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The Israel Koschitzky Virtual Beit
Midrash
Student Summaries of Sichot of the Roshei Yeshiva Yeshivat
Har Etzion
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We wish a warm
mazal tov to Rav Ezra and Itta Bick on the birth of their grandson,
born to Moshe and Hadas, and another warm mazal tov to Rav Binyamin and
Naomi Tabory and Henry and Syma Weinberg on the birth of their grandson, born to
Rav Aviad and Debra Tabory. May the families be zocheh to raise these
children le-Torah, le-chuppa u-le-ma’asim
tovim!!
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We ask that
you continue to pray on behalf of Israel’s captive soldiers, Har Etzion’s
talmid Zecharia Shlomo ben Miriam Baumel, Tzvi ben Penina Feldman,
Yekutiel Yehuda Nachman ben Sarah Katz, Ron ben Batya Arad, Guy ben Rina
Chever, Gilad ben Aviva Shalit, Eldad ben Tova Regev, and Ehud ben Malka
Goldwasser. Gilad Shalit celebrates his 21st birthday today, his
second birthday in captivity.
Parashat KI
TAVO
SICHA OF HARAV YEHUDA AMITAL
SHLIT"A
Kernel and Husk
Summarized by Matan Glidai
Translated by Yoseif Bloch
The Gemara (Avoda Zara 5b) notes that only at the end of the
Jewish people's forty-year sojourn in the desert does Moshe see fit to mention
their ingratitude towards God, as we see throughout the Book of
Devarim. Based on this, the Gemara asserts that "No one can know
his teacher's mind before forty years' time." What is the significance of
this observation? Does it really take four decades to learn a lesson?
To understand this, we need to employ the famous Talmudic analogy
(Chagiga 15a) of tokh and kelippa: a core or kernel
(tokh) of meaning, value and truth is often surrounded by a shell or husk
(kelippa), which can take many forms. Chasidic thought
differentiates between a kelippa of desire, which one may penetrate to
reveal the truth, and a kelippa of falsehood, which has no tokh at
its core. In such a case, the shell is truly empty.
Indeed, this is the challenge of our time, when we confront a new culture
of falsehood. A generation ago, behind the Iron Curtain, there was a culture of
obvious lies: everyone knew better than to lend credence to anything or rely on
anyone. People believed solely in that which could benefit them
pragmatically, not in what they were allowed to see. Now it is the mantra
of the West which rules, that image is everything, that only kelippa
counts. Within this culture of hidden lies, falsehood is attractively packaged
and marketed. Whether it is commercial advertisement or political propaganda,
modern media present us with enchanting and beautiful externals, the connection
between them and the internal value of the product or person being
negligible. There are even those who attempt to sell the tokh of
Judaism in the same way, by exhibiting all of its ostensibly desirable and
appealing elements, instead of delving into its content and depth.
The Yerushalmi (Chagiga 2:2) exposes the seriousness of this
misconception. It tells us about two righteous men, one of whom died and then
appeared to his friend to describe the afterlife. Among other things, he relates
to him the fate of a woman by the curious name of Miriam Onion-Leaves, in whose
ear the hinge of the gate of Gehinnom revolves. What did she do to earn this
punishment? The Yerushalmi attributes it to her supposed piety in fasting,
which she took pains to publicize, or, according to another opinion, to
exaggerate. Nevertheless, the departed relates, Miriam is scheduled to be
relieved of this onus by none other than Shimon ben Shetach, the Nasi
(President of the Sanhedrin), who will replace her upon his passing. What was
his sin? Before becoming nasi, he promised to use his position to
eradicate the scourge of sorcery, but he failed to do so upon attaining his
office. Upon hearing this, the friend immediately goes to Shimon ben
Shetach, who undertakes to fulfill his campaign promise, while marveling that he
had never even expressed it verbally to the public, but merely had resolved in
his own heart to do so! What are we to glean from this passage?
This perplexing tale begins with Miriam Onion-Leaves, and it is her name
that gives us the clue to unraveling this enigma. There is a striking
difference between the onion and other vegetables: other vegetables have a
kelippa and a tokh, but the onion has only the former; after each
peel comes another peel. The onion is thus the symbol of things which have
only an exterior, but no core. The Yerushalmi condemns that which has no
inner truth, that which merely consists of a nice package. Miriam
Onion-Leaves pretends that her fasting is about a desire to better herself, but
the core is a desire for public acclamation; Shimon ben Shetach fools himself
into believing that he wants the position of nasi in order to eliminate
paganism, but he soon forgets his resolve. It is the message from the next world
that reminds the Nasi of the consequences of breaking a promise, even one
made in his own mind.
Judaism
demands that, just as one should not write a check unless he has funds to cover
it in the bank, one must also have “coverage” for all his assertions, promises
and even intentions. The Torah
despises facades and hypocrisy. We must inspect our actions, making sure
that they validate our words and thoughts. Indeed, this explains another
detail, namely, that Miriam was punished through her ear. This alludes to the
fact that she related to things as they sound, not as they truly are.
With this in mind, we can return to the Gemara in Avoda Zara cited
above. The template of Moshe in the desert shows us that it is
insufficient to memorize and declaim the rabbi's words verbatim, being satisfied
with the way they appear at first glance, on a kelippa level. Instead, we
must understand them well and plumb their depths, exposing the
tokh. This requires a great deal of time, but it is the only way to
ensure that at our core, we are people of truth.
(This
sicha was delivered at se'uda shelishit of Shabbat Parashat Ki
Tavo 5756 [1996].)
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