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Food for Thought


Food for Thought
Thoughts in the Wake of the WTC Bombings
Rabbi Shaya Karlinsky

The following is an expanded version of a shmuze given by Rav Shaya Karlinsky last Wednesday, after the tragic events of the previous day.

It has been quite a year. The year began last Rosh Hashana with fierce and deadly Arab violence against the Jews of Eretz Yisrael. It is ending with Muslim terror and destruction against the entire Western world.

It is less than a month ago that I wrote you my thoughts about the difficult situation Jews were experiencing in Eretz Yisrael. My words began "in the shadow of ongoing tragic deaths and maiming of innocent victims of barbaric terrorism in Eretz Yisrael." It is quite unbelievable and very difficult to have to write once again, this time in the shadow of even greater barbarism, insane loss of unimaginable numbers of innocent human lives, coupled with mass destruction. While the miraculous alarm clocks that didn't go off, unexpected traffic jams or job layoffs, and the "simply coincidental" vans that had to leave late because of selichos resulted in many of our Jewish brethren being saved from death or maiming, the message G-d is sending was certainly directed to us all.

I am sure there are many psukim and Midrashim making the rounds that describe or predict what happened. Some are more telling, some are more stretched. I share with you two verses in the section of the curses that we read the Shabbos before the Twin Tower's Tragedy, which caught my attention.

"[Your enemies] will besiege you in all your gates, until the crumbling of your tall and fortified walls, those upon which you relied in all your lands." (Devarim 28:52)

"You will go mad from the sight of what your eyes see" (Devarim 28:34). On this verse the Netziv (Ha'amek Davar) prophetically comments: You will be astounded over how it was possible for a small number of thugs to cause so much (damage), and your abilities didn't save you, when in truth you had the power to withstand them. This will cause you to go mad.

We are taught (Amos 3:6,8) "Is it possible that the Shofar is sounded in the city, and the population doesn't tremble? Could an evil befall the city, and G-d didn't bring it about?... A lion roars - who doesn't fear? G-d speaks - who can ignore the prophecy?

The lion has roared. The shofar has sounded. G-d has spoken very loudly.

The only problem we have is in deciphering the message.

Prophecy has been taken from us since the beginning of the Second Temple period, so we have limited resources available to help us. Yet, if G-d speaks to us through world events, we must have some mechanisms to hear Him. If we really want to hear Him, and if we "listen very hard," there is chance we may succeed. The tools available to us are our Torah sources, from the Torah and Prophets, through the Talmud and Midrash, continuing with the Rishonim, later commentators and Rabbinic scholars.

Colleagues that I have spoken with have different perspectives, as do contemporary Rabbinic leaders. Each one focuses on a different aspect of Klal Yisrael that needs attention. What I am going to write is based on my perspective of the contemporary Jewish world and Jewish history, as well as my reading of our sources. It should not be taken as definitive, but simply as "chomer l'machshava," material for further thought and consideration, to get you thinking and introspecting. And it should be read as being directed to you, Darche Noam alumni, who may have different challenges than other segments of the Jewish community.

Whenever one finds oneself in a confusing situation, the first rule is to "keep your eye on the ball," "begin with the end in mind," or in simple terms, know what the end result is supposed to look like. Where are we headed? From a Torah perspective, I think that can be simplified into: The Jewish nation being faithful to its unique character, keeping the Torah in Eretz Yisrael, serving as a vehicle for G-d's existence and greatness to be recognized by the entire world. That is what our sources tell us, and that is the clear direction of Jewish history since the Vilna Gaon and the Ba'al Shem Tov instructed groups of their disciples to make the very difficult move from their homes in Europe to the wasteland of eighteenth century Eretz Yisrael. Since that time, we have seen the slow unfolding of Biblical prophecies that are to usher in the Messianic Age, and all the Torah giants of the past century were in agreement that we were in the throes of that final period of Jewish history. (The only serious disagreement among them has been how to relate to the secular state espoused and eventually built by Zionism.) The agricultural development of Eretz Yisrael, the ingathering of Jews from every corner of the world, the relocation of the Torah center of the world from Europe (pre WWII) to Eretz Yisrael (by the 1970's, with a short stopover in the US), and the miracles G-d has been performing from the War of Independence (1948-49), the Suez War (1956), the Six Day War (1967) through the Yom Kippur War (1973, when the country was initially overrun, yet it miraculously snatched victory from the jaws of defeat) give us a good indication of the direction in which G-d is moving Jewish history.

The problem, in my opinion, has been the reaction of world Jewry to all this. How have G-d's miracles been received? How dear is Eretz Yisrael to the Jewish people? When we are taught in our sources that the descendants of Yishmael will be in conflict with the Jewish people over the rights of ownership to Eretz Yisrael, and then we compare the level of commitment and conviction they show over their ownership claim compared to ours, it is embarrassing. After Oslo, many Palestinians living in the US began liquidating their businesses and selling their homes to move [back] to the West Bank, which they proclaimed as their homeland.

Exile was decreed on the Jewish nation as a punishment. The Holy Temple was destroyed and we were driven from Eretz Yisrael into exile as a punishment for our sins. The Maharal teaches us that we needed to take an oath not to leave the exile for Eretz Yisrael (Ketuboth 110b-111a) because the unnatural state of being in exile cannot be maintained under the natural order. But when G-d has given us the opportunity to leave that exile, when He gives us the opportunity to enhance our relationship with Him by coming to "the land which G-d inquires after, always his eyes are on it, from the beginning of the year to the end of the year" (Devarim 11:10-12) what attitude are we conveying when we don't utilize the opportunity?

