Rosh Hashanah Reflections| RABBI ELI GEWIRTZ
Transcription
Rosh Hashanah Reflections| RABBI ELI GEWIRTZ
H IGH HOLIDAY EDITION | T ISHREI 5769 | SEPTEMBER 2008 Rosh Hashanah Reflections | I ’m often asked how a 21st century Jew is expected to relate to Rosh Hashanah as a Day of Judgment. Buying the apples and honey and arranging to attend High Holiday services is relatively easy. But the concept of a Day of Judgment, especially for the uninitiated, is hard to grasp. Recent world events, the collapse of some of the biggest financial institutions, a mammoth hurricane that wreaked many billions of dollars in damages, a mini-war in Georgia (which may turn out to be not-so-mini), and ominous threats of a multi-regional (did someone say world?) war, may shed some light on the theme of judgment. Are these recent events the result of Divine judgment? If so, judgment for what? I’ll leave questions like those to people greater than myself to answer. But judgment isn’t about red men with pitchforks running amok. It’s about Divine decisions which could drastically and unexpectedly change a positive or negative status quo. Communal and individual judgment for the coming year takes place on Rosh Hashanah. The Haftorah that we read on the first day of Rosh Hashanah reinforces the idea that everything is dependent on the will of Hashem. The Haftorah describes the painful story of the childless Chana; how her husband’s other wife Penina tormented her over her inability to conceive, and how her prayers were finally answered on Rosh Hashanah when she was told by the prophet Eli that she would be blessed with her first child. The commentaries offer many insights into the connection between Rosh Hashanah and Chana’s story. On the most basic level it provides a message about hope and about the power of prayer. Though her situation seemed hopeless, Chana knew that the gates of genuine, heartfelt prayer are never closed, and that prayer can transform the seemingly unalterable. This is certainly an important message for a day in which we are immersed in prayer. But the Haftorah doesn’t end with Chana’s good tidings. After fulfilling her promise to dedicate her son to the Temple service, Chana offers a sobering message about life: The bow of the mighty is broken, while those who were stumbling are given strength… The prosperous are hired out for meager pay while the hungry cease to be R A B B I E L I GE W I RT Z hungry… Hashem brings death and gives life… He raises the needy from the dust… for not through strength does man prevail. (Samuel 2:4-2:9) Chana makes clear that everything is in the hands of Hashem and that, as the disclaimer goes: past performance is no guarantee of future results. Chana’s co-wife Penina learned this lesson the hard way. As Chana gave birth to five children, Penina lost five of her own. The proximity of recent world-altering events to Rosh Hashanah reminds us to reflect on the feebleness of the status quo. Everything can change without a moments notice. Just ask Penina or anyone at the 158 year-old pillar of Wall Street that just went belly-up. The only constants in this world are the open gates to heartfelt prayer. As we reflect on the precariousness of the world during the upcoming Days of Awe, we would do well to realize that all of life, health, prosperity, and even national security are being judged and as we learn from Chana, our prayers do make a difference. May we all be inscribed for life. Enjoy Parsha Partner - 5 pages of weekly inspiration —Free. DELIVERED EVERY THURSDAY TO YOUR INBOX. SIGN-UP AT www.partnersintorah.org OR EMAIL parsha@partnersintorah.org FREE HOME DELIVERY. ROSH HASHANAH | RABBI ELAZAR MEISELS 1. DO WORRY, BE HAPPY A remembrance of the sounding [of the shofar] “One should launder his clothing and take a haircut on Erev Rosh Hashanah” SHULCHAN ARUCH 581:4 Our sages teach us that Rosh Hashanah is much more than just a day of sounding a Shofar or reciting specific verses. Instead, it is primarily a Day of Judgment, upon which the entire world is judged to determine whether they will be sentenced to life or death. Why then, did the Torah conceal this primary aspect of the day, and refer to it only by its secondary aspect, the blowing of the Shofar? Launder…and…haircut – To demonstrate that we are confident in the Almighty that we will emerge with a favorable judgment. TUR SHULCHAN ARUCH 581 Nevertheless, one should not attire himself in overly elegant apparel as on other holidays, for the awesomeness of the judgment should be upon him. Instead, one should wear clean and neat white clothing. TAZ (RABBI DAVID HALEVI) However, in a locale where the custom is not to wear white clothing on Rosh Hashanah, one should merely wear respectable, but inelegant clothing. MAGEN AVRAHAM 597(RABBI AVRAHAM ABELE BEN CHAIM HALEVI GOMBINER, C. 1637-183) As serious a day as Rosh Hashanah is, and as frightened as we are over our likely shortfall of sufficient merits, we are still confident in the Almighty’s ability to help us emerge from judgment intact, reasoning that His love for us is so strong that He will advocate on our behalf. Thus, we adopt a somewhat contradictory attitude. On the one hand, we inwardly maintain an air of grim solemnity since we’re nervous and fearful that we will be found lacking before the Almighty. On the other hand, we conduct ourselves outwardly in a festive manner, demonstrating our confidence that the Almighty will find a way to ensure that our sins will be forgiven. 2. CAN YOU HEAR THE SOUND? “Speak to the Children of Israel saying; in the seventh month, on the first of the month, it shall be for you a day of rest. A remembrance of the sounding [of the Shofar,] a holy assembly.” VAYIKRA (LEVITICUS 23:24) A remembrance of the sounding [of the shofar] This remembrance is achieved by reciting ten Biblical verses which relate to Divine Remembrances [i.e. they mention G-d’s remembering human beings for good throughout history,] and Biblical verses which relate to the Shofar, to remember for your sake the binding of Isaac in whose stead a ram was brought as an offering. RASHI (RABBI SHLOMO YITZCHAKI; 1040-1105) Rabbeinu Bachya explains that the more spiritually endowed the concept, the more concealed it is from mankind, and the greater the effort needed to reveal it. Examples of this are Tefillin and Tzitzit, which are barely hinted to in the Torah, although their laws are numerous. Their elevated spiritual significance demands that they not be clearly articulated. Instead, they are merely alluded to, requiring us to elevate ourselves in order to comprehend their essence. Similarly, Rosh Hashanah, which heralds the onset of the Ten Days of Repentance (which culminates in Yom Kippur) is of such an exalted spiritual nature, that it cannot be revealed to the masses and must only be alluded to in cryptic fashion, and accessible only to those who sanctify themselves and aspire to it wholeheartedly. 