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Vayishlach
The sicha for parshas Vayishlach
is in Vol. III of Likkutei Sichos, and it is actually a sicha
for Yud Tes Kislev.
Yud Tes Kislev is related to
parshas Vayishlach in that the Maggid, the Shabbos before he
passed away, which was on Yud Tes Kislev, said, “ vayishlach
Yankov malachim el Esav,” that Yakov sent angels to Esav, that
Yakov sent the mamush, the body of the malach to Esav, but not
the essence. The essence of the malach remained by Yakov.
Now Rashi says that Yakov sent
angels mamush, meaning he literally sent the angels. So the
way Rashi understands it, and the way the Maggid explains it
seems to be contradictory. Rashi is saying the word “mamush”
implies that it was really the angels and the Maggid is saying
that the word “mamush” implies that he didn’t send the real
angel, he sent only the “mamush”, the physical part, the body
of the angel but the essence stayed with Yakov.
The Rebbe explains that this
contradiction is only on the surface. When you stop and think
about it, an angel belongs in essence by Yakov, not by Esav.
The fact that when the angel went as a shliach, on a shlichus
from Yakov to Esav, the essence of the angel remained
connected and devoted to Yakov and not to Esav, because the
shliach in essence remains with the meshalayach. So that by
the very fact that the body of the malach related to the
shlichus and the effect it needed to have on Esav, but the
soul of the angel, the mind and heart and the devotion of the
angel remained with Yakov, that’s why it is mamush an angel
that went to Esav. Because that it was an angel is really all
about, that the heart and soul belongs to Yakov, and only the
body deals with Esav.
So in this connection between
Vayishlach and Yud Tes Kislev, there is a sicha in Vol. III of
Likkutei Sichos which was actually said in 1923, and the Rebbe
says as follows:
The Freidike Rebbe who
transplanted Chabad Chassidus to America, told many stories
about the Alter Rebbe, and one of them, which is very relevant
to our times, needs to be mentioned. This is the kind of a
story brings out and shows the essence and character of the
style and philosophy of Chabad Chassidus.
This was in the time when the
Mitteler Rebbe, the Alter Rebbe’s son, who later became his
successor, was with him in the same house. The Mitteler Rebbe
already had children at the time, and among them was an
infant. The Alter Rebbe lived on the second floor and the
Mitteler Rebbe lived on the ground floor. One time when the
Mitteler Rebbe was sitting learning, and the infant was
sleeping nearby in a crib, the crib turned over. The Mitteler
Rebbe was so deeply immersed in his studies that he didn’t
hear the crib fall nor the baby crying. The Alter Rebbe,
although he was upstairs on the second floor, and he too was
immersed in learning, yet he heard the baby crying. So he
interrupted his learning, came downstairs, picked up the baby
and quieted him down, and put him back into the crib.
Afterwards the Alter Rebbe said
to the Mitteler Rebbe, that when a child is crying and you are
immersed in the learning to such a degree that you don’t hear
the cry, this is not an acceptable way, this is not an
acceptable behavior.
The Freidike Rebbe explained and
elaborated on the story, saying that as deep and as devoted as
we are in the world of Torah and mitzvahs, when a child is
crying and needs attention, we have to tear ourselves away
from the study and the mitzvahs that we are doing for
ourselves, and attend to the needs of the child. Because when
a Jewish child expresses a need and a feeling, an emptiness
and wants and needs to be taught and elevated in his
Yiddishkeit, we have to put everything else aside and take
care of the child.
This is particularly relevant to
us in our time, the Rebbe says, because we live now in a time,
where we can see a very strong desire, an awakening among Jews
in general and young Jews in particular. That even among
teenagers and younger, thirteen year olds and even younger
than that, we see a desire and a yearning to grow in
Yiddishkeit.
We find also in young married
couples who have young children, even four and five year olds,
the parents have also developed a strong desire and thirst for
Yiddishkeit. And it is not for some kind of entertainment
Yiddishkeit but a desire for Yiddishkeit in its truest,
original, authentic form without compromises and without sugar
coating. Only when we give our children that kind of
education, that kind of upbringing, which is based completely
and totally on the truth of Torah, only then is their desire
and their need satisfied.
