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Just as no physical destruction can destroy our love for the beloved land, so can no spiritual desolation reduce profound love of that land — Rav Avraham Itzhak Hakohen Kook

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Debbie's Archive
Mr. Bitter Cheshvan and the World of Concealment

The intense introspection of Elul is far behind us. The royal crowning of Hashem on Rosh Hashannah is but a distant memory. The pressure of Aseret Ymei Tshuvah has come and gone. The books of Yom Kippur have officially been closed. The sukkot have been dismantled and stored for another long year. Our feet have healed from the joyous dancing of Simchat Torah. Yet as sad as we are to pack away our various machzorim and see the Days of Awe fade away, the change of seasons brings with it a sigh of relief. We couldn’t possibly handle another barrage of huge meals, impose on another family for a place to stay, or afford to miss a single extra class. We couldn’t possibly pick out another outfit, afford another trip home or stand for another moment in shul pretending we know where we are in the machzor. And it is official, as a thunderstorm rages outside, answering the tefillot of Jews all around the world, that the cold front has brought with it someone we’ve both been dreading and secretly anticipating: The month of Cheshvan. Mar-cheshvan. Mr. Bitter Cheshvan.

As the only month of the Jewish calendar without a single holiday, the dismal beginning of winter, and a sudden return to the mundane after a period of spiritual bounty, Cheshvan doesn’t have the best reputation among the other months. He represents a fall from grace – spiritually, emotionally, and physically. The flood in the days of Noah that destroyed the world happened in Cheshvan. Rachel Immenu passed away in Cheshvan. So why does our tradition say that the Third Temple in the days of Mashiach will be built in this bitter, cold and empty month?

The challenge of Cheshvan is to ground the unbelievable spiritual energy of the chaggim in our seemingly mundane physical world. The word עולם, ‘world’, literally means ‘concealment’. In order to grant His creations the gift of free will and allow for the illusion of the existence of anything other than His All Encompassing Oneness, Hashem creates worlds of concealment. He masks Himself behind the mundane and allows for a world in which His very own creations can flatly deny His existence. And that is Cheshvan. “…בראשית ברא אלקים את השמים ואת הארץ: והארץ

The Torah opens by telling us that in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth. He created the spiritual realities of the universe, the happenings of the heavens, the secrets of existence, the holy, the transcendental, the beyond. And He created the earth. He created the physical world, the mundane, the imminent, the simple, the here and now. The second verse begins with the words והארץ. Don’t worry about the spiritual secrets, God hints to us, I’ll worry about that. Your life, your existence, your Torah that I am about to reveal to you, all takes place in the physical world. Know that השמים exists, He demands, but live in הארץ.

The chaggim are over for all of us. We may remain connected, but our period of basking in perpetual inspiration has dissolved into university, work, and the challenges of every day living. There is a danger of descending into this Cheshvan-like existence and dropping all of the spiritual enlightenment we have been granted out of a fear that there is no place for it in this bitter world of gashmiut. The challenge is instead to both bring the light down and raise the world up by revealing that behind the dark, heavy rainclouds of this world of concealment exists a Light and a Truth so bright that it is only through the chessed of concealment that He can allow for us to exist. Perhaps if we manage to use this month of Cheshvan properly, as a way to scratch away at the surface and reveal the hidden spirituality all around us, we will merit to see the Bet Hamikdash rebuilt, revealing that Mr. Bitter Cheshvan is really the bearer of the greatest spiritual gifts we could ever dream of. His storm clouds may bring darkness, but his rains bring unprecedented potential for growth.

אני ואתה נשנה את העולם

אני ואתה נשנה את העולם,
אני ואתה ויבואו כבר כולם,
אמרו את זה קודם לפני,
לא משנה – אני ואתה נשנה את העולם.

