Sirens, Tehillim & Faith
By Rabbi Pinchos Lipschutz
On Purim, we celebrate the
deliverance of the Jewish people from Haman’s sinister plot to annihilate them.
We read and study the Megillah, reliving the stunning reversal that
transformed a decree of destruction into a day of light and joy, and tracing
the downfall of the wicked Haman.
The Megillah is unique in
the fact that the name of Hashem is not mentioned openly anywhere in the entire
narrative. Unlike other moments in our history, the Hand guiding events remains
concealed between the lines. Purim was the first major miracle of
national deliverance in which Hashem’s presence was hidden, His orchestration
discernible only in hindsight. As the story unfolded, it appeared to move
forward through political maneuvering, palace intrigue, and human courage. Only
once the salvation was complete did it become evident that every detail —
including the seudah of Achashveirosh, Vashti’s downfall, Esther’s rise,
the king’s sleepless night, and everything else described in the Megillah
— had been precisely arranged as part of a Divine plan.
Until Purim, Hashem’s role
in our redemption had been revealed openly and unmistakably, often through
events that transcended the laws of nature. The makkos, Yetzias
Mitzrayim, Krias Yam Suf, and the miraculous sustenance in the midbar
proclaimed Hashem’s mastery for all to see. The supernatural was evident, the
message undeniable.
But the salvation in the days of
Mordechai and Esther ushered in a new era. It was accomplished b’hester,
within the natural order, through seeming coincidence and ordinary events. And
so it has been ever since. We celebrate Purim not only to commemorate
what happened then, but to internalize what it teaches now: That nothing is
random, nothing is happenstance. Even when Hashem’s name is seemingly not
written into the story, His presence is there. What appears fragmented and confusing
is, in truth, carefully choreographed by Hashem Yisborach, guiding His
people toward their ultimate redemption.
Once again, Klal Yisroel
finds itself confronting grave danger. Nearly 2,400 years after the wicked
designs of Haman to annihilate the Jewish people, we faced an existential
threat from the regime in Iran.
For 47 years, since the Iranian
Revolution, Iran’s leaders have openly proclaimed their hostility toward Israel
and the United States, funding terror proxies across the region while pursuing
nuclear capabilities and long-range missile technology. Israeli officials have
warned for decades that a nuclear-armed Iran would pose an intolerable threat,
not only to Israel but to global stability. American administrations, along
with other Western governments, have insisted that Iran must never obtain a
nuclear weapon, though diplomatic efforts and negotiated agreements often fell
short of eliminating the danger.
This past Shabbos, after
years of escalating tension and repeated warnings, the United States and Israel
launched coordinated strikes targeting senior Iranian military leadership,
nuclear facilities, ballistic missile installations, drone infrastructure, and
command centers.
The objective was to halt a
program that had crossed declared red lines and was rapidly advancing toward
operational capability. Last year’s attacks apparently slowed, but did not
stop, Iran’s efforts to build and expand its nuclear and missile programs.
The regime that repeatedly
pledged to wipe Israel off the map appeared to be inching closer to that goal.
Negotiations were attempted, but as the threat intensified and intelligence
assessments grew more alarming, leaders concluded that the window to act was
narrowing. When the opportunity presented itself to rid the world of the
country’s leadership, the war was launched.
And thus, in the very region
where the Purim story unfolded, and in the week of Purim, we find
ourselves holding our collective breath. As in the days of Mordechai and
Esther, events are moving swiftly, alliances are shifting, and the stakes are
nothing less than the safety of millions. We recognize that beyond the military
maneuvers and political calculations, Hakadosh Boruch Hu guides
everything.
We are living through dangerous
and historic days. Across Eretz Yisroel, families once again began the week
hearing the wail of sirens and rushing to shelters as barrages of ballistic
missiles streaked across the sky. Regrettably, some of those missiles landed in
populated areas and claimed lives.
We daven that this
conflict ends swiftly, that innocent lives be spared, and that the threat
hanging over Klal Yisroel be decisively removed.
Just as the hidden Hand became
clear at the end of the Megillah, we pray that soon we will merit to
see, openly and unmistakably, the yeshuah that is now unfolding.
Boruch Hashem, most of us
reading these words have never had to scramble to a shelter with minutes to
spare. But for our brothers and sisters in Eretz Yisroel, this has become an
all-too-frequent reality. And yet, no matter how many times they have done it,
they never grow accustomed to it.
