The Big Picture
On the Yomim Noraim, as the baal Mussaf solemnly intones the
words, “Ve’al hamedinos bo yei’omer,” we contemplate the fate of those
countries that are being judged. “Eizo loro’ov ve’eizo lasova.” Each one
faces its unique challenges and opportunities. As we hear those words, we
imagine hunger being meted out for underdeveloped African nations with no
infrastructure, floods and typhoons for distant islands in the path of
treacherous weather patterns, pestilence for war-ravaged republics where
despots rule, and hurricanes for backward Caribbean fiefdoms.
Very few of us imagined the possibility that the strongest nation that
ever existed could be crippled by a calamitous natural disaster, and that just
as the rebuilding would begin, the country would again be confronted by a new
enemy, which we are seeing with increasing frequency: horrific, inexplicable
violence, the product of a monster which seems to reside within the hearts of
too many of the country’s young people raised on a diet of moral and spiritual
deprivation.
A tragedy beyond comprehension took place in a picture perfect New England
town. The carnage occurred in a school, a place that should be off limits to
the ills of the world. It affected young children eagerly settling down for a
day in a first grade class, enthusiastic minds awaiting a day of knowledge and
play with some recess, lunch and snack. The smallest, youngest, most innocent
members of society were cut down by a totally senseless act of terror that this
country had rarely known before.
The closest parallel to what the good people of Connecticut and the United
States experienced would be the acts of terror which take place in Eretz
Yisroel, perpetrated by Palestinians on children in a school bus, innocents of
all ages on Egged busses, families in their homes such as the Fogels in the
pastoral village of Itamar, or people driving on roads. This country, which had
largely been spared from such acts of horror, has now once again experienced
the dread that such irrational acts cause.
And now, many worry about what will be with this country, the golus home
of so many Jews. As the blood of young, tiny innocents, victims of a vicious,
senseless rampage, runs freely through tree-lined, idyllic streets, painting
landscaped lawns crimson, we all need to look in the mirror to ask ourselves if
we aren’t affected by increased evil evidencing itself around us. We have to
question whether our teivos are as safe as we thought they were or if
they are springing leaks as well.
Obviously, the perpetrator was mentally unstable and, obviously, his act
does not represent anyone or anything, but there is a message in it
nonetheless. We know and believe that there are Divine messages for us in all
that transpires in this world.
Chanukah’s brilliant lights, which brought joy and hope into our
homes, providing us with energy to face our daily struggles, are now
extinguished, giving way to the leilei Teves ha’aruchim, the longest
nights of winter. As the glow of the menorah fades, we struggle to
recapture the illumination, and so, as Yidden always have, we tread a
path through the cold and dark to our Gemaros and to the bais medrash,
the only real escapes from the lurking outside elements.
Rav Elozor Menachem Man Shach zt”l would often recount that in
pre-war Vilna, every seat in the shul was taken on the winter Friday
nights. No ehrliche Yid was willing to forfeit the opportunity to engage
in many hours of uninterrupted Torah amidst the blanket of peace provided by Shabbos.
Rav Shach would often paint a picture of that scene in shmuessen
delivered at the Ponovezher Yeshiva. He would add emphasis by retelling
what befell Rav Dovid Karliner one Friday evening as he sat learning in his shul.
“Rav Dovid Karliner would sit late into the night on leil Shabbos
engrossed in his learning. One Friday night, he sat immersed in the sweet world
of the Rashba, lost in the intricacies of the sugya, with a
flickering candle illuminating the page before him.”
“As he sat there,” Rav Shach related, “he encountered a question put forth
by the Rashba that challenged his entire understanding of the sugya.
Of course, Rav Dovid Karliner didn’t just look at the Rashba’s answer.
He first considered the question from every angle, slowly analyzing each idea.
He pondered possible answers, probing each solution carefully, one by one. When
he had thoroughly examined the entire topic and fit the question into the
bigger picture, he allowed himself to look at the Rashba’s teirutz. With
the entire sugya clear as day in his mind, he looked back down at the
page. And then, suddenly, the candle burnt out.
“As Rav Dovid’l sat there in shock, an anguished cry left his mouth. ‘Gehennom
iz noch erger!’ The pain of gehennom is worse than this.’”
To Rav Dovid Karliner, one of the greatest Torah giants of his time, the
only way to assuage the pain of not being able to read the p’shat he had
arrived at after so much hureving and toil on a cold, dark, Friday
evening was by remembering that the pain of gehennom was yet worse.
Torah wasn’t just something that he did. Learning wasn’t just studying. It was
life itself. His life was Torah. His life was the Rashba. The
frustration and regret he felt upon losing his connection to the Rashba
and to Torah on a Friday night was comparable to the torture of gehennom.
Do any of us feel that way?
