I was in my rabbinical class finishing the evening prayers as the
sounds of automatic gunfire rang out through the Yeshiva. We were in
the classroom above the Library which turned out to be the killer's
target. As we lay on the floor, bracing furniture against the doors, we
could only imagine the horror he was wreaking in the rest of the
Yeshiva. We were unarmed and could only wait and pray that help arrive
as soon as possible. We called the police, but it was only thanks to a
man named Dadon and an off-duty officer named Shapira who neutralized
the killer. When the security forces finally arrived, they searched the
building and found us sitting on the floor in the dark.
As they whisked us out of the building, we gained a first hand glimpse
of the horror the killer had wrought. We were spared only because we
were delayed in finding a tenth man to make our minyan. Had we finished
praying one minute earlier we would have found ourselves in the path of
the killer.
As I was driven home by my daughters, the gnawing question of why bad
things happen to good people was now magnified by the fact that murder
was perpetrated against young Torah students learning Torah in a Torah
Academy. I offer this essay as an attempt to come to grips with this
dilemma.
"The Torah is a tree of life to those who grasp hold of it." And yet
eight Torah students, learning Torah in a Torah Academy, were
mercilessly gunned down by a raging beast called Amalek.
How can we reconcile the special Divine providence extended to those
"grasping hold" the Torah, with the bloody reality to which we bear
painful witness? The answer lies in the date of the attack: Rosh
Chodesh Adar.
Rosh Chodesh is a time of joy in that the new moon symbolizes renewal
and rejuvenation. Yet it is also a time when the moon is not visible,
and consequently, is a time of darkness symbolizing evil.
Adar is a month of great joy for we celebrate the victory of good over
evil. Yet it is also a month of fasting over the evil designs of
Amalek. Indeed it is in this month that we remember Amalek by reading
the "zachor" Torah portion. We remember that "God's war against Amalek
is from generation to generation."
Rabbi Shimshon Raphael Hirsch explains that the battle against Amalek
is really a battle over whether Man will obey God or the dictates of
his own rationale. Man expresses his freewill by deciding to act either
according to his own definitions of right and wrong, which devolve to
his own "might and power," or according to God's definition of morality.
The ability to exercise a choice between good and evil demands the
existence of evil and by extension, people who purvey that evil. Those
people are known as Amalek. And though Amalek was a specific people,
the verse commanding their destruction states: "blot out the memory of
Amalek". Consequently, Hirsch explains that the memory of Amalek, of
people who glorify the sword, must be blotted out. For as long as their
memory is glorified others will follow the path of evil and reject the
path of morality.
Although evil, necessary for freewill, is part and parcel of Creation,
it is seemingly nevertheless a stain on a loving God who wants only
good for his creations. So much so that God, as it were, offers a "sin
offering" as atonement on none other than Rosh Chodesh, when light is
diminished and evil reigns supreme. God can do little more than offer a
sacrifice in atonement, lest he remove from Man the very task He
entrusted to him: to be a partner in creation, to complete creation,
through his own efforts.
Nowhere is this paradigm of existence more pronounced than in the story
of Ester read on Purim. The Megilla tells of Amalek's plan to
annihilate Israel where he obtains the King's seal on a decree to that
end. The Jews fast and pray that Esther's efforts to annul the decree
succeed. However they are told, "The decree of the King cannot be
annulled." Since when can't a king issue an annulment?! The answer is
that this refers to not just any king, but the King of Kings. The
decree that cannot be annulled is God's decree of Creation, the decree
of freewill, the decree that evil must have free reign.
The Jews obtained only the permission to fight back -- this was God's
answer to their fasting and prayers. And as they fought evil, so too
must we. Real evil will not go away with appeasement and peace
negotiations.
The Megilla ends with the celebration of the victory of the Jews. We
rejoice however, not at our own strength, realizing that victory would
be for naught without God's hidden help. Indeed it is this knowledge,
that God works behind the scenes to guarantee our success, which is the
source of our joy.
It is only the guaranteed assistance of the Creator that can explain
Israel's continued existence in the face of evil perpetrated by the
Amaleks of the world. But that guarantee extends only to the nation as
a whole and not to individuals. No individual can confidently assume a
protected existence - not even a Torah scholar, learning Torah, in a
Torah academy.
So what of the promise that "grasping" the Torah offers special Divine
providence? Perhaps, though the Torah does provide a path to
righteousness and life in general, there are times that are beyond
man's comprehension. At such times we must lament: "Difficult is the
death of the righteous in the eyes of God."
As such, the Zohar provides a succinct theological response in the form
of prudent advice: "A man should not confidently affirm - God will
deliver me or will do for me this or that - but rather he should
endeavor to fulfill the precepts, walk the path of truth, and put trust
in Him that He will help."
And thus we fight Amalek. A fight for the perfection of the world. It
is a fight man wages internally, striving to fulfill God's will. It is
also a fight man wages against those who wield "might and power" to
avoid carrying out God's will.
The victory of this fight is embodied in the Holy Temple, symbolizing
God's dwelling amongst mankind upon acceptance of His will. In the
Megilla, Haman sought to derail the building of the Temple. Today,
Amalek attacked our small Holy Temple, the Yeshiva, center of Torah
learning, whose purpose is to bring God's will, God's peace, to mankind.
And so it was on Rosh Chodesh Adar, a time of good mixed with evil,
that our rejoicing was mixed with tears. We cry bitterly over the loss
of our holy Torah students at the hands of Amalek. But we rejoice in
the Divine promise that no matter what designs the evil Amaleks of the
world will conspire, they will never destroy the nation of Israel. In
the words of Haftarat Zachor: "Netzah Yisrael Lo Yishaker" -- The
eternity of the people of Israel is guaranteed by God.
Original
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