Bring the Light
Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
Our
world, once again, is in a precarious situation. Actually, it has been this way
since Covid spread throughout the world, felling many of our most cherished
people. Many still have not recuperated from what it did to them physically and
mentally. Yet, so much has happened since then, so you may be forgiven for
forgetting the lockdowns, shutdowns, government overreach, collapsing economy
and everything else the raging virus brought on.
Think
about what has happened just since this past Sukkos, starting with the
awful slaughter in Israel that brought on a war that has been raging ever
since. So many people needlessly died that day and in the ensuing months,
thousands of people’s lives were changed forever, and thousands have become
orphans. So many have been wounded, hurt, and traumatized, and over one hundred
are still being held hostage by depraved savages.
Israel
is becoming more isolated every day. Anti-Semitism has reached levels unseen
since the Holocaust, and Israel’s great friend is led by a president virtually
nobody has any confidence in. He is increasingly pressuring and threatening
Israel to end the war before achieving the goal of defeating Hamas, an enemy of
Jews and the West.
Israel’s
economy is sputtering and many of our brethren are refugees, ripped out of
their towns and cities with no homes or jobs. Yeshivos and kollelim
are suffering and those who depend on them for support are facing increasing
difficulty in feeding their families.
Topping
it all off is the threat of a war at the country’s north, with an enemy much
better armed than the one Israel is battling at the country’s south.
In
this country, many are hurting from the fruits of a weak administration. High
interest rates and high inflation are no longer theoretical fears, but facts of
life that impact families on many levels. The border crisis and rising crime
threaten cities throughout the country. Rising Jew-hatred is not just relegated
to kids scratching swastikas into trees. It presents real danger and peril. The
country is changing, and if leftist Democrats remain in power, we can expect it
to get worse.
We
are and remain a good and resourceful people. Dealing with adversity is built
into our DNA. Coping with rough times is what we have been doing more often
than not. In times of pain and suffering, we rally together and help each other
get through the crisis. It is refreshing to note the many successful campaigns
for good causes and for the less fortunate.
When
someone’s flame flickers, others come with fuel to help keep it going,
providing light for him and making the world a brighter place.
The
sparks of hope in the families of the two hostages miraculously rescued this
week were kept alive by some religious people whose hearts pulse with
compassion and love. They became close to the worried and anxious relatives of
the captives, providing them with physical and spiritual sparks of light and
warmth.
This
week’s parsha speaks about the construction of the Mishkon, the
dwelling place of the Shechinah in this world. Introducing the
description of the Divine home, the posuk (Shemos 25:2) states, “Veyikchu
li terumah – And they should take donations for Me” to build the Mishkon.
It
was the people’s donations that allowed the Mishkon to be put together.
Though each person gave but a symbolic amount, it was their demonstration that
they appreciated what Hashem had given them when they left Mitzrayim. This
portrayed that there was holiness in their soul. Kedusha seeks to expand
and strengthen.
When
Jews give of themselves and their possessions, they can build a place where kedusha
can reside. The more donations, the more people who are part of it, the more kedusha
there is. And then the individual neshamos of those people who
contributed, gather together to form a location of holiness in their world.
If
one person is walking alone on a dark road and lights a match to see a sign,
the match remains lit for a few seconds and then withers away. But if two
people are walking together and each lights a match, the flame is brighter than
when a single match is struck, though it is still quite weak and ineffective.
The more people there are walking together and the more matches they strike
together, the more light there is.
Every
Jew has a spark of kedusha, but by itself, and when it is cold and dark,
the spark can’t accomplish much. When Jews join together, each with their
spark, a torch of kedusha erupts and the Shechinah has a place to
dwell.
This
is how the Vilna Gaon (Shir Hashirim 1:17) describes the power and
potency of the Mishkon. Every Jew was walking around with kedusha
in his heart, but until they had a place where they could unite, a physical
location where they could connect, their individual passions lay dormant. The
Mishkon gave the fires a place to unite and light up the world.
The
Shechinah resides inside the heart of every good Jew. The Mishkon
is the place where all those Jews gather, as the Shechinah that dwells
inside of them comes alive and expands, kevayachol. This is why Hashem
commanded to take a “terumah” from every “ish asher yidvenu libo,”
allowing every person to contribute from his heart towards the construction of
the Mishkon, enabling all the hearts to join together in this special
place.
In
the Mishkon, every feature reflected Divine mysteries and each element
was filled with cosmic significance. Just as the calendar ushers in the month
of Adar, we begin reading the parshiyos that detail the
particulars of the construction of this special place.
