1. One time, Rav Kook was sitting together with his student R. Shimon Strelitz in his small room. Their Gemaras were open before them, and they were learning. There was a knock at the door, the mailman entered and brought a letter to the Rav. They looked at the letter—it was a check for a million dollars.
The Rav looked at the check with complete indifference. And with a dismissive expression he turned to his student and asked, “What can be done with this?”
The student gathered his courage and told the rav, “Allow me, rabbi, and I will say what can be done with this.”
Rav Kook gave him permission, and R. Shimon began to explain about checks: “If I had a check for a million dollars, I would first of all devote a sizable part of the sum to building the land.”
When Rav Kook heard “building the land,” his eyes shone. His indifference ceased. If so, this money is not completely meaningless, if it can be used to build the land of Israel! And he listened attentively to what his student might add.
“And second,” continued R. Shimon, “I would set aside a significant part of that money on behalf of our Central Yeshiva.”
Now Rav Kook’s brightness was doubled: this money could be used for the sake of the holy renewal, for the establishment of Torah—if so, it is certainly not meaningless.
And R. Shimon didn’t cease, but he added a detailed list all sorts of good things that could be done with this million dollars, as Rav Kook sat and listened.
However, after the student had mapped out a complete plan of what could be done with this money, it turned out this was not a real check, but an American New Year’s greeting card, in the form of a million dollar check.
Shivchei Harayah (told by R. Shimon Strelitz), pp. 221-222
2. One time the Nazir, R. Dovid Hacohen, came to Rav Kook to ask for a match. Rav Kook answered, “If this is what you want, I must certainly be sure to give it to you” (because in general R. Dovid would not ask anyone for favors). And Rav Kook added, “Do you know what? Nothing in this house is mine. The watch isn’t mine [see Rav Kook’s will in Nefesh Harayah]; the chairs are a gift from Williams [one time a man named Williams came to Rav Kook’s house and saw that he was lacking chairs and he sent about twenty chairs to Rav Kook’s house]; the fur coat [for traveling to America] is form the general council.”
Shivchei Harayah (told by Rav Dovid Hacohen), pp. 222-223
3. Rav Kook told his bother’s son, R. Rafael, who was planning to travel out of the country, “Do we have permission to allow you to leave us? But what can I do? You are traveling among people. Tell them our situation. I have to send out letters on the topic of agunos [grass widows], and I don’t have stamps.”
Shivchei Harayah (told by R. Rafael Hacohen Kook), p. 223
4. When R. Chaim Dovid Sobol, Rav Kook’s student, had his first-born child, a boy, he asked Rav Kook to redeem his son in the pidyon haben ceremony, since Rav Kook was a cohen.
The father at that time asked Rav Kook if he wanted silver coins or a silver object.
It was the custom in the land of Israel to give the cohen for the pidyon haben Turkish majidos, which contained an amount of silver in the necessary weight according to the halachah. But Rav Kook told his student that he preferred a silver object, on condition that it contained enough silver as necessitated by the halachah.
The father of the boy bought a silver goblet in the correct weight, carved on it the words “for pidyon haben”, and gave it to Rav Kook during the ceremony.
After that, this goblet replaced his regular kiddush cup on the Sabbath, since this goblet, Rav Kook explained, was certainly his, since the Torah made it his, unlike all of the other goblets, which were given to him out of respect.
Shivchei Harayah, from R. Ch. Sobol, p. 223
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