Double Joy
By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
Think
about it. If this year wasn’t a leap year, we would be celebrating Purim
this week. Instead, Purim is a month away. But even though we have to
wait a month to celebrate Purim, we can still be happy. After all, Adar
is a month of joy.
But
being happy, for some, is easier said than done.
Who
doesn’t want to be happy? Yet, in the world around us, the search for happiness
leads people in many different directions, chasing all types of superficial
stimulants to cheer themselves up. This usually lasts for fleeting moments
before they are returned to their sorry, empty lives.
Some
try music, while others go wild for sports. Some gorge themselves checking out
every restaurant, while others satiate themselves with gallons of ice cream.
Some people are forever traveling, as if getting on a plane can somehow
transport them to blissful happiness they so desperately seek. Some turn to
alcohol and worse. Yet, their goal eludes them and all they are left with is a
lethal habit.
The
concept is so simple, the pursuit is so universal, yet, for so many, it is so
unattainable.
For
Torah Jews, simcha is an obligation. When Chazal make a statement
of fact, “Mishenichnas Adar marbin besimcha” (Taanis 29a),
they are saying that simcha, that elusive destination, is not a utopian
dream attainable only by other people. Happiness is within the reach of every
Jew, and therefore they can instruct us to increase our joy during the month of
Adar.
“Mishenichnas
Adar, as the month of Adar enters, marbin besimcha, we
increase our happiness.” What does it mean to increase happiness? To what
extent are we to do so? Why the ambiguous language?
Rav
Eliyohu Eliezer Dessler writes that simcha cannot come from a quick-fix.
It is a goal that is attained through contemplation and work. This is what he
says: “Simcha has to be increased in levels... Therefore, we begin from Rosh
Chodesh, since the avodah of simcha requires great preparation, and we continue
with this avodah each succeeding day” (Michtov M’Eliyohu II, pg.
125).
The
attainment of simcha requires working to shed the barriers that prevent
a person from feeling joy. Simcha requires a focus on fixing our
middos so that we are selfless and non-judgmental and aren’t consumed by
jealousy.
Feeling
simcha means living with the words of the Chovos Halevavos to
become imbued with the bitachon necessary to be happy and to flourish in
a cruel world. Shaar Habitachon is essentially a guide that helps us
navigate the turbulence we encounter. Its study reinforces the understanding
that our ability to manage the problems life brings is based on the degree of
faith we have in Hashem.
When
we recognize that everything that happens to us is from Hashem, for a reason we
may not yet understand, we aren’t devastated when things don’t go our way.
The
feeling that your life is incomplete without the attainment of something you
don’t really need is akin to a child crying bitterly until he receives a
lollipop. His life is really as complete now as it was prior to his receiving
the candy. The lollipop provides a momentary lift only to be quickly forgotten.
Transient objects that are craved to stimulate happiness never fail to
disappoint; their effect is fleeting, quickly disappearing. All they can
accomplish is to mask over some inner need; they cannot provide lasting
fulfillment that engenders true simcha.
Happiness
emerges from internal satisfaction that is brought about through strength and
conviction. It is not superficial. It comes from a strong constitution coupled
with the ability to withstand spiritual and emotional battles. One who is
strong mentally and physically can make do without the band-aids, and to one
who is weak, the band-aid is of little use.
It’s
not cheesy to say that mental strength and real happiness are acquired through emunah
and bitachon.
Once,
when I was speaking to my rebbi, Rav Avrohom Yehoshua Soloveitchik, the
name of a common acquaintance came up. The rosh yeshiva asked how his talmid
was doing.
I
responded, “Ess geit em shver. He’s having a hard time.”
Without
hesitating for even a moment, he looked at me and shot back, “Bei der Ribono
Shel Olam, iz gornit shver.”
In
his pithy, concise way, he was teaching a lesson. For someone facing a
challenge, the problem seems so overwhelming and daunting, but we have to
remember that the Ribbono Shel Olam has no limitations. However large
the issue seems to the person who is experiencing it and to those who love and
care about him, in essence, to the Creator, Who can heal all, it is not a big
deal.
We
get upset and we become forlorn because we become trapped by the moment and
cannot look past it. Though we are limited in what we can perceive, we mustn’t
forget that “Bei der Ribono Shel Olam, iz gornit shver.”
