For 76 years, Rav Reuven Scheiner’s day revolved around Yeshiva Torah Vodaath, from his teenage years walking to his beloved yeshiva around the corner from his parents’ apartment home on Bedford Avenue to his later years when he would stride down Boro Park’s 16th Avenue, tape recorder stuck to his ear, as he made the trek to the yeshiva in Flatbush.
“Rav Scheiner lived and breathed the yeshiva,” Rabbi Yitzchok Gottdiener, the yeshiva’s executive director, told the Yated. Rav Scheiner, 88 years old at the time of his passing Monday morning, left behind a family loyal to the Torah atmosphere in which he and his rebbetzin raised them, as well as thousands of talmidim he taught over 51 years as a maggid shiur and the chinuch that radiated from him.
“The middos that characterized him were his ahavas haTorah and ahavas Yisroel,” said Rabbi Nosson Scherman, a lifelong friend and erstwhile neighbor and chavrusah of the niftar. “He was a masmid. He was a gutskeit. He was totally devoted to talmidim and friends. He had a tremendous influence on talmidim — not just as a maggid shiur, but a personal inspiration.”
Rabbi Scherman, general editor of ArtScroll/Mesorah Publications, said that he knew Rav Scheiner for seven decades. They lived in the same house, with Rav Scheiner being his landlord, chaver in the Bais Medrash Elyon kollel, learned together, and baked matzos together for fifty years.
“His whole life,” Rabbi Scherman said, “he kept on growing and growing.”
Rabbi Yosef Chaim Perlman, a dayan in Flatbush and Rav Scheiner’s chavrusah for the past six years, said that he would marvel how he kept track of all his talmidim, whom they married and where they lived. He would meet them years later and “have such nachas seeing them,” he said.
“He loved people,” Rabbi Perlman said. “He was such an oheiv Yisroel. He was a man of passion — passionately a masmid, passionately devoted to his family, passionately devoted to his talmidim. He had a wonderful middah — he was able to fargin, he was happy when somebody else had something.”
Rav Scheiner was born in Scranton in 1931 to Reb Shmuel Yom Tov and Eidel Scheiner, a couple with a deep reverence for Torah and rabbonim. They were simple people — the father drove a truck and the mother worked in a bakery — but they merited having their children serve as Torahleaders or be married to one.
When Rav Shraga Feivel Mendlowitz, the future visionary who changed the American Torah scene from his perch leading Torah Vodaath, first came to the United States, he lived in Scranton for several years, eating some of his Shabbos seudos at Rav Scheiner’s grandparents’ home until he was able to bring his family over from Hungary.
Rabbi Scherman recalled the young Reuven as an American boy who went to public school, transferring to yeshiva in sixth grade when the family moved to Williamsburg for the chinuch of their children. They chose their apartment because it was near Torah Vodaath.
Reuven Scheiner did so well in his new environment that he was skipped seventh grade by his rebbi, Rav Kaplan, an old school mechanech from the original Polish town of Mir. The first time Rabbi Scherman remembered hearing his friend’s name was when he was in Rav Kaplan’s class a few years later. “Scheiner is one of the skippers,” Rav Kaplan would say.
From there, Rabbi Scherman said, Rav Scheiner just “grew and grew.” He learned under Rav Reuven Grozovsky for several years and was a talmid of Rav Elya Chazan and Rav Gedaliah Schorr.
“He did not have any single rebbi,” Rabbi Perlman said. “He learned from everyone. He would go to the tishen of the Satmar Rov and the Stoliner Rebbe. The Klausenburger Rebbe invited him to come join him, but he wanted to stay in Torah Vodaath. The Klausenburger Rebbe used to send him with messages to the Soniker Rebbe.”
Rav Scheiner once asked the Satmar Rov a question in learning. The Rov gave an answer, but later changed his mind, and sent him a message to return to him. Rav Scheiner later discovered that the Rov had thought about it so much that he came late to his tish because of it.
Rav Scheiner married his wife, Rebbetzin Shoshana, a daughter of Reb Chaim Lichtenstein, a fervent chassidishe Yid, who owned a hall on the Lower East Side. Together, they established a family of rabbonim, philanthropists and ehrliche Yidden.
— Yated (Excerpt)
