was ordered to join fellow Jews
who were digging graves for dead horses. It was my first taste of Nazi
brutality, but actually mild in comparison with what awaited so many others. |
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That
night I escaped in the darkness and resumed my journey. My friends received
me gladly and fed me, but in a short time the new restrictive laws against
Jews forced me to leave. Returning to |
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HOME AGAIN
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My
parents could hardly believe I was still alive when I arrived in
mid-December. One of my sisters also returned home, and we settled down, hoping
to wait out the war. We knew, however, that our blue-and-white armbands,
marking us as Jews, were a constant hazard to our lives. I was forced to work
with slave laborers, building a road, but managed to escape when starvation
swept the camp. Home again, my mother told me that I must stop telling my
Jewish friends about the Messiah. But the spreading pall of suffering and
death caused people to reach out for some hope or answer for the dreaded
future. |
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One
day my sister came to me. "I read your Bible," she said, "and
I heard your discussions. I believe, and if God gives us peaceful days, I
want to be baptized. "My mother came to me and said, "I have
watched you and you are a different person. I was reading your New Testament
and I don't see anything wrong in this Jesus. Why are our rabbis so much
against Him?" My father never admitted anything to me. However, he
stopped hiding my Bible and rebuking me for speaking about Jesus. He began
secretly to read the Bible. |
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The
blossoming faith of my family was a great blessing to me as death drew nearer
in 1942. We saw trucks and trains loaded with Jewish people rolling toward
the extermination camp at Sobibor. One by one and village by village they
disappeared. My father, my mother, my sisters, my newly wedded wife, and all
other relatives except a brother-in-law perished. At the end of August the
order came for me to go. I was given permission by the mayor of our village
to say goodbye to my parents, who at that time had not yet been called. I
fled to the woods, and though time and again I was captured, by miracle after
miracle God enabled me to survive. |
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ALONE IN THE WOODS
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Once,
alone in the woods in the biting cold of winter, exhausted and discouraged,
my whole being seemed to cry out: "Why are we so persecuted?" I was
convinced that the companions who had been with me just days before had been
caught, and lived no more. I, too, was ready to die. But there still remained
the Lord, the same yesterday and today. He began to speak to me. "You have enough of my grace. Had not
Job enough? Had not Paul enough?" The still small voice of God spoke softly to me.
Overcome with tears, I yielded and decided to live as long as the Lord would
allow me to live, and to work for Him. Confident that God was with me, I rose
up and left those woods. |
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As
I moved from place to place, Gentile Christians often risked their lives by
hiding and feeding me. One of my bitterest experiences, however, was the
discovery that many German Christians, though they knew of the Nazi
atrocities against the Jews, would not help. "It is our government, and
we must obey," they said. |
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IN THE |
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In
late 1944, by hiding in cemeteries, deserted churches, and the homes of fearful
friends, I was one of the few surviving Jews in |
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Time
seemed to drag slowly. There were nights when a Christian family would risk
their lives by sheltering a Jew. Once, in the shop of a Christian undertaker,
I slept in a coffin. There were other times when a barn provided my shelter.
In all that time there was the assurance that God wanted me to live. As long
as He wanted it, I was ready. And finally the day came when I was no longer
hunted and condemned for being a Jew. In January of 1945, Russian troops
entered |
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After
the war I left |
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WHAT MY HEART FEELS
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Words
fail to describe what my heart feels. Awed by the power and greatness of the
God of Daniel, King Darius wrote a decree to his dominions which perhaps
describes best the awe and reverence that I feel for what God has done for
me: |
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... for He is The
living God, enduring forever; His kingdom shall never be destroyed, and His
dominion shall be to the end. He delivers and rescues, He works signs and
wonders in heaven and on earth, He who has saved Daniel from the power of the
lions. (Daniel 6:26-27). |
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From
my harrowing experience, I see that men who reject Messiah are capable of
bringing hell on earth. But surely God has not abandoned mankind. He has a
plan for every person who will trust Him. The Bible, which has guided and
sustained me thus far, promises that peace and justice will fill the earth
only when the Prince of Peace returns. He is the only hope of mankind, and I
know that He will come, because He has proved His great love and His
miraculous power to me. Will you not also trust Him, my friend? |
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And
I will pour upon the house of David, and upon the inhabitants of |
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Rachmiel
Frydland |
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RACHMIEL FRYDLAND - (1919-1985) |
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Mr.
Frydland was truly a humble scholar teacher who lived to proclaim the
Messiahship of Yeshua in many countries and languages. He shared his
knowledge of rabbinics and Yeshua in books, articles and messages, |
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From:
http://www.menorah.org/ |