I think it is quite a Chilul HaShem (desecration of G-d's honor) when Jews ignore this opportunity. Becoming more entrenched, more invested, more connected to the exile (as Torah-friendly as it appears to be) rejecting the opportunities of Eretz Yisrael, makes a very clear statement about the strength of our conviction about our rights to Eretz Yisrael. Actions speak louder than words. And right now Arab actions are speaking very loudly. And the Jewish words being spoken aren't that loud. How often do you hear Hanan Ashrawi or Saib Erekat speaking in a very compelling way about their historical rights to Palestine? How many times are Jewish spokesmen as convincing?

Of course living in Eretz Yisrael is difficult. Chazal teach that due the spiritual nature of Eretz Yisrael, it requires sacrifices on the material level. Every spiritual accomplishment does. But those difficulties are much less today than they were two hundred or one hundred or even thirty years ago. There are jobs, there is housing, there are cellphones and internet, and there is a level of comfort undreamed of a decade or two ago. And if the security situation had been the one remaining excuse for choosing the US over Eretz Yisrael, the events of the past week just leveled the playing field. I fear that over the coming months, we may find that in fact these events were just the tip of the iceberg.

In discussing the situation in Israel with a close friend and colleague from the US during the past few months, the question kept coming up: What does G-d want from us? When I put forth some of my ideas, he rejected the ones that focused on the changes demanded of the American Torah community. "The bombs are going off in Jerusalem, Netanya, Gaza and Gush Etzion, not New York, Monsey and Chicago," he said. My response was "I can't speak for G-d, and that isn't a proof, since frequently it is the righteous who pay the price for the sins of the nation. But, it is inconceivable to me that we, the Torah Jews living in and sacrificing for Eretz Yisrael should be subjected to the difficulties and terror that we live with, and Jews in America should sit comfortably insulated from the pain and suffering that G-d is visiting upon us." I said this a number of times during 5761, the last time being when he was in Jerusalem on a solidarity mission, and one of his students was killed in the Sbarro bombing.

The issue of Anti-Semitism should also not be overlooked. While the reaction of the American people to last week's events was one of understanding for Israel, the recent Anti-Semitic spectacle of Durban shouldn't be forgotten. And I don't need to tell alumni living in the US about the voices blaming the WTC bombings on US support for Israel. "Halacha - Eisav sonei eth Yakov" Chazal inform us. Anti-Semitism is a constant in the world order. There can be periods in which it is more intense or less intense, and it can manifest itself in different ways. It may even take a hiatus. But it is an underlying constant, and if the Jew forgets it, the world will remind us.

The evidence of tangible Divine intervention in the events of last week are overwhelming. From the fact that such a complicated mission, in the planning for many years, was pulled off with no intelligence agency picking it up, with not one security check picking up just one of the terrorists before boarding the plane, et al; to the many instances of people not making it to work on time for one reason or another, thereby saving their lives, gives us a tangible sense of the Divine hand guiding all that is happening.

But there are two points about Divine intervention that should be focused on.

The first point appears in Rashi's commentary on the verses just quoted (11:12). Doesn't G-d inquire about the welfare of the entire world? Aren't His eyes on the entire world? Rather, it is as if He only inquires about Eretz Yisrael, and along the way He also inquires about the rest of the world. Decrees for the entire world are a function of the needs of Eretz Yisrael. When we experience personal Divine intervention, it is available to us only because G-d was attending to the needs of the Jews in Eretz Yisrael.

Our relationship with G-d has the potential to be more intense, more intimate, more ongoing in Eretz Yisrael. How great are our efforts to make that possible? What price are we willing to pay for that special relationship?

The next point has to do with tefilah, our davening.

When Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach, zt"l, was asked what he would miss about "this world" when he reaches 120, one of the two things he listed was the ability to speak to the Almighty whenever he wanted, through tefillah. The quality of the ongoing relationship we have with G-d is directly related to the quality of our davening. When we rush in late to shul, skip half of psukei d'zimrah to reach Shmoneh Esrei with the tzibbur, finish the entire davening in thirty or thirty-five minutes, with our minds on our first appointment in the office or on carpool as we say "Aleinu," we have lost the most powerful opportunity to create and define our relationship with G-d. (We won't mention the insulting way we seem to be relating to Him.)

At Darche Noam, we are coming off of an unbelievable Yarchei Kallah this summer that was focused on the Power of Prayer. If you weren't there, I highly recommend that you get some of the tapes to listen to the many inspiring and practical lectures and shiurim. Spend time studying the davening. Get to shul early, daven slowly, talk to G-d. Let us improve the quality of our prayers, not just with an extra chapter of Tehillim for the situation, but with a complete overhaul of the way we communicate with G-d.

Life stood still for many people last week in New York. Things that seemed our top priorities lost all significance during the hours we watched in horror at what was happening to the world. The fragile nature of life, the unstable existence we so take for granted took on new perspective. I am sure the concluding words of Nethaneh Tokef will take on new meaning this year, as we better understand that "Man is created from dust, and his end is dust.compared to fragile pottery.a passing shadow and a dissipating cloud, like a blowing wind, floating dust, and a fleeting dream.

The world changed last week. Let this Rosh Hashana provide us with a changed perspective on life and our priorities.

A Kethiva v'Chathima Tovah to the entire Jewish nation, with 5762 being a good and sweet year.

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