Isaiah Rothstein

 

Parshat Dvarim In this week’s Torah portion we start the new book of Dvarim. As I learned this week’s portion I imagined the last 30 minutes of a movie where everything all seems to come together. The Children of Israel–led by Moses- are at the border of Israel ready to enter the land. Not knowing the sins of their ancestors, the Jewish people of this generation are excited, determined and inspired. They are ready to enter into the land of Israel to serve HaShem with reverence, pride and commitment. Moses sees the excitement and deems it necessary to tell the story that the young generation did not live. The story of their fathers, the reminder of the obstacles, failings and prevails. “We journeyed from Horeb and we went through the entire great and awesome wilderness that you saw. By the way of the mountain of the Amorite, as HaShem our G-d commanded us, and we cam until Kadesh barnea… See—HaShem, your G_d has placed the land before you; go up and take possession, as HaShem, G-d of your forefathers, has spoken to you. Do not fear and do not lose resolve. (1:19-21)” A committed leader is someone who regardless of the leaders own personal experiences always focuses and stays fully committed to the group. Moses struggles with the Jewish people till the day he dies; he is not even one to merit the land of Israel. He understood the future of the Jewish people and he sent a message out for all of us. He lets each and every one of us know where we came from and what we went through. Not to make us feel bad, but to make us learn from our nations previous mistakes. Before Moshe dies he devotes the last 5 weeks of his life to a careful well articulated orally transmitted history of the Torahs words. He tells the Jewish people how great of a nation we are and how we are loved by G-d and feared by nations, how our fathers and those before them sinned. They caused death, enslavement and exile because of false perception, baseless hatred and words of slander against each other. Through it all G-d never left our side, so don’t leave his. He took us through Egypt, a dangerous wilderness and forty years in the desert. Despite all this he gave us everything we needed. Don’t forget that even when it’s difficult HaShem takes us through the hardest times. Tuesday night we entered into one of the most intense months in the Jewish calendar, AV. In the month of AV and particularly the 9th of AV, the sin of spies ended with a bitter 40 years in the dessert, both temples were destroyed, the expulsion for Jews in Spain took place and WWI began. Rebetzin Tzipporah Heller points out that even though all these things took place in the month of AV the Talmud tells us that the first 9 days of AV are the birth pangs of the Messiah, compared to the 9 months of child preconception. Also, the very fact that the Messiah sprouts forth at this time shows the true intensity of the time. The question we must begin to ask ourselves, is … you guessed it, why? Why are all these things so closely linked to the point that they almost seem to co-exist with one another? Why is this exact time of year so masked and covered with beautiful sunny days and extra time to spare? I would like to offer the following explanation. In the world there is up and down, there is a sun set and a sun rise. We have good and bad times and we have winter and summer. There is an opposite for everything. On the ninth of AV (this year July 30th) the last straw was drawn. The temple was destroyed and we were sent into our present exile.

As Rebetzin Heller points out, these days are two sides of one coin. Only in this game of heads or tails we can make the coin land in our favor. If the temple was destroyed because of baseless hatred, then we need to bring about baseless love. If there is bad then we need to make good. On a personal level one should recognize the sadness of this month, but on a national level this time is meant to trigger our aspirations to be the best people we can be. To fix the flaws of our fathers just the way the Jews who went into Israel the first time around needed to know the flaws of their fathers. We need to carefully take an account of Moshe’s final encounters with the Jewish people. HaShem sent our prophet Jeremiah to warn the Jewish people and to tell them to stop their deceitful ways, but they did not listen. They didn’t listen to the cries and warnings of Jeremiah, but ultimately they did not listen to the advice of our teacher Moshe. Moshe saw what the future obstacles of the Jewish people. The great sages (CHAZAL) put the fast day of Tisha B’av (9th in AV) not to be a day were we are restricted restricted, restricted, but more a time to reflect and be uplifted, uplifted, uplifted! It’s a day to remember and learn from our ancestors. We remember not to just remember, we remember only to fix what went horribly wrong. See—HaShem, your G_d has placed the land before you; go up and take possession, as HaShem, G-d of your forefathers, has spoken to you. Do not fear and do not lose resolve. (1:19-21)” Judaism and its inner beauty is masked. From the great words of King Solomon“ It is a tree of life for those who grasp it.” If we yearn for the deeper meaning, if we search for what is not understood, then it will be our vitality. The word AV means father. In this month more than ever we need to turn to our Father in Heaven. This Week I will try to: be sure to encapsulate and swallow the preceding generations’ flaws and change them. I will try to personally feel what is missing while trying to erase and fix the original reason. I will dig deep into myself and destroy what is stopping me from striving. I will remember that HaShem has rescued us in the wilderness, and will rescue us in this wilderness.

