Events in Eretz Yisrael are heartbreaking. What can anyone say or write?
The next time time a newspaper or politician calls for Israel to sit down for peace talks with our animal neighbors I suggest that the community innundate that media outlet or politician with pictures of these three poor teens killed by the savages.
Even though the outcome was not what we hoped for, the many tefilos and good deeds undertaken during these past 2 1/2 weeks should not be thought of as for naught. Now is the time to prove that it's not just tragedy that can bring us together as a community. Now is the time to show that the achdus, the chessed, the tremendous outpouring of ruchniyus that these boys' lives brought out is something that will stay with us as a kiddush Hashem and a merit for their neshomos.
Monday, June 30, 2014
ameilus baTorah
Rashi writes that “Im bechukosai teileichu” must be
referring to ameilus baTorah and not just shemiras hamitzvos, as the next
phrase in the pasuk, “v’es mitzvosai tishmoru,” already speaks about
mitzvos.
Why does Rashi say the pasuk is referring specifically to
ameilus? Maybe the reward promised is
for stam learning?
To understand what Rashi means we need to first understand what the chiddush is in the concept of ameilus baTorah. Doesn’t every accomplishment require
ameilus? If you want to be a doctor, you
have to work hard to get through medical school; if you want to be a lawyer,
you have to work hard to get through law school. If you want to be successful in learning, it
takes work – peshita, mai kah mashma lan?
Yesh lachkor: is ameilus a means to the end of knowing
Torah, or is Torah a vehicle that Hashem gave us to bring out a certain type of
ameilus? Or to put it another way, when
a person is engaged in the shakla v’yerya give and take of learning, where
every answer inspires a new, deeper question, and every question brings an
answer that lends greater clarity, are the questions just a means to unravel
the sugya and get to the answers, or are answers just the foundation upon which
deeper, more probing questions can be built?
The answer is black on white in Chazal: “Adam l’ama yulad” –
man was created for the sake of work, which the gemara (Sanhedrin 99b) darshens
the pasuk as referring specifically to ameilus in Torah. Ameilus in Torah is the tachlis, not just the
means.
In all other disciplines, the work is just a way of attaining
mastery of some skill or subject matter.
When it comes to Torah study, the the goal is to be immersed in questions;
the struggle in learning itself is the goal, not arriving at conclusions.
Explains the Sefas Emes, when one is learning with ameilus,
at every stage the knowledge that is yet to come, that one anticipates and is
working toward, is a mystery relative to where one is holding at that moment. There is always a “bechukosai,” something yet
to be understood that sits just beyond the horizon. “Im bechukosai teileichu” – if your learning
is focused on looking forward to the next unknown, if you cherish the mystery
of questions for their own sake and not just as a means to get to answers, then
this is ameilus baTorah.
"Zos chukas haTorah" -- not chukas haparah or chukas hataharah. Chok, the pursuit of the next unknown, is the engine that drives all learning.
Friday, June 27, 2014
opposite sides of the same coin
1) The Sefer Yetzira says that the month of Tamuz corresponds
to the letter ‘cheis’ (whatever that means) which symbolizes cheit. The name of the month, Tamuz, appears in
Sefer Yechezkel (8:14 see Rashi there), “mevakos es hatamuz,” where it refers to
something heated up, something being burnt.
Sin, burning – these are not pleasant images.
2) For forty years Bnei Yisrael were wandering in the midbar
eating mon. Why now at the end of the
road do they suddenly start complaining again, “nafsheinu katzah ba’lechem
hakelokeil?” (21:5) Chasam Sofer answers
that the generation who left Egypt and entered the midbar had all died
out. The generation our parsha speaks to
is a new generation, one that had been raised in the desert from birth and had
known nothing other than mon. Now, they
find themselves on the borders of Edom, Moav – they encounter civilization for
the first time. They see people eating
foods they had never tasted; they see drinks and delicacies they have never
seen before. Who wants mon anymore when
you can have “real” food?
Yet, explains the Shem m’Shmuel, latent within these same
images is exactly the opposite meaning.
We have in our parsha “mei chatas” and “hu yischatah,” where “cheit” means
taharah. The fire of Tamuz need not be a
destructive fire, but can be the flame of Torah that gives warmth.
