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Dvar for Pinchas (Numbers 25:10-30:1)

SP
Short, practical, relevant Weekly Dvar
Tue, Jul 7, 2015 6:18 PM

** This Dvar is dedicated to the loving memory of Moshe Schulhof, a special
person, cantor and uncle, with a heart even bigger than his voice **

Enjoy this Lelamed Dvar from torah.org, also available in your local App
Store (iTunes and Android). Please share this Dvar with someone...


After Bila'am's failed efforts to curse the Jewish people, he devised
another ploy. He advised the nations of Midian and Moav to lure the Jews to
sin through salacious activities. Midian complied wholeheartedly, offering
its daughters as conspirators in the profanity. The scheme worked, and the
wrath of Hashem was aroused. A plague ensued and thousands of Jews died. In
this week's Parsha, Pinchas, G-d commands his people to administer justice.
"Make the Midianites your enemies and attack them!" The issue that may
confront the modern thinker is simple. War? Over what? They were not
fighting over land or oil. Why such vehemence to the point of physical
attack over the incident at Peor?

Rabbi Eliezer Sorotzkin related the following story: In November 1938,
before the onset of World War II, some Jewish children had the opportunity
to escape from Nazi Germany and resettle in England through what became
known as kindertransport. Unfortunately, there were not enough religious
families able to accept these children and other families who were willing
to take them were not willing to raise the children with Jewish traditions.
The Chief Rabbi of London, Rabbi Yechezkel Abramski, embarked on a frantic
campaign to secure funding to ensure that every child would be placed in a
proper Jewish environment. Rabbi Abramski called one wealthy Jewish
industrialist and begged him for a donation sizable enough to ensure that
the children would be raised in proper Jewish environment. "It is pikuach
nefesh!" cried Rabbi Abramski. At that point, the tycoon became incensed.
"Rabbi," he said, "Please do not use that term flippantly. I know what
pikuach nefesh is. Pikuach nefesh means a matter of life and death! When I
was young, my parents were very observant. When my baby sister was young,
she was very sick. We had to call the doctor, but it was on Shabbos. My
father was very conscientious of the sanctity of Shabbos, but our rabbi
told us that since this is a matter of life and death, we were allowed to
desecrate the Shabbos. Rabbi Abramski," the man implored, "with all due
respect. The children are already here in England. They are safe from the
Nazis. The only issue is where to place them. How they are raised is not
pikuach nefesh!" With that, the man politely bade farewell and hung up the
phone. That Friday evening, the wealthy man was sitting at dinner, when the
telephone rang incessantly. Finally, the man got up from his meal and
answered the phone. As he listened to the voice on the other end of the
line, his face went pallid. "This is Abramski. Please. I would not call on
the Sabbath if I did not think this was pikuach nefesh. Again, I implore
you. We need the funds to ensure that these children will be raised as
Jews." Needless to say, the man responded immediately to the appeal.

We understand matters of life and death, justice and injustice, war and
peace, in corporeal terms. It is difficult to view spirituality in those
terms as well, but the Torah teaches us that our enemies are not merely
those who threaten our physical existence, but those who threaten our
spiritual existence as well. What our enemies were unable to do to the
Jewish people with bullets and gas, they have succeeded in doing with
assimilation and spiritual attrition. The Torah teaches us that the
physical world and the spiritual world are inseparable. An attack on
spirituality breaches the borders of our very essence, and our response
must be in kind. It is essential to know that when we do some serious
soul-searching there is really something out there waiting to be found.

Shlomo Ressler


Quotation of the Week:
"A way of life has no finish line."

** This Dvar is dedicated to the loving memory of Moshe Schulhof, a special person, cantor and uncle, with a heart even bigger than his voice ** Enjoy this Lelamed Dvar from torah.org, also available in your local App Store (iTunes and Android). Please share this Dvar with someone... _______________________________________________ After Bila'am's failed efforts to curse the Jewish people, he devised another ploy. He advised the nations of Midian and Moav to lure the Jews to sin through salacious activities. Midian complied wholeheartedly, offering its daughters as conspirators in the profanity. The scheme worked, and the wrath of Hashem was aroused. A plague ensued and thousands of Jews died. In this week's Parsha, Pinchas, G-d commands his people to administer justice. "Make the Midianites your enemies and attack them!" The issue that may confront the modern thinker is simple. War? Over what? They were not fighting over land or oil. Why such vehemence to the point of physical attack over the incident at Peor? *Rabbi Eliezer Sorotzkin related the following story: In November 1938, before the onset of World War II, some Jewish children had the opportunity to escape from Nazi Germany and resettle in England through what became known as kindertransport. Unfortunately, there were not enough religious families able to accept these children and other families who were willing to take them were not willing to raise the children with Jewish traditions. The Chief Rabbi of London, Rabbi Yechezkel Abramski, embarked on a frantic campaign to secure funding to ensure that every child would be placed in a proper Jewish environment. Rabbi Abramski called one wealthy Jewish industrialist and begged him for a donation sizable enough to ensure that the children would be raised in proper Jewish environment. "It is pikuach nefesh!" cried Rabbi Abramski. At that point, the tycoon became incensed. "Rabbi," he said, "Please do not use that term flippantly. I know what pikuach nefesh is. Pikuach nefesh means a matter of life and death! When I was young, my parents were very observant. When my baby sister was young, she was very sick. We had to call the doctor, but it was on Shabbos. My father was very conscientious of the sanctity of Shabbos, but our rabbi told us that since this is a matter of life and death, we were allowed to desecrate the Shabbos. Rabbi Abramski," the man implored, "with all due respect. The children are already here in England. They are safe from the Nazis. The only issue is where to place them. How they are raised is not pikuach nefesh!" With that, the man politely bade farewell and hung up the phone. That Friday evening, the wealthy man was sitting at dinner, when the telephone rang incessantly. Finally, the man got up from his meal and answered the phone. As he listened to the voice on the other end of the line, his face went pallid. "This is Abramski. Please. I would not call on the Sabbath if I did not think this was pikuach nefesh. Again, I implore you. We need the funds to ensure that these children will be raised as Jews." Needless to say, the man responded immediately to the appeal.* We understand matters of life and death, justice and injustice, war and peace, in corporeal terms. It is difficult to view spirituality in those terms as well, but the Torah teaches us that our enemies are not merely those who threaten our physical existence, but those who threaten our spiritual existence as well. What our enemies were unable to do to the Jewish people with bullets and gas, they have succeeded in doing with assimilation and spiritual attrition. The Torah teaches us that the physical world and the spiritual world are inseparable. An attack on spirituality breaches the borders of our very essence, and our response must be in kind. It is essential to know that when we do some serious soul-searching there is really something out there waiting to be found. Shlomo Ressler _______________________________________________ Quotation of the Week: "A way of life has no finish line."