Anyone with a solid Zionist education has, no doubt, sang this feel-good Israeli song in Hebrew class, yet as I learned it in Ulpan I began to question its legitimacy. “Me and you will change the world”, it claims. That’s a pretty hefty statement, in my opinion. It assumes two axioms that need to be further developed. The first, that the world is indeed changeable. That we are not destined to live in the same world tomorrow that we live in today. And the second, that it is we who have the power to change it. That the entire world can be affected by small things – by individuals, by ideas. We, in a modern day North American culture, are certainly familiar with these empowering and optimistic ideals, but I sometimes wonder how deeply we truly understand them. More often than not, they remain cliché statements repeated during “Awareness Week” at school and “Yom Chessed” at camp, instead of becoming integrated values that we understand, never mind truths that we actually live by. (more…)

On my flight back to Toronto after my Year in Israel, I was writing furiously in my journal, trying to make sense of all that I’d seen, felt, learned and experienced, when a fellow passenger came up to me and struck up a conversation. We spoke about the power of Eretz Yisrael, and our mixed feelings about leaving. It was Parshat Shelach that week, and he explained to me Rebbe Nachman’s interpretation of the spies’ evil report of the land, specifically the phrase “the land…is a land that devours its inhabitants”(Bamidbar 13:32). Unfortunately I don’t remember his exact understanding, but it implied that this statement was both true and potentially positive, if read correctly. “Perhaps it’s true,” he suggested with a smile, “no one can deny that you become a part of this place. Whether you like it or not, your soul gets stuck here. Eretz Yisrael absolutely swallows you up.”

Those words echoed in my ears as my aliyah flight took off from Toronto just over a month ago. Exactly a year had passed, and as I learned Parshat Shelach on the plane, I thought about the deep, enigmatic connection between Am Yisrel and Eretz Yisrael. Over the past month as I’ve gone through the technical motions that will officially make this place my permanent home, I have been trying to better understand the meaning of this phrase. As I go from office to office, line to line, bus to bus, mountain to mountain, maayan to maayan, tiyul to tiyul, and Shabbat to Shabbat, this questions comes with me. What is it about Israel, about this physical mass of land in the Middle East, that completely consumes the Jewish people?

At first, I felt nothing. I felt like I was just here for the year. Perhaps it was all just so natural, so right - - the fulfillment of 3000 years of waiting. And then I began to panic. Am I in denial? Do I not understand the magnitude of my decisions? And then, suddenly, I felt everything. I felt everything, all the time. The most aggravating annoyance as I went through (and continue to go through!) the infamous Israeli bureaucracy. The most incredible frustration as I struggled (and continue to struggle!) in Ulpan, realizing my personal handicap in the language in which I will soon be studying. The most painful longing for friends and family members so far away, on so many levels. The most frantic helplessness as I heard the news of a terrorist on a mad rampage, bulldozing innocent people, smashing into the 13 bus I take to my Katamon apartment. The deepest sorrow upon feeling the effects of our captured soldiers tragic return to their home, to our home. And then the most all encompassing relief as I lit the candles and brought in my first Shabbat in the holiest city in the world. The most refreshing peace as I returned to Sfat for the first time. The indescribable feeling of touching the Kotel and realizing how close it will always be. The subtle comfort of being home. And the final clarity I have as I develop these thoughts at a maayan in the Judean Mountains at sunset (not to be too much of a cliché, or anything).

The greatest challenge, I have found, has been allowing myself to feel all that is constantly coming my way. Israel is a place so intense, so loaded, so powerful, that it is virtually impossible for my Western mind to categorize, analyze, and understand it, intellectually. My roommate gave me the wise advice of her mother, “Your emotions are a part of you. You need to embrace them, experience them, let them wash over you, and only then can you let them go.” But how could I feel something that didn’t make sense? How could I understand what I was going through, when it was so much larger than my limited perspective? Moreover, how could I be frustrated, annoyed and negative when I knew it was all part of something so Good? I tried so hard to remind myself at the peak of my frustrations, that each time I was being sent from office to office to office, I was spending more time exploring the streets of Yerushalayim, Ir Hakodesh. “It doesn’t matter how time consuming it is to get your medical insurance sorted out, or that every single person has given you completely contradictory directions,” I rationalized, “at the end of the day you are receiving free health care from an independent Jewish state in Eretz Yisrael that you have had the opportunity to make your home after thousands of years.” But it didn’t work. All of my efforts were futile, and this type of thinking only increased my frustration.