The
person who lives with bitachon experiences happiness and serenity that
others cannot. He knows that the world was created by, and is run by, Hashem,
Who has the ability to give him whatever he wants and needs. A person with real
bitachon is not embittered when his own ambitions are not realized the
way he wanted, and he doesn’t feel himself equal to others. Personal grievances
don’t get him down. When he is frustrated, he can realize that all that happens
is for the good. He absorbs the blow and moves on, with the knowledge that if
he puts himself together and has faith about the future, Hashem will help him
achieve what has been planned for him.
Understanding
that the world is controlled by Hashem permits the baal bitachon to
joyously accept what comes his way. It enables him to manage his fears and
emotions in a productive manner and erase the pain of what otherwise would be
perceived as failure.
The
two months of Adar with which we are blessed this year help us get
ourselves together, properly aligned for the coming month of geulah in Nissan.
Marbin besimcha. Step by step, we grow in our appreciation of the truths of life and
thus develop the ability to be truly joyous.
The
Shechinah doesn’t rest on a person who is unhappy and depressed. In
order to make ourselves worthy of properly understanding Torah and
interpersonal relationships, we walk on the path that leads to simcha.
And as we improve ourselves and our avodas Hashem, we become better and
happier people.
Rav
Pinchos Menachem Alter of Ger recounted that as a child, he visited a bank. He
saw a man handing over piles of cash to a teller and felt so bad for the man. “Oy,
the poor man has to give so much money to the bank. He probably has nothing
left for himself,” he thought in his childish head.
As
he stood there, he saw another man receiving bundles of money from a manager.
“Look at that rich man,” he thought to himself. “He is walking out of here with
a fortune.”
The
rebbe related that it was only later that it was explained to him that
the person he saw handing over money to the teller was, in fact, the wealthy
man. He had come to deposit his money in the bank for safekeeping. The second
man, who walked out with a big wad of cash, was quite poor. He had no money of
his own and had come to the bank to negotiate a loan. He had to put up his
house as collateral and had no idea how he would ever pay the loan back.
When
we trust and believe that there is enough money in His bank to provide for us
all, we will recognize that, in fact, we do have what we need.
The
Rambam, in his introduction to Sefer Hamada, writes that the
reason Chazal instituted the reading of the Megillah on Purim
is to notify the future generations that “emes hee,” the words of the posuk
are true. The posuk (Devorim 4:7) states, “Ki mi goy gadol
asher lo Elokim kerovim eilav kaHashem Elokeinu bechol koreinu Eilov
- Because ours is the only nation that has a G-d Who is close to it and Who is
with us whenever we cry out to Him.”
Why
does the Rambam need to underscore that the posuk is a reality?
It’s a posuk, after all. Of course it is real. How could we even
contemplate otherwise?
Perhaps
the proper understanding is that the story of Purim demonstrates that at
each stage of the unfolding tale, there was a Divine agenda, prodding
circumstances along towards a happy ending. Though as the story was unfolding
there was plenty of reason for fear and sadness, when the story ended, everyone
was able to see that at every step of the way, Hashem was with them,
orchestrating their eventual victory.
Seemingly
random incidents and facts, such as Vashti’s brazenness, the search for a new
queen, Mordechai’s knowledge of foreign languages, and even the month during
which Achashveirosh married Esther, were all details in a gradual, measured
march towards salvation.
Bechol
koreinu eilov. Regardless of what our situation is, we cry out “eilov,”
to Hashem. Everything that transpires brings us closer “eilov,”
to Him. As the Jews of Shushan watched the goings-on, they felt as
if the world was closing in on them and that they were doomed to destruction
and defeat. In fact, the opposite was true.
They
had sinned at the feast of Achashveirosh and were therefore marked for “kloyah,”
annihilation (Megillah 12a), but because Hashem pitied them and heard
their tefillos, “bechol koreinu eilov,” when they repented and
called out to Him, He responded with redemption.
Mordechai
rallied the Jews and they cried out, fasted and did teshuvah, so Hashem
had the tragedy bring about a return of the Jewish people “eilov,” to
Him.