3. L’CHAIM: TO LIFE “Remember us for life, O’ King who desires [that we be granted] life, and inscribe us in the Book of Life, for Your sake, O’ God of Life.” ROSH HASHANAH LITURGY What kind of life are we referring to in this prayer? Does G-d merely desire for us to live another day in order to consume exotic and tasty foods, and further indulge in earthly delights? A life devoted to maximizing hedonistic pleasures is not a life, but a mere existence. Instead, we request that G-d grant us the opportunity and wherewithal to devote ourselves fully to His service, the essence of life itself. BAALEI MUSSAR (MASTERS OF ETHICAL TEACHINGS) In his sermon offered on the first night of Selichot, Rabbi Chaim of Volozhin zt”l, explained that although much of the liturgy on Rosh Hashanah is dedicated to requesting additional life, one would be foolish to devote his precious prayers on this sacred day to asking only for additional life on earth. Instead, his intent should be to solicit the most sublime life imaginable; Eternal Life in the World to Come. This life-form far surpasses anything available to us on this earth, and it would be a pity to expend the most powerful weapon in our arsenal, the prayers of the High Holidays, on anything less. Rabbi Meisels can be reached at rabbimeisels@partnersintorah.org Apples, Honey and You | R AB B I LEI BY B U R N HAM Dear Rabbi, It seems like every year I get the same feeling. It’s a few days before Rosh Hashanah and suddenly I’m caught up in a frenzy of emotions. I want as much as possible to be ready for this awesome festival, yet I find myself struggling to remember what it is all about. I remember speeches I heard and essays I read that talked about it. I know it is the birthday of the creation of man. It is the time when we re-evaluate our relationship with G-d, and coronate him as our King. It is the Day of Judgment which will determine our coming year, and a day in which we can recreate ourselves. But the more I remember, the more confused I get. Now that I know all this, what should I do differently this year on Rosh Hashanah? How does all this relate to our prayer service in the synagogue, which takes up most of our day? Thanks Rabbi, and Shana Tova, Mark R. Dear Mark, Three years ago, while studying in Yeshiva, one of my Rabbis explained one of the Rosh Hashanah practices to me, and based on his response, I think we can begin to understand what the holiday is all about. There is a question that bothers many people about the practice we have on the first night of Rosh Hashanah. We take an apple, dip it in honey, and say a prayer asking G-d that we should have a sweet new year. The symbolism here seems almost childish, sweet apple + sweet honey = Sweet New Year!? There are also a number of other foods each with its prayer that all have “cute” word plays that connect the food with the prayer. (Some people even take lettuce, a raisin, and a celery stalk, hold them together, and then say a prayer asking G-d to “let us have a raise in salary.”!) What is it supposed to mean to us? How does it tie in to an otherwise solemn Day of Judgment? The answer mentioned in the writings of Rabbi Isaac Hutner (of blessed memory), the late Rosh Yeshiva (Dean) of Yeshivas Chaim Berlin in NYC is as follows. Rosh Hashanah translated literally means “The Head of the Year.” We know in Judaism there is a concept that every word has great depth. When we say Rosh Hashanah is the “head” of the year, it must be more than just the first day of the New Year. The head is the body part that controls the rest of the body. In it lies our brain, the processing chip for all our human functions. A neuro-surgeon when performing brain surgery is extremely careful to not slip even a millimeter, because that millimeter-although so tiny in space-since it is located in the brain can have drastic effects on the rest of the body. Rosh Hashanah has the same power. It is the “head” of the Year. It is the processing chip through which the programs for the coming year run. The smallest, most minute changes that we make in the head of the year can have the most profound affect on our entire year! This is the deeper message of the special foods we eat. During the rest of the year, such small actions would have little or no effect, yet on Rosh Hashanah they have the power to help give us a better year. (An analogy to explain this is wet concrete. While concrete is still wet you can take a little branch and carve into it whatever you want but the minute it is dry, you can’t even scrape the surface with the same branch.) The lesson we learn from these foods teaches us how powerful the day is. From here we can start to put together the task of the day. The “goal” is to try to make changes in how we view our world. It is a day to remember that on this day man was put on earth for a purpose, and that purpose must drive us in our daily living. We must realize that G-d was the One who put us here, and that we must reaffirm our allegiance to him, by accepting him upon us as our King. We must cry out like the broken cry of the Shofar with a genuine desire to see the coming year be a more elevated one than the past. We have no mitzvot to do on this day, like on other festivals. No Sukkah to dwell in, no matzah to eat, no lulav to shake: because the change has to be in our “Rosh,” in our head. If we can change our perspectives on this day to ones that are more motivated, more cognizant of all that G-d gives us continuously, more mindful to the fact that everything we do needs to be accounted for, then the rest of the year will flow forth successfully. It is the day to make meaningful marks in the wet cement of the coming year. Wishing you a sweet, and successful New Year, Rabbi Leiby Burnham Rabbi Burnham can be reached at rabbiburnham@partnersintorah.org AZ CO TUCSON Sharon Baskin PHOENIX Irwin Brodsky QUEEN CREEK Ashley Randall FOUNTAIN HILL Sam Lazarus ASPEN Itzhak Vardy AUROR A Miriam Geller BOULDER Logan Altman Cairole Woodward COLOR ADO SPRINGS Joel Schneider-Farris Rebekah Schneider Farris DENVER Shana Adler Tirtza Amsel Renee Chernin Joy Eagle Avraham Grossman Mordechai Fleisher Pola Lubarov Cheryl Mirrop Linda Pitter Marcy Schreiber Aron Schwab Marion Sills Alice Silverberg Jeremy Simblist Tzippy Sommers Avigail Steinharter ENGLEWOOD Pennie Aragon ERIE Joshua Kamien GREENWOOD VILLAGE David Aknin Dovid Gertz Moshe Heyman Mordechai Hoffman Sherry Margulies Jake Weiman DENVER Mordechai Fleisher .......... BC VICTORIA Peter Booth CA ATHERTON Laura Rheinheimer ......... BEVERLY HILLS Lisa Hirth Devorah Myers CARLSBAD Eva Lynn Diesenhaus CASTAIC Pauline Aksenfeld SACR AMENTO Rena Haberfeld BAKERSFIELD Kathleen Chambers GR ANADA HILLS Nicole Farr GR ASS VALLEY Bailey Barbour IRVINE Bat Sheva Guerin Shella Sadovnik JOLON Susan Steinfeld L A JOLL A Jackie Diamond L AGUNA HILLS Jana Stein LONG BE ACH Franci Karp LOS ANGELES Malka Breitman Phillip Oliff Janna Ridley Avraham Sachs Rivka Schneirson Ilana Schwarzberg Angela Vinokurov Pamela Witt MOR AGA Rebecca Neril NORTH RIDGE Rachel Himmelstein OAKL AND Nina Heller OAK PARK Melanie Bornstein PLE ASANT HILL Denise Mordecai RIVERSIDE Jessi Goldman SACR AMENTO Justin Lane SAN ANSELMO Katie Yanow SAN DIEGO Kirby Wohlandeר SAN FR ANCISCO Frank Falcon Don Narin SAN JOSE Ed Greenberg SANTA MONICA Zvi Hollander STANFORD Melanie Reynard STUDIO CIT Y Rob Shorr SUNNY VALE Deena Goldfeld TAR Z ANA Yosef Shallman VALLEJO Lesley Patterson VAN NUYS Baruch Preger VENICE Jim Richman Jodi Weiss WOODL AND HILLS Susan Arasteh Michella Termechi Avraham Grossman Alyssa Kamlet Ellyn Hutt Linda Pitter Tzippy Sommers Marcy Schreiber Aron Schwab ENGLEWOOD George Gumbiner PARKER Mark Margulies CT BRIDGEPORT Racheli Muller DANBURY Larry Ditkoff NEW HAVEN Elinor Klein David Levitan Shoshana Nemoy Tziporah Paley WESTIN Joseph Stein CHESHIER Gayle Daskal D.C WASHINGTON Saler Engel Axel David Bogomolny Alex Feshenko Resna Hammer Dorry Samuelד Amy Schnidman Ally Toll DE DOVER Tzipporah Brezner FL AVENTUR A Rene Friedheim BOCA R ATON Lisa Pinkis Sarah Shore COR AL SPRINGS Madi Hoesten FORT L AUDERDALE Chami Gross HOMESTE AD Dennis Ross JACKSONVILLE Sari Lozovsky Jill Metlin Samuel Rosenthal NORTH MIAMI Jessica Furth NORTH MIAMI BE ACH Kimberly Schultz MIAMI Martin Levine Adam Ogen MIAMI BE ACH Matthew Kahn Rosem Mitrani MIDDLEBURG Shaina Boer ORL ANDO Florence Siegel SAR ASOTA Amber Ikeman WESLEY CHAPEL Sean Diamond WEST PALM BE ACH Amir Gamliel WESTBORO Joel Slovin WESTFORD Gavriel Yarmish WEST ROXBURY Evan Haller MD FISHERS Norman Wain SOUTH BEND Yoel Yormark ANNAPOLIS Alexis Skriloff James BALTIMORE Leah Bitman Lev Barav Yocheved Baumer Yitzchok Bloch Ilya Burdman Charissa Cheah Joe Davis Chesky Edelson Yaakov Goldstein Leah Hauser Yaakov Horowitz Rivky Katz Yaakov Katz Yitzchok Katz Miriam Kestenbaum Alisa Mandel Lisa Mervis Menachem Miller Avery Muller Paul Myers Roberta Myerson Ephraim Ohana Gail Pariser Vicki Polin Hadassah Sanders Ron Schlossberg Felix Shraga Chaim Silverman Eliyahu Shuman Ilan Weinberger Malka Weintraub Steve Weiss Luda Yakubov Shira Yisraeli Bonnie Yoffee Bryna Zumer BETHESDA Debra Kirsh DERWOOD Aaron Silverman PIKESVILLE Moshe Segal Aryeh Willner POTOMAC Miriam Plaut REISTERSTOWN Peri Cohen ROCKVILLE Yasha Moz Cina Werner SE ABROOK Joel Rosenbaum Sara Rosenbaum SILVER SPRING