The Midrash writes that in every parsha that Hashem taught
Moshe he learned the thing and its opposite, e.g. heter and issur, tumah and
taharah, etc. When Moshe got to parhas
Emor, Hashem taught him the concept of tumas meis, but no opposite. Moshe thought there is no remedy for that
tumah. Finally, Hashem taught him our
parsha of parah adumah.
R’ Simcha Bunim of Peshischa explains that to truly
understand something means to understand its opposite as well, it’s negation. The Maharal writes in many places that
opposites are logically actually very closely related, as they are two sides of
the same coin; one cannot exist without the other. If you grasp one, you grasp the other. Whatever Moshe learned, he understood fully
and was able to fathom the opposite ideas as well. The only exception was the parsha of tumas
meis. Parah adumah is a chok, it is
unfathomable. Hashem had to reveal the
parsha to Moshe and only then did he understand it.
In other words (what I think he means), we can justify and
rationalize a lot of things. We can talk
about cheit having opposite meanings, we can talk about fire meaning different
things. It’s harder when it comes to
talking about death. Only G-d himself at
some point can reveal to us that mystery.
The punishment Hashem gave them was the poisonous snakes. For forty years in the desert the ananei
hakavod had smoothed the road out – no one knew what a snakebite was or that it
could prove fatal. You want to complain
that you haven’t had a steak for 40 years – remember that you haven’t suffered
harm for 40 years either. You want to
complain that the food everyone else is eating looks so good – you tikun is to
look at the nechash nechoshes and direct your vision to higher things.
Monday, June 23, 2014
some quick thoughts
1) I remember when the Mir’s deficit of something like 10
million dollars was considered shocking, proof that the chareidi system doomed
institutions to failure under an economically unsustainable model. So what does YU’s economic problems prove
about the economic sustainability of Torah u’Mada and modern orthodoxy?
2) Yated Ne’eman last week claimed that the kidnapping of the
teens in Israel is a punishment from G-d resulting from the attempt to draft yeshiva students. Maybe Yated has a pipeline directly to G-d
and that’s how they know these things, but if not -- if we are just shooting
sevaras from the hip -- couldn’t one make exactly the opposite argument? Hasn’t this episode helped rally support and
appreciation for the army and effectively put an end to the protests?
3) In a similar vein, some people read Korach as a lesson in
what happens when you challenge da’as Torah.
R’ Asher Lopatin of YCT points to the Netziv’s interpretation that the 250
people who joined Korach were in fact great Torah leaders with the most sincere
motives. The lesson: “But our loyalty is
to the Torah and to the Jewish people, and with love and with awe we must
choose these values over the words of any individual, or group, no matter how
great or religious they are.”
Some people are bothered by the fact that the text lends itself to competing and opposite interpretations. I think it would be boring if it were any other way.
4) Heard from a graduation speaker: it says “Zos chukas
haTorah” and not “chukas hataharah” or “chukas haparah” because the entire Torah, not just this one parsha, is a chukah. Speaker’s conclusion: “chukah” = from the
root “ch-k-k, to engrave; years of education serve to engrave the Torah on the
heart. My conclusion: after years of
education at some institutions the entire Torah remains as much an
incomprehensible mystery as when you first started school.
Friday, June 20, 2014
im briya yivrah Hashem -- new creations
Chazal tell us that Korach bolstered his argument by
rejecting the laws of tziztis. He
dressed his gang in clothes dyed completely in techeiles and asked Moshe
whether those clothes still needed that one techeilis string of tzitzis. What difference does one string make when the
entire garment is techeiles? What
difference does one Moshe Rabeinu make when “ki kol ha’eidah kulam kedoshim?”
Rashi quotes from Chazal that “eino hit’aso,” Korach’s eyes
tricked him. He saw that one of his descendants
would be Shmuel haNavi and thought that if he were wrong, surely such
illustrious children would not come from his lineage. The word “tzitzis” comes from the root
meaning to see, like the pasuk in Shir haShirim (2:9), “…meitzitz min
hacharakim,” looking through the latticework.
Seeing techeiles is supposed to remind a person to look away from the
wrong things, “lo tasuru… acharei eineichem,” and learn to see through Torah eyes. Korach’s rejection of the mitzvah of tzitzis goes hand-in-hand with his
not being able to see and interpret events properly.
