| PARSHAS YISRO | 22 SHEVAT 5767 | 10 FEBRUARY 2007 | |
Parsha PerspectivesBy Ozer Alport(וישמע יתרו (18:1 “And Yisro heard” After hearing about the miracles that Hashem performed for the Jewish people at the Reed Sea and in the battle against Amalek, Yisro came to convert and join the Jewish people. The Torah seems to emphasize that there was something unique and significant about Yisro hearing of these miracles. Rav Moshe Alshich explains that while the entire world heard about these miracles, and everyone was filled with awe and fear of the Jews, only Yisro chose to do something about it – to come and convert. Proper hearing doesn’t merely connote the ability to detect and process sound waves-it requires an understanding of the message being conveyed. Rav Shalom Schwadron likens the difference to two people walking down the train tracks. When the conductor of an oncoming train notices them, he begins to sound a shrill warning whistle. Both men hear the whistle. One is a simple farmer who has never before seen a train, and therefore continues walking, enjoying the view and the sounds of the whistle, while the other understands the warning being expressed and immediately flees from the oncoming danger. While both men physically “heard” the sound of the whistle, only the second one can be said to have properly heard and understood the message. Similarly, although the nations of the world heard of the miracles which Hashem performed for the Jews in Egypt and in the desert, the news went in one ear and out the other, failing to penetrate and change them. Only Yisro internalized the message, understanding what was required of him and acting accordingly. During World War I, many of the Jews of war-torn Poland fled to take refuge in Austria. One year on Shabbos Chanuka, Rav Moses Flesch, the Rav of a shul in Vienna, gave a speech about the strength and determination of Yehudis, a heroine of the Chanuka story.. He continued by noting that while yeshivos had spread throughout Europe and a proper Jewish education was available to many boys, there was unfortunately no similar option for Jewish girls, who were forced to attend public school and received only a rudimentary religious education at Sunday schools. Lacking a solid background, the girls were all too often swept up in the anti-religious movements of the time, often corrupting other family members with them. Rav Flesch stressed the need for a modern-day Yehudis to step forward and establish a suitable system of formal education for Jewish girls, so that they would remain religious and so that the yeshiva students would be able to find G-d-fearing girls to marry. While everybody in the packed shul heard his inspiring words on that fateful day, only one girl up in the crowded Ezras Nashim truly “heard” the message – her name was Sarah Schneirer, and she was inspired by his address to establish the modern Beis Yaakov movement, giving Jewish girls the opportunity to receive a proper Jewish education. Many times in life Hashem sends us personal messages and wake-up calls. Although we always hear the information being presented to us, we often choose to ignore the call to action which is required. At those times, let us “hear” the lesson of Yisro and of Sarah Schneirer and understand the actions and changes that we are required to undertake. return to top Dedicated to the memory of Charles “Chuck” Tennant (Yosef ben Carol). | |
talking points - parshas yisroRabbi Elazar Meisels1. Measure For Measure“Yisro said, ‘Blessed is Hashem, Who has rescued you from the hand of Egypt and the hand of Pharaoh…Now I know that Hashem is greater than all the other gods, for [by the] the very matter in which [the Egyptians] had conspired against them!’” 18:10-11
That the Egyptians were punished by G-d came as no surprise to Yisro. What stunned him, and reinforced his awareness of G-d’s omnipotence, was the fact that He struck them in precisely the manner that they had sought to strike the Jews. Idolatry is based on the assumption that the manifold forces in nature compete with and seek to overpower one another, since each wields power in one area only and is defenseless in the others. By punishing the Eygptians through water, G-d demonstrated that not only wasn’t He vulnerable in that area as they had suspected, to the contrary, He was capable of utilizing it to overpower and annihilate them. 2. The Mandate of Jewish Unity“In the third month from the Exodus…they arrived at the wilderness of Sinai...and encamped in the wilderness, and Israel encamped there, opposite the mountain.” 19:1,2
3. The Potential To Be Leaders“’You shall be to me a kingdom of ministers and a holy nation,’ these are the words that you shall speak to the Jewish people” 19:6
Our decision to assume the weighty moral responsibilities of the Torah endowed us all with the potential to be exceedingly great. How firmly we would adhere to the strictures of the Torah would determine our success at attaining this lofty goal. The potential is there eternally, and although the promise that we would collectively attain it will not be fulfilled until the Messianic Era, every person is capable of individually pursuing and achieving this noble quest. To strive for less is to shortchange oneself of the unique rank accessible only to the Jewish people. return to top This page is dedicated to, and written for the 6,000 Partners in Torah mentors.
