When little Yisrael Zeev Gustman's father brought him to his rebbie, the Chafetz Chaim, the venerable sage called him a "good boy." This "good boy" knew all six sedarim of Mishnah by heart by the time he was ten. Years later, when he was a famed Rosh Yeshivah, he insisted that he'd never been an iluy, a child prodigy; all his youthful accomplishments, he declared, came through his intense love of Torah.
At the age of 21, Rav Gustman was the youngest dayan to sit on the famed Vilna Beis Din. Even before that, his brilliance and diligence brought him into close relationships with many of Lithuania's most revered gedolim: Rav Shimon Shkop, Rav Chaim Ozer Grodzinski, Rav Chaim Shmuelevitz, and the Chazon Ish, among others.
When the horrors of war came to Vilna, Rav Gustman was saved from certain death by the prophetic words of Rav Chaim Ozer and by a deathbed berachah from Rav Chaim Ozer that he would survive. Rav Gustman's war experiences were nothing short of incredible. He survived being shot in the head at point blank range. He hid for six months in a pit with his family, living on scraps thrown in by a non-Jewish farmer - and during that time he learned Meseches Zevachim from memory twenty times. As a partisan, he fought the Nazi soldiers in the forests of his occupied country. ">
|