The
month of Adar has taught us that as a united nation, we can achieve
salvation. When everyone comes together and gives of themselves, the resultant
power can overcome any crisis, tragedy or enemy.
Today,
in our time, it is inspiring to see how our people come together to help each
other, davening for salvation and peace, visiting the sick, and helping
care for the hospital-bound, boosting morale and helping yeshivos and
organizations and people who do good.
With
simple things, we can cheer people, lift their spirits, and inspire them.
Last
week, on Rosh Chodesh Adar, I sent a clip of Benny Friedman
singing the classic Mishenichnas Adar to a friend, without giving it
much thought other than thinking that it was a nice thing to do. He responded
with this message: “I was having a rough time because I was alone, and when you
are alone, among other things, you miss out on the energy created by the people
around you. Your gesture reminded me that I am never really alone. Thank you
for the pick-me-up.”
Letting
a person know that he isn’t alone with his little match, but that you are there
with him, brightens his life. Try it and you will feel greatly rewarded as you
light someone else’s fire.
But
there is more we can do.
Last
week, The Jerusalem Post published a survey that it conducted to test
Israeli reaction to October 7th and the war.
While
we have been writing about a return to religion by many Israelis and
interviewing some of those who have turned to Hashem in these trying times, the
phenomenon had not yet been scientifically proven and many were choosing to
ignore what was going on.
But
the survey found that, in fact, the people of Israel have become closer to
Hashem and to Yiddishkeit over the past four months since the attack.
The
paper reports, “According to a comprehensive survey conducted by Lazar Research
for The Jerusalem Post … aimed to gauge the religious sentiments among
Israelis in these turbulent times … 33% of Israelis have reported a
strengthened faith in G-d since the October 7 massacre by Hamas and the
subsequent war.”
Interestingly,
“The younger the respondents, the more they reported an increase in faith: from
48% among those aged 18-29 to 18% among those 60+.”
Israel
has been through a lot politically over the past few years. Religious Jews were
singled out for derision and blamed for everything that was going wrong during
the leftist administrations of Lapid and Bennett. Religious funding cratered as
the community’s popularity sank. Thankfully, the leftists were sent packing and
Netanyahu returned to power together with the religious parties.
The
left didn’t let up in their bashing of the coalition, leading massive
demonstrations weekly against them, giving the media, local and international,
an avenue with which to bash the religious community.
But
despite all the hate and invective directed at religion, the tiny embers
flickering in thousands of lost souls have begun igniting small flames. It is
sad that it took such an awful tragedy to trigger the sparks, and it would be a
great tragedy if we allow them to flame out.
It
is our responsibility at this historic juncture to provide the fuel necessary
to keep those little flames flickering and turn them into larger fires. We have
to introduce these people who are seeking to draw closer to Judaism and the Ribono
Shel Olam to the information they need to enable them to become educated in
what Torah is all about. We can’t sit by and let the flames diminish in size.
There
are organizations we are all familiar with, such as Lev L’Achim and Shuvu,
which do their heroic work far from the limelight, bringing Torah and Yahadus
to the people of Israel. They don’t preach. They learn Torah with people you
would never imagine would have any interest, and the Torah itself warms their
hearts, lights their souls, and awakens within them the ancient yearning for
the fire of Har Sinai.
If
the children of those who are reaching for kedusha aren’t in yeshiva,
then it’s doubtful that the inspiration will have a lasting effect. Shuvu is
commencing a campaign to be able to accommodate many more children in their
school system. Anyone who has visited their schools, seen the angelic faces of
the students, and thinks about where they would be without Shuvu can be
overcome.
We
make that happen. It is only through our support that the young lights are lit
and set on a path of Torah and mitzvos. Then they go home and light
their parents’ neshamos, bringing families to lives of Torah.
There
is a unique opportunity now to share the gift of our way of life with so many
of our brethren, who are standing alone in the dark, with a book of paper
matches, trying desperately to get something going.
We
have what it takes to bring the light to them and bring them to the light.
We
all seek the return of the Mishkon, the place where all of us can gather
and have our neshamos set on fire eternally. The more neshamos we
get lit, the more Jews are on fire, the faster the Bais Hamikdosh will
descend from on High to its appointed place in the center of the world, in the
heart of Yerushalayim, the place to where we direct all of our prayers.
L’Yerushalayim
ircha berachamim toshuv, bemeheirah beyomeinu, amein.
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