But, as Rashi asks, Korach was a brilliant individual – how could
he have failed to realize that his descendants’ greatness might be due to his
children doing teshuvah and following their own path, not to his own merits or
success?
The gemara (Brachos 10) tells us that Chizkiyahu did not
want to have children because he saw the wicked Menasheh would come from
him. Yishayahu haNavi told him that
making calculations was not his job; Hashem just wanted him to do mitzvos, not
worry about the eventual or ultimate outcome.
The gemara (Sanhedrin 103) in fact tells us that Menasheh ended up doing
teshuvah. Even though the midas hadin wanted
to reject his repentance, even though the malachim did not want to carry his
tefilos up to shamayim, Hashem created a tunnel for him right under his throne
so that Menasheh’s repentance could be accepted. How come Chizkiyahu did not see that part of
the story? The Imrei Emes explains that
the midas hadin and the malachim logically were right – Menasheh did not
deserve any more chances and there is no way his last minute return should have
made a difference. Chizkiyahu was
looking at the world based on those same rules of reason that the malachim were
using. The chance of Menasheh’s teshuvah
being accepted was the same as the chance of the sun has of not rising or my
dropping a brick and it not falling – the world just doesn’t work that way. Teshuvah, however, transcends logic,
transcends reason, transcends law. The world
as it existed before Menasheh may not have worked that way, but Hashem can
create a new tunnel that never existed before right up to his kisei hakavod and
suddenly Menasheh is a new Menasheh as well.
“Im briya yivrah Hashem…”
Moshe threatened Korach that Hashem was going to create a hole in the
ground that had not existed since creation to swallow him up. Moshe was telling Korach that all his
predictions and sevaros and reasoning was predicated on the laws of the
universe as-is, like a machine that runs like clockwork from creation
onward. But that’s not reality – G-d can
change things in a moment and introduce a hole in creation that had never been
there before. Korach couldn’t see that. He couldn’t see how his descendants’ could
possibly do teshuvah and rise to greatness if he was really wrong and guilty of
rebellion. It made no sense. And he was right – just as the malachim and
midas hadin were right about Menasheh’s teshuvah as well. But just as Hashem can make a new briya of a
hole that never before existed in creation in order to take down wrongdoers, so too he can make tunnels into shamayim that never
existed before to welcome back those who truly wish to do teshuvah, as
impossible and incredible as it may seem.
Wednesday, June 18, 2014
the power of a group
I feel remiss that I did not mention as I have in previous
years the beautiful siyum made this past Sunday in my son’s yeshiva. About 90 boys finished Gittin this year, and
others made chazarah siyumim on masechtos done in previous years that they once
again finished. It’s not required by the
yeshiva – the boys do it because they want to.
I am usually very critical of what passes for education these days, but
every year when I go to the siyum I feel a sense of hakaras hatov to the
yeshiva and am inspired by what the boys accomplish.
I usually write over what the guest speaker said, but in this
case I just cannot do justice to the derasha given by R’ Yisrael Schorr of Ohr
Samayach in Monsey, which was malei v’gadush with mareh mekomos from shas and
midrash as he moved m’inyan l’inyan but still managed to tie everything
together. In a nutshell, R’ Schorr explained
that gashmiyus is usually a contradiction to ruchniyus (He quoted the GR”A’s
explanation that a shtar geirushin is called a “get” because the letters gimel
and teis never come together in all Tanach – “get” therefore connotes
separation. But why don’t those letters
come together? Derech derush he suggested that
gimel=gashmiyus, while teis = tov, and “ain tov elah Torah,” so the two
elements cannot coexist). However, when
we make a siyum we celebrate with gashmiyus, with food and a seudah. The process of learning begins with
toil. The churban habayis happened
because “lo beirchu baTorah techila,” the people did not recite a bracha on the
beginning of the learning process (Sefas Emes), when the learning is difficult
and not enjoyable. It’s easy to
celebrate and say a bracha when you finish and can sit back and appreciate the
fruits of your labor; it’s harder to thank Hashem as you struggle with the
difficult sugyos along the way. But that
toil, that struggle, is what elevates a person.
