Lemonade in
the Desert
Parshas Behaaloscha
Posted on June 8, 2023 (5783) By Rabbi Naftali
Reich | Series: Legacy | Level: Beginner
Packing up an entire
family and moving to a new location is one of the great physical, mental and
emotional ordeals in life.
Relocation imposes great
hardship and throws the normal rhythms and cadences of life into disarray.
Those who have endured the experience are thankful that it normally needs to be
done only once in a very long time.
The Jewish encampment in
the desert, however, was not quite so fortunate. The people traveled by divine
command numerous times, always with extremely short notice. The signal to
encamp or decamp was delivered by the cloud pillars that hovered over the
encampment. When the cloud pillars rose and edged away, the people scrambled to
pack up and follow. And when the cloud pillars descended and came to a stop,
the people knew this was the place to pitch their tents.
The travels were
unpredictable. Sometimes, the cloud pillars would signal them to move within a
very short time, and sometimes, they would remain in one spot for a very long
time. Sometimes, the cloud pillars would bring them to a barren and desolate
stretch of desert and stay there for a long time, and sometimes, they would
guide the people to a lovely spot but uproot them in a matter of days.
What was the purpose of
all this constant relocation? And why was it done in a manner so unpredictable
and fraught with such difficulty? Why did G-d force them into such a trying
nomadic existence?
The commentators explain
that the forty-year sojourn of the Jewish people in the desert was meant to
prepare them for the trials and vicissitudes of the life that lay ahead. There
is no life that is not fraught with hardships and frustration, nor is there any
important period in a person’s life that passer without any adversity
whatsoever.
So how do we deal with
these difficulties? Many people just burrow down and try to get past it. They
think, “When I will get to high school, then my problems will be over.” Or:
“When I get my driver’s license, then life will be just perfect.” Or: “When we
get married and settle down in a place of our own, then life will be
uninterrupted bliss.” And what about their relationship with the Creator? “I
know I have to improve,” they say. “Just let me get past these hurdles, and
then I will concentrate on it.”
The travels of the Jewish
people in the Desert taught us that we always have to deal with what life has
handed us. As we travel through the various chapters of our lives, we need to
rise above the unpredictability and the hardship. We must not let ourselves
become distracted from the ultimate purpose of our existence. We must deal with
our situations as they arise and turn them to our advantage. If G-d served
us lemons, we should use them to make lemonade.
A young man was traveling
on a train with a great sage. The window was open, and the cold air was blowing
in. The young man kept his holy books open on his lap, but he stared at them
blankly.
“Why aren’t you studying?”
asked the sage.
“Because it is so cold,”
said the young man.
“Then close the window,”
said the sage.
The young man closed the
window but still was not studying.
“What now?” asked the
sage.
“I am still disturbed by
the memory of the cold.”
“My dear young man, if you
had wanted to, you really could have studied in the cold. And if you don’t want
to, you can find a reason under any circumstances.”
In our own lives, we are
faced with the struggles of existence every day, whether they are financial,
intellectual, social, emotional or medical by nature. There never comes a time
when we can step back and say, “All right, I’ve set up my life just right.
Everything is just perfect. Now the good times can begin.” No matter how
difficult they may be, the good times are right now. These moments will never
pass our way again. We must grasp them, elevate then, sanctify them and store
them away forever.
Text Copyright © 2007 by
Rabbi Naftali Reich and Torah.org.
Let the
Wick Catch Fire
Parshas Behaaloscha
Posted on May 26, 2021 (5781) By Rabbi Berel
Wein | Series: Rabbi
Wein | Level: Beginner
We are familiar with the
Rashi’s comment in the second verse of this week’s Torah reading that the
Priest who lit the candelabra was to keep the fire close to the wick, until the
wick itself caught fire and rose by itself. This is a lesson not only regarding
the lighting of the great candelabra in the Temple but is also a metaphor for many
life situations. Unless the wick itself truly catches fire and holds the flame
on its own, the effort expended in attempting to light this wick will
ultimately be fruitless and unsuccessful.
This metaphor is true in
family life as well, for if our children and grandchildren are unable to be
successful on their own, then the parents have somehow failed their
responsibility regarding their children. This is also true in the realm of
education. Students who can never be productive on their own, no matter how
much knowledge they have, will not be a source of pride to their teachers.
We have witnessed many
times in life that people who were somehow voted to be the most likely from
their class to be successful in the future, do not fulfill that hope and
expectation. Their flame did not kindle itself and is of limited illumination
and value. There are many factors that go into this eternal problem of
generations of students. However, the result is what usually counts, and
everyone agrees that success is measured by the ability to eventually achieve
by one’s own efforts.
This week’s Torah reading
itself provides an example of this idea, of making certain that the flame will
take hold on its own and not flicker and later disappear. We are taught that
the Jewish people undertook what should have been a short march from the
mountain of Sinai to enter the land of Israel. They are seemingly well
mobilized for the journey and embark upon it with apparent enthusiasm.
Nevertheless, this journey turns into a trek of 38 years of bitterness,
hostility, rebellion, and eventual demise of that entire generation. Simply
put, the flame that was with the Jewish people at the Exodus from Egypt and the
revelation at Mount Sinai did not hold fast enough to be able to survive the
tests and vicissitudes of life and the events that lay ahead.
It would be the task of
the later generations to summon the will and tenacity necessary to see to it
that the tools necessary for the national growth and development of the Jewish
people in the land of Israel would be strong enough to maintain itself on its
own. That remains the challenge in Jewish life throughout the long centuries of
our existence, and especially over the tumultuous centuries that we have
recently experienced. Tenacity of purpose and strength of will have been and
remain the key weapons in our arsenal of survival and triumph, and we will see
the flame of Israel strengthen and rise once again in our days.
Shabbat shalom,
Rabbi Berel Wein
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