ארכיון English - חב"ד תל אביב https://chabadtlv.org/category/תפריט-ראשי/english/ יהדות בתל אביב יפו Mon, 15 Jan 2024 10:14:19 +0000 he-IL hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.2 https://chabadtlv.org/wp-content/uploads/2019/01/cropped-logo_Chabad_2-1-32x32.jpg ארכיון English - חב"ד תל אביב https://chabadtlv.org/category/תפריט-ראשי/english/ 32 32 The Psalms and the sign of life from the hostage: an exciting story from Kiryat Malachi. https://chabadtlv.org/the-psalms-and-the-sign-of-life-from-the-hostage-an-exciting-story-from-kiryat-malachi/ https://chabadtlv.org/the-psalms-and-the-sign-of-life-from-the-hostage-an-exciting-story-from-kiryat-malachi/#respond Mon, 15 Jan 2024 05:28:57 +0000 https://chabadtlv.org/?p=42211 “The friend overheard the conversation and asked the butcher who it was, and he said it was the father of one of the abductees. He tells her the name and she stands there shivering. She approaches the man, asks him if he is the father of that abductee, and takes out the booklet she received […]

הפוסט The Psalms and the sign of life from the hostage: an exciting story from Kiryat Malachi. הופיע לראשונה ב-חב"ד תל אביב.

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“The friend overheard the conversation and asked the butcher who it was, and he said it was the father of one of the abductees. He tells her the name and she stands there shivering. She approaches the man, asks him if he is the father of that abductee, and takes out the booklet she received from her bag and tells him that “Since yesterday I have been praying for your son” 
Yair Tucker, Kikar Hashabat
A Kiryat Malachi resident told her friends a heartwarming story that happened to her recently:
She stated: “I organized a Challa portion ceremony at my home the day before yesterday to pray for the safe return of the hostages A lovely girl from Chabad in Kiryat Malachi sent me pamphlets of Psalms to recite for the hostages’ return. Every participant was given a pamphlet and they all recited the particular chapter corresponding to the particular age of the hostage. The pamphlets were taken home by those who wished who wished to continue praying for the hostages’ return.
“One of the girls went to the supermarket the following day,” she continued. At the meat store, she was waiting in line when the butcher asked for her pardon and moved away for a little while to speak with someone while giving him a strong hug. He inquired about his well-being and whether anything new had happened. The man claimed that three weeks ago, they got a sign indicating he was still alive, and that was it. The friend overheard the conversation and asked who it was. The man identified himself as the father of one of the hostages
When she heard the name of the hostage she shuddered. She walks up to the man, asks him if he is the abducted child’s father, pulls out the pamphlet she was given from her purse, and says she has been praying for his son since yesterday.
“The father starts crying,” the woman continues, “he was unaware that his son was being prayed for and that these pamphlets even existed. How likely is it that, the day following, she happens to run across the father of the captive, for whom she had been praying, while waiting in line at the butcher’s shop at the supermarket? Without realizing it, she was selected to be the angel.”
Rabbi Joseph Gerlitzky, the emissary of the Lubavitcher Rebbe and the Rabbi of Central Tel Aviv, is the driving force behind the Psalms movement. These are elegant little pamphlets that feature an image of one of the kidnapped individuals and contain passages from the Book of Psalms chapter 20 as well as the abducted person’s particular Psalms chapter, based on their age. “We made the decision to start this effort in accordance with the tradition set by the founder of Hassidsm, Rabbi Yisroel Baal Shem Tov that every person both male and female recite everyday the chapter in Psalms which corresponds with his/her age,” declared Rabbi Gerlitzky.
“To ensure that thousands of people would recite Psalms for each abductee every day and at all times, we printed over 100,000 copies of the pamphlets based on the precise age of the respective hostage,” said Rabbi Gerlitzky.

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?Yoke or Straitjacket https://chabadtlv.org/1844_yoke-or-straitjacket/ https://chabadtlv.org/1844_yoke-or-straitjacket/#respond Thu, 11 Aug 2016 00:00:00 +0000 https://chabadtlv.org/1844_yoke-or-straitjacket/ ?Yoke or Straitjacket                                       “We see, for example, that children, and very often adults also, may be warned that overindulgence in certain foods will be harmful to them and make them sick later on, so that for […]

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?Yoke or Straitjacket                                      


“We see, for example, that children, and very often adults also, may be warned that overindulgence in certain foods will be harmful to them and make them sick later on, so that for a period of time they might not be able to eat anything at all; yet, they may nevertheless reject all restraints to gratify their immediate appetite or passion. In a like manner, G-d has given us the “yoke” of Torah and mitzvoth, telling us that whether one understands them or not, or whatever the temptation may be, one must carry out G-d’s commandments unquestioningly”

-The Rebbe

Is the Torah too rigid? Does it restrict the mind and body, and ultimately the life?

The Avner Institute presents the Rebbe’s thoughtful response to a Minnesota professor on the nature of Jewish observance – the need to accept mitzvoth unquestioningly but not passively; their pleasure and benefits, and the true freedom gained when the soul connects to its higher, limitless source. With special thanks to Rabbi Simpson, of the Rebbe’s secretariat and Rabbi Levi Gorelik for the photo.

This week’s e-mail is dedicated to Zalman & Mushkie Werdiger in honor of their newborn daughter Fanya Luria, May she bring her parents great joy and be raised to a life of Torah, and good deeds.

Good Shabbos 
Menachem

   

Click on The Photo to Enlarge!

