Message from Above
Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
Over
the past month, Jews around the world have changed. Our demeanor has changed.
The way we view the world and our place in it, and the way we view ourselves,
has changed. There is a renewed feeling of achdus and everyone is
seeking improvement. People who have never observed Shabbos are doing
so. People who never wore tzitzis are doing so. Women who had never
previously lit candles are doing so. There is a worldwide shortage of tefillin
because so many men have begun wearing them every day.
The
news from Eretz Yisroel is sad. So many Jews have been slaughtered. Hundreds of
thousands of people are at war, fighting for the survival of the small Jewish
state. Many are paying with their lives and limbs for the safety of Eretz
Yisroel. Fearsome images and slogans are on display from masses of Jew-haters
marching in the streets around the world. What are we to do? There is no place
to hide, no place to run, no place in the world where we are safe, al pi
derech hateva, without Hashem’s protection.
A
biblical tragedy took place. Men, women, children, grandparents, parents, and
even little babies were killed, and others taken hostage, after terrorists
crossed through what was assumed to be the world’s best defended border,
rushing virtually unimpeded into a host of Jewish towns. Families were wiped
out. People who survived the Holocaust met their end at the hands of animals
more vicious than Nazi dogs.
The
more we find out about the ruthless attacks that gave birth to the current war,
the more we realize that we are living in historic times. Every day, history is
being made, as events occur that defy explanation and are obviously guided and
orchestrated by our heavenly Father.
Hashem
favors neither the might of the horse nor the prowess of its rider. All the
jets, tanks and heroic soldiers can only accomplish what the Divine allows
them. So far, the war is going better than planned, as the army marches through
northern Gaza, hitting one target after another and pushing Hamas further and
further away. Hashem has caused President Biden to support Israel in ways
nobody thought he would, even as he faces tremendous pressure from his
political allies and base.
In
this week’s parsha, referring to our evil uncle, Eisov, the posuk
states “vehu oyeif.” The literal translation is that Eisov was tired. He
lacked in spirit and vitality.
The
idea that he was lacking life-sustaining energy is reinforced by the phrase
used in the posuk to describe the sale of his bechorah: “michra
kayom.” It was a sale for today, because Eisov’s vision was limited
to that which fit with his need for immediate gratification. He was tired and
wiped out. He couldn’t think beyond a day at a time.
Yaakov
didn’t tire. He remained vibrant, fresh and young, with the feeling that a
person has at the dawn of a new day, when he is getting started, aflame with
the sense of possibility and optimism that comes with the start of a project or
endeavor. He was able to think and see far into the future. He visualized the
fires of the mizbeiach, the joy of a korban being accepted, and
the sanctity of the makom haMikdosh. He was able to “taste” it right
then. He felt it. His vista was far larger and wider than “kayom.” When
he realized the value of every moment and every mitzvah and every word
of Torah, he was energized.
In
making that decision, he invested us, his children, with the ability to stay
young - ki na’ar Yisroel ve’ohaveihu - and remain fresh. Yaakov studied
for 14 years in the yeshiva of Sheim and Eiver without sleeping (Rashi,
Bereishis 28:12, from Bereishis Rabbah).
Imagine
a marathon runner nearing the finish line. He is sapped, drained, thirsty and
hot. But he sees the finish line and his spirits are up. He looks ahead, more
excited and energetic as his eyes behold his goal.
A
nation of people who had the strength to walk into fires in Spain, death pits
in Lithuania, and gas chambers in Poland, and face the less glorious mesirus
nefesh of turning their backs on the world, ignoring the call of the street
and the lure of the outside culture each day, draws its strength from that
vision. It embodies the rush of power that comes from visualizing a goal.
The
Jews of Israel, from the very north to the very south, are living through a
war. There are bouts of anxiety, fear, hunger, loneliness and sadness. But then
they think back to all the tragedies suffered in that country since its
founding and they remember how Hashem has been there for them, as they bounced
back each time, vanquishing our enemies and emerging stronger and better. Their
emunah and bitachon get recharged, and people at every level of frumkeit
seek improvement in how they live their lives. As they get better, their
lives improve, their level of simcha improves, and their hatzlocha
and brocha are enhanced too.
Thus,
the posuk states, “Vekovei Hashem, those who hope to Hashem, yachalifu
koach, are constantly re-energized.” Their hope and faith invest them with
life, spirit and stamina.
Being
a Jew means being connected and charged. That is the legacy of Yaakov Avinu.
That is our legacy. That is who we are.
