Rabbi Nachman Kahana
Parashat Ve’Ata Te’Tzaveh 5768
I am writing this week’s divrei Torah in the lobby of a magnificent
hotel on the shores of the Dead Sea, that ancient area of Sodom and
Amora and its three sister towns, which were destroyed by HaShem
because of their debased ways. (These five cities are not unique. An
acquaintance of mine, on his return from a visit to San Fransisco,
remarked that if God does not destroy San Francisco, He owes an apology
to Sodom and Amora.)
Now, despite its bad track record, or perhaps because of it, this area
was chosen by the Ariel Institutions of Yerushalayim for its bi-annual
rabbinic conference. For four days, the lowest point on the planet (the
Dead Sea) was launched into orbit of keddusha (holiness) by the
presence of over 200 of Israel’s leading rabbis in a conference dealing
with the Shoah (Holocaust).
It is a constant source of amazement to me how Hashem interlocks the
practical plans of Man with His spiritual agenda: 1- The Jewish nation;
2- This week’s parasha; 3- The place which was designated for the
conference; and 4- The Shoah, all meshed together in synchronization.
As I gaze at the many colored hues of the waters of the Dead Sea, two
things come to mind: A- the Sea’s buoyancy and, B- its deceptiveness;
because despite all its alluring colors nothing can live in its waters.
Buoyancy is a quality shared by the Dead Sea, together with the Jewish
nation and our parasha, which begins:
ואתה תצוה את בני ישראל ויקחו אליך שמן זית זך כתית למאור להעלת נר תמיד
and you shall command the children of Israel that they shall take for
you pure olive oil beaten for the light to raise up the eternal light
In our holy writings, there are many analogies between the Jewish
people and olive oil, the most robust one being that they are both
endowed with the inherent ability to rise above their surroundings:
Olive oil will rise to the top when placed in any other liquid, and the
Jewish people rise to the top of every society which permits us the
freedom to exhibit our God given brilliance.
The Shoah, which was under discussion at the convention, is analogous
to the Dead Sea in both ways. Our fellow Jews in the cursed continent
of the Shoah (Europe is a Jewish cemetery, from Portugal in the west to
Siberia in the east) were intoxicated with the freedom granted them to
rise at will to the top echelons of Christian society; they could not
sense the death awaiting them just under the surface. The placid waters
of the Dead Sea are deceiving, concealing the absence of all life
within its depths, as is the galut (diaspora) which sings its sweet
alluring melodic phrases to deaden the Jewish sensors to approaching
dangers.
I drew two conclusions from the lectures of the rabbinic Shoah
conference.
1- The State of Israel forever changed the meaning of Kiddush HaShem -
sanctification of God’s holy name.
Incidents of how holy Jewish men and women went to their death with
"Shema Yisrael" on their lips were related at the conference, or
rabbis, who could have been saved, but preferred to join their
communities in certain death.
The gemara (Bava Batra 10b), which extols the acts of Jewish self
sacrifice in the sanctification of HaShem and the Torah, was often
quoted.
And indeed these people reached the level of Rabbi Akiva and his
generation, even the level of Yitzchak at the akaida (The binding of
Yitzchak on the Temple Mount).
However, and in no way to diminish an iota of their great courage and
belief of the kedoshim of the Shoah, I submit that the manner of
sanctifying HaShem’s holy name has changed with our return home to
Eretz Yisrael.
In the galut, in all its ages and places, the cry of "Shema Yisrael"
ascended to the highest realms of heaven as a Jewish soul parted from
this world because of the fires of Christianity or the sword of Islam.
However, with our return to Eretz Yisrael the ultimate sanctification
of HaShem is NOT to die for Him but to destroy all those who are
identified with Amalek. As the Almighty Himself says in the Torah
(Shemot 17,16):
ויאמר כי יד על כס י-ה מלחמה לה‘ בעמלק מדר דר
And HaShem vowed that He will do war with Amalek from generation to
generation
And who is Amalek? Amalek as a person was Eisav’s grandson, but in a
larger sense it includes every gentile who attempts to destroy the
Jewish people or a segment of the people, including the planners of the
destruction, and those who aid and abet the destruction, or even those
who passively agree to or silently observe it.
The true sanctification of the Holy Name is for the Jew to LIVE for
HaShem, not to die for Him. The Gemara (Moed Katan 16b) describes the
great physical strength of King David, that he could kill 800 of the
enemy by the shot of a single arrow; and had David not sinned in the
matter of Uriah Ha’Chiti, Hashem would have permitted David to kill
1000 with each arrow.
The lesson we are taught by this Gemara is essentially what the Medina
has provided us with - to become a partner with HaShem, as the verse
says, "do war with Amalek from generation to generation."
King David would have long ago incinerated Iran, Hizbulla and Hamas.
That is the Jewish way and let us not forget that the vehicle for
fostering this mitzva is Tzva Hagana LeYisrael (Israel Defense Forces).
2- The second conclusion which I drew has to deal with the remnant of
Jews still attached to the galut.
It is no secret that World War Two was a direct consequence of the
First World War, just as a pressure cooker is waiting to explode. The
conditions forced upon Germany by the Versailles Treaty brought to the
fore all the obscure hidden evil in the German soul. But what brought
about the First World War?
I submit that the First World War was brought about by HaShem as a
warning to the Jewish people to leave Europe. When that warning was not
heeded, the next war took center stage in all its fury and death. But
the fury and death of the Second World War are themselves warnings to
the Jewish people to leave the galut and return home, because World War
Three will make the first two to seem as mere border clashes.
With Yishmael on the march, and when Christian nations will finally
awaken to find a little Achmed under every bed, it will be too late for
the Jew to leave.
The Jewish people, the eternal light, the Dead Sea and the memory of
six million extinguished Jewish candles of the soul, all lead to one
conclusion: HaShem has given us two paths - life or death, as the Torah
states (Devarim 30,15)
ראה נתתי לפניך היום את החיים ואת הטוב ואת המות ואת הרע
Behold! I have place before you today life and goodness versus death
and bad
We are blessed with the freedom to choose our destiny and future. On
the one side there is the eternal Jewish nation and its eternal light,
as opposed to the dead waters and extinguished candles.
If you choose correctly, you and your descendants will continue, but if
folly overcomes your senses, there is still room, God forbid, for more
Holocaust museums.
Shabbat Shalom
Nachman Kahana
Original Source
|
|
|||||||||
|
Shabbat Times
Subscribe 4 Updates
About Us
Search
Donations
This Month
Month Archive
Recent Photos
Login
|
Parashat Tetzaveh: Dead Seas
Comments
No comments found.
Trackbacks
TrackBack URL: |
||||||||
|
|
|||||||||


![Validate my RSS feed [Valid RSS]](http://www.battalionofdeborah.org/logos/valid-rss.png)