The story embodies the powerful bond that the Yidden a few
generations back had with the seforim before them, the way they lived
and breathed the questions of the Rishonim, and how a peaceful
resolution to a Rashba meant a peaceful resolution to their day.
As you read the story, you can picture the bais medrash Yid hunched
over his yellowed sefer. You can close your eyes and visualize the
poetry of a timeless Jew by the shtender, a candle illuminating the tome
in front of him. You can visualize the shuckeling figure, humming a tune
without words, turning one page and then another.
This picture of the eternal Yid hunched over his seforim, Gemaros
and Rashbas is the image of chodesh Teves, the month in which we
currently find ourselves.
Rav Shmuel Berenbaum zt”l, the Mirrer rosh yeshiva,
explained that the final day of Chanukah is referred to as Zos
Chanukah. He would say that this is because the final day of Chanukah,
when there is no menorah to be lit, is the only day of Chanukah
when the regular seder of learning is not interrupted. The name Zos
Chanukah indicates that this day beholds within it the message of Chanukah:
uninterrupted Torah study in a world of darkness and superficiality.
Here we are, with Zos Chanukah, the final day in a chain stretching
back to Elul and the Yomim Noraim, behind us. Now we need it to
help us light up our path towards realizing our dreams and becoming the person
we want to be.
Rav Kasriel Kaplan was a talmid chochom in Radin. Following the
travails of the Second World War, he made his way to Yerushalayim, where he
lived the rest of his life. He would often regale the bnei yeshiva of
the Chevroner Yeshiva with stories about the Chofetz Chaim, his revered
neighbor back home.
Rav Kasriel related that one year, his wife planted a few flowers in an
attempt to dress up the dirt path in front of their humble dwelling, adding
color to the landscape. The Chofetz Chaim noticed the added décor and
asked Mrs. Kaplan if she could perhaps do without the flowers. He explained
that while he had nothing against the beautiful plants, and he in fact
appreciated them, he anticipated that his own rebbetzin would likely be
equally impressed and would plant flowers along the dirt path to their home.
The Chofetz Chaim told his neighbor that he worried that the
enhanced appearance of his front yard would cause visitors to be more careful when
walking along the path. He feared that the bnei yeshiva, the talmidim
of Radin, would be vigilant when coming to the home of their rosh
yeshiva, the Chofetz Chaim, and perhaps one or two might feel afraid
to approach the house, hesitant to visit lest they damage the flowers.
The Chofetz Chaim told Rav Kaplan that the home of the rosh
yeshiva must be part of the yeshiva, accessible and welcoming to
each and every talmid, “and we must never discourage a ben Torah from
coming to his rebbi’s home.”
Our path to the places where our shiurim are held, to the local botei
medrash, and to the homes of our rabbeim must not be unfamiliar to
us. They should be well tread upon, utterly familiar to us and comfortable to
walk on, because they embody who we are and what we are all about.
In addition to being a haven from the depravity of the surrounding world,
learning Torah provides us with the perspective to see past the here and now,
enabling us to view events that transpire in the world and in our daily life
with the clarity and depth of the Torah.
One of the many lessons that emerge from analyzing the maasei avos
in the parshiyos of Sefer Bereishis we currently read every Shabbos
is that our forefathers viewed their experiences not as isolated incidents -
negative or positive - but as part of something much bigger. Avrohom Avinu was
on his way to the Akeidah when he saw Har Hamoriah looming in
front of him (Bereishis 22:4.) He visualized the future, the nitzchiyus,
the smoke of the korbanos being olah lereiach nichoach, and all
the glory that would yet come forth from that exalted spot.
He turned to his companions and inquired if they saw this as well. When
they told him that they didn’t see anything up ahead, he told them, “Shevu
lochem po im hachamor - Stay behind with the chamor, while I
go up with Yitzchok on the mountain you don’t see or appreciate.” Chazal
explain that Avrohom was comparing his co-travelers to an “am hadomeh
lachamor,” a donkey. Those who failed to see the mountain are similar to
the animal that symbolizes base instinct, with neither depth nor vision. They
are people who cannot see past the chomer, the material. Their only
concern is for their next meal.
Avrohom Avinu saw things differently.
In the very dramatic reunion between a father broken by longing for his
son and the son torn from his father’s side while still a teenager, we read in
this week’s parsha (46:29) not of the father’s jubilation or tears upon
their reunion. Rashi (ibid.) tells us that Yaakov Avinu’s
reaction upon encountering his son, Yosef, was to recite Krias Shema.
Yaakov Avinu had feared that he would never again see his beloved son. He
was undoubtedly full of joy to see and hold him once again. But when he saw
Yosef together with his brothers, Yaakov was witnessing a much larger picture
than a reunion of individuals. He saw the chibbur, the connection and achdus,
between the shivtei Kah and the Divine Oneness it reflected. He was
overwhelmed by the achdus of Hashem, and the words of Krias Shema,
ending with Echod, sprang forth from his lips.
