Danny Saunders is a wise, kind and compassionate Hasidic boy suffering from secular knowledge and desire for heritage as the ultimate leader of the Sadik Hasidistic religion. Danny comes from a rigid hash background. He is a son of Rev Sanders who became a rabbi in Russia and led the believer to a better life in America. Danny took part in a seminary founded by his father.
Reb Isaac Saunders - The home of Reb Saunders is also the center of learning and prayer for his followers. Reb Saunders is a smart, knowledgeable, well thought out person, quietly speaking of Danny and speaks to him only when he talks about Talmud. At the end of the novel, he revealed that he grew Danny quietly to teach him compassion for others. Reb Saunders is passionate about his rigid, limited Hashido worldview and imposes his view on all around him.
At the Passover Festival of senior Danny and Leuven University, Leuven was invited to Danny 's house to meet Danny and Ravi Sounders. Rabbi Saunders told Reuven he knew that Danny would not accept the rabbi. He said he saw both the letter and the appearance of Danny's eyes. Then he explained why he quietly brought up Danny: he was concerned that Danny's amazing wisdom would lead to lack of consideration. Therefore, he quietly brought him up so that he himself could find his own strength (as he himself is his own father), but he gave Danny a really caring man I understand that it became. He also tied Danny to his brother. My older brother escaped, became a professor at the hometown of Russia, abandoned faith, and died at the Auschwitz concentration camp. When he was ready to fight, Lu Wen and his father said they came to see them in the life of Danny, and they said that Danny understands what he really wants I helped. Danny responds to his wish
Danny and Reuven began to spend most of the afternoon at the library and on Saturday they studied Talmud and Reb Saunders. Reuven learned that Reb Saunders believed that he would keep his son silent. In addition to the Talmud argument, Danny's father never talked directly to him even though he began using Ruwen as an indirect conversation method with his son. In addition to shul, Danny and Reuven spent almost all of their free time and had a lot of conversations. At the same time, almost all of the novels are addicted to the news of World War II. In April 1945, President Roosevelt's death saddened the whole country. In May, Lu Wen and his father celebrated the end of the European war, but they were shocked by the discovery of the post-enemy concentration camps. Everyone, and even Rebe Saunders, are anxious about the report of Jewish suffering and death by Nazi's hands.