The court case that miraculously disappeared
THE MIRACULOUSLY DISAPPEARING COURT CASE B. is a young man from the Shuvu Banim community. I met B. by the morning prayers being held at the Beit HaRav right next to Rav Berlandâs house, where I saw him take up a spot right next to the Ravâs small stage. When the Rav entered the hall and the prayer service began with the zemirot haboker (morning songs), B. turned to the Rav and asked him for permission to travel to Uman, to the grave of Rebbe Nachman. > The Rav told him that he could travel with his passport, and that no-one would do anything to him. That sounded a little unusual, so I asked one of my friends: âWhatâs his story?â He gave me a funny smile, and told me: âAsk him yourself. Heâs got a story thatâs right up your alley.â B.'S PROBLEM WITH THE LAW After the prayers, B. agreed to tell me his unusual story. When he was around 16 years old, he got into trouble with the police on three separate occasions, for driving without a valid license. The first time, he got off lightly and they just gave him a warning. By the second time, they already started to hold him more responsible for his actions, and by the third time, the prosecuting lawyers requested that he should be sent to juvenile prison for two years. While he was freed on bail pending the judgeâs decision, B. decided to rush over to Rav Berland, shlita, and told him about the very complicated situation he now found himself in. THE RAV SMILED, AND TOLD HIM: âBRING ME A PIDYON OF 5,000 NIS, AND THEIR FILE WILL DISAPPEAR.â B. told me: âI said to the Rav that I donât have any money. So, the Rav pulled a bunch of notes out of his wallet, and told me: âCount it, thereâs exactly 5,000 shekels here.â So I counted it, and he was right. I gave the money back to the Rav, and the Rav told me that now, Iâd done a pidyon, and everything was going to be OK.â âThen, the Rav borrowed a lighter from someone, and set fire to a small piece of paper, while telling me in no uncertain terms: > âRight now, all the prosecutionâs claims are being nullified, and the file and the court case have disappeared.ââ TWO YEARS LATER... Two years had passed since that time, and the young man hadnât received any other correspondence or summons to attend court. The case truly seems to have vanished, just the like Rav said it would. The authorities suspected that he might try to leave the country, so theyâd put a stop on his passport. But now, even that problem had vanished before his eyes, during the time the community were reciting zemirot haboker⌠Translated and adapted from âPele Elyonâ, a collection of true miracle stories about Rav Eliezer Berland, shlita. Click HERE [gabay18@gmail.com] if youâd like to buy the book in Hebrew.