War is not merely headlines and
briefings. It is not maps and military jargon. It is fear. It is
disorientation. It is being jolted awake in the middle of the night, or
abandoning what you are doing in the middle of the day, clutching your children
as you race to safety, reciting kappitlach of Tehillim as you
run. It is the collapse of normalcy, with schools closed, businesses shuttered,
flights canceled, and deliveries halted. It is the steady, unrelenting anxiety
that settles into the body and clings to the soul.
Having your day interrupted by
sirens and a frantic dash to a shelter before a missile strikes is more than
inconvenient. It is nerve-racking, frightening, and life-altering. It reminds a
person, again and again, how fragile life is.
And yet, amidst the chaos of
sirens and explosions, a Jewish heart responds instinctively: “Hashem
yishmor. Hashem will guard us.” Every rocket intercepted is a manifestation
of His mercy. Every near miss is an indication of His will and rachamim.
Ultimately, no defense system and no army operate independently of the Ribbono
Shel Olam. He alone determines who will be protected, who will be spared,
and who will emerge to say, “Hashem was watching over me.”
We are a nation that has endured
more than any other in history, not because of our superior strength or
political advantage, but because of our unbreakable bond with the Ribbono
Shel Olam. That connection has carried us through empires that rose and
fell, and through Hamans of every generation, and it sustains us still, in
these days of sirens, smoke, rockets, planes, and peril.
With rachamei Shomayim,
most of the intended targets inside Iran are being struck, and with each
successful operation, the threat is further diminished. Missiles are
intercepted. Catastrophes are averted. Entire barrages that could have wrought
unimaginable destruction are stopped midair.
And yet, as we saw in Tel Aviv,
Beit Shemesh, Yerushalayim, and other cities, there are rockets that penetrate
the shield. They land. They destroy. They maim. They are painful reminders that
alongside rachamim, there is also din. They remind us how fragile
life is, how dependent we are on siyata diShmaya, and how urgently we
must draw closer to Hakadosh Boruch Hu to merit protection.
As maaminim bnei maaminim,
we understand that while armies battle on the physical front lines, we wage war
on a spiritual one through tefillah, teshuvah, and tzedakah.
Every added kappitel of Tehillim, every act of chesed,
every extra moment of Torah learning fortifies the battlefield forces in ways
we cannot measure. The unseen weapons of Klal Yisroel have always been
its most powerful.
And when the war feels prolonged
and the darkness thick, we cling to the promise of the novi: “Ki lo
yitosh Hashem amo,” Hashem will not forsake His people.
Even now. Especially now.
In times of conflict, many are
tempted to become amateur geopolitical analysts. Conversations quickly turn to
speculation — why the enemy acted, what strategic calculus was at play, how
deftly this leader or that one responded. Pundits dissect the decisions of
presidents and prime ministers, attributing outcomes to political brilliance or
failure.
But we know better.
This war, like every war, unfolds
because Hashem willed it so, not because a particular leader desired it, and
not because of one treaty or another speech. Events do not generate Divine
plans. They implement them.
It is not that circumstances
aligned and therefore history moved. History moves because the Ribbono Shel
Olam directs it, and circumstances align accordingly.
Just as Paroh ascended to power
to set the stage for Yetzias Mitzrayim, so are contemporary leaders
positioned precisely where they need to be to fulfill a larger design. The
revolutionary regime that took control of Iran in 1979 did not emerge by
accident. The global powers that enabled it, restrained it, negotiated with it,
or confronted it did not act outside the framework of Hashgocha. Each
played, and continues to play, a role in a script authored long before any of
them took office.
It’s not that Trump won and
therefore the war happened. It’s the other way around. Trump won because Hashem
wanted the world to move toward this moment.
Presidents and prime ministers
occupy their posts because, at this juncture in history, the Ribbono Shel
Olam requires them there. The world is being guided, step by step, toward
its destined culmination. The threats we face, the alliances that form, and the
confrontations that erupt are all part of a process moving creation toward geulah.
Because Hashem wants to set up
the world for Moshiach to reveal himself and redeem us, He brought the
world to this juncture.
We may not yet see the full
picture. But just as in the days of Purim, when the Hand was hidden
until the final moment, so too, we now live within a story still unfolding,
guided with precision, purpose, and promise.
