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by Daneal Weiner
email:
daneal@actcom.co.il
Parshas Dvarim is always read prior to Tisha
b'Av. The parsha starts, Aileh hadvarim asher dibehr Moshe el kol Yisrael-
These are the things that Moshe spoke to all Yisrael. Right now, as Dvarim
opens, ALL Bnei Yisrael are gathered together to hear Moshe. A concept we’ve
often spoke of is that just as there are 600,000 letters to the
Torah, so too are there
600,000 Jewish souls. Each soul has it’s shoresh- root in one
letter. YiSROeL stands for Yaish
Shishim Ribui Osios Latorah- there are 600,000 letters to the Torah.. All
the people/letters of Israel are now gathered before Moshe.
Most of Chazal- our Sages
expound using a tool called s’muchim- adjacent subjects. They ask why are two topics in the Torah
adjacent to each other? The root, samuch means 'lean' or ‘depend’. If
one topic is leaning/depending on another topic, than some information from
one is integral to the other. There is one opinion in the
Gemorah, Rabbi Yehuda,
who does NOT expound by s’muchim for the first 4 books of the Torah.
Only for Dvarim does Rabbi Yehudah use s’muchim. There must be
something unique to Dvarim that makes it different than the other 4 books. Maybe
that it opens el kol Yisrael, with all Yisrael s’muchim one to
another? Dvarim is also unique in that it
is called the Mishnah Torah. The Torah Reviewed. Called as such because many
mitsvot are repeated in it. Since we know nothing in the Torah is
superfluous, Chazal compare the 'repeats' to the 'original'
appearances and learn out more details of each mitsva. The name Mishnah Torah
and the further elucidation of mitsvot are hints to the Oral Law. What is the relevance? At the end of days, when Hashem
hits the big ‘reset’ button in the sky, the Jewish calendar will be wiped
clear except for two days. Purim and Tisha b'Av! An interesting
pair. A day of utmost festivity and one of grief and mourning. In Megillas Esther, Haman's argument for
permission to destroy the Jews was that we were 'scattered and dispersed.'
The opposite of el kol Yisrael as Dvarim begins. After defeating Haman
and our enemies, all the Jews were kimu v'kiblu, they upheld and
accepted the yoke of Torah. If that was so, then, then what was the na'aseh
v'nishma- we will do and we will learn that we declared at Mt. Sinai? Chazal
say that at Mt. Sinai we committed to the Written Law and on Purim we
committed to the Oral Law! This does not mean the Jews were not following the
Oral Law since Sinai. But one thing it did mean is that in a moment when Hashem wanted to destroy
us, Moshe was able to pray for our salvation saying "They never
committed to the Oral law like they did to the Written law so they can't be
punished to the letter of the law." (Of course, after Purim we no
longer had that defense.)
Point is, every Tisha b’Av is preceded with Shabbos Dvarim,
Dvarim is an allusion to the
Oral Law. A Chazal links Tisha
b’Av to Purim. Purim is another allusion to Oral Law. (Everybody
go, “Hmmm?”) Two new mitsvos came out of
Purim. Mitsvos, aside from their tikun- purifying effects, are a way
we stay aware of our relationship to Hashem. They’re constant reminders that
we are on His earth and need to play by His rules. If a mitsva is 'born' in
to the Jewish people, it is to create an exercise, so to speak, for a new awareness in the area we’ve become weak (as well as creating
a new reparation for the sin inevitably
due to that weakness.) The
mitsvos of Purim are giving mishloach manos ish l’rayayhu- food
portions one to another and matanos l'evyonim- gifts to the poor. We
take what is ours and give it to someone else. Mine becomes yours, yours
becomes mine. And like everyone does on Purim, some of yours
which became mine gets
repackaged in a new mishloach manos and becomes theirs. Everyone
becomes connected to everyone else. The sin was we were 'scattered and
dispersed', the tikun is matanos l'evyonim and mishloach
manos ish l’rayayhu. We become El kol Yisrael. Rav Wolfson points out that ish
l'rayayhu- ‘one to another' = 622 = el kol Yisrael. So Rav Yehudah learns from s’muchim
in Sefer Dvarim, perhaps because all the Jews are standing side by side, being addressed by Moshe.
