Parshat Pikudei: By: Rabbi Moshe Goodman, Kollel Ohr Shlomo, Hebron

בס"ד

לשכנו תדרשו

Seeking the Holy Presence in Our Holy Land


"בקע לַגֻּלְגֹּלֶת מַחֲצִית הַשֶּׁקֶל בְּשֶׁקֶל הַקֹּדֶשׁ... לְשֵׁשׁ מֵאוֹת אֶלֶף וּשְׁלֹשֶׁת אֲלָפִים וַחֲמֵשׁ מֵאוֹת וַחֲמִשִּׁים"

"From fear save me, guide me to Zion the holy place of my destiny, HaShem, hear my voice!" (Adir Ayom veNora of Melave Malka)


Before entering the Land of Israel, we see that the Torah conducts a census of the Jewish People via the commandment of the 'half-shekel', read this week both in context of the weekly parsha and in context of the first of the four special readings before Pesah, Parshat Shekalim. Although we know that it took another 40 years, after the first census in our parsha, till the People reached the Land, ideally speaking these numbers of the People could have entered the Land immediately if not for the sin of the spies. Therefore, yet again are the people counted at the end of these 40 years before entering the Land.

We yet again see the dominant role of census in context of entering the Land of Israel in the book of Ezra-Nehemia, which details with great elaboration the numbers of groups, even the seemingly insignificant groups among them, who returned to Zion after the Babylonian Exile. Indeed, also from a halachic perspective does the census of the People in regard to the Land of Israel take an important role. Based on this census, determining how many Jews live in the Land of Israel versus how many in the Diaspora, can it be determined one of the crucial criteria for the advent of much of the mitzvos dependent on the Land (such as Truma, Maaser, Shmita, Yovel, and more) on a Biblical level, which requires a majority of worldwide Jewry to be living in the Land of Israel.


It is therefore not surprising that important events have occurred in conjunction with important censuses of Jewry in the Land of Israel. When 600,000 Jews, men and women, lived in the Land, the State of Israel was formed, and when 600,000 Jewish men alone, indicative of the 'Legions of Israel' in the book of Bamidbar, lived in the Land, much of the Land was redeemed in the 'Six-Day-War'.


Although, in absence of the Bait HaMikdash, we do not have the Biblical 'half-shekel' today, what we do have is the contribution to the great Return to Zion which is counted before HaShem and may also serve as atonement in a similar way, as our Sages teach that the Land serves as "an altar of atonement'.


The message of the 'half-shekel' proves to be especially meaningful in regard to Hebron. Many have pointed at the 'half-shekel' highlighting the fact that each Jew is only half, coming to completion only with his fellow Jew. This was highlighted especially in the Mishkan where all extremities of the People, from the first camp of Judah, exemplified by Bezalel, to the last camp of Dan , exemplified by Ohaliab, joined together to build an abode for the Holy Presence.


Similarly, it is in Hebron that the extremities of the People in a political sense, Benjamin from Rachel's line, exemplified in the form of Abner, and Judah from Leah's line, exemplified in the form of David, joined together in a treaty, strengthening Israel's sovereignty in the Land by making a united Kingdom, the Kingdom of David, the prototype of Mashiah son of David.     


Real Stories from the Holy Land #59: "One afternoon at 4 pm, a friend of mine, who has been learning with me in the same collel in Hebron for about a year-and-a-half, suddenly took me to the side and discussed with me how we can together strengthen our Torah-learning, something he's never done before. 'It turns out' that at that very same time, my wife was driving and was miraculously saved from an accident with a tractor before her."

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Sources: Rambam Trumot 1, 26, Shmita Veyovel 10, 8, Ktubot 111a, Samuel II, 3, 19-21

Parshat Ki Tisa By: Rabbi Moshe Goodman, Kollel Ohr Shlomo, Hebron

Parshat Ki Tisa
By: Rabbi Moshe Goodman, Kollel Ohr Shlomo, Hebron

בס"ד

לשכנו תדרשו

 

Seeking the Holy Presence in Our Holy Land

"ששת ימים תעבד וביום שביעי תשבות, בחריש ובקציר תשבות"

 

"Come in peace, her Husband's crown of pride, with song and good cheer. Among the faithful of the people so dear, enter O Bride, enter O Bride; O Bride, Shabbat Queen, enter, come here!" Every week, at the advent of Shabbat we say these words, greeting the Shabbat Queen, greeting the Holy Presence into our lives.

 

This concept of "greeting" Shabbat is deeply rooted in our sources. In a halachic sense