And this is what we learn from
the story mentioned before, that whatever a Jew may be
involved in, and all Jews are involved with good things and
important things, in pursuing a livelihood, or in community
projects and so on, when it comes to the needs of a Jewish
child, that must be given priority treatment and it must come
first before all other projects. We have to make the greatest
effort and put in the greatest amount of work to make sure
that every Jewish child receives a Jewish education, a Torah
education, particularly with the condition in which the world
is today, that many children are left out of the yeshivas and
of Jewish education because of financial problems, or other
such things, so we have to make sure that every child’s desire
for Yiddishkeit is satisfied.
Unfortunately there are also
those kinds of children who are lacking in Yiddishkeit and
lacking in a Torah knowledge but they are not crying, we don’t
see in them, we don’t hear from them a thirst and a yearning
for Jewish values, for Jewish awareness.
That gives us an even greater
obligation. The very fact that they are not crying shows that
their lack is so deep, their hunger is so deep that they no
longer feel it as hunger. When a person doesn’t know that he
is sick, that is an even worse sickness than when a person
feels symptoms. And this is one of the things a yeshiva, all
yeshivas, should devote themselves to, to make sure that they
accept and bring in every kind of Jewish child, without any
restriction whatsoever, without any discrimination whatsoever,
regardless of what family background the child comes from, and
regardless of what attitudes the child displays at the moment,
every Jewish child should be absorbed and surrounded in an
environment of Torah and mitzvahs, so that they will be
blessed in their physical life as well as their spiritual
life.
One other point that needs to be
made concerning the world in general. The world finds itself
in general in the position of a baby who has fallen out of its
crib. Because the world has in general left its track, fallen
out of its cradle so to speak, and is totally confused in
terms of its direction and its future. So it is seeking,
searching desperately to find ways to harness the human
potential in a way that it will contribute to the building and
the improvement of life and the world, rather than the
opposite, the destruction and the deterioration of life.
And here also a person might say,
he has his own problems, he is busy with his own affairs, and
he has no time to devote himself to the
direction of the world in general or the society in general,
to worry about what is going on in the world, particularly in
another country.
But we now know that in spite of
the distance between one country and another, and one
neighborhood and another, we now know that what happens in one
corner of the world, actually affects the rest of the world as
well.
Then there is another claim that
a person might have and that is “ mi ani, u ma ani”, if there
are problems in the world, who am I and what am I that I
should be able to make a change, to make a difference in the
world. However the truth is that every person can have an
effect on the entire world, as the Rambam says that the world
is balanced and one more deed can change the world. We find
also in other seforim that whenever a Jew does a mitzvah in
one place, one little corner of the world, and he creates
there a Divine light, the light of truth, the emes of Torah,
that light, the Torah and the mitzvah, has the ability to
effect the entire world, and G-d promises that it will effect
the entire world, in that it will become better and easier
everywhere in the world to be good.
So when a person in his own
limited space creates that kind of a life, the result is that
everywhere in the world, people are moved and are inspired to
righteousness and justice, goodness and holiness that dispels
and removes all the forces of evil and war, the destructive
forces, and replaces it with the force of good and of light.
Among the activities that a
person can do in his little corner of the world that effects
the rest of the world, is as mentioned before, strengthening
the true Jewish education of Jewish children wherever they
are, and by having an individual Jewish child educated
and inspired by the light and the
G-dliness of Torah. This causes the light and the G-dliness of
Torah and mitzvahs to spread throughout the whole world, ner
mitzvah v’Torah ohr, it lights up the whole world. And then we
have G-d’s guarantee, G-d’s promise that this will bring great
blessing to all those who are involved and participate in this
activity in that all the good in the world will become
stronger until finally the powers of good will be victorious
and will conquer the evil, and we will be zocher among all
Jews and the whole world with the coming of Moshiach, to take
the world out of golus, and to bring the true geulah which is
lasting and permanent.
And the Rebbe ends with a bracha
that G-d should bless us all with true health, with happiness
and enthusiasm which will help us in all our activities so
that we will do it with the greatest success. Because as we
see that the circumstances in which we are now in as much as
we strengthen the yeshivas, the bigger the yeshiva becomes the
more students we will find, and all the facilities will be
filled, and overfilled, and all the classes will be filled and
this will happen when we work with enthusiasm and with simcha
and good health, and this will also increase G-d’s
bracha in the hatzlacha of all our activities.
