“THE REBBE REPAID ME FOR MY HELP IN RENOVATING HIS FATHER’S TZIYUN.”

Rabbi Shlomo Aryeh Niazov, resident of Shikun Chabad in Lud, tells how he helped renovate the tziyun of R’ Levi Yitzchok and the unusual favor the Rebbe repaid him with as soon as he moved to Eretz Yisrael.

By: Nosson Avrohom

Rabbi Shlomo Aryeh Niazov, of Shikun Chabad in
Lud, has a soul-connection with the Rebbe which
began while he still lived in Tashkent in the middle
of 5731. That year, he lived, like many of his fellow
Bucharians, in Tashkent. The rigid communist regime
did not allow people to leave the country, certainly not
to Eretz Yisrael. If someone made the request, in the
best case scenario he was just harassed, or in a worse
case he was fired from his job.
Despite this, R’ Niazov submitted a request to leave
the Soviet Union and prayed to Hashem that he would
be allowed to do so.
His friend, Rabbi Mendel Garelik, suggested that he
join him on a trip to Almaty, to the tziyun of R’ Levi
Yitzchok Schneerson, and to ask that he plead on his
behalf before the One on High. Niazov jumped at the
opportunity
“The visit to the tziyun was an inspiring experience for
me,” he said. “We first immersed in a secret mikva in
the city and then we spent the entire day praying by
the Rebbe’s father, that he should pray to Hashem on
our behalf to speed our personal redemption from the
Soviet vale of tears.
“When I looked around me, I was upset at the
tremendous neglect at the tziyun and the environs.
The kever was surrounded by the graves of gentiles. It
was sad to see the tzaddik in exile among gentiles even
after his passing
“That evening, I returned in an emotional state and
filled with hope to my home in Tashkent, to my wife
and four children.”
Just two days later, Niazov was astonished to see a
letter from the emigration office in his mailbox with an
exit visa from the Soviet Union for him and his family.
Afterward, he learned that he was the only one of his
neighbors, friends and people in the entire area who
also asked to leave, who received permission to go.
“I had no doubt in whose merit I received the visa.”

DOUBLE MIRACLES

The unfortunate condition of the tziyun bothered
other Chassidim too and the decision was made to
clean and renovate it. After lengthy searching, they
found a Bucharian Jew by the name of Rabbi Gavriel
Ochunov, who could do the work.
At first, he declined since he was sick and weak. He
suffered from headaches. Niazov explained to him that
only because of the merit of davening at the tzaddik’s
grave did he receive his visa. It was then that Ochunov
agreed to travel to Almaty to do the necessary work.
Needless to say, a short while later he no longer suffered
from headaches. Within a few days, he too received an 
exit visa releasing him from the Iron Curtain.
Later on, the two of them, R’ Shlomo Niazov and R’
Gavriel Ochunov became mechutanim.

THE REBBE PERSONALLY PROVIDED ME WITH AN APARTMENT

For the first half a year since the Niazov family landed
in Eretz Yisrael, they found it difficult to acclimate. They
did not know the language and the mentality, they had
no home and they had no chance of buying a home in
their financial state.
His friend, R’ Menachem Mendel Garelik, who was
in 770 at the time, had yechidus and mentioned his
plight to the Rebbe. In a rare departure from the
norm, the Rebbe took a paper out of the drawer and
wrote something on it. He asked R’ Garelik that upon
returning to Eretz Yisrael, even before he went home,
that he stop at the home of Rabbi Efraim Wolf, the
Rebbe’s representative in Eretz Yisrael, and give him
the paper.
The Rebbe had written that a home should be provided
for the Niazov family. “It wasn’t simple because I didn’t
have money at the time,” said Niazov. “Nor did I have
a job.”
However, when the Rebbe sought to repay a favor
for the help for his father, nothing would stand in the
way. Even a “side issue” like money was resolved. After
efforts on the part of R’ Wolf at the central Jewish
Agency in Tel Aviv, this problem was solved too.
“I presented guarantees for loans from friends in the
amount of 20,000 liras to the director of the agency
and the director provided me with the rest with a
check for 40,000 liras.
“This was amazing and miraculous,” said R’ Niazov.
“Within a few months of arriving in Eretz Yisrael, I
already had an apartment that I owned. I even had
several thousand liras left over which I used to buy
toys, clothes and sweets for my children.
“It’s not like many of my friends received a home on
a silver platter. I’ll remember this forever; the house
that I live in is a gift from the Rebbe. If not for the
Rebbe’s intervention, telling them to find me a home,
it wouldn’t have happened. I felt that the Rebbe was
paying me back for my involvement in renovating the
tziyun of his father in Almaty.”

THE REBBE CALLED HIM WITH A BIG SMILE

Niazov flew to the Rebbe in 5734. The moment he first
saw the Rebbe will never be forgotten.
“The yechidus that I had floods me with emotion every
time I think of it. At the farbrengen for Yud Shevat that
year, I merited a personal kiruv from the Rebbe. I sent
in a small bottle of mashke to the Rebbe so he would
pour from it into his cup. How astonished I was when
the Rebbe suddenly called me by name as he held a
large bottle of mashke. When I went over to the Rebbe,
he asked me in Russian, ‘Do you know how to make a
bracha?’
“‘Of course,’ I answered.
“The Rebbe smiled broadly and said, ‘Make a bracha,
say l’chaim, give from this to the Chassidim and keep
some for your shul and family.”

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