Edith Brown Milty Crane Bonnie Evans David Jackson Hadassa Keleman Ronja Soroka KS ME GA ATHENS Caroline Blumenthal ATL ANTA Tov Brog GAINESVILLE Gail Mize Susan Mize L AWRENCEVILLE Denis Ayzenberg LINCOLN Bob Berlin R ABUN GAP Iris Sadove IA SIOUX CIT Y Guy Greene WAUKEE Cindy Sherr Statman ID BOISE Melissa Powers IL BLOOMINGTON Naomi Epstein SKOKIE Sharon Abelman Faige Biron Adam Kabins CHICAGO Bracha Adler Leah Chamberg Debbie Elkaim Chana Ehrman Chana Suri Fuerst Al Osle Chana Shira Rosen IN LE AWOOD Scott Fishman OVERL AND PARK David Abramov PORTL AND Robert Schrier MI BATON ROUGE Nechama Sims Amram Cohen FERNDALE Ryen Freedman SOUTHFIELD Ben Zion Belen Joel Ross MA MN LA BOSTON Taylor Jacobson BRIGHTON Seth Michaelson CAMBRIDGE Anna Kamerow Jason Schnier FR ANKLIN Rebecca Sinks MARBLEHE AD Barbara Eyges NATICK Laurie Samuels SWAMPSCOT T Stefan Boroda PLYMOUTH Amy Walter ST. PAUL Gary Portnoy MO COLUMBIA Eran Feintuch ST LOUIS Steven Low NC Arnold Litwin Alex Teich CHARLOT TE Lisa Bixen Stephen Westman DAVIDSON Mark Simchowitz MAT THEWS Bernise Starolowitz R ALEIGH Jeff Rosner Gavriel Stackhouse WRIGHTSVILLE BEACH Howard Stein ND FARGO Harold Rosenheim NJ Lisa Woodfield ATLANTIC HIGHLANDS Michael Goldberg BERGENFIELD Tzvi Bernstein Rachel Book Shimon Solnica CHERRY HILL Justin Gordon Vivien Richmond Irina Zakharin CALDWELL Clara Solomon CLIF TON Michal Fruchter Miriam Hartstein Batya Mandel E AST BRUNSWICK Michael Frost Jordana Jakubovic E AST WINSOR Sarah Weiner EDISON Meir Atkin Charles Zucker FAIRL AWN Bob Freud Martine Schenker Ari Wei Yitzchak Wei FREEHOLD Josh Bliznik GREEN POND Karen Wallman HIGHL AND PARK Sara Chazin Atara Fink Barry Kegeles Seth Mandel Cory Rubeck Miriam Widofsky HOBOKEN Steven Sperber HOWELL Samantha Friedeman L AKEWOOD Menachem Abraham Moshe Aboud Rachi Alon Menachem Berkowitz Esther Bernstein Chava Biegeleisen Hadassa Brandeis Malky Brander Meira Brodsky Chaim Coffman Nechama Cohen Naftali Cohen Miriam Erps Dovid Fishman Miriam Friedman Alex Galy Shifra Gerstel Chanie Gordon Naftali Gugenheim Rochel Hassan Basya Herschberg Eliezer Hilman Shalva Hoffman Dina Ilyadzhonova Mindy Janklowicz Sholom Kaver Aidel Korbman Yaffa Kushner Nechama Landman Chaya Levin Chani Mayer Yerachmiel Percal Yitty Posen Larry Rauer Moshe Rosenberg Nara Sadov Frieda Schreiber Esti Schwarz Malka Schwartz Sruly Shain Rochel Shanik Bracha Sosowsky Efraim Steinberg Brandon Stern Nachum Szmidt Giti Tenenbaum Nechama Wilner Rena Zakheim Elliot Zaks Avraham Zelasko Yaakov Ziet Chana Ziemba Tzvi Ziskind LEONIA Marc Oppenheimer LINDEN Stuart Finkelstein Evan Leibowitz LIVINGSTON James Friedman Rona Wall MANAL APAN Sharon Knecht Mike Zharnest MARLBORO Adam Berger Lois Korman Scott Terminiello MONT VILLE Yerachmiel Kirschenbaum NEWARK Yael Zegen NORTH BRUNSWICK Jessica Ashen PAR AMUS Rivka Schrem PARK RIDGE Sharon Miller PARLIN Scott Edelman PASSAIC Misha Beletsky Leba Bell Laurie Bennett Mindy Berman Shlomit Chambre Devorah Farrell Paula Gershonowitz Susannah Greeberg Tamara Grunberger Shoshana Isseroff Yisraela Joran Avrohom Klein Bassie Meghnagi Brenda Nikelsberg Hadassa Matana Ramati Ellen Schulman Rita Shelly David Shtrambrand Goldi Spitzer Rachel Stack Kurt Stein ROCK AWAY Harry Kanigel ROSELLE Ronnie Treitler SCOTCH PL AINS Rebeca Sass SPRINGFIELD Jason Berke Mendy Pollack TE ANECK Charles Bartel Malka Van Bemmelen Howard Birnbaum Rob Ernst Paul Malek Rivkie Pollack Jonathan Rand TENAFLY Zahava Markovic Hephzibah Wiederkehr VINEL AND Geri Schwed VOORHEES David Prutchi WALL TOWNSHIP WEST OR ANGE Erin Sternthal WHITING Adam Schweitzerhof WARREN David Schwartz NM ALBUQUERQUE Eileen Dolinski Diamond Driscoll Alan Feldman NS HALIFA X Tamar Ellis NV L AS VEGAS Andrea Dresser NY ACCORD Josh Lunior AIRMONT Ahava Finsley AMIT Y VILLE Roni Woitovich ARDSLEY Roberta Leiner ATL ANTIC BE ACH Barbara Vandoros BALDWIN Helena Shayer BAYSIDE Gayle Friedman BELLMORE Joel Savit BORO PARK Gitty Mandel BRONX Meredith Gottlieb Jay Haberman BROOKLYN Tzipporah Perel Abbassi Hindy Abrams Kailii Aghive Chana Akiva Jonathan Albala Bezalel Anflick Johanna Amar Max Anteby Bella Avshayev Esty Balsam Chani Bandman Leib Barnett Paul Basker Sonia Beyderman Yehudis Bauman Chaya Beck Basya Belsky Afsanah Benji Pearl Berkowitz Shmuel Beyda Fema Efraim Bichuch Gittel Bloch Malka Blum Jacqueline Boyd Gitty Braun Favi Cahan Josh Darabaner Yosef Danziger Ruchie Deutsch Netsie Diamond Isorys Dilone Bryna Diskind Marc Edelstein Chanie Eckstein Rochel Eilenberg Mordechai Friedlander Chaya Friedman Leah Friedler Issar Fuchs Terry Fuchs Moshe Ginsberg Sholom Ginzberg Pearl Gold Malky Goldenber Tzvi Goldberg Rachel Goldfein Dani Goldstein Moshe Goldzweig Michal Greenblatt Ruth Greenstein Esther Gut Tzvi Haas Perel Hande Chaya Isaac Sholom Ginzberg Naomi Grunfeld Yehoshua Grunfeld Sara Haddad Shmulik Hartman Tami Hess Sanhedria Alan Kaplan Chaya Leah Katz Shua Katz Suri Kaufman Rivky Kirzner Roizy Klein Shloimie Klein Tova Klein Esther Kohl Rifka Lamm Gitti Lew Esther Lichtenstein Liliya Loksh Oleg Mardukhayev Marissa Mestre Daniel Melen Aaron Mendelson Channie Miller Avi Most Ruth Neuberger Neal Nosowitz Chesky Ordentlich Chani Paneth Esty Pesach Shlomo Pessin Avrumi Pollak Malky Porgesz Yehudis Pressman Frieda Reiz Rochel Rosenberg Zalman Rosenthal Menachem Rottenberg Ruchy Salomon Moshe Schiff Miriam Schlafrig Kathleen Schultz Frady Schwartz Cecile Seidenfeld Jacob Schiff Malky Schechter Mindy Schoenblu Sharon Shaked Leah Shekhtman Alan Shuchatowitz Baruch Schwebel Karen Sheinberg Joanna Slevin Shmuel Singer Chaim Spector Esty Spitzer Meira Srebro Sora Steiger Sy Stern Heshi Stern Gail Strauss Shifra Stone Esti Talansky Yita Tauber Simie Terebelo Devorah Tessler Regine Tessone Suri Tyberg Draizy Wald Elisha Weinberg Zalman Weissman Aryeh Weiss Faigy Weiss Sura Weiss Yosef Widroff Meir Wikler Nina Wolf Tzvi Wolf Zelda Wrotzlovsky Joseph Zahavi Robin Zakariaei BUFFALO Chana Burnett CEDARHURST Nicole Brachman CORONA Ahuva Murik E AST NORWICH Sherry Lanin FALLSBERG Rachel Berzansky Chana Zisel Epstein FAR ROCK AWAY Tovah Ackerman Tobie Braun Sarah Bronstein Zev Carrey Rena Chill Yosef Colish Eileen Fine Michael Jacobsen Gita Kohn Leah Kurland Baruch Lovett Faigie Singer Dov Teichman Esther Teitelbaum Chana Stone Yocheved Weber FLUSHING Roberta Ackerman Robert Ayzin Sura Censor Golda Fried Elazar Grossman Abraham Katz Odelia Madmoni Shmuel Moskovits Carol Rappaport Ariella Rosenthal Daniel Steinberg Chevi Weiss FOREST HILLS Anita Solomon Ida Langsam GLEN COVE Will Gotkin GRE AT NECK Sharon Fishman Lauren Karmely Daniel Piroozian Noach Potter Pegah Rahmani GREENWOOD L AKE Heather Heron HARTSDALE Ellen Bittner Samantha Hyman KEW GARDENS HILLS Peryl Grossman Nancy Hilsnerath Ruchie Travis Tova Wel L AWRENCE Faigie Horowitz Effie Mayerfeld Aryeh Smith LEVIT TOWN Mandi Gellis Fran Moshkovski LONG BE ACH Nancy Soffer Michael Wagner MASSAPEQUA Linda James MERRICK Jamie Shapiro MIDDLE VILL AGE Mark Epelbaum MONSEY Baruch Abramoff Paysach Ackerman Bassy Altman Shlomo Cooper Moshe Deutsch Malka Drucker avid Erblich Sasha Ettlinger Daniel Feig Goldie Feig Akiva Feinsod Tzirel Fine Heshy Friedman Yonah Ginsburg Mark Goldberg Moshe Goldberg Moshe Grossman Nosson Hirsch Rafael Kalikstein Barry Kupfer Rivka Mashitz Malka Miller Dovid Muehlgay Chaya Nulman Chaya Nulman Liba Paige Elimelech Piasek Tzirel Fine Mark Goldberg Rivka Mashitz Michel Sanders Zevi Simonovits Binyomin Teplitz Sara Weiner Hershel Weizberg NANUET Teri Goldstein NEW PALTZ Lilly Vargyas NEW SQUARE Surie Gruber NEW YORK Beatriz Abraham Zev Alexander Lara DeLon Josh Dredze Brett Firfer Judy Schlesinger-Frankg Nirit French Sarah Gogel Allison Goldberg Eric Goodman Gail Goodman Ross Goralnick Mark Greenfield Tova Kalkstein Adam Kezsbom Bonnie Kozek Ellen Kaplan Tatiana Light Brad Malat Dikla Raguan Batya Reichman Matthew Schaikewitz Yisrael Strauss Miranda Gomez Talisman Leslie Weinstein NISK AYUNA Ephy Carmel N. WOODMERE Valentina Bangiyeva OSSINING Susan Eisenstein PL AT TSBURGH Andrew Goldstein POUGHKEEPSIE Harold Warren QUEENS Yossi Zeevy REGO PARK Judith Sachs RICHMOND HIL Mark Bondi RIVERDALE Georganne