Now we might add that if this was
true in 1923 that the Rebbe saw already then that there was an
opening, an awareness, a thirsting, a desire among young
people, even among children, for not only some parts of Torah,
not only some parts of Yiddishkeit, but for the true,
complete, essential, authentic Yiddishkeit without any
compromises, how much more so today, all these years later
when the world has so obviously become conscious and concerned
with values and with ethics and with truth.
Now certainly the time has come
when we have to speak out and offer the message of Torah to
the whole world, beginning of course with Jewish children whom
we don’t have to convince and we don’t have to argue with
them. In fact they are knocking on the door and asking that
we teach them true Yiddishkeit and give them a way to live on
a daily basis from morning to night and throughout the entire
year, that they should know and feel that they are going in
the path of Yiddishkeit, they are doing what they were created
to do. This goodness that is now coming from them, this
desire, this openness and this willingness not only from
Jewish children but from non-Jews as well, from the entire
world, contains within it a potential for G-dliness
that has never existed before. In addition every year, since
creation, there has been a greater G-dliness in the world, a
greater gilui in the world, but particularly now, the
generation of geulah, the time is now ripe and we are seeing
it with our own eyes that goodness is coming from the earth,
not from heaven, from the mekabel, not the mashpia, that
goodness is a higher and greater good than anything we have
ever experienced in the past.
As we learn in the parsha of
Noach, Avraham came and gathered the reward and the zchus of
all previous generations from Noach until Avraham. The
Rebbe says there that there are
many qualities, many forms of G-dliness that
were produced in the world but never revealed to the world,
like the goodness of the generations from Noach to Avraham.
They produced goodness, but it wasn’t revealed to them and
they didn’t benefit from it. But when Avraham came
along, and served people and brought them to
G-dliness, elevated them to an awareness of G-dliness, he
reaped the benefits, the zchus, of all previous generations.
And so it is with our generation,
that we reap the benefits of all previous generations from the
time of creation, that all the zchusim that were created by
Jews and l’havdil non-Jews in their goodness that was not
revealed and not appreciated, we now can benefit from all of
that, if we tap into it, by adding the little bit of goodness
and the little bit of effort that we have to do to bring the
world to an awareness of emes Hashem l’olam, that we then not
only get rewarded for our own efforts but also for all the
efforts of previous generations that remained hidden and were
being collected and gathered, waiting to be revealed.
These zchusim, which is when a
person does a mitzvah, what zchus does he accumulate? He
accumulates the zchus that his children, future generations
will find it easier to keep Torah and mtzvahs and to serve G-d
with a whole heart, and mind, and a true devotion, easier
than it was for the grandparent. That is the ultimate zchus.
So with all the parents and
ancestors of the past who have accumulated zchusim, it should
now become easy for us and natural for us to be able to serve
G-d with a whole heart and a whole mind without any
interference, without any resistance at all. Not from the
outside world and our own yetzer hara, but that we should have
a zchus in Torah and mitzvahs, that we should be able to serve
G-d effortlessly, painlessly, and therefore with great joy, by
reaping all the G-dliness that was planted in the earth, in
the lowly, outside world, that is now offering itself back to
holiness and coming and knocking on our doors and saying, I
have good intentions, I have good feelings, show me how to use
them, show me how to serve G-d and express this desire to be
connected to the emes.
In Vol. XV of Likkutei Sichos,
the third sicha on parshas Vayishlach is also connected with
Yud Tes Kislev. Here the Rebbe says on the posuk, Yakov
remained alone and then he crossed over the river and he
wrestled with the angel, that the Gemarrah says, what does it
mean that he remained alone. And the Gemarrah gives the answer
that he was separated and remained alone by crossing over the
river, because he went back to get some left-over utensils,
little pots and pans. The Midrash gives another explanation,
that just as it says that G-d remains alone, stands alone, the
same is true by Yakov, that Yakov also stands alone.
And as we have spoken many times,
when there are two explanations for the same thing, there must
be a connection between them. But here we find two extremely
contradictory explanations. According to the Gemarrah, the
reason why Yakov was alone, was over small, insignificant
utensils. On the other hand, the Midrash says that this
aloneness is of the highest sort, comparable to the aloneness
of G-d, particularly the aloneness and the gilui of the
oneness of G-d as it will be in the world to come, as the
posuk ends, on that day, after the coming of Moshiach, then
this aloneness of G-d, this oneness of G-d will be revealed.
So here we are comparing Yakov’s oneness to the oneness of
G-d.