Kelmer
mussar teaches that under normal circumstances, man’s evil inclinations are
kept in check by the “normal” rate and measure of tragedies and calamities. But
when the regular spate of illness, death and turmoil fails to inspire us to
repent and improve our ways, Heaven causes new, unimaginable horror to be
created to scare us and steer us back onto the proper path.
The
novi Tzefania speaks of a Yerushalayim stained with blood. It disobeyed
the nevi’im, did not accept mussar, failed to have bitachon
in Hashem, and did not draw itself near to Him. The novi speaks of
ministers “roaring like lions” in the midst of the city, where there are
“rebellious robbers of the Torah.” Hashem’s justice remains exact. “I have cut
down nations and made their towers desolate in the hope that you would pay
attention and learn mussar lessons from what Hashem has done, so that
your homes would not be destroyed.”
One
of the highlights of the tefillos of the Yomim Noraim is the tefillah
of Unesaneh Tokef. We cry out, “Mi yichyeh? Mi yomus? Who will
live? Who will die? Who will be torn apart? Who will live comfortably? Who will
be rich? Who will be poor?” After we chant those fearful words and realize that
everything that will transpire in the world during the coming year is decided
by the Creator on Rosh Hashanah, we cry out and proclaim to all the
world, to each other and to ourselves that teshuvah, tefillah and
tzedakah have the power to change the undesirable decisions.
Those
tefillos aren’t just words. And they’re not just meant for the Yomim
Noraim. The fear and kavanah with which we expressed them must
remain with us throughout the year, especially in times of din, war and
rampant anti-Semitism.
Teshuvah, tefillah and tzedakah have been our weapons during our
darkest days throughout all the ages. We never despair. We don’t get broken.
Our spirit remains alive and vibrant no matter what is being done to us and
what is going on around us. We never give up hope, irrespective of the issue we
are plagued with, for we know that netzach Yisroel lo yishaker and hinei
lo yonum velo yishon Shomer Yisroel.
My
three-year-old grandson woke up on Friday night. He was shivering from fever.
He went into his parents’ room and said, “Hashem is making my teeth shake and I
can’t sleep. What should I do?”
Little
Yaakov, who receives a good chinuch at home and in Yeshiva Nachalei
Torah, understood that if something is happening to him, it is coming from
Hashem. He didn’t say, “I’m shivering.” He didn’t say, “I’m feeling sick.” He
said, “Hashem is sending me a message. He is causing me to shiver and my teeth
to shake. What am I to do?”
We
all need to be like little Yaakov and understand that everything that happens
to us, to our people and to the world is from Hashem. Instead of saying, “I
caught the flu,” or, “The flu is going around and it got me,” we need to say,
“Hashem afflicted me with the flu. Which part of my life needs improvement?”
Instead of saying, “I wonder how it could be that Hamas was able to break
through Israel’s security fence and kill 1,200 people without the army being
able to stop them,” we need to say and understand that they were able to do
what they did because Hashem allowed them to. We should articulate what message
there is for us in what happened and what chizukim in kiyum mitzvos
we can undertake to do our share to make sure that it never happens again.
Ani Maamin is not just a nice moving tune to sing at serious times. It is the
foundation of our belief and the frame of reference in understanding what
happens to us in golus. Wrapping our arms around each other and singing
“Lemaan achai verei’ay” and other songs of achdus is very
touching and gives off warm feelings, but it doesn’t mean anything if we go on
hating people who don’t think - or dress - the way we do.
At
times like this, we need to take these things seriously and strengthen our emunah
and bitachon, our dikduk b’mitzvos and ahavas Yisroel.
Even though we are now b’ikvisa d’Meshicha, he is not able to reveal
himself and undertake his mission until we are truly united and do teshuvah.
Each
person has different challenges, but Hashem gives us the ability to withstand
them and keep our internal fire of Torah burning, ready to burst into a glowing
flame. Let us do what we can to grow that fire, day after day, week after week,
and year after year, expending our energies on matters of substance and
meaning.
Let
us endeavor to always remain focused on a goal, ambitious and driven, young and
vital, as long as we are able to on this earth. If what we are doing is worth
doing, then it is worth doing right and energetically, giving it all we’ve got.
Let
us never become lazy, lethargic or tired. Let us stop focusing on silly and
trivial things. So much nonsense is passed around during these days of war and
confusion. We would all be so much better off if we would do away with the
little pekelach of nezid adashim that pop up on our phones minute
by minute to avert our attention from our mission.
We have our work
cut out for us. We are so close to the finish line, realizing the goal of Am
Yisroel since its inception. Let us all do what we can to get there, bemeheirah
beyomeinu. Amein.
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