Garfinkel ROCHESTER Miri Pardo ROCKVILLE CENTER Vera West SOUTH FALLSBURGH Esther Fishman SPRING VALLEY Ruvain Chait Ben Zion Goldberg Chava Leah Herbst Chana Perl Neiman Tzvi Teitelbaum Chaim Weisman ST. JAMES Beth Forhman STATEN ISL AND Steven Golikov Heidi Schwartz Rochel Lichtschein Ahuva Tarnoff Mordechai Vigdorchik Raphael Wakefield SUFFERN Penina Weber SYOSSET Ruth Kravit Abe Stecker UPPER JAY Robert Segall WASHINGTON PORT Jessica Rodriguez WATERTOWN Ariella Khandadash WEST HEMPSTE AD Hillel Samlan Avraham Solomo WHITE PL AINS Jonah Bernstein Steven Cove WOODMERE Shlomo Haft Moshe Jacobowitz Lester Kirshenbaum Annette Labovitz Gail Sturm Ruchie Travis Samantha Tuchfeld YORKTOWN HEIGHTS Sara Schwedelson OH COLUMBUS Rachel Cassell CLEVEL AND HTS Yosef Koval Shloimy Modes Zahava Richman ON THORNHIL Asher Breatross Chani Rosengarten TORONTO Eli Adler Shea Czermak Leo Davids Ben Feintuch Yitzchak Goldstein Fievi Heller Moshe Klugman David Markovic Aryeh Pamensky Chumee Steinmetz Devorah Vale Dovid Zauderer PA SCR ANTON Mayer Porter Chana Penina Weg MERION Stacey Goldman IS R AMAT BET SHEMESH Rivka Bickel JERUSALEM, Sanhedria Tova Perl Old City Renee Chernin Neve Yaakov Shoshana Horwitz Michel Levitansky Miri Spiro Ilana Hamer Chaya Meyer Yehudis Lieder......NY Erica Elkin..............NYY Yehoshua Jacobson Yiska Greenberg Ms. Spitzer Yosef Waintman Zale Newman Goldstein Yosef Heimfeld Nechama Nussbaum Moishe Zionce Rena Rotenberg Rabbi Pliner Janet Stern Debbie Lebovic Ari Messinger Chaya Glezerman Yonina Juni Zena Katz Esther Weinstock Dr. Ivan Mezei Elisheva Vale Noam Jakubovic Jules Grunwald Aron Porges Yaeli Kotzen Mazal Tov to all the new partners who made a difference this year in the life of another Jew! מזל טוב YOM KIPPUR | RABBI ELAZAR MEISELS 1. TOLL-FREE NUMBER “O’ G-d, You taught us to recite the Thirteen Attributes of Mercy, so remember for us today the covenant of these thirteen, as You made known to the humble one [Moses] in ancient times…” YOM KIPPUR LITURGY You taught us to recite “Rabbi Yochanan said,‘Were it not for a verse that says as much, it would be forbidden to say this. This teaches that Almighty appeared to Moses [i.e. in a prophetic vision – Ritva] in the guise of a prayer-leader wrapped in a Talit and taught him the Thirteen Attributes. He said,‘Whenever Israel sins, they should recite this in its proper format and I will forgive them.’” TRACTATE ROSH HASHANAH 17B It would forbidden to say this It would be forbidden to say that the Almighty provided a visual demonstration of how to recite the Thirteen Attributes. MAHARSHA (RABBI SHMUEL ELIEZER EIDELS (1555-1631) So remember for us today “Rabbi Yehudah taught,‘There was a covenant forged regarding the Thirteen Attributes that they are never returned unrequited.’” TRACTATE ROSH HASHANAH 17B Why, indeed, was it necessary for the Almighty to provide a visual demonstration of how to recite the Thirteen Attributes? Why couldn’t a simple oral lesson suffice to convey this point? Ben Yehoyada explains that this promise of the efficacy of the Thirteen Attributes is counterintuitive, entirely out of the ordinary, and utterly dependent upon G-d’s inimitable attribute of Kindness. As such, it is constantly subject to repeal, should Satan mount an effective counter-attack. Only by bringing it into the world of “actuality” through an “actual” prophetic vision, could it be guaranteed against future condemnation. By demonstrating it to Moses, the Almighty immunized us against the diatribes of the Heavenly Prosecutor. 2. NO FREE SHIPPING “And the Word of Hashem came to Jonah, son of Amittai, saying…” HAFTORAH, YOM KIPPUR MINCHAH Why is the Book of Jonah read on Yom Kippur? 1. The repentance of Ninveh’s wicked population serves a reminder for us to repent our own sins. – SHELAH HAKADOSH (RABBI YESHAYA HURWITZ, 1565-1630) 2. The message of Jonah’s prophecy applies to each and every one of us, for it is a journey that we all must take. We are born with a subconscious realization of the fact that we have a mission. We seek escape, because our mission is often one that we are afraid to attempt. Yet, if we embrace G-d’s compassion, we will find the strength to embark upon it and complete it successfully. – VILNA GAON (RABBI ELIJAH BEN SHLOMO ZALMAN, 1720–1797) 3. When Jonah wondered why G-d had destroyed the Kikayon tree, God replied, “You took pity on a Kikayon for which you did not labor ... Shall I not take pity on Nineveh, that great city in which there are more than 120,000 people who do not know their right hand from their left, and many beasts as well?” With these words, G-d impressed upon Jonah the idea that the flaws of the residents of Nineveh did not render them unworthy of life. Each person has a purpose in life and so long as he is willing to pursue it, he will be given multiple chances to attain his goal. – Sefer Likkutim 4. The story of Jonah teaches that the harshest Heavenly decree can be reversed with sincere repentance. – LEVUSH MORDECHAI (RABBI MORDECHAI JAFFE, C. 1535-1612) If Jonah was holy and righteous enough to be chosen to deliver G-d’s warning to Nineveh, what could possibly have possessed him to believe that he could escape his responsibility by fleeing to Tarshish? There is no question that Jonah knew that G-d would find a way to deliver the message, but his overwhelming love for the Jewish people convinced him to flee, in the hopes that G-d would find some other channel through which to deliver the message. Instead, through a series of miraculous events, G-d turned Jonah back and insisted that He carry out his mission. His intentions may have been noble, but noble intentions are no match for G-d’s will, which we are bidden to execute even if our intellect perceives things differently. 3. FIVE TO STRIVE “It is a positive commandment on Yom HaKippurim to refrain from partaking in food and drink… we have also learned… that it is forbidden to wash oneself on this day, anoint oneself, wear [leather] shoes, or engage in conjugal relations…” RAMBAM HILCHOT TESHUVAH 5:1,2 These five afflictions correspond to the Five Books of the Torah, and remind us to accept them wholeheartedly without the natural barrier imposed by pleasure seeking. – TITEIN TORAH The five afflictions correspond to the five senses through which a person is attracted to temptation, and which distract him from spiritual pursuits. – LIKKUTEI TORAH It is imperative to remember that the point of these five afflictions is not to make ourselves uncomfortable merely for the sake of experiencing discomfort. Instead, the goal is to enable us to rise above our daily habits which calcify us, and prevent us from seriously pursuing spiritual growth. Therefore, when experiencing the discomfort of Yom Kippur, a person must take the opportunity to seriously consider what changes he or she needs to make in order to become a better person, and strategize on how to implement these changes in a positive and uplifting manner. Rabbi Meisels can be reached at rabbimeisels@partnersintorah.org HEIGHT MAKES MIGHT | RABBI ELAZAR MEISELS Dear Rabbi, I am studying the laws of the Four Species and last night my partner taught me the proper blessing to recite when shaking them. I was struck by the fact that in the benediction we refer to the “taking of the Lulav” and omit all mention of the other three species. Why was the Lulav selected as the representative of the four? Why not the Etrog, or one of the other species? Thank you, Isidore Isidore, Your question is so on target that the sages of the Talmud actually addressed it, and I’ll be glad to share their answer with you. The discussion takes place in Tractate Sukkah 37b, and reads as follows: “Rabbah says: The Lulav must be held in the right hand, and the Etrog in the left hand. Why? Because with the Lulav, three mitzvot [Lulav, Hadas, Aravah] are performed, and with the Etrog only one. Said R. Yirmiah to R’ Zrika: Why do we pronounce the benediction over the Lulav only? Because it is higher than the other species. But why not raise the Etrog [higher,] and pronounce the benediction over it? He answered: Because by nature it grows