Peace, Brother.
By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
Parshas Ki Sisa contains apexes of glory and splendor, depths of catastrophe, and a cataclysmic blow, followed by the greatest message of forgiveness in the Torah.
The tragic error and climb back to teshuvah resound
through the ages.
The Bnei Yisroel were counted, and they learned of
the ketores and its powers. Hashem told Moshe that he had selected
Betzalel to construct the Mishkon, its keilim, and the bigdei
kehunah. The gift of Shabbos was granted to us, and Moshe was
presented the luchos that Hashem had written.
But then the people sinned and constructed the Eigel,
changing the trajectory of history until this very day. Moshe descended from
atop the mountain with diminished greatness. Witnessing the scene of depravity,
he shattered the luchos Hashem had handed him to present to the Jewish
people.
Moshe summoned all who cared about the rapid degradation of
Am Yisroel. Alas, it was only the tribe of Levi that rallied with him to
wage war against the sinners.
Hashem wanted to destroy the Jews, but relented after
Moshe’s pleas and quick action. Moshe was allowed to climb the mountain once
again and transcribe the luchos. Hashem revealed the 13 Middos to
Moshe and promised to allow the nation to enter The Promised Land.
It is apparent that as those who gave birth to the Eigel
strengthened and accomplished their goal, Moshe weakened. The instigators of
the Eigel, which they said would lead the Jews as they believed Moshe’s
return from the mountain had been delayed, were the Eirev Rav, who had
joined the Jewish people as they exited Mitzrayim. When they succeeded in
persuading Aharon to tentatively accede to their plan, Moshe was commanded, “Lech
reid.” He was instructed to go down and return to his people.
Chazal say (Brachos 32a) that in
commanding, “Lech reid,” Hashem was saying, “Go down from your
greatness, for I have only made you great because of Yisroel, and now
that Yisroel has sinned, of what use are you?”
Very strong words.
The Peirush HaGra on Chumash (Shemos
32:7), quoting the Tikkunei Zohar, says, “Ispashuta d’Moshe bechol
dor vador. In every generation, there is a nitzutz, a part of the neshomah,
of Moshe Rabbeinu present in one great man.” Through him, the light of Torah
is transmitted to the talmidei chachomim of the generation. All the chiddushei
Torah that are nischadeish in the world is through the “hashpo’as
ohr,” influence, of Moshe Rabbeinu.
Several times a week, we say, “Vezos haTorah asher som
Moshe lifnei bnei Yisroel…beyad Moshe.” We extend our fingers and
try to see the holy letters on the parchment, proclaiming not just that the
words form our Torah, but that the Torah was given specifically through
Moshe.
The repeated testimony to this fact - not just that the
Torah is ours, but that Moshe is the one who gives it to us -
underscores the fact that we are recipients. “Tov ayin hu yevorach - One who
has a bountiful eye will be blessed” (Mishlei 22:9). This, Chazal
teach us, refers to Moshe, who had the ultimate ayin tovah: He gave us
the Torah and the ability to plumb its depths. He gave us the koach to
“own” Torah.
The chet ha’Eigel put that whole gift in jeopardy.
At the time of the Eigel, Moshe became weakened to
such a degree that the luchos were broken, causing a diminution of Torah
knowledge and leading to all the exiles our people have since endured.
The Vilna Gaon writes (Even Sheleimah 13:8) that in
our time, the Eirev Rav is basically composed of five groups of people: baalei
machlokes and lashon hora, baalei ta’avah, hypocrites, people
who seek honor to make a name for themselves, and people who crave money. He
continues: “The worst are those who cause machlokes, and they are Amaleikim.
Moshiach will not arrive until the world is rid of them.”
The Torah, in the opening of this week’s parsha, teaches
us what we can do to help deter those practices from our people and help bring
about the arrival of Moshiach. The parsha opens with the
commandment of counting the Jewish people following the sin of the Eigel
(Rashi). Instead of counting the people individually one
by one, each person donated a half-shekel coin to the Mishkon and
the coins were counted.
The posuk states that by conducting the
census in this way, the act of counting would not bring on a plague, and each
person’s donated coin would help forgive him for his sins.
Many commentators discuss what it is about the counting of
Jews that causes a plague and why counting coins is better.
A simple explanation is that when all people are counted
equally, it shows that each person is as important as the next. No one should
view themselves as being better than others, and no person should ever consider
themselves worse than everyone else. Similarly, even if someone has made
mistakes in their life and is not doing well, they shouldn’t feel as if they
are destined for failure and life as a second-class person. Everyone can come
back. Everyone can improve and get back to where they ought to be.
People try tracing what happened to someone they know who
left the path, and they find that it wasn’t one major step that sent them
tumbling. It was small things that followed each other, each one minor by
itself, but as they occurred, the person began feeling like a loser. They gave
up on ever being able to rectify themselves and get back into the good graces
of those in whose eyes they would have wanted to find favor. So instead of
working to climb back to where they could have been and belonged, they slipped
further and further away.
The Torah’s census demonstrated to all that even though
they may have hit a rough patch and veered off, they are still loved by Hashem
and their path to return is waiting for them.
Rav Tzadok Hakohein of Lublin writes (Tzidkas Hatzaddik 154)
that just as a person is obligated to believe in Hashem, a person is obligated
to believe in himself. No one should ever give up on himself and feel that all
hope is lost and he is too far gone. In whatever position a person finds
himself, he has what it takes to climb back up and excel once again. Everyone
counts.