And then it hit me. I was at a friend’s going away party and met a woman who’d made aliyah close to two years ago. We spoke about the process, the challenges, the highs and lows, and she helped me to understand the inherent purpose of all that I had been going through. “This land will absolutely flatten you and rebuild you,” she warned, “any personal hang-ups? Ego-trips? Character flaws? Forget them!” And that is when I looked back over the past month, and realized that the entire experience has been picking at the very aspects of myself that need the most work. Whether it is learning how to ask for help, validating my own emotions, letting go of my ego, or relinquishing my desire to control my own fate (among many others!), my very environment is refusing to allow me to get away with my flaws. Every day, the things that frustrate me so completely, only do so because, in His abundant love and kindness, God has designed a reality where we are so intrinsically connected to this land that our experiences here reflect that which is happening internally. We are forced to address these issues head on, and the more we attempt to avoid them, the harder they will chase us. We need to become completely devoured by this land in order to realize our true potential and become the greatest versions of ourselves possible.

I know that I am currently living the dream of so many of Tzipiyah’s readers, and I feel a responsibility to be as honest as possible to those who look here for inspiration as I make my own personal report on the land. It is not necessarily easy. It is not necessarily fun. Perhaps this land really does devour its inhabitants. But it is real, it is worth it, and I truly believe that any time spent here, no matter in what capacity, has the power to bring us deeper and deeper into the reality of the world, into the heart of the people, and into the individual potential of ourselves. Please God, we should all get here soon.

Mah zeh "Atzmaut?"

A short thought from my dad:

“The problem with today is that many people forget that although Israel is ‘independent’, it is completely dependent on God. When Israel celebrates its dependence on God, then we will be truly free!”

מֵאֵת יְהוָה, הָיְתָה זֹּאת; הִיא נִפְלָאת בְּעֵינֵינו
This is Hasmem’s doing, it is wonderous in our eyes
זֶה-הַיּוֹם, עָשָׂה יְהוָה; נָגִילָה וְנִשְׂמְחָה בוֹ
This is the day which Hashem has made; we will rejoice and be glad in it/Him (?)
-Tehillim 118

Yom Ha’Atzmaut - Israel’s Accomplishments

Part of The Yom Haatzmaut Project
1. Organizations to Help Victims of Terror
2. Operation Solomon
3. Education
4. Worst Human Rights Violater (according to UNHRC)


Organizations to Help Victims of Terror

In response to the violence and terror thrown upon the people of Israel since it’s conception, countless organizations have been founded to aid the victims and their families. Whether these organizations provide financial, technical, medical, emotional or psychological support, they show a level of resilience, strength and love among Am Yisrael that promises a bright future…no matter what is thrown (or shot?) our way! It is by continuing to transform pain into love, despair into hope and tragedy into triumph that we will ultimately turn exile into redemption.





Operation Solomon

In 36 hours, 34 non-stop flights of Israeli aircraft transported 14 500 Ethiopian Jews to Israel. On May 24, 1991, the operation set a world record for ’single-flight passenger load’ when an El Al 747 carried 1 122 passengers to Israel (1 087 passengers were registered, but dozens of children hid in their mothers’ robes). Two babies were born during the flight(wikipedia.com).

Bringing geulah - kibutz galiyut at its finest..!

Education

There are challenges and problems galore - student strikes, teachers strikes, insufficient funding, low teachers’ wages, strikes, strikes, strikes, but at the end of the day, Israel’s commitment to education can be seen through the following facts:

Israel has the highest ratio of university degrees to the population in the world.

Twenty-four per cent of Israel’s workforce holds university degrees, ranking third in the industrialized world.

Four Israeli universities are included in the European Top 100.



Worst Human Rights Violater According to the UNHRC

I would be extremely worried and ashamed if Israel was meeting the United Nation’s Human Rights Council’s standard of human rights. Since its inception, the Council has passed twenty resolutions - 19 of them have been anti-Israel. The 2009 UN anti-racism conference, Durban II, is being planned by a committee that boasts Libya as its Chairman and Iran, Cuba and Pakistan as its members. Richard Falk, who draws a moral equivelency between the actions of the Nazis and those of the Israelis, was just appointed special rapporteur on the Palestinian territories. Need I continue?


Considering the council’s definition of Human Rights proves to be completely backward, I consider this title to be a great compliment to Israel’s commitment to human rights. Despite the fact that she has been faced with difficult challenges every step of the way, Israel offers religious and political freedom, protects minority rights, champions womens’ rights, and protects the holy sites of other religions in the only liberal democracy in the Middle East. Perhaps we arent exactly where we would ultimately like to be, but we’re most definitely on the way…


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