higher than the other species [i.e. the date palm is a taller tree than that of the other species]” The commentators explain that the Talmud suggested only the Etrog as a possible alternative because in the verse in the Torah which informs us of the obligation to take the Four Species [“On the first day, you must take for yourself a fruit of the citron tree, an unopened palm frond, myrtle branches, and willows that grow near the brook…” Leviticus 23:40,] the Etrog is mentioned first and then followed by the Lulav. Thus, it was thought that of the four, the most appropriate representative would be the Etrog, if not for the fact that the Lulav tree grows taller than the Etrog tree and is therefore a more ideal choice. Although the Talmud offers little scriptural support for its contention that the Lulav best represents the other three species, Igra D’Pirka offers a beautiful allusion to this idea from a verse in Shir HaShirim [Song of Songs 7:9,] “Amarti Aaleh B’tamar Ochazah B’sansinav…” – “I said: ‘I will climb up into the palm-tree, I will take hold of the branches thereof…” The word “Aaleh” is spelled Aleph, Ayin, Lamed, Hey, the first letters of the words, Etrog, Aravah, Lulav, and Hadas [the Four Species.] Thus, the word Aaleh in the verse is representative of all Four Species and the verse can be read. “Imrosi – my words regarding, Aaleh – the Four Species, B’Tamar – will be expressed through the date palm [i.e. Lulav.] Interestingly, Rambam [Yad HaChazakah Hilchot Lulav, 7:6] offers a different rationale than that found in the Talmud for the choice of Lulav over the others. He explains that it is because two of the other species are bound to the Lulav and even the Etrog, which is not bound to it, is still held adjacent to it. Therefore, by lifting the Lulav, one fulfills the other mitzvot as well and this renders the Lulav as an ideal choice through which to recite the blessing on all four. [Aruch L’Ner [Tractate Sukkah 37b] who is troubled by Rambam’s decision to offer a rationale other than the Talmud’s, explains that Rambam felt that the reason offered earlier by the Talmud for holding the Lulav specifically in the right hand, is sufficient to explain why we mention Lulav in the blessing over the others as well. The point that the Talmud made about the Lulav’s height, was only necessary if we don’t hold that it is crucial to hold the Lulav in the right hand. Since we rule like Rabbah that the Lulav must be taken in the right hand, this reason suffices to explain why we mention the Lulav in the blessing as well.] These two explanations address your question purely from a halachic standpoint. The commentaries offer various homiletic explanations for this as well. I’ll share with you two. The Midrash [VaYikra 30:14] tells us that each of the Four Species represents one part of the human body. The Etrog looks like and corresponds to the human heart, the Aravot, long and thin, to the mouth. The Hadassim with their oblong shape, evoke comparisons to the eyes, and the Lulav to the spine with its vertebrae. Influential as the first three limbs may be, they do not compare to the spine which controls the entire lower portion of the human body and through which all mitzvah activity is performed. This fact alone renders it optimal for representing the other three in the benediction. Meiri offers another explanation based on a wellknown Midrash that explains that trees generate primarily two things: fruit and fragrance. Fruit represents Torah scholarship, and fragrance represents mitzvot. Each of the Four Species offers a different combination of these two and therefore symbolizes a different kind of Jew. The Etrog, which has a fragrant odor and is an edible fruit, is compared to a Torah scholar who also performs many mitzvot. The Lulav gives off zero fragrance, but produces dates, and is compared to a Torah scholar with great Torah knowledge but few mitzvot. The Hadas gives off a beautiful fragrance but produces inedible fruit, and the Aravah offers neither fragrance nor fruit and symbolizes the Jew who possesses neither Torah, nor mitzvot. Understood thusly, the Etrog represents the ideal Jew. Since the Etrog represents the ideal Jew, it stands apart from the others, which explains why it is not bound together with the others, only held adjacent. It can stand before the Almighty on its own merits entirely. The other three species are each individually flawed and thus, they must present their case as a unit, and hope that one compensates for the other who is lacking. The reality is that more so than the Etrog which symbolizes perfection, these three represent the common Jew who is an imperfect specimen and therefore one of them was chosen to represent the greater body of Jewry through the taking of the Four Species. Of the three, the Lulav, which symbolizes Torah with a minimum of mitzvot, is the most prominent. This is why the Lulav is chosen to represent the others in the benediction. It represents an imperfect Jew, but one who strives to be the best he possibly can be. Wishing you and your entire family a truly joyous holiday, Rabbi Elazar Meisels DOVI D BASL AW (Vayikra 23:41) וחגתם אתו חג לה‘ שבעת ימים בשנה “You shall celebrate it as a festival for Hashem. A seven day period in the year.” O ne of the many qualities inherent in the commandments pertaining to the holiday of Sukkot is the opportunity it provides for the observer to create channels of Kedushah (holiness) that one can draw from and touch every aspect of our life. In his exquisite collection of essays on the holidays of the year entitled Netivot Shalom, Rabbi Shalom Noach Brezofsky (otherwise known as the Slonimer Rebbe) sites the unique wording of a verse in the Torah describing the YomTov of Sukkot. The verse reads (Vayikra 23:41) וחגתם אתו חג לה‘ שבעת ימים בשנה “You shall celebrate it as a festival for Hashem. A seven day period in the year.” R abbi Brezovsky notes that the Torah does not include the words “in the year” with regard to any other holiday and offers an important insight as to why this is so. Every year, the spiritual cleansing process that Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur provide, enables the Jew to begin the year with a clean slate. With that accomplished, the days of Sukkot that soon follow and the commandments that are fulfilled throughout its duration allows each individual the opportunity to build a solid, unblemished spiritual foundation of Divine service for the New Year. Rabbi Brezovsky notes that a Jew can serve his Creator through one of three dimensions: space, time and body. A person can serve HaShem by designating a space for the purpose of serving Him or by setting aside time spending it in an elevated manner or by using his body to fulfill a mitzvah. On Sukkot, the holiday which occurs at the beginning of the calendar year, a Jew is called upon to employ all three dimensions in the service of HaShem. He is instructed to take a designated period of time and spend it intimately with HaShem. He is also instructed to designate a space within which he should build a sukkah the holiness of which is so powerful that the neshamot (souls) of the founding leaders of the Jewish people come as guests and visit. He is also instructed to bring together (and shake) the “four Species”, where each species is symbolic of a vital organ of the human body used in Divine service (the lulav corresponds to the spine, the etrog to the heart, the myrtle to the eyes, and the willow to the lips). Bringing each of these together demonstrates our willingness to serve Hashem with our entire body. As we conclude Sukkot which, like no other holiday, involves our service to Hashem with time, space, and body, we are not only setting the stage for the upcoming year, but infusing our time, space, and body in the service of Hashem every day “in the year”. However, from the fact that the Rabbis nevertheless made this decree, we see that they understood that there is more to mitzvos than just looking after oneself to do them properly. As much as we think Hashem will be happy if we do what we are supposed to, we forget that He doesn’t