This is also connected to Yud Tes
Kislev. Concerning Yud Tes Kislev, we find two extremely
contradictory explanations. In answer to the question, why
Chassidus was revealed at such a late stage in history, only
in the last few generations, we find two answers.
On the one hand we are told that
Chassidus came in our times late in history, because of the
extreme darkness of the generations before Moshiach which
began with the Baal Shem Tov. Because of this double and
quadruple darkness, there was a need to illuminate the world
with the light of Chassidus, and the other explanation, again
the extreme opposite, is what’s written in the writings of the
Arizal, which the Alter Rebbe mentions in Shulchan Aruch, that
Erev Shabbos you are supposed to taste from the foods that
were prepared for Shabbos.
And so it also in terms of
history, that the days, each thousand year period represents a
day, that in the last generation before Moshiach, in the Erev
Shabbos, in the six thousandth year, beginning from the year
5501, you are supposed to already taste, since it is now
Friday, the foods of Shabbos, the foods of Moshiach. And so
Chassidus is the taste of the teachings of Moshiach while it
is still Friday, Erev Shabbos.
Here also the explanations are
extremely contradictory. The first explanation is that
Chassidus was revealed in the later generations because of how
lowly and dark those times are, and the second explanation
says that we are giving a taste of Moshiach before Moshiach
comes because of the greatness of it.
So the explanation of this
contradiction is that Yud Tes Kislev was the beginning of the
time of yafutzu maayonasecha chutza, the spreading of the
wellsprings to the outside. When the Alter Rebbe came out of
prison that was when he was really able to spread the
teachings of Chassidus, even to the chutza, the outside. And
the idea being that the maayon, the well, itself should reach
chutza. Because there are times when one can have an influence
on the world around him, but the person himself remains aloof
and separate from the world around him.
The expression yafutzu
maayonasecha chutza, means that the well itself reaches
outside, not that the well has influence on the outside, while
the well itself remains inside, The well itself spreads to the
outside. And when we say yafutzu maayonasecha chutza, it means
that when the well itself comes to the outside, it is absorbed
into the outside, like we learned in the sicha of Bereishis,
that the Torah begins with the story of creation and all the
stories of Chumash Bereishis, all to explain to the nations of
the world, how Eretz Israel belongs to the Jewish people.
And the Rebbe says there, that
the explanation has to be not only an answer that we have to
present to the non-Jew for our own satisfaction, but the
answer has to be so convincing, and so thorough, that the
non-Jew to whom we give this answer will understand and agree
that this is correct, and be moved by it to change his
behavior.
So the reaching out of the
maayonos to the chutza is not that it should have an influence
from a distance, but that the well itself should come into the
chutza, and when the well comes into the chutza, it should
devote itself to the chutza to the point where the chutza
itself begins to understand and think in a holy fashion.
Now this yafutzu maayonasecha
chutza began the revelation of the essence of Torah, of
pnimiyus haTorah. It began when the hidden part of Torah was
revealed in the revealed part of Torah, in the nigleh of the
Torah. Because before Chassidus there were may tzaddikim, many
great scholars and sages who were genii in both fields of
Torah, revealed part of Torah and the pnimiyus, the soul of
Torah, but those two subjects remained separate, two distinct
subjects. And although inevitably one had an influence on the
other, the influence was from a distance and they remained two
separate subjects.
But with the beginnings of
Chassidus, with Yud Tes Kislev, was the time when the Alter
Rebbe was the first to bring together, to merge the two parts
of Torah, bringing the soul of Torah into the body of Torah.
For example, understanding a mitzvah with all of its details,
the halacha of a mitzvah, according to its inner meaning,
according to the neshama of Torah.
Now just as it is with Torah,
that you join, bring together the maayon, the well, the
essence of Torah with its body, with the chutza of Torah, the
same is true also with the neshama. The neshama has an essence
and a body, an external part. Prior to the Alter Rebbe, there
was a division, a separation, there was the etzem of the
neshama, the essence of the neshama, and that was for example
faith and obedience that was superational, above the rational
level, and then there was the rational function, the human
function of the rest of the system of intelligence and
emotions.
The Alter Rebbe brought the two
together so that even that which is above intelligence and
above the rationale, the faith, the emunah and the
superational obedience, the mind should be able to appreciate
and approve of the emunah and the acceptance of the obedience.
That which was above intelligence should be felt in
intelligence and the intelligence itself should rationally
approve and almost demand the qualities that are superational
– the faith and the obedience.
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