Gan (Eden) = guf and neshoma. The
only way back into the gan is through ameilus in learning. If a person succeeds, his reward is not only
in ruchniyus, but in the ability to appreciate a seudah in gashniyus properly
as well. (Again, this is poor summary of just a taste of what he said.)
Of course there was a bit of a bittersweet flavor to the
event, as we took time from celebrating our teens finishing masechtos to say
tehillim for the teens kidnapped in Israel.
Is there anyone not amazed by the tremendous achdus shown by Klal Yisrael at
this time of crisis? Remember the protest
marches, the inflammatory rhetoric, etc. of just a few weeks or even days ago? Now you have chassidism, chareidim,
mizrachiniks, chardal – everyone – davening for these boys. I saw in an article that over 2000
non-religious Jews came together at a Chabad event on Shabbos in Tel Aviv to
daven for these boys. Of course there
are many issues that still divide us.
Too bad it takes tragedy to teach us that despite those problems, we are
all still brothers.
Why did Moshe have to change Yehoshua’s name to protect him
from the meraglim? Yehoshua was a
brilliant talmid – surely he would have had his guard up and followed Moshe’s
advice had Moshe warned him of the danger?
R’ Chatzkel Levenstein explains that the power of a group is a “koach
ruchani,” a force that the intelligence and willpower cannot easily overcome,
no matter if the person is as great as Yehoshua, no matter that he might have been
warned in advance and have his guard up.
If such a force can be harnessed for bad, surely it works for good as
well. When dozens of young men dedicate
themselves to finish masechtos, their positive influence has an effect on their
peers, their yeshiva, their community.
R’ Chatzkel explains further that as powerful as the sway of
the group might be, we see from the parsha that there is an even great force:
the power of tefillah. Kaleiv escaped the
influence of the meraglim by going to daven at the graves of the Avos. It’s this koach of tefillah that we
desperately need these days to see that all works out for the best.
Friday, June 13, 2014
nesachim and challah
Sorry, have not felt much like writing.
פתח ר' חנינא (קהלת ט) לך אכול בשמחה לחמך ושתה בלב טוב יינך מהו כי כבר רצה האלהים
את מעשיך אכול בשמחה לחמך זו פרשת חלה ושתה בלב טוב יינך זו פרשת נסכים מהו כי כבר
רצה וגו' זו הכנסת ישראל לארץ שנא' כי תבאו אל הארץ
Right after the sin of the meraglim we have the parsha of
nesachim and the mitzvah of challah. The
Midrash comments as follows:
In other words, nesachim and challah were a sign that “kvar
ratzah Elokim es ma’asecha” (as the pasuk in Koheles ends), of G-d’s acceptance
of the Jewish people despite their failings.
The Ishbitzer points out that the pasuk in Koheles first
refers to bread and then to wine, yet the order in the Torah is reversed –
first we have the parsha of nesachim, which involves pouring wine on the
mizbeyach, and then afterwards we have the parsha of challah, which is taken
when baking bread. Why does the Torah
reverse the order from the order in Koheles?
Challah represents yiras shamayim, wanting to be extra
careful and go the extra mile for G-d.
The farmer already took out terumah, took our ma’aser, took out ma’aser
sheni or ma’aser ani – he’s shown that he remembers that his crops are
dependent on G-d. Now he comes to bake
his bread and he’s still not satisfied – let’s take off one more portion and
give it to the kohen just to be safe.
Nesachim represent the depths of the heart. The gemara in Sukkah tells us that the wine
poured on the mizbeyach went down a hole straight into the deepest depths of
the earth.
In an ideal world challah comes before nesachim, we would
build up our yiras shamayim until we felt it penetrate down into the depths of the
soul.
Post-cheit hameraglim is what happens when the the ideal has
been shattered. You can’t talk about
building up yiras shamayim until it penetrates down into the heart if you
think, “heimasu es levaveinu,” that the heart is completely corrupt and unredeemable. The Torah therefore reverses the order. First comes the parsha of nesachim – there is
still something down there in the depths that can be reached. The cheit of a Jew is only on the surface and
never fully corrupts the soul. Once Klal
Yisrael absorbed that lesson and believed that they still had a connection,
then the Torah gives the parsha of challah and talks about rebuilding yiras
shamayim.