Rebbe Ksb

“The Bridge Spanning the Infinite Abyss”

Miss ——– 
Minneapolis, Minnesota

Blessing and Greeting:

I received your letter with some delay. In it you write about the uncertainty you feel regarding commitment to Yiddishkeit, inasmuch as you think that life in accordance with the Torah and mitzvoth is restrictive, and limits the individual in personal creativeness, particularly in the area of thinking and choosing for oneself, etc.; so that it is hard to reconcile such commitment with the idea of personal freedom.

Frankly, this attitude is somewhat surprising, coming from a thinking person. I suppose the difficulty here is due to the superficial understanding of the meaning of the “acceptance of the yoke of the Torah and mitzvoth ,” because the word “yoke” suggests restrictiveness.

In truth, however, there are many things in daily life that a person accepts and follows without question, even if he or she is a highly gifted intellectual, with a searching bent of mind. Since you attend college, and have studied science, etc., you surely know that one does not go about starting everything in physics and technology from the beginning, by verifying everything through personal research and experimentation. For example, a person will board a plane without having first researched aerodynamics, etc., to verify that it is safe to fly in it, and that it will bring one to one’s destination at approximately the scheduled time.

Or take an example from the area of physical health. It is well-established that there are things which are useful or harmful to one’s health. A person will not go about trying to verify the efficacy of a particular drug through personal experimentation. Even if a person has a very strong personal inclination to do some research and experimentation, he will surely choose areas which have not been previously researched.

This generally accepted attitude is quite understandable and logical. For inasmuch as experts have amply researched these areas and have determined what is good and what is harmful to physical health, or have established the methods as to further technological advancement, it would be, at best, a waste of time to try to go over all those experiments from the beginning. Additionally, there is no assurance that one may not make some error, and arrive at wrong conclusions, with disastrous effects, as experience has shown in some cases.

Ultimate Health

What has been said above in regard to physical health is also true in regard to spiritual health, and how the neshama [soul] can attain perfection and fulfillment. All the more so since spiritual health is generally related to physical health, particularly insofar as a Jew is concerned.

Now the Creator of man, Who is also the Creator and Master of the whole world, surely has the best qualifications that might be expected of any authority, to know what is good for man and for the world in which he lives. In his goodness, G-d has already provided us with complete and final results, having put us on notice that if a person will conduct his daily life in a certain way, then he will have a healthy neshama in a healthy body, and it will be good for him both in this world and in the world to come. He has also left some areas where a person can carry on his own experimentation, in other matters that do not interfere with the rules laid down by Him.

In other words, it is quite certain that if a human being lived long enough, and had the necessary capacities, to make all sorts of experimentation, without distraction and interference and without error, he would undoubtedly arrive at the very same conclusions which we already find in the Torah which G-d has given us, namely, the need to observe Shabbat, eat kosher food, etc. But as mentioned above, G-d in His infinite goodness – and it is in the nature of the Good to do g00d — which is to spare us all the trouble, as well as the possibility of error, and has already given us the results beforehand, for the benefit of both the person who has the inclination and the capacity to search, as well as those who do not.

The expression “yoke” in relation to accepting the Torah and mitzvoth in daily life is to be understood in the sense that human nature makes it necessary to act on imperatives. For human nature and the yetzer hara [evil inclination] are such that an individual might easily succumb to temptation. Temptation is sweet at the beginning, but bitter at the end. But human nature is such that an individual may disregard the bitter consequences because of the initial gratification.

We see, for example, that children, and very often adults also, may be warned that overindulgence in certain foods will be harmful to them and make them sick later on, so that for a period of time they might not be able to eat anything at all; yet, they may nevertheless reject all restraints to gratify their immediate appetite or passion. In a like manner, G-d has given us the “yoke” of Torah and mitzvoth, telling us that whether one understands them or not, or whatever the temptation may be, one must carry out G-d’s commandments unquestioningly.

Limitless Blessings

There is a further point, and this is the most essential aspect of the concept of the yoke of the Torah and mitzvoth. It is that although, as mentioned before, the Torah and mitzvoth have been given for the benefit of man, both in this life and in eternal life, there is an infinitely greater quality with which G-d has endowed the Torah and mitzvoth. This is the quality of uniting man with G-d, the created with the Creator, who would otherwise have nothing in common. For, by giving man a set of mitzvoth to carry out in his daily life, G-d has made it possible for man thereby to attach himself to his Creator, and transcend the limitations of a limited being, living in a limited world. The Torah and mitzvoth constitute the bridge spanning the infinite abyss separating the Creator from the created, enabling the human being to rise and attach himself to G-dliness.

Of course, this quality can be attained only if the person observes the Torah and mitzvoth, not because of the reward that goes with it for the body, or for the soul, or for both, but purely because they are the will and command of the Holy One, blessed be He. It is also for this reason that the text of the brachah [blessing] which a Jew makes before fulfilling a mitzvah does not mention the utility of the mitzvah, but rather the fact that “He has sanctified us with his commandments and commands us.”

Finally, I would like to say that the fact that you have had some doubts and uncertainties should not discourage you at all. Indeed, the Torah desires a person to utilize all his capacities, including his mind and intelligence, in the service of G-d, as long as the approach is right, namely, the acceptance of the Torah and mitzvoth first. It is quite natural and even desirable that one should understand everything that is within one’s mental grasp. In your case this is of additional significance, because you have an opportunity to influence and benefit other young people who have the same bent of mind as you.

Much more can be said in connection with such a profound subject, but I trust that the above lines, though limited in quantity, have sufficient content to illuminate the true aspects of the matter. Besides, should you wish to discuss these matters further, you surely have friends among anash [community members] in London who will be glad to enlighten you.

With blessing,

[Signature]

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