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Volume V : Issue V
Editor-in-Chief:
Jesse Hyman 16
Senior Editors:
Jack Levkowitz 17
Pinchas Gamzo 17
Managing Editors:
Noam Gershov 17
Gidon Amsellem 18
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Marketing:
Layout Editor:
Eitan Tennenbaum 17
Joshua Aranoff 15
Yosef Hier 16
Distributors:
Eli Friedman 15
Jordan Lustman 15
Ilan Atri 15
Nathan Silberberg 16
Staff Advisor:
Rabbi Arye Sufrin
The Flame of
Our
Ancestors
If one believes in
Hashems kindness,
then there are no
questions. And if one
doesnt believe, there
are no answers.
-Rav Yaakov of
Radzimin
Tefillah Gems
Yosef Petlak 17
Parshat Vayakhel-Pekudei
Rabbi Sufrin
In Parshas Vayakhel we are commanded to observe Shabbat. The Torah says On six
days, work may be done, but the seventh day shall be holy for you, a day of complete rest for G-d;
whoever does work on it shall be put to death." (Shemot 35:2) Similarly, we emulate Hashem by
working for six days and resting on the seventh day of the week. The Gemara in Sanhedrin also
explains that we must understand that the Torahs definition of work isnt based on how much
difficulty one faces, rather it is based on the 39 Melachot that were used in the construction of the
Mishkan.
Based on this, Rabbi Chaim Friedlander asks a famous and important question. Why
does G-d specifically want us to refrain from activities that were directly related to the building in
the Mishkan? There must a deeper meaning to having the labor from the Mishkan be considered the
39 Melachos that cant be done on Shabbat. He answers that when G-dcreated the world, it was a
creation of something from nothing. Never before did anything physical exist until Hashem
decided to create the world. In contrast, when we create something in this world, such as a
building, we are always creating something from something. It is simply a manipulation of
preexisting physical properties that have been given a brand new function in the world. However,
we must realize that man has a special power to create something from nothing, to create
something spiritual from something physical. By building the Mishkan, Bnei Yisrael used physical
work to create a spiritual home for Hashem. This process is a paradigm of how we can use
something physical in order to engender spiritual growth. Through this creative and physical
work, we also succeed at creating something from nothing.
This same message can be applied to our daily actions. For example, when one makes a
Bracha on a certain food, using the physical food item to foster spiritual growth he is creating
something (spiritual growth) from nothing (spirituality that was never there). This message is ever
more clear every Shabbat as we cease from our creative activities so we can reflect and focus on
the spiritual goals that lie behind the physical.
Chazal teach us that Shabbat was given to Bnei Yisrael as a Matanah Tovah, a special
gift from G-d. Similarly, the Chafetz Chayim used to compare Shabbat to a wedding ring given to
symbolize Hashems special love for Am Yisroel. Just like by any successful relationship, love
expressed must be reciprocated. We must also observe Shabbat with a similar love and passion,
recognizing the beauty of it, and reciprocating our feelings on Shabbat towards Hashem.
Unfortunately, most people lose sight of this critical dimension. We must stop focusing
on the dos and donts of this holy day, and focus on the love and beauty that exists. Through this
perspective, we will be able to successfully use Shabbat as a tool to create and recharge our
spiritual batteries by creating something from nothing in our own creative way.
Every day, we recite the Tefillah of Shemoneh Esrei during Shacharit, Minchah, and Maariv. During Shacharit and
Minchah, the individual first recites the Amidah to themselves, which is then followed by the repetition of Shemoneh Esrei by the
Chazan. As the Chazan repeats each stanza of the Amidah, the congregation is merely obligated to respond Amen to each Bracha.
However, by the Bracha of Modim, we are obligated to recite a similar version of the Bracha with the Chazan. This rare response
brings one to wonder why it is that we are obligated to repeat Modim unlike every other Bracha, to which we must simply answer
Amen. In truth, the answer is very simple. If one was to take a closer look at the Bracha, it would appear that Modim, like every
other Bracha in the Amidah, has its own theme, that of thanksgiving. While someone can Daven on behalf of another person, no
one else is able to give proper gratitude to Hashem but the person that was helped or received the favor. Therefore, we are obligated
to recite Modim with the Chazan so that we are able to give the correct thanks and appreciation to Hashem.