The gemara (Brachos 14) says that a person who reads kri’as
shema without tefillin is like a person who offers a korban without the
nesachim that go with it. What’s the
comparison? When a person wraps tefillin
around his head and his arm he shows that his mind and heart and the actions he
takes with his hands are all connected – what he is saying is part of how he
thinks, acts, and feels; it’s not just words coming out of his lips. In light of the Ishbitzer perhaps the gemara
means that just as the nesachim drip down to the deepest depths, it’s the
donning of tefillin that shows that the message of shema is part of the essence
of the person. (See Shem m’Shmuel for a
different interpretation.)
Monday, June 09, 2014
kabbalas haTorah requires self-awareness
When Moshe went up to get the Torah, the angels argued that
mankind is undeserving of receiving it.
G-d told Moshe to answer their claim.
Moshe was afraid lest the angels harm him, so G-d told him to grab onto
his throne and he would protect him.
Moshe then responded that the words of Torah cannot possibly apply to angels. “Lo tirtzach” – do angels have a temptation
to murder? “Lo tignov” – are angels
tempted to steal (kidnap)? Each of the
aseres hadibros addresses a frailty that only human beings have. With this, Moshe won the debate.
Instead of asking Moshe to answer the angels and then having
to shield him from harm, why didn’t G-d just answer the angels himself? After all, it was G-d’s choice to give the
Torah to mankind just as much as our choice to receive it!
Maharal in his Derush al haTorah explains that we see from the gemara that Torah was given to mankind because man has imperfections. Torah is a roadmap to overcome faults and
grow – something angels cannot do. But that
process is possible only if one has self-awareness. Unless a person is cognizant of his own faults and
shortcomings, he can never aspire to anything greater. Therefore, G-d could not answer the angels –
the answer had to come from Moshe himself.
Our own kabbalas haTorah as well needs to start with the self-awareness; with the knowledge that we are imperfect and need that roadmap to get somewhere better.
Friday, June 06, 2014
rebuke demands a reaction
At the end of our parsha Miriam spoke critically of Moshe’s
having separated from his wife Tziporah.
Miriam did not understand Moshe’s actions, as she and Aharon were also
prophets and they did not separate from their spouses. Hashem immediately intervened and faulted Miriam
for not appreciating that Moshe’s level of prophecy was far greater than that
of any other navi, including herself and Aharon. The Torah then ends the rebuke by telling us
(11:9), “Vayichar af Hashem bam va’yeilach,” Hashem was angry and Miriam and
Aharon and his presence departed. Had
you asked me, that pasuk should have been the opening to Hashem’s rebuke. You first get angry and then you let the
other person have it – not the other way around. Why does the Torah place it here, at the end
of the section?
וַיִּחַר אַף ה' בָּם. שֶׁלּא נִכְנְעוּ תֵּיכֶף כְּמו
שֶׁעָשָה דָּוִד בְּאָמְרו אֶל נָתָן "חָטָאתִי"
I found this Seforno:
The anger of Hashem that the pasuk is referring to is not a
result of what Miriam said – that was already addressed by G-d’s rebuke. The anger of Hashem is a result of Miriam’s
lack of reaction to that rebuke. When
Nasan came and told David that he had done something wrong, David immediately
responded, “Chatasi,” with an admission of guilt. The Torah does not record a similar reaction
on the part of Miriam and Aharon. It’s
not what they said that kindled Hashem’s anger, but rather it was the lack of immediate
contrition once they knew they had done wrong.
Tuesday, June 03, 2014
nature vs nurture
“V’kol ha’am ro’im es hakolos… va’yar ha’am va’yanu’u...”
(Shmos 20:15)
וְכָל הָעָם רֹאִים אֶת הַקּוֹלֹת וְאֶת הַלַּפִּידִם וְאֵת קוֹל הַשֹּׁפָר וְאֶת הָהָר עָשֵׁן וַיַּרְא הָעָם וַיָּנֻעוּ וַיַּעַמְדוּ מֵרָחֹק:
Why does the pasuk repeat two times that the people saw, “ro’im”
and then “va’yar?” And why does the pasuk change the tense of the verb? R’ Tzadok haKohen explains that “va’yar”
refers to those who stood at Sinai and witnessed mattan Torah; “ro’im” in the
present tense refers to us. The experience
of mattan Torah reverberates through history so that we can still hear and feel
it in our time as well.
