Keep That Spirit
By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
We just recently completed observing the eight-day Yom
Tov of Pesach, which celebrated our freedom - geulah - from
Mitzrayim. After many generations of subjugation under a depraved nation, Hakadosh
Boruch Hu heard the cries of pain and intense tefillos of our
forefathers and mothers, and brought about our miraculous deliverance. From
there, we were led though the Yam Suf and the midbar, reaching
great heights, attaining prodigious achievements, and overcoming disasters of
our making and enormous tragedy. Finally, with our shared destiny, we entered
the Land of Israel as a nation, bound to one another.
But there is more to Pesach than that; the Yom
Tov and the freedom that we celebrate are understood on several levels,
each deeper than the other. The Ramchal, (Maamar Hachochmah, Derech
Hashem) for example, understands the chag hageulah as a redemption
from a life of chumriyus, literally servitude to the physical aspects of
life, commonly referred to as materialism.
With the onset of Pesach, we search for and destroy
any vestige of chometz, for it represents chumriyus, the
materialism of life, as it is comprised of basic flour and water that have been
enhanced. Since the geulah that we celebrate is freedom from servitude
to materialism, we banish chometz from our lives for the period of the chag.
We celebrate the Yom Tov with matzah and
recite the Haggadah over matzah, for it represents the happier
and more fulfilling life, free from chumriyus. For the days of Pesach,
we abstain from the food that is rooted in the yeitzer hora and only
partake of that which is rooted in the yeitzer tov. We commemorate our
freedom from Mitzrayim and the enhanced lives we were able to lead,
unconstrained by servitude to chumriyus and evil, and free to live
enhanced lives seeking spiritual fulfillment as guided by the yeitzer tov.
The kedusha this adds to our lives remains with us the entire year, if
we prove worthy.
That pursuit didn’t end with Havdolah on Thursday
night for those of us in chutz la’aretz and Wednesday night for those in
Eretz Yisroel. In fact, it continues until Shavuos with Kabbolas
HaTorah. The Ramban and Rabbeinu Bachayei (Vayikra 23:36)
write that the days of Sefirah between Pesach and Shavuos
are sort of like the days of Chol Hamoed between the first and last days
of a chag. And we wonder what that means.
A hint to this can be derived from the parshiyos of Tazria
and Metzora, which serve as a bridge between Pesach and Sefirah.
These two parshiyos, which we lain this Shabbos,
discuss the affliction of tzora’as and the necessity to remove the
afflicted person from among the community, placing him in isolation for weekly
periods as he recovers from the Divine affliction.
The Medrash (Vayikra Rabbah 16:1) teaches
that tzora’as is brought on by engagement in any one of seven
anti-social acts: hubris eyes, a tongue that speaks falsehood, hands that spill
innocent blood, a heart that plots bad thoughts, feet that run to do evil, a
liar/one who testifies falsely, and, the worst of them all, someone who causes
arguments to break out between people. This is accomplished through spreading
defamation and lies, motzie sheim ra and lashon hora. Thus, the
Torah refers to the person with tzora’as as a “metzora,” for the
word is formulated from the words motzie sheim ra.
A person who speaks lashon hora and engages in other
anti-social behaviors that cause people to quarrel is punished with tzora’as.
Let us offer an explanation.
In this world, there are four elementary forms, each one on
a higher level than the one below it. They are domeim, tzomei’ach, chai
and medaber, the inert, such as stone and dirt; that which grows, such
as grass and trees; that which is alive, such as animals; and, above them all,
man, who is granted the gift of speech.
The ability to speak allows us to effectively communicate
with each other. With speech, we can learn, grow, develop, study Torah, engage
in mitzvos, and be part of a cohesive social fabric. We can teach other
people, help others, and offer them words of support when they are down.
Targum Onkelos famously writes that the
words used by the posuk in Parshas Bereishis to state that man
was alive, “Vayehi adam lenefesh chaya,” indicate that “vehavas
b’adam ruach memalela,” man was given the power of speech. The ability to
speak gave man his spirit and life.
The essence of life is the ability to connect with others –
the experience of joining others, interacting with them, and using words to
convey emotion. The breath invested into each word is the stuff of life itself.
Man was bestowed with the gift of speech to enable him to
live an exalted life, connected with Hashem and Klal Yisroel. One who
follows his yeitzer tov uses speech to earn eternal life and blessings.
Through the power of speech, the enslaved Jews in Mitzrayim were able to shout
out to Hashem and earn their salvation. Through proclaiming “naaseh v’nishma”
at Har Sinai, we were granted peoplehood and the Torah. Through studying the
Torah, we rose to unprecedented levels of holiness and perfection in creation.
Our geulah from the chumriyus and evil of
Mitzrayim brought us to those levels.
We were freed from Mitzrayim, led through the dried bed of
the Yam Suf, and received the Torah when we were united, k’ish echod
beleiv echod, and all of Klal Yisroel became areivim zeh bozeh,
interconnected. Yisroel v’Oraisa v’Kudsha Brich Hu chad hu. We are
connected to each other, to the Torah, and to Hashem, as one.
