Leadership
By Example
Parshas Emor
Posted on April 30, 2021 (5781) By Rabbi Label
Lam | Series: Dvar
Torah| Level: Beginner
And HASHEM said
to Moshe: ‘Say to the Kohanim, the
sons of Aaron, and you shall say to them:
“To a (dead) person he
shall not become impure among his people…”‘ (Vayikra 21:1
Say to the Kohanim…and you
shall say to them: The Torah uses the double expression of “say” followed by
“and you shall say” to caution the adults with regard to the minors. (Rashi)
The Kohanim-The
Priestly cast are to play an important role as living examples of holiness and
purity for the entire nations. Where is the manual for success in relating this
sublime message from one generation to the next?
Rabbi Yaakov Kaminetsky
ztl. Had made an important distinction between two important words in the realm
of raising children; Chinuch – Education and Hashpah – Influence. Education is a form of direct teaching. The
teacher fills up the cup of the child with valuable information and important
knowledge. Hashpah comes from a root word Shefa which means abundance.
Hashpah is when one fills one’s
cup and what overflows washes over and influences those in one’s immediate
surroundings. Which is most effective?
I have had many parents
brag to me over the years, “Rabbi, I push my children!” They think I will be
impressed. While I am sure they mean well, my response is, “Don’t push! Pull!”
I explain, “When someone honks their horn behind you, do you feel like going
faster or slower? However, when a car goes racing by, we all have an urge to
speed up. Teach your child primarily by example!
Children are studying
their parents in ways the parents may never imagine and they will naturally
imitate their behavior. One day I opened the food cabinet at home and an
avalanche of 2 ounce applesauce snack containers came crashing down. As I gazed
at the pileup on the floor below a great truth dawned upon me, “The applesauce
doesn’t fall far from the pantry!”
The parents who
unfortunately talk in Shul are raising the next generation of Shul talkers.
Those who remain focused
on the business of Davening invariably raise
children who Daven.
One clever child told his
parents, “Your actions are so loud, I can’t hear what you are saying!”
The story is told about a
principal who called a father at his work to discuss his child’s behavior.
While the principal was
demanding a face to face meeting the father insisted to be told the reason for
the call.
So, the principal told him straight, “It seems your child has been stealing
pencils from the other children in school.” The father was righteously
indignant and replied to the principal, “Why in the world would my child steal
pencils from the other children? I bring home all the pencils he needs from the
office!”
One of my teachers was
happily skipping home on Simchas Torah with his then young family.
They were singing a lively
tune to the words, “Olam Haba is a guta zach…Learning Torah is a besser zach…”
(The next world is a good thing…Learning Torah is a better thing…” His
four-year old daughter interrupted the parade and asked her father in all
earnest, “Abba, what’s Olam Haba?”
He knew he had to address
her question on a level she could comprehend. He asked her what the most
delicious thing in the world was, thinking that if she said chocolate, then he
would tell her it’s tons of chocolate and if she said marshmallows then he’d
tell her how many marshmallows. She gave a most surprising answer, though.
“Davening!” He asked her where she had learned that. She was not yet in school
and all she said was, “Mommy!”
How had she learned this?
He realized that after the morning rush, when all the older brothers and
sisters are sent off to school the mother and daughter sit down to eat some
breakfast. The mother has her coffee and a muffin and the daughter has her
sweet raisin bran. Afterwards, the mother approaches a blank wall, siddur in
hand and prays. The child notices the look of sublime joy on her mother’s face.
Intuitively she compares it to the sweetness of the breakfast goodies and
naturally concludes one experience must be far sweeter than the other. Davening must be that delicious.
That’s the power of
Hashpa, the highest form of leadership – by example.
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