Indeed an experience we should learn from. Rav Wolfson points out that the words eL koL YisraeL all
end with the letter lamed. The word lamed means ‘learn’. El
kol Yisrael- to all Yisrael Moshe reminded them of their trials and failings and
warned them of the years ahead. Wanting to teach and not embarrass, Moshe
only hints to the sins committed by mentioning only the names where they took
place. Aileh hadvarim asher
dibehr Moshe el kol Yisrael b'aiver layarden, bamidbar ba'aravah, mol suf
bein Paran ubein Tofel v'Lavan v'Chatseros v'Di Zahav. Rashi itemizes for
us what happened in each place till he gets to Tofel v'Lavan. He says
there are no such places in all Tanach! He explains Moshe is alluding to the
mon. Tofel means 'denounce' and lavan means 'white.' Bnei
Yisrael denounced the white stuff. They spoke against the mon while
remembering the free fish in Egypt. Rav Wolfson asks, back in Shmos the mon
is described as 'seedlike,' 'thin,' 'honey-tasting,' 'white,' etc. Why is it
that Moshe picked 'white' as the code word? He answers, it's because Moshe
wanted to impress upon Bnei Yisrael what it was that they were complaining
about. They just saw the object rather than what was behind it. What ‘white’
was behind it? The number 7 is no stranger to
Judaism. There are 7 heavens, 7 seas, 7 days, we count 7x7 weeks for
the Omer, 7 ushpizin, 7
sfiros and 7 nations conquered in claiming Israel. Not all these
aforementioned 7's stand alone either. Some have ‘3 more’ waiting in the
wings. 7 nations were conquered for the borders of Israel we had but
ultimately 3 more will be conquered. Then, Jerusalem will reach all the way
to Damascus. ( In Hebrew, Damesek, which is the same letters as Mikdash!)
Regarding the sfiros there are also a total of 10. 7 have a
prominence, of sorts, in our metaphysical interaction with the world now and
the final 3 will show themselves more after the Mashiach comes. There are
also 7 colors in the rainbow. Ultimately there will be 10! Each color
corresponds to one of the 10 sfiros. The Tikun Zohar says white
corresponds to the sfira of Chesed- loving kindness. When Hashem threw mankind out of
the Garden of Eden, He cursed man saying, "By the sweat of your brow shall you eat bread." Work is a curse we have to contend with. There was a time
when the Jews did not have to sweat for their food. We were fed out of pure
loving kindness. When? In the desert! The mon from heaven was more than just
free food. It was a direct expression of Hashem's loving kindness, suspending
a curse which then plagued mankind for over 2400 years! Moshe let Bnei
Yisrael know this is what they were complaining against. Oy! There is another time, even after
5700 years, when we are fed out of pure loving kindness. As nursing infants!
No rooms to straighten up, no finger nails to scrub, no vegetables to force
down as the price of a meal. We are fed from pure loving kindness.
Accordingly, milk manifests itself white. Rav Wolfson feels maybe this is why
we eat dairy the 9 days prior to Tisha B'Av. To awaken in ourselves and in Hashem pure loving
kindness. That we should all again become s’muchim to one another and
that Hashem should permanently suspend all the curse of this exile. Just as the red blood turns
to white milk, may these red days, red hot days, days red with the
blood of our ancestors, may they be turned to days of pure loving kindness. Kein
yehe ratsone! While the men take on the
responsibility of the mitsvos to counter-balance their egos, to exercise
their awareness of Hashem, to hopefully
purify Israel to the point of redemption- reflected in them thanking Hashem with shelo asani isha- Who has not made me a
woman, the women, the
intuitive ones with an more innate awareness of Hashem, they take on the parallel path to redemption through
pure loving kindness. A path which more
directly emulates Hashem, Him not being bound to mitsvos and spending His day keeping house, so to speak. They thank Hashem saying sheh’asani
kirtsono- Who has made me according to His will. With both forces of Bnei
Yisrael working s’muchim towards our one goal, may we all merit
returning to the expanded Land of Milk and Honey. May Hashem not just care
for us as he cared for the Jews in the desert but care for us as a mother
cares for her nursing child: Without expectation, without rebuke, without
punishment, with only pure loving kindness, Bimhayrah Biyamainu. If we don’t merit the celebration
of redemption and if there will be a fast this year, may it be a meaningful
one. In the mean time, start practicing your celebrating by having a mitsvah filled and loving kindness felt Shabbot Shalom. |
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