But people who are under the spell of the yeitzer hora
and live lives of chumriyus betray the gift of speech and use it to
cause machlokes and separation of people from each other. They use what
could be the greatest gift to bring about evil and dissention, disconnecting
people from each other.
Thus, as we enter this new period of Chol Hamoed and
seek to grasp onto the levels of kedusha and simcha that we
reached on Yom Tov, study the parshiyos of tzoraas, which
admonish us to stay in the righteous lane we hewed through the exalted days of Pesach,
as we eschewed chometz and partook of matzah, following its
message daily.
Those who abstain from the chomer of man and chumriyus
of life are saved from pettiness and jealousy. People who live lives of matzah
are guided by their yeitzer tov, are freed from superficial
distractions, and are able to love all.
Humans are comprised of chomer and tzurah. Chomer
is the physical and mundane aspects of man, while tzurah is the
spiritual. The authentic core of a person is his tzurah, his depth and
spirituality, which are coated by the outer layer of chomer. A person
who is caught up with his chomer is wrapped up with the superficial and
is missing out on the greatness, essence and spirit of life.
A person of chomer, who lacks in tzurah,
rejects unity, as he is shallow, with no appreciation for what lies at the root
of everything. He becomes a baal lashon hora, a hate-monger, resenting
other people’s success and popularity. He cannot live comfortably with others,
because other people’s possessions arouse envy in him. He is unable to be with
them. Rejecting unity and suffering his own punishment, he is forced to sit
alone.
Tzora’as forces the person consumed with
exterior impressions to confront physical imperfections that are brought on by
his spiritual inadequacies, as he ponders the essence of his existence.
The posuk in Bereishes (2:18) states, “Lo
tov heyos ha’adam levado.” As Hashem was creating the world, He said that
it is not good for man to be alone and He fashioned a partner for him.
Loneliness is not healthy. Man must be involved with other people and not be
enveloped in himself without social contact.
Those who engage in lashon hora, hotza’as sheim
ra and rechilus divide people, bringing on loneliness and ill
feelings. The punishment fits the crime, as such a person is left in solitary
confinement.
A person of tzurah, arvus and ruach
memalela feels the soul of another.
Good people are generally happy when with other people.
They value being part of a whole. When people make a simcha, they want
many people to be there with them. No matter how many people are in attendance,
each one of them brings added joy. We are all one, big, happy family, and the
holier and more fulfilled we are, the more we feel that.
The more we are matzah Yidden, the easier it is for
us to get along with others and the happier we are to help other people,
offering words of support, chizuk and nichum when appropriate,
and always finding nice and positive comments to share with people when
engaging in conversation.
The more a person is a chometz Yid, beholden to his chomer
and chumriyus, the more he is controlled by his yeitzer hora,
which leads him to put people down and speak lashon hora to deprive his
victims of their self-worth and the respect others have for them. Instead of
using his words to strengthen people and cause them to smile, he demeans and
saddens them.
The lessons of Pesach and matzah are meant to
change and improve us so that we can maintain the elevated lives of Yom Tov throughout
the year. I don’t know anybody who dislikes Yom Tov and waits for the
hallowed period to end so they can return to work and the rat race. I’d venture
to say that most people are like me, saddened when Yom Tov ends, the Pesach
dishes are put back into storage, and mundane work beckons.
Through maintaining the refinement we reached by banishing chometz
from our homes, hearts and neshamos, and becoming matzah Yidden
connected to our tzurah, we can keep alive the spirit of Yom Tov through
these days of Sefirah - Chol Hamoed. A valid test of where we are
holding is by judging our social relationships. If we aren’t jealous or
judgmental, and are able to celebrate the achievements of others, we can know
that our chomer and chumriyus are in check.
Hopefully, while on the Yom Tov break we tuned out
from the goings-on in the world, we have quickly been reminded that there is
much darkness in our world today and much evil as well. Most people are afraid
to confront the evil that has overcome the social fabric of this country since
the election of Joe Biden and the administration he brought in to lead this
country. People are even afraid to publicly express the moral foundations that Yiddishkeit
and, lehavdil, this country are built on.
We see the forces of evil, pure evil, appearing to be on
the ascendance. We see secret intelligence giving Russia much more credit than
the official Western government spokesmen and media analysts. We see Iran,
Saudi Arabia and China coming together for no good. We see the anti-religious
forces in Artzeinu Hakedosha gaining as they gird for another round
against the religious and right-wing forces. We see the United States
leadership tottering and the economy teetering. Everything everywhere seems
radically off kilter. Nothing seems to be going correctly and we become
fearful.
The revelation of the Ramban and Rabbeinu Bachayei
that these days of Sefirah serve as a Chol Hamoed bridge between Pesach
and Shavuos would also indicate that the powers that were evident during
the original redemption from Mitzrayim and again from the 15th
through the 22nd of Nissan are still in effect now. If we can
remain free from the shibud to our chomer and to chumriyus,
and we use our kochos to engage in Torah, tefillah and kedusha,
we can merit to be fully redeemed speedily in our day.
The world seems to be hurtling towards a great upheaval. But it doesn’t
have to be catastrophic as many fear. Let us use the gifts of Pesach and
sefirah to make it instead the coming of Moshiach and the longed-for geulah.
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