The most often quoted explanation is from the Alshich, who
quotes Rav Shlomo Alkabetz, author of Lecha Dodi and the
classic sefer Manos Levi on Megillas Esther, who
says that each person contributes a half-shekel to demonstrate that every
individual on their own is not whole. We only become complete and worthy of
being counted as a member of Klal Yisroel when we live b’achdus with
our brethren. If we are aloof, apathetic and alone, we don’t count, so to
speak.
Rav Yitzchok Eizik Chover explains that the counting was
not to determine how many separate people there were, but rather to bring the
people together and count them all as one unit.
Additionally, the posuk states, “He’oshir
lo yarbeh vehadal lo yamit,” the rich man should not give more than a
half-shekel and the poor man should not give less. The count is conducted to
remind the Jewish people to rectify the sin that causes the Shechinah to
be removed from among them, namely machlokes and peirud.
At the root of every machlokes is ga’avah,
when one person feels that he is better than the other. Such feelings lead to
squabbles among Jews and the departure of the Shechinah.
Therefore, the Torah calls for everyone to contribute the
same small amount to signify that nobody knows their value in the eyes of
Hashem and people should view each other as equals. This leads to forgiveness
of sins through the census, for the feelings of equality remove sinas
chinom and machlokes, and thus leads to achdus.
When there is achdus among the Jewish people, the Shechinah returns.
Rav Chover adds that when there is achdus among
Jews, they are able to help each other improve. When people despise each other,
they cannot offer reproach or help. When two people are squabbling and one of
them sees the other doing something wrong, he smiles, fantasizing about how he
can spread virally what he saw and cause the person much pain and anguish. Even
were he to reprimand the person who acted wrongly, the person wouldn’t accept
the tochacha and suggestions for improvement, because he would
feel that the other person is mocking him and seeking his downfall.
If we cannot be mochiach each other, then
people won’t improve, and we will stray further and continue to act foolishly.
In the spirit of Purim Koton which falls this week,
we can offer that Mordechai Hayehudi was a champion of achdus and
searched for ways to bring the Jewish people together to counter Haman. As a
grandson of Amaleik, Haman’s ability to destroy the Jews would only be
effective if the Jews remained divided. He enacted decrees and sought to scare
and divide them further, but because Mordechai worked to bring the Jews
together, Haman’s plot failed.
In our day, as well, we have to work to bring people
together, to end acrimony, hatred and jealousy.
We need to connect to our brethren and understand what lies
in the hearts of the members of our nation and what keeps them awake at night.
And then we need to do what we can to help them.
What are their worries? What are their concerns? What do
they want from life? Do they learn? Do they daven? Do they have any
ambition? Do they want to excel at anything? If not, why not? Are they making
ends meet? Do they have a decent place to live? Can they afford their rent or
mortgage? Are they happy with the way their children are turning out? How is
their health?
If you care about them, and you should, figure out how to
reach and affect them, to inspire and offer direction and support in trying
times.
We live in a very dangerous time.
Russian President Putin sees President Biden’s weakness as
an opportunity to rope in a reluctant neighbor. He ramped up his army and
surrounded Ukraine on three sides at he threatened a war which would cause
untold human misery and harm to the Western world, to elicit a promise that
Ukraine would not join NATO. The world quaked in fear and the threat remains.
The American people have tired of lockdowns, mandates,
masks, and other failed government policies nobody any longer believes have
anything to do with science. Inflation is worse than it’s been since the days
of Jimmy Carter, as people have little trust in government anymore.
Iran is rapidly closing in on obtaining a nuclear weapon
than ever, and once again, nobody seems able to stop them, preventing the world
from becoming much more dangerous. China also sensing American weakness is up
to no good, as American threats don’t intimidate them from their expansionist
desires.
The reshoim who conned their way into controlling
the Israeli government have no positive accomplishments to point to. They
shamelessly try to create more hatred and division in the country, going so far
as to blame rising inflation on the chareidim, as if the chareidim
have anything to do with the failing government’s many missteps.
The gang in power is going to great lengths to destroy
everything religious in the state. You would think that kosher phones are of no
concern to them. Why should they care if certain people want to connect with
limited technology? But nothing is beneath those who are evil.
Every day, they target another facet of religious life,
from dumping rabbonim chashuvim, to destroying kashrus and
marriage, to corrupting conversion until it becomes a meaningless fictitious
ritual. That’s not enough. They want to defile the holiest place on earth,
starve children of kollel families, and close yeshivos.
Their plans are reminiscent of the days of the evil czars
my great-grandfather writes about in his classic Zichron Yaakov. Gedolim
traveled from across the Jewish world to hold meetings in St. Petersburg and
other capitals, working together to quash the plans conspired to crush religious
Jewry.
What are we to do? Three times a day, in the final brocha
of Shemoneh Esrei, we daven for peace: Sim shalom. Shalom
rov.
The Yaaros Devash says that this is what we should
be thinking as we are about to recite the tefillah. The only receptacle
that can hold brocha is peace, shalom. We should daven that
there be no machlokes, jealousy, hatred and rivalry among Klal
Yisroel; that everyone should love each other, united in the strongest way
possible with love, brotherhood and friendship, and all of Klal Yisroel
should be as one nefesh. And we should daven not to have the middah
of kaas, anger, but rather be humble to all, because where there is
anger, there is no peace.
We have our work cut out for us. The world is a powder keg, ready to blow
up at any time. As we engage in tefillah and teshuvah as is
incumbent in times such as these, let us work to bring about peace amongst us
so that this period of chevlei Moshiach will end quickly with the
arrival of Moshiach speedily in our day.
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