When Yosef and Binyomin meet in this week’s parsha (45:14), they
fall on each other’s shoulders and cry. Chazal teach that they were not
crying over the pain of separation and the joy of reunion. They weren’t
mourning their mother, whose tears would define a nation. They were crying over
the churban of Mishkan Shiloh in the cheilek of Yosef.
They were weeping over the two Botei Mikdosh that would be destroyed.
They thought of the eternal home of Hashem, which would be built in the
portion of Binyomin, and lamented its subsequent destruction.
They cried over events from a time well ahead of where they stood, but
which were clearly visible to both tzaddikim, who, like their zaide, Avrohom Avinu, saw the bigger picture.
Only by seizing the perspective of our avos can we rise above the
seemingly endless stream of negativity, pessimism, grim prognoses and dire
warnings. Eretz Yisroel is in danger, right here we are surrounded by
devastation, our mosdos are struggling, and there are too many crises in
our camp. Shootings and murder are quickly becoming commonplace, and there is
decreased respect for human life accompanied by an epidemic of lawlessness.
People fear the fiscal cliff and, moreover, what is behind it. They worry
that America may be changing for the worse. The proposed new defense secretary
is someone with a history of antagonism toward Israel. With increased
regularity, religious Jews are appearing in the media, accused of reprehensible
behavior. They are negatively portrayed as representing all of us. People who
should know better say the silliest things, either unconcerned or not knowing
how they will be depicted in the media. We see bris milah under
attack and fear what will be
next.
next.
We need to horeveh in learning until our vision shifts and until we
learn to look with depth to see not just what is happening on a superficial
level, but with a higher gaze, one focused on nitzchiyus.
Rabi Akiva was able to smile when he saw impure foxes making their way out
of the holiest spot in the world, for he understood that, in the bigger
picture, this was a positive development, a step closer to a world of tikkun.
Rav Shlomo Heiman zt”l, rosh yeshiva of Yeshiva Torah
Vodaas, would deliver his shiur with tremendous passion, exerting
himself to explain and analyze each fine point. He would tremble and sweat, at
times even fainting from the effect. One day, there was a severe snowstorm and
only four talmidim were able to make it to yeshiva to hear the shiur.
To their amazement, Rav Shlomo delivered the shiur with his
characteristic fire and energy.
After shiur, upon witnessing the toll that the exertion his rebbi
expended for such a small audience had taken, one of the talmidim
asked Rav Shlomo why he knocked himself out for only four boys. Rav Shlomo
responded, “Do you think that I am delivering a shiur to four bochurim?
My words are being passed through four talmidim, but they are being
given to hundreds of talmidim. The talmidim that you four will
yet have and their talmidim as well!”
This story is often repeated to illustrate the lengths to which a rebbi
must go for each individual talmid, but in it we hear something else as
well. We understand what it means to see a bigger picture, to see a reality unrelated
to the “facts on the ground.”
Chanukah was an opportunity to refine our vision. We were to use the
days of hallel vehoda’ah to view the people around us as the blessings
they are and our families as gifts to be cherished. Do we view our jobs with gratitude,
thanking the Ribbono Shel Olam for allowing us a means to serve him
through feeding our families? Do we appreciate our shuls and the mosdos
that serve our children? Do we take the time to contemplate the myriad chasdei
Hashem that surround us all day, every day?
May the precious days of Chanukah serve as a reminder of our good
fortune, inspiring us to take advantage of the many talented, dedicated maggidei
shiur and kollelim eager to help us establish a permanent foothold
in the bais medrash, regardless of schedule or personal situation.
It should not take national tragedies and manifestations of venomous
behavior for us to appreciate our good fortune and cherish our family and
friends. We have to learn how to better feel people’s pain and how to
appreciate what we have while we have it. We must be thankful for what we are
blessed with, not complaining about the minor bumps of life but taking
advantage of what Hashem has granted us.
We have to remain focused on what is real and permanent. We have to stop
acting selfishly and foolishly. We must recognize that our words and actions
are on public display. There are no longer any secrets. Our inner dirty laundry
is hanging publicly for all to examine and mock. We do not have the luxury of
thinking that no one is watching or noticing our malfeasance. Sensitivity and
intelligence would be prudent in times like these.
Our task in this world is to mekadeish sheim Shomayim and to make
the world a better and safer place for children and everyone else. When we
engage in any activity, or speech, we must ensure that it accomplishes one or
both of those goals, if it doesn’t we should not be engaging in that action.
May Hashem open our eyes. May we see His revealed kindness and how
the events unfolding around us are the final chapters in the story of the
Jewish people, the last steps in our journey back to home.
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