After his parents, Baruch and Rochel, hosted the Baal Shem Tov (before he was known), he revealed himself to them and blessed them with a child that would be righteous and told him to name him Yehuda Leib and said he would be by the bris of their son.
At the bris the parents didn't see him in the crowd so asked for all the guest to form a line and each person to give their own blessing to the child.
I bless the child that he be a grandfather to the people of Israel, just like Avraham.” The crowd roared in good-natured laughter at the crude homily of the strange peasant, who so readily admitted his ignorance, but the parents took it with pride, knowing the Baal Shem Tov was a holy man.
After the Maggid's passing, all of his around 120 students had a meeting in which they all were to different locations around Europe and the Eretz Yisrael to spread the relatively new teachings of Chassidus, in which Reb Yehuda Leib ended up living in Shpola.
That next week was the squire's birthday and he was thinking that he would get the jew to dress up in a bearskin costume and compete with him in a dancing competition threatening death if he lost.
the Shpoler Zeide ended off, "when I was in jail Eliyahu Hanavi revealed himself to me in honor of the great Mitzvah I did by exchanging myself for the jew and he taught me how to dance."
His Gabbai, Yollek (Yoel), bravely stepped forward and drowned, sacrificing his own life to save the Shpoler Zeide.
On that evening, The Shpoler Zeide delayed Kabbolas Shabbos as he awaited Yollek's arrival in Gan Eden.
The following year, the Shpoler Zeide instructed his family and all his descendants to make an annual Seuda on the 19th of Shevat to thank the Almighty for the miracle and not to have waiters to personally involve everyone like it is by a family meal and invite poor people to the celebration (or to give money for the poor at the event) which is still practiced to this day.