Day: December 26, 2024

  • Parshas Mikeitz | Shabbos Chanuka

    Print PDF

    By Rabbi Shloimie Lindenbaum

    We say in על הניסים that the Greeks tried להשכיחם תורתיך, to make us forget the Torah. It sounds like they did more than just stop us from learning, but they tried to make us forget what we already had. How did they do this? R’ Yeruchem Olshin brings a Gemara that the Greeks tried specifically to prevent the Jews from bringing wood to the בית המקדש and from bringing ביכורים, the first fruits of the seven species. The Maharsha explains that these two mitzvos were performed with exceptional שמחה, joy and excitement, and therefore the Greeks targeted these mitzvos first. Their goal was to deprive us of the enthusiasm that we associated with serving Hashem and keeping His Torah and mitzvos. R’ Yeruchem continues with a Pasuk in תהלים, Psalms, בחוקותיך אשתעשע לא אשכח דבריך, “I play in Your laws, I will not forget Your word”. The אלשיך explains that the way that Dovid Hamelech ensured that the Torah would stay with him and not be forgotten, was by enjoying it and learning it with joy.  The more enjoyable something is, the more it will remain with you and the more it will be internalized by you. The Greeks, when targeting our שמחה in our Torah and mitzvos, were aiming for something much bigger than a nice addition in our עבודת ה’. They understood that if they can break our שמחה in our Torah and mitzvos, it will be something that will eventually be forgotten from us. In this way they tried “להשכיחם תורותיך”. We find this concept in our Parsha as well. Yosef, after becoming promoted to second-in-command in Egypt, named his first son מנשה, because “Hashem has made me forget (נשני) all my hardship and all my father’s household.” This is astonishing! Why would he be grateful that he forgot his father’s household? R’ Asher Druk explains that Yosef was clearly placed by Hashem into a new role in life, a role that he needed to apply all his faculties for. Had Yosef been constantly reminiscing and remembering his father’s house, he would have been totally overwhelmed and filled with depression. He is so distant from his childhood, surrounded by people of entirely different ideals! These feelings would overtake him and cause him to fail at his new job. To succeed in life in Egypt, Yosef had to, on some level, forget his father’s house, of course maintaining the ideals of his father, but all the while not letting the emotions overtake him. For this he thanked Hashem, for the ability to “move on” and focus on the task that was made his lot in life. Again, we see that for a person to succeed, they must have שמחה, they must do things with enthusiasm. R’ Yeruchem uses this to explain the Rambam who says that there is mitzvah of שמחה on Chanukah. Where does the Rambam get this from? Based on the above we can understand that because the Greeks targeted the שמחה of Torah and mitzvos to wrench it away from us, it is the perfect time to strengthen our שמחה, through which we will grow stronger and more intimately connected with our ‘עבודת ה.

  • Immutability

    Print PDF
    By Rabbi Naftoly Bier

    In על הניסים the praise recited when lighting the menorah, we declare, “that the whole of Chanukah these lights are holy and we are not permitted to use them, but rather only to look upon them in order to thank You and praise Your great name for Your miracles…” the Talmud Shabbos 21a says, “the holiday was established for praise and thankfulness.”

    What is praise and what is thankfulness?

    There are two stages in being afflicted with a difficulty. There is the time of the struggle, and then the time when one is redeemed from it. While struggling, one may not see any benefit from it. If one struggled properly and did not succumb, then one has gained not only from the redemption but from the affliction itself. This is also true when God afflicts the Jewish people with oppressors and then intervenes miraculously to redeem them. They study their situation and realize that they should definitely praise God for the redemption. But also, they finally realize that they have gained even more from the affliction. For this they offer thanks, or more correctly, acknowledgement that all God had done was good. (Sfas Emes)

    Dovid Hamelech in Psalms, chapter 94, comes to answer the age-old question, “Why does Hashem at times fail to check wrongdoing?”
    In verse 12, he states (on the contrary), “Praiseworthy, for forward strides the גבר (person of strength) who you, Hashem trains by discipline (remonstrates) and from your Torah one is taught.”

    Adversity is a gift. It is actually a means to discipline one to take true stock of oneself, thereby causing one to strengthen one’s moral fiber and to ennoble oneself. Only those who are capable of enduring pain, suffering, and adversity, those who are labeled גבר, a person of inner strength who has the moral energies to truly understand the purpose of adversity and to improve; will be visited with misfortune. At the same time, any suffering will be viewed as an admonition to delve more deeply into the Torah in order to derive the standard of what a life filled with duty and loyalty to G-d should be, and to measure his past existence against that standard. (see Rav S.R. Hirsch)
    Adversity, hardship, distress and tribulations are in Hashem’s world an act of benefaction; it’s no different than a person who is physically ill and in order to regain their health undergoes a painful medical procedure. Precisely for this reason, the wicked are not always punished, for they will gain nothing, on the contrary, they inadvertently empower the righteous to make great strides!

    How is it possible to actually view tragedy as anopportunity for edification? Life is an eternal struggle to submit to governance of Hashem, to transcend our physical, hedonistic, material, egotistical drives and strive for the true essence of who we are, our נשמה, soul?

    On Chanukah, there was the miracle of the one small jug of oil that lit for eight days. Hashem was teaching us; My love for you is ceaseless, a small spark in you can light a huge flame. Everyone has a נשמה, soul, which is part and parcel of Hashem. It’s eternally there. It just needs to be “sparked”.

    Shlomo Hamelech, Song of Songs 8:7, teaches, “Manywaters cannot quench love, neither can floods drown it…”

    אהרון הכהן, Aaron the brother of Moses, was the greatest peacemaker. (Ethics of the Fathers 1:12) When Aaron met a quarreler he would say, “ I just met your partner and he, she is very sorry… and wants to be together.” When he met the other he would say the same. Naturally, when they would meet they would embrace one another with true forgiveness and love. (Avos D’Rav Nosson 12:3) Aaron saw that love can be lost, he took it and eternally locked it back into their hearts securely and eternally.
    This is the same by Hashem and his people. The love is locked in the kernel of spirituality (נשמה) locked in every Jew. Nothing can disturb it. This was the lesson of the oil, a metaphor for this love, there is always a part of one’s heart that has not been defiled.

    The Torah is the blueprint of the נשמה, soul. In the mother’s womb, a child is taught all of Torah, which is forgotten at birth, though embedded in the subconscious. What’s the point?! The Torah is the match that creates a fire, the flame of truth, spiritual greatness and emulation of Hashem.

    When one is in misery, when one’s physical world is suffering, invariably the remaining spark of spirituality is awakened, for that is the only possible definition of life at that moment. The way to maintain and expand it is through Torah study, thereby opening the pathway to true growth. adversity create understanding. it develops empathy. It challenges one to investigate and create new goals.

    It created a miracle. from the darkest times of Jewish history, when most of the Jewish nation Hellenized, came the outstanding development of Mishnah and Talmud. The experience gave us the ability in the darkest of times not to despair, but on the contrary to harness trials and tribulations as a conduit to acute clarity of one’s true life goals. The Jewish נשמה is eternal and immutable! It’s our precious gift!