look at us as individuals but as part of the collective Jewish nation. If some of His children do His will with the greatest precision while a much larger group may not, due to lack of knowledge, the overall picture from His perspective is grim. The Sages appreciated that as much as Hashem would enjoy the taking of the four species by those who know how to do so, the pain caused by those who may accidentally transgress is so great that it outweighs the pleasure He would receive. Upon understanding this, the questioner will be left with a new appreciation of the sense of responsibility which we are required to feel toward our Jewish brethren. Hopefully, this new recognition will inspire him to a newfound commitment to reach out, educate, and draw near those uneducated and less fortunate Jews in a manner which taking the four species could never have accomplished! Dovid Baslaw can be reached at parsha@partnersintorah.org Partnership in Wedding Planning L ike thousands of college students who visited Israel on a Birthright trip, Jeff signed up for a Partner in Torah before returning to America. And like many of those who had come before him, Jeff reclaimed his Jewish birthright in the fullest sense of the word as a fully-informed member of the Jewish community. Certainly, no one anticipated how the ripples would spread from Jeff’s interest, and how things would all fall into place around him. Jeff got more and more involved in Judaism and in due time he was set to leave for Israel to study at Machon Shlomo, in Jerusalem. In the months preceding his trip, he spent many a Shabbat with members of the observant community nearby in his hometown of Jacksonville, Florida. He started talking with his mother about all the things he was studying and tried to encourage her to get on board to incorporate more Jewish practice in their home. They’d been a team, Jeff and Marilyn, since the divorce back when Jeff was a toddler. Jeff was Marilyn’s only child, and she was committed to making him happy. So if Jeff was interested in doing more, Marilyn was open to talking about it – but she had no clue how to go about it. | DENA YELLIN started with a basic introduction-to-Judaism type of book. But it quickly became obvious that, as a mother of a newly observant son, Marilyn had specific things she needed help with, fast. “During the first session, I saw that the book just didn’t seem to be working for Marilyn. I decided to backtrack a bit, make it more personal, and told Marilyn why I decided to join Partners in Torah. I told her about someone I knew who’d joined and made a really nice relationship with their partner, and how inspired I was by this lovely partnership. Then I asked Marilyn why she’d joined, and she described her son’s transformation and wanted guidance on how to run a traditional Shabbat. They studied the meaning of Shabbat and the purpose behind many of the do’s and don’ts. Marilyn eventually joined a local class to learn more about the laws of Kasrhut, and Yehudis served as her personal tutor for questions about all that she was learning. Today, two years later, Marilyn is pretty sure that she never would have been able to stick with it if not for Yehudis’s patience and her exceptionally warm, outgoing personality. ...a moving testimony to the family-like bond they’d developed and Marilyn’s tremendous growth, products of their telephone partnership. Growing up in Jacksonville, North Carolina, Marilyn’s father traveled a lot. But she knew he had been raised in a religious home, and when he was around, she’d see his tefillin. She also knew that walking to shul on Shabbat was something that meant a lot to him. As an adult, she had tried to get Jeff access to Jewish education by enrolling him in the Solomon Schecter School, and by bringing him to a local synagogue where many people drove to Shabbat services. That was as much observance as Marilyn could manage. At some point, Jeff handed Marilyn the phone number of Partners in Torah and suggested that she call up and get a partner herself. “I figured I knew so little that I probably couldn’t even be helped,” remembers Marilyn, “so I didn’t think it would last more than a month. I remember telling them that I would really need a very open partner, who wouldn’t be fazed by questions coming from so far out. I was basically going along with the idea just for Jeff’s sake, but I didn’t think anything would come of it.” Yehudis, Marilyn’s Torah partner, recalls getting started. “Partners in Torah told me that Marilyn wanted basic Jewish information, that she was a real beginner whose son had become observant. After speaking with Marilyn, they recommended that we get “As we went along, Yehudis just did not allow it to be overwhelming – which was a pretty big accomplishment, considering how little I knew and how sure I was that this whole thing wouldn’t amount to much. We became friends, and I could see that she really cared.” Before they knew it, September came, and Jeff’s departure to Israel was upon them. Yehudis knew it was going to be a tough send off for Marilyn and her heart went out to this very devoted mother. “Come to me for Rosh Hashana,” Yehudis said, “You’ve got to join me. You’ll hear the shofar in shul, you’ll be with my family, and we’ll finally get to meet!” So Marilyn came. She flew in and Yehudis stood at the airport with a sign bearing Marilyn’s name. “It was just like in a novel,” says Yehudis. ”I had no idea what she looked like. I had sent her a picture but it didn’t arrive before her trip, and I didn’t have one of her. So neither of us knew exactly who we were looking for!” “Spending Rosh Hashana with Yehudis’s family was amazing,” Marilyn remembers. “I had never experienced the beauty of Shabbat. And there seemed to be people coming in and out of her house, all day long, every day that I was there. I’d never seen anything like it! I was afraid of doing the wrong thing, but with the Continued: Partnership in Wedding Planning warm reception I got from the entire family, the ice was melted. Yehudis showed me how to make challah and I did it right along with her.” With time, Marilyn became a frequent traveler, going further afield to spend part of Pesach in Israel with Jeff, and the rest of the holiday with Yehudis, then back with Yehudis and company again for yet another Rosh Hashana. Jeff came to Yehudis’s house too during the summer when he was back in America. “During our discussions over the phone, Yehudis always let me know when Rosh Chodesh was coming and help me get ready for whatever holiday was coming up,” Marilyn says with emotion. “She gave me so much day-to-day help and became a true friend.” Every now and then, both Yehudis and Marilyn would get calls from Hava, a Partners in Torah staffer who was keeping tabs on the partnership. Hava would call to check in and see how the learning was going, and offered to make connections for Marilyn with resources in her area. Sometimes Marilyn had kashrut questions, and when Yehudis couldn’t reach her Rabbi, Hava would put Marilyn in touch with a qualified Rabbi who could help her out. Well into Jeff’s second year at Machon Shlomo, he got engaged. Yehudis went into high gear and made it her business to prepare Marilyn for all the new things she was facing, from the six-week engagement to the Orthodox wedding in Israel. Technical details, esoteric points of philosophy surrounding a Jewish wedding, travel plans and the understandable angst of a mother whose son was about to embark on yet another stage of life so far away… All this buzzed through the telephone wires as the date approached. During this time, Yehudis realized that she couldn’t let Marilyn face this challenge alone. “I wanted the experience not only to be okay for Marilyn, but also to be meaningful – the wedding of her only child, after all! – and I knew I’d just have to be there at her side.” At first, it was going to be a surprise. But when the frequency of their conversations changed from once a week to every day and even several times a day, Yehudis felt like she was going to bust with her secret. Finally she gave up the charade and told Marilyn