When we forget who we are and Who
sustains us, when we allow ourselves to be distracted by headlines and worldly
analysis, we risk becoming like the Jews of Shushan, threatened by Haman after
having sinned by indulging in the feast of Achashveirosh and drinking from the keilim
of the destroyed Bais Hamikdosh.
The Rambam opens Hilchos
Taanis with a powerful statement: “Mitzvas asei min haTorah, it is a
mitzvah in the Torah, to cry out to Hashem and to do teshuvah
whenever any tragedy strikes.” This is derived from a posuk in Parshas
Beha’aloscha (Bamidbar 10:9). When tragedy strikes, it is ultimately
a reflection of our own shortcomings, and the path to overcoming it is through teshuvah.
Those who reduce wars or
calamities to purely political or natural explanations, or who deny or ignore
Hashem’s role in the unfolding of events, are engaging in a form of cruelty.
They obscure the truth, prevent people from recognizing the Divine Hand, and
hinder the opportunity for teshuvah. None of us wish to be counted among
the cruel, especially when the Rambam is not offering opinion but
articulating halacha and revealing the true nature of the world
according to the Torah.
The Chovos Halevavos
teaches in Shaar Cheshbon Hanefesh that someone who places his faith in
Hashem is never abandoned. Hashem opens the gates of understanding, reveals the
hidden depths of His wisdom, watches over him, and does not leave him to the
limitations of his own strength.
The Gemara (Avodah
Zarah 2b) tells us that when Moshiach comes, the nations of the
world will protest the punishment they are about to receive for their treatment
of the Jews. They will claim that all their actions were intended to benefit
the Jewish people and facilitate their service of Hashem and the Torah. Persia,
modern-day Iran, will argue, “We built bridges, conquered lands, and waged wars
all to enable the Jews to learn Torah.”
While it is conceivable that
infrastructure projects could indirectly support Torah study, what of war?
Perhaps the Gemara is hinting that even wars and threats can serve as
wake-up calls — to frighten, to warn, to inspire teshuvah, and to
redirect hearts toward the Torah.
When the Supreme Ruler of Iran
publicly declared his intent to destroy Israel and raced to arm the nation with
nuclear weapons and ballistic missiles, the world largely stood by, making only
nominal attempts to curb his ambitions.
During last year’s twelve-day
conflict, Israel cleared the skies, striking hundreds of targets and
neutralizing military leaders, nuclear scientists, and key infrastructure. In
just a few days, a nation seventy-five times smaller dismantled decades of buildup,
despite Iran’s strength and pride. Though rockets were fired in retaliation,
Hashem’s protection was unmistakable. Most were intercepted, and the death toll
remained minimal. Every life lost is a tragedy, yet the contrast between what
could have happened and what actually occurred can only be explained by Hashgocha
Protis.
This is not strategy. This is not
luck. This is not political brilliance.
This is Hashem’s Hand. This is
the unfolding of a Divine plan. This is the sound of the approaching geulah.
Let us not waste this moment. As
the war continues, as sirens wail and bombs threaten every part of Eretz
Yisroel, let us raise our voices in passionate tefillah that Hashem
spare us from the evil intentions of the anshei Poras and Yishmoel.
Let us strengthen our commitment
to Torah, chesed, tzedakah, and the refinement of our middos.
Let us build zechuyos with every word of Torah learned, every tefillah
sincerely recited, and every act of kindness performed.
Just as in the days of Mordechai
and Esther, when danger loomed and Hashem’s Hand was hidden, we live today with
the awareness that nothing is by chance. Every challenge, every threat, every
moment of uncertainty is part of a Divine plan. Purim reminds us that
even when Hashem is hidden, His providence is real, guiding every event and
protecting His people.
We are reminded that our role is
not passive. While Hashem orchestrates the world, we are called to act as only
we can through Torah, tefillah, tzedakah, and chesed,
refining ourselves and building zechuyos for ourselves and our people.
Just as Esther and Mordechai played a crucial role in the miracle of Purim
by leading Am Yisroel to teshuvah, so will our spiritual efforts
today help bring about the hidden yeshuah for which we all yearn.
Let us live with clarity and
courage, seeing both the dangers and the opportunities that lie before us. Let
us be a people who respond to fear, threats, and uncertainty with emunah,
bitachon, and unwavering trust in Hakadosh Boruch Hu.
May this be the last war, and
just as the Megillah ends with orah, simcha, sasson and yekor,
may we soon see peace break out in the Middle East and throughout the world and
be zoche to the coming of Moshiach Tzidkeinu.

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