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Parshas YISROYisro, Moshe Rabbeinu’s father-in-law, hears all that has happened to Bnai Yisroel. He brings Tzipora, Moshe’s wife, and their two sons to the desert to be reunited with Moshe. Moshe elaborates on all the marvelous events of the Exodus from Egypt. Yisro offers sacrifices to Hashem, and he and the notables of Bnai Yisroel eat together. The next day, Yisro sees that Bnai Yisroel wait on line all day to seek advice from Moshe and to have him settle their disputes. Yisro suggests that Moshe appoint a capable group of men to assist him in judging the people. Moshe selects a group of judges who will bring to his attention only the most difficult matters. On Rosh Chodesh Sivan, Bnai Yisroel arrive at Har Sinai. The nationl is imbued with a spirit of devotion and unity. Moshe carries Hashem’s message to the people that if they will be loyal to Him, they will be His special treasure, a nation of priests and a holy people. Bnai Yisroel unanimously and enthusiastically accept this destiny. They are instructed to prepare themselves for three days to receive the Torah directly from Hashem Himself. They are warned not to overstep the boundaries set for them. A dense cloud covers Har Sinai. Amid lightning and thunder, Moshe is called to ascend the mountain where he is given another warning to the people. Moshe feels it is superfluous, but Hashem insists, and he descends the mountain to be sure the people understand. When all is ready, Hashem speaks to His beloved people and reveals to them the Aseres Hadibros, the Ten Commandments. It is the only time in history that an entire nation hears the voice of Hashem speaking to its assembled multitude. The people are shaken by the experience, and beg Moshe to be the intermediary for them, lest they die. Moshe assures them that Hashem seeks only to raise them to an exalted status, and to place His imprint upon them so that they do not sin. The parsha ends with a command to build an alter for Hashem which is to be placed on the ground, not raised on columns. The alter is to be built of stones, but they may not be fashioned with metal tools. Access to the top of the alter will be by means of a ramp, not steps, in order to insure the maximum degree of tznius (modesty). return to top Talk, Laugh, Learn, Please pray for a speedy recovery: | |
Just Forget About ItDear Rabbi: Dear Jed: Clearly, this is no simple matter, and the commentaries discuss what the exact parameters of this obligation are. However, the verse makes it clear that it is precisely this love that precludes the possibility of bearing a grudge or taking revenge against another Jew. Why is this, and how can one obtain this deep affection for another Jew that empowers him to forgo the insticts and pleasures of revenge? The Chafetz Chaim, in his classic work, “Shmiras HaLoshon”, provides insight [Chelek 1, Shaar HaTevunos, Perek 6]. He quotes the Talmud Yerushalmi which offers a powerful analogy to explain this idea. Imagine someone walking in the woods whose leg became entangled in a fallen tree limb and caused him to trip and fall. Would he become incensed at his leg and begin striking it with his arms? Will he start to kick it with his other leg? Would he bear a grudge against his leg for causing him this agony? Surely not! It is impossible to separate the leg from the arm and view them as separate entities that one would bear ill will toward the other. The Jewish people are referred to in Divrei HaYomim [1:17:21] as a single entity, “And who is like your nation Israel, one nation in the land.” This comparison is not merely symbolic. The mystics teach that although every Jew appears in this world as an individual, in reality, we are all merely extensions of a central unit called the Jewish soul that resides in the spiritual world. At its core in the spiritual world, this soul is a unified entity, which branches out and manifests itself in the physical world as individual human beings. The separateness, however, is illusory. In reality, no Jew is independent of the others. Once a person recognizes that at his core, he is one with each and every Jew, the obligation to love another Jew as yourself is self-understood. It’s as natural as the expectation that the arms and legs feel and act in unison. They’re one and the same: parts of a greater whole. When one Jew acts foolishly or even harmfully toward another Jew, it should not be perceived as an act of aggression against that individual. Rather, the Torah teaches us to view the aggressor as the leg that became entangled and caused the person to trip and fall. The victim is like the arm, and thoughts of grudges or revenge are obviously inappropriate. RM return to top Rabbi Elazar Meisels can be reached at rabbimeisels@partnersintorah.org | |
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