 

Parshat Mattos-Masei In the book of Bamidbar the Jews finish yet another obstacle in their path. The days of Abraham, Isaac and Jacob are in their stories. The Exodus from slavery left the Jews in happiness and ecstasy and a place for G-ds Divine spirit in the world was created. In this sefer(book) The Jews went through hardships almost consistently throughout this book. Whether it begins with the sin of the Sotah, Miriam and Aaron against Moshe, the false perception of the spies, Pinchas, Bilaam or the many wars fought through this time period, The Jewish people again have miraculously managed to set obstacles in their way. Even in the midst of tumult and anguish the Jewish people could hear the reminder and blessing that G-d gave to their forefathers “I am Kel Shakkia, be fruitful and multiply, a nation and a congregation of nations shall descend from you, and kinds shall issue from you loins. The land that I gave to Abraham and to Isaac, I will give to you: and to your offspring after you I will give the land. (Genisis-35:11, 12)” the constant reminder and miracles that helped the Jewish people through the desert, through death of their leaders and through death of their loved ones was always G-ds unconditional blessing regardless of how low we fall. We should stay reminded even in the hardest of times when our stable platform is loosened “HaShem loves me, I have a Bracha.” When Yaakov Avinu was going to be confronted by Esav he split his family for security purposes. Yaakov Avinu knew that regardless of what happens to him, HaShem’s promise remains for his family, for us. As the birth pangs of Aliyah begin for the Jewish people, again we are reminded of our “long and winding road”. We are once again forced to remember our passed, our roots and who we are and who we were. “These are the journeys of the Children of Israel, who went forth from the land of Egypt according to their legions, under the hand of Moses and Aaron (33:16).” The Torah then continues with the names of the many places the Children of Israel journeyed too. The significance and deeper meaning of the names place reflect of the Jewish people and their state of being as a unit at that time. The hardships of the Jewish people are hidden between the lines and reflected off of the deeper meaning of the place. The Jewish people were chased, killed, beaten destroyed and challenged with tests that were passed and not passed. Today we see that these “journeys” have not ceased. Exiled from our land over 2000 years ago, we have gone through many hardships. Our generations have experienced the Spanish inquisition, the Holocaust and masked anti-Semitism (and unmasked for that matter). Yet we are still here stronger and weaker than ever. HaShem reminds us through this Torah portion of His Bracha, We have gone low and high, backwards and forward, but we are still in merit of his unconditional love. When the time comes, in the right time, we are elevated, we are directed home. In a time of mourning we must remember we have not lost the temple in the sense that it is never returning. We have not lost HaShem; we have not lost the relationship this single unit once had. We are simply missing it. We are not mourning, but yearning for its return. We are reminded that we must play our part, before HaShem plays His. In a time of so much destruction and deceit, we must counter it and fix it through unconditional love for our fellow brothers and sisters (and non family members too). In this time more than ever, we must be B’simcha( In joy and happiness and we must cure the cold of the Jewish people. Remember the days of old and fix them today. Remember the destruction of the temple not through the books and stories, but through your own personal experiences every day. Every day the potential is there to fix, but we must be the difference between the generations before us…actualize. Despite our differences we all are still one family. We left Egypt with 12 different paths, but we all still left together. Love yourself and love your neighbor. The Hardships of the Jewish people have grown bigger than ever, but HaShem is still here for us. Before we experience Geulah, before we see the Third Temple we must be prepared to remember. Remember the sins of our ancestors, Remember the sins of our own past and remember that only YOU, YOU and YOU will make the change for us. Before we go up, we must go in. Go into yourself and rip out all the shmutz. In the great words of Matisyahu: “strip away the layers and reveal your soul”. This week I will try to: recognize that with every Aliyah (ascent) comes a Yiridah (descent)/ hardship. With every beautiful sunrise the sun must first set. I will focus with all my energy on the destruction and separation of the Jewish people. I will remember through the Torah portion, the journey of my family. I will remember the struggle and I will redeem the sins of my ancestors. I will remember that with a broken heart we stand before G-d. Even with a Broken heart… HaShem loves you. “ Hashem spoke to Moshe, “Go ascend from here, you and the people whom you brought up from the land of Egypt, to the land about which I swore to Abraham, Isaac and Jacob, saying ;I shall give it to your offspring.’ I shall send an angel of ahead of you, and I shall drive out Canaanite, the Amorite, the Hittite, the Perizzite, the Hivvite, and the Jebusite- to a land that flows with milk and honey…(Exodus- 33:1-3)” “The Descent is for the sake of the Ascent”-Rebbe Nachman

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