she was going to be there. Soon, they were coordinating travel plans to meet at a central airport and fly into Israel together. The wedding was unforgettable. Marilyn took everything in with awe and excitement, finding the many facets of the traditional wedding both curious and heart-warming. She felt fortunate to have Yehudis at her side throughout the experience. “Yehudis was great. She sent me books; she sent me a pamphlet she had used for her own wedding – it was so helpful. And the wedding….I’d never seen so much happiness. It was so different from what I’d seen at every wedding I ever attended, including my own – those were more stress than anything else. Here, everyone seemed to be genuinely as happy for Jeff and his bride as the couple was themselves!” Marilyn’s family wasn’t able to attend the wedding because they couldn’t get passports made quickly enough. Yehudis was all the family Marilyn and Jeff had there with them. Side by side, Marilyn and Yehudis sat next to the bride at the reception. They watched the men dancing with the groom and Marilyn knew this experience was above and beyond anything she’d ever seen. During the wedding meal¸ a gentle tap on the shoulder brought Marilyn face to face with yet another stranger who’d come to share in her son’s simchah. Hava, the Partners in Torah staffer, who actually lives in Jerusalem, had come to introduce herself and wish Marilyn Mazel Tov. It was tremendously meaningful for both Marilyn and Yehudis to share this momentous event. It was a moving testimony to the family-like bond they’d developed and Marilyn’s tremendous growth, products of their telephone partnership. The two women continue to share the joy of their learning.. As they’ve discovered, living in different states doesn’t mean living separate lives or lifestyles; there is a gap to be bridged, and it can all start with a phone call. THANKS FOR THE LIGHT! | RABBI REUVEN DRUCKER Dear Rabbi: I heard from my partner about the great celebrations that are held on Simchat Torah in synagogues throughout the world, and am looking forward to attending one this year. My question for you is: historically, what took place on Simchat Torah that made it such a great day for celebration? Happy New Year, Ed P Dear Ed: I have some shocking news for you! Although most celebrations that take place on the Jewish calendar are associated with historical events—Passover (the exodus from Egypt), Shavuot (the giving of the Torah), Sukkot (the protection of the Jewish people when they traveled through the Wilderness), Chanukah (the salvation from the hands of the Assyrian-Greeks) and Purim (the salvation from the hands of the Persians)—the joy we experience on the day of Simchat Torah does not have any historical underpinnings. Certainly some explanation is in order. Before the explanation, however, let me engage you in a parable. Imagine you were in Houston at night after Hurricane Ike hit. The city is without electricity and you need to get to the bus station in order to evacuate. The storm’s high winds and voluminous rain left devastation in its wake and debris all over the streets. Imagine that a friend of yours gave you a flashlight before you set out to the bus station. While others fumbled their way down the sidewalks, bumping into downed poles and stumbling on bricks and wood planks, you were able to circumvent trouble during your slow and deliberate walk. Upon arriving at the station, you saw others who suffered from bruises and lacerations from their excursion through town, and you felt an even greater appreciation for your friend’s thoughtfulness. As your bus pulled out of the station, imagine that your friend showed up to say goodbye. Undoubtedly, your heart would pound with love and joy for the incredible gift of illumination that he gave you—a gift that truly spared you so much grief and provided you with so much pleasantness. The joy of Simchat Torah, although not rooted in a past event in Jewish history, is really the joy of the traveler through life who uses the illumination of the Torah to guide him or her around the pitfalls and “landmines” of life. By studying the wisdom of the Torah and implementing its tenets, we are able to transcend the trendy wisdom of one decade, which oftentimes seems primitive and unenlightened in the next. In America circa 1960, there were many places where Afro-Americans were required to travel in the back of a bus. Some 40 years later, an Afro-American has been awarded the right to run for President. What were they thinking back then, one might ask? How come some of G-d’s creations were so discriminated against because of the color of their skin, which was not of their choosing? Only with the absolute Truth of our Torah are we able to rise above the current notions of the host culture within which we live. Its source is rooted in G-d’s perspective of His creation and He has shared this illumination with us, so we do not stumble and fall on our path through life. In our daily prayers, we say, “[G-d] has separated us from those who go astray and has given us a Torah of Truth.” The alternative—a life based on what human beings believe to be correct—often leads to making choices that conform with the current mores of society, but do not stand up to the test of time. Each year on Simchat Torah, a Jew is overcome with G-d’s gift of illumination. However, the question remains: why do we reserve our expression of joy specifically on this day of the year, as opposed to any other day of the year? Simchat Torah is celebrated on the holiday of Shemini Atzeret, which is the last day of the Sukkot holiday. Thousands of years ago, when the Holy Temple in Jerusalem was in operation, the Jews would offer 70 sacrifices on behalf of all mankind, (which according to our Tradition is divided into 70 nations). Essentially, after achieving Divine forgiveness for their own transgressions during the Rosh Hashanah/ Yom Kippur period immediately preceding Sukkot, the Jewish nation involved itself in gaining pardon for all the nations of the world with these sacrifices. The last day of the holiday (Shemini Atzeret), is a “farewell day” between G-d and His people Israel. “Your departure [at the end of this festival period] is difficult for Me to bear. Stay one more day [and let us celebrate intimately, without busying yourself with efforts on behalf of others],” our Sages characterize this final day of the holiday season. This is the farewell at the bus station, so to speak, and this moment of intimacy allows us to experience a private moment of appreciation and joy—both the joy for the illumination we have garnered to date and the anticipation of the illumination we hope to gain in the future. Ed, I hope you enjoy your Simchat Torah this year and for many years to come. Your friend, Rabbi Reuven Druckeer For Discussion Around the Yom Tov Table | Hashanah is the day t) Ason Rosh which we are judged for our actions, why do we not confess or repent for our sins in an effort to avoid being judged for them? (Leket Reshimos of Rabbi Nosson Wachtfogel) is the holiday referred to c) Why as Rosh Hashanah (literally, head of the year) instead of a seemingly more appropriate name such as Yom HaDin, the day of judgment, or the name by which it is referred in the Torah, Yom Teruah (the day of blowing the shofar) (Numbers 29:1)? Hashanah is legally cond) Rosh sidered a festive day, on which a person dresses in his finest and eats enjoyable meals. The verse commands us (Nechemia 8:10) to rejoice on this Holy day and not be sad. How can we be expected to be happy at a time when we know that we are on trial and our very lives are at stake? (Darash Moshe by Rabbi Moshe Feinstein) the knife which Abraham was willing to use to sacrifice his beloved son to Hashem? a person is forced to spend v) IfSukkot either in a community which has a sukkah but doesn’t have the four species or in a place which has the 4 species but no sukkah, which one should he choose? Why? nally planned to create man and woman as separate beings, but ultimately chose to make them as one (Genesis 5:2), only to then split the person into two and