Again and again the question arises: Why does the Torah expend so many
words in reviewing the many details of the building of the Mishkan in the
wilderness? Rabbi Label Lam said over a Dvar Torah of the Alter of Kelm.
There are two different factors that lend value to a given entity: Its rarity and
its necessity. For example, a diamond or some other gem increases in price as a
consequence of its scarcity. A rare stamp or even a baseball card becomes a
collectors item and an expensive commodity only because its one or two of a
kind. If thousands more would flood the market the price would be reduced
dramatically. There are other elements that are valuable because we need them
to live. Air, water, and food have intrinsic value. They may not have a big
monetary ticket attached to them but that is only because they are, thank G-d,
plentiful. Try holding your breath for two minutes and then the inherent value
of air becomes apparent. At the conclusion of a fast day we can all begin to
sing the praises of food. The Alter goes on to observe that the world was
organized in such a way that the more we need something, the more abundant
it is. Air is everywhere and we need it most urgently. Water is less vital than
air and more crucial than food and so two-thirds of the earths surface is
covered with water. Food which is needed less is granted in less abundance
but still sufficient measure. The implied principle is that everything is just as
abundant as it is important and necessary. Therefore those things mentioned
most often in the Torah are more critical. The exodus from Egypt takes up an
enormous space and is associated with many daily, weekly, and yearly
Mitzvot. We are commanded not only to speak in depth about the events of
leaving Egypt at the Pesach Seder, but to remember it each and every day. The
Torah uses the expression Yetziat Mitzrayim 50 times in one form or another.
We are meant to know that for Jewish survival, remembering what happened
in Egypt is like the air that we breathe. Maybe this idea has a similar
application to the subject of the Mishkan. At an ecumenical gathering of
spiritual leaders from the across the globe, they were deciding how to unify
their minds for some noble purpose. It was proposed that they take some
meditative moments together to transcend this world and to reach beyond the
mud of daily life and the constant tug of physical desire. In the final instant a
new and surprising suggestion was offered by one of the clerics, Instead of
trying to get beyond worldliness, why dont we raise the physical and create a
space for G-dliness here on earth?! The suggestion was immediately
dismissed by the moderator of the exercise, Nah! he said, Thats the job of
the Jews! The quantity of materials and the communal effort that went into
creating the Mishkan are emphatic reminders of the importance of our unique
mission - to bring Hashems presence to Earth. It remains, after all these years,
The Job of the Jews! Perhaps that is the reason that the Torah repeats the
details of the building of the Mishkan so many times.
Halachic Illuminations
Aaron Reiss 18
This weeks Parsha talks about the process of making the Mishkan and the vessels that were meant to be placed inside of it.
Logically, if one were to build a home, one would build the home first and then add all the necessary furniture and accessories. Yet, in this
weeks Parsha, the Torah says that Moshe commanded Betzalel, the main architect of the Mishkan, to build the the vessels and then the
Mishkan. But Betzalel did the opposite because it was the normal way of doing things. When Moshe heard that he was doing the opposite
from what he had commanded him, he confronted Betzalel. Betzalel said that he made the Mishkan first then the vessels. Moshe replied and
told Betzalel that Hashem had originally commanded him to do as Betzalel had done, and it was amazing how he had innately known
Hashems will.
What is the problem of making the vessels and then the Mishkan or vise versa? Of course, there is a reason to make the Mishkan first.
The Maharal explains why Moshe commanded Betzalel to construct the inside first not the outside. In order for one to build a
building, one needs a plan. One needs money and permits somewhere along the road, but you definitely need a plan. Before anyone has the
ability to build their dream home, they would plan out just about every detail they would want in it. They would have all their maps and
drawings ready for construction. Moshe felt that the essence of the Mishkan was in the vessels, and, therefore, they should be constructed
first.
Betzalel had a different approach. The day comes when the workers are all ready, and a foundation is made. Then, the frame of the
house is setup. Later, it starts to look more like a house. Then, after all of that, the inner materials of the house are put into place. Meanwhile,
the house is still chaotic with painters and tilers. Finally, the inside is as solid as the outside. The house is complete and the unpacking
process starts. Books are put on the bookshelves and firewood is placed in the fireplace.
Betzalel understood that the outside of the Mishkan needed to be built first because the inside cannot exist without the outside. The
inner vessels are the main purpose of the project. the outside simply allows one to be able to place commodities inside. The essence is within
the home, but the outside is needed to keep G-ds presence amongst the inner vessels.
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