The gemara says that R’ Yosef remarked that if not for this
day [of Shavuos], he would just be another Joe in the marketplace. R’ Tzadok asks: were there no great people
before mattan Torah? Even before the
Avo,s there was Chanoch, there was Mesushelach.
Why was Rav Yosef convinced that he would have been a nothing had there
not been a mattan Torah?
There is a big debate whether intelligence or other traits
are a product of nature or nurture. Is a
brilliant person born a genius because he has genius genes, or does he become a
genius because of how he is raised or how he works to develop himself? Pre-mattan Torah, great people became great
by dint of their own effort. At mattan
Torah things changed. The Jewish people
were given Torah as a “morasha,” an inheritance. You don’t need to do work to earn an inheritance
– it’s bestowed upon you without your having to do anything. It’s part of your nature, not something you
need to nurture and develop.
R’ Tzadok reminds us of the gemara at the end of Sotah where
R’ Yosef held himself up as the exemplar of anavah, modesty. R’ Yosef surely was aware of his greatness in
Torah. What the gemara means is that he
did not attribute his success to his own talents and efforts – he attributed
his greatness to the experience of mattan Torah that implanted Torah within him, as part of his nature. I don’t know if there is a Jewish
gene for smarts, or for other talents, but there is a Jewish gene for limud
haTorah that each one of us possesses.
Monday, June 02, 2014
why the parsha of sotah followed by the parsha of nazir belong in Naso
While on the topic of the Ralbag, let me mention his beautiful explanation of why the parsha
of sotah followed by the parsha of nazir belong here in Naso. The parsha of Bamidbar and the beginning of Naso
focus on the arrangement of the machaneh – who camps where, what everyone’s job
is. The Torah wants to establish order
on the macro- level to ensure a peaceful society. The parsha then turns to the micro- level, to
the family, to establishing peace between husband and wife through the pasha of
sotah. Finally, the parsha zeroes in on
the individual, the person torn between his role as a regular individual who
must deal with mundane life, yet someone who desires spiritual growth and closeness
to G-d akin to the kohen or levi.
brisker rav on the mitzvah of carrying the aron
The footnotes to the Mossad haRav Kook edition of the Ralbag
are medayek that in his explanation of the parsha he discusses the Levi’im’s
role in carrying all the klei hamikdash, but at the end of the parsha when he
sums up the take away points he only mentions their job of carrying the
aron. Why did he omit carrying the klei
hamikdash?
The Rambam in Sefer haMitzvos shoresh 3 writes that the din
of “lo ya’avod od,” that a Levi who is past 50 years old can no longer do the
job of carrying, is not counted as a mitzvah l’doros. Ramban takes issue with this idea, as we see
that even later in Tanach whenever the aron was moved it was carried on the
shoulders of Levi’im. The Brisker Rav
(michtavim at the end of Ch haGRI”Z) writes that there are two dinim in
carrying the aron: 1) there is the mitzvah of carrying the klei hamikdash,
including the aron, which the Levi’im are charged with in our parsha; 2) there
is a separate mitzvah of carrying the aron – “Ba’eis ha’hi hivdil Hashem es
sheivet haLevi la’seis es aron bris Hashem…” (Devarim 10:8) The Rambam rejects “lo ya’avod od” as a
mitzvah l’doros as there is no din l’doros of moving klei hamikdash, especially once the Beis haMikdash was built; however,
the Rambam in his count of mitzvos aseh lists carrying the aron by kohanim (not Levi'im) as a seperate
mitzvah. Ramban does not disagree as a matter of principle that carrying the aron is a seperate mitzvah. However, he argues that when the Levi’im perform this task, all the
requirements of avodah by levi’im mentioned in our parsha are in force.
It could be that the Ralbag deliberately does not mention
the klei hamikdash as a takeaway l’doros, but mentions carrying the aron in
keeping with this idea that only carrying the aron is a mitzvah l'doros.
The only little problem I have is that the takeaway l’doros belongs in
parsha Eikev, not here.