then command him (Genesis 2:24) to cling to his wife and to become one flesh. What is the significance of this apparent change of plans and recurring retractions? (Aderes Eliyahu 2:18 by the Vilna Gaon) reciting the Grace after Rashi writes (Genesis 3:1) that u) When Meals during Sukkot, we pray, h) the serpent was inspired to “May the Merciful One (Hashem) return to us the falling Sukkah of King David (i.e. the Holy Temple).” Why do we associate the Temple with David and not with his son Solomon, who actually built it? the blessing recited just before z)InShema during the evening prayers on Shabbat and festivals, we ask Hashem to spread His sukkah of peace ( )סוכת שלוםover us. What is the connection between a sukkah and peace? of the reasons given for Why are we accustomed s) One the blowing of the shofar on j) to finish the annual cycle of Rosh Hashanah is to remember the merit of the binding of Isaac, and it is for this reason that we are accustomed to use the horn of a ram, just as Abraham offered (Genesis 22:13) a ram on the altar he had built for Isaac. Instead of invoking the memory of the ram offered instead of Isaac, wouldn’t it be more meritorious to remember OZER ALPORT reading the Torah on Simchat Torah instead of on Rosh Hashanah, which would seem to be more appropriate as it represents the beginning of the new year? (Bikurei Yaakov 669:1 by Rabbi Yaakov Ettlinger) he Talmud (Berachot 61a) y) explains that Hashem origiT trick Adam and Eve after he saw her in the Garden of Eden and desired her. If his goal was to have Eve for himself, why did he pressure her to take from the forbidden fruit, which would bring about her death and defeat his purpose? (Taima D’Kra by Rabbi Chaim Kanievsky) serpent succeeded in th)The getting Eve to eat from the fruit of the tree of knowledge by convincing her that doing so wouldn’t cause her death (Genesis 3:4-6). However, immediately after eating the fruit, she gave some to Adam to eat with her. Rashi explains that she did so out of a fear that after her death, Adam would remain alive and would find another mate. How is it possible that she ate the fruit out of a conviction that doing so wouldn’t be fatal, only to immediately fear the aftermath of her impending death? (Taima D’Kra by Rabbi Chaim Kanievsk y) Hey, I Never Knew That! Amazing Insights About the High Holidays Q There is a three-year cycle which governs the tithes that a person is obligated to take from his crops. In the year following the conclusion of a three-year cycle, one has until the day before Passover to deliver all of his tithes to their respective destinations. On the last day of Passover, he recites a passage (26:13-15) in which he declares that he has properly observed the laws governing the separation and distribution of the tithes. The Mishnah (Sotah 32a) refers to this section as the “confession” of the tithes. In what way is it considered a confession when it makes no reference to sin, but rather represents a declaration that one has acted. A Rabbi Levi Yitzchok of Berditchev offers an innovative explanation of one of the lines from the Mussaf (additional) prayers for Rosh Hashanah. He begins by noting an interesting difference between the proper attitude toward mitzvot and sins. With regard to a person’s sins, it is preferable to remember them constantly, so as to fully repent for them and to be careful not to repeat them. Regarding mitzvot, however, it is advisable not to remember and dwell on one’s successes, as this may cause a person to become haughty or complacent, but rather to leave them in the past and always focus on future growth and accomplishments. At the end of the Remembrances section of the Rosh Hashanah Mussaf prayers, we say, “You (Hashem) remember all that which is forgotten.” In other words, Hashem remembers whatever we forget and “forgets” whatever we remember. If a person acts properly, remembering his sins and forgetting his mitzvot, then Hashem will overlook his misdeeds and focus on recalling his accomplishments. If, however, the person forgets his sins and arrogantly dwells on his mitzvot, then Hashem will meticulously remember each sin while overlooking all of his good deeds! Based on this explanation, the Satmar Rebbe Rabbi Yoel Teitelbaum suggests that in reciting the declaration concerning the distribution of tithes, the person recounts in detail how he acted properly and adhered to all of the relevant laws. In doing so, he is remembering and dwelling upon the mitzvot which he performed over the previous three years, something which Hashem in general prefers that we not do. In this sense, the proclamation that he has behaved properly over the previous three years is none other than a confession! Although we traditionally assume that a confession is associated with a declaration of one’s sins, in this case we now understand that a proud statement about the righteousness of one’s actions can also be considered a form of confession. Q The Talmud (Rosh Hashanah (34a) quotes various opinions regarding the sound the Torah intended when it instructed us (23:24) to blow the shofar on Rosh Hashanah. In order to avoid doubt | OZ E R A L P O RT and to perform the mitzvah according to all opinions, we are accustomed to blow three different sounds: tekiah, shevarim, and teruah. Although we sound the shofar according to each possible interpretation, there is nevertheless a specific order in which we arrange the sounds. When blowing them all together, we first blow the simple tekiah, then the three shevarim sounds, then the broken teruahs, and finally another unbroken tekiah. Why were the sounds arranged in this particular order? A The Shelah HaKadosh, Rabbi Yeshaya Horowitz, writes that this order was specifically chosen in order to symbolize for us the concept of repentance. King Solomon writes in Ecclesiastes (7:29), “Hashem made man straight, but people sought out numerous complex calculations.” We begin by sounding an unbroken tekiah to symbolize the simple, straightforward manner in which Hashem initially created us. Unfortunately, as the verse prophesies, we inevitably complicate situations unnecessarily, as represented by the broken sounds of the shevarim. As if that weren’t sufficient, we fail to recognize the error of our ways until we have reached rock bottom, as suggested by the short crying sounds of the teruah. Sometimes it is only after a person has fallen into the depths of despair that he is able to recognize how far he has fallen from his original heights, and it is this realization which jolts and inspires him to full and proper repentance, allowing him to return to the straight tekiah just as he was created! Q According to one opinion in the Talmud (Sukkah 11b), we are commanded to sit in sukkot in order to commemorate the miracle of the Clouds of Glory which surrounded the Jews during their travels through the wilderness. As this miracle began immediately upon the Exodus from Egypt, a number of commentators question why the holiday commemorating the miracle takes place in Tishrei and not in Nissan, when the miracle began? A The Vilna Gaon answers that we are not commemorating the Clouds of Glory which initially protected the Jews in Nissan, as those clouds were taken away at the time of the sin of the Golden Calf. Rather, we are commemorating the clouds which returned on the 15th day of Tishrei after Hashem forgave the Jewish people, and which remained to surround and protect them for the duration of their sojourn in the wilderness. He explains that the Jews were forgiven on the 10th of Tishrei (Yom Kippur), and on the 11th Moses commanded them regarding the building of the Tabernacle. They brought their contributions for the Tabernacle for two days (Exodus 36:3), the 12th and the 13th, and on the 14th Moses realized that the donations were sufficient and announced that no more should be brought (36:6). On the following day, the 15th of Tishrei, the work began on the building of the Tabernacle and on that day, the Clouds of Glory returned to the Jewish camp, which we celebrate and remember on Sukkot. Ozer Alport can be reached at ozer@partnersintorah.org