Ana
Bechoach is a special acrostic tefillah composed by Rav Nechunya
Ben Hakanah. It is recited every morning together with the korbanos and
on Friday evening prior to Lecha Dodi. The tefillah asks Hashem
to accept the prayers of Klal Yisroel and concludes by stating, “Shavoseinu
kabel ushema tzaakoseinu yodei’a taalumos.” We ask Hashem to accept
our shouted prayers, as He knows secrets.
The
question is obvious: If we say that we are crying out to Hashem, why do we then
add that He should hear us because He knows all the secrets?
Because
He knows all the secrets and how the travails will end in salvation, we ask
that He hear our tefillos and quickly bring about the reprieve He has
planned, with less pain and aggravation.
Along
with thousands of others, Rav Elazar Menachem Man Shach and his family found
refuge in Vilna during the period leading up to the Second World War. While in
Vilna, he had developed a relationship with Rav Chaim Ozer Grodzensky.
During
his stay there, his 14-year-old daughter, Miriam Raizel, passed away from a
lung condition from which she had been suffering. Rav Shach was devastated.
At
the time, Rav Chaim Ozer was old, virtually bedridden, and weakened from the
illness that would claim his life. He was unable to be menachem avel the
Shach family as they sat shivah. A short while later, Rav Shach went to
visit Rav Chaim Ozer, who had himself experienced the loss of his only
daughter. The aged gaon looked at the young rosh yeshiva he had
come to know, appreciate and love. Though Rav Shach didn’t mention his
daughter’s passing, Rav Chaim Ozer saw the pain in his eyes.
After
an extended silence, the rabbon shel kol bnei hagolah said a few words
that Rav Shach would carry with him for the rest of his life. He said to Rav
Shach, “Lulei Sorascha sha’ashuoy oz ovadeti be’onyi. Without Torah, I
wouldn’t have been able to go on.”
Those
words were to become Rav Shach’s mantra.
Many
years later, some rabbonim went to visit Rav Shach on the day of his
daughter’s yahrtzeit. He spoke about his daughter and repeated what Rav
Chaim Ozer had told him. And then he explained what he thought Rav Chaim Ozer
meant.
He
related that it is analogous to two prisoners who were jailed under horrendous
conditions. They were both understandably miserable, yet one managed to smile
from time to time and make conversation with others. The other one was bitterly
morose. He looked miserable and acted even worse.
The
difference was that one knew that he was nearing the completion of his sentence
and would soon be free. While he was suffering terribly, knowing that he would
soon be free gave him the strength to smile. The second prisoner had a life
sentence with no hope of ever getting out alive. He was emotionally destroyed
and could never bring himself to smile or interact socially ever again.
Rav
Shach explained that without Torah, when tragedy strikes, a person loses his
equilibrium and ability to go on. He becomes overcome with pain and sadness and
finds it impossible to function. One who learns Torah is blessed by the “pikudei
Hashem,” which are “mesamchei lev.” But it is more
than that. Someone who learns Torah, someone who is mesha’ashei’a in
Torah, knows that Hashem maintains Hashgocha Protis on everything in
this world. When he is hit by tragedy, he doesn’t lose himself, for he knows
that what happened to him was brought about by a loving Creator for a higher
purpose.
The
world is spinning out of control. Every day brings with it more ominous news.
People have many tzaros. They wonder why they suffer from illness,
children not turning out the way they dreamt, parnossah challenges,
tuition bills, shidduchim difficulties, and so much more. They wonder
why they are being challenged. Why me? Why is this all happening? What is the
purpose? How will it all end?
Lulei Sorascha sha’ashuoy oz ovadeti be’onyi
Emes hee.
We
must remember that it is true. Bechol koreinu eilov. We can be comforted
by the knowledge that we will live to see the purpose in all the sadness that
we experienced. We will experience the joy of seeing the circle closing
and the pieces of the puzzle fitting together, bringing relief and simcha.
May
it occur speedily for all who need yeshuos and refuos. May we all
have much nachas from our children, financial prosperity, and stability.
Let’s keep on davening for the Jews in Eretz Yisroel, for ourselves, for
our friends and neighbors, and for all of Klal Yisroel.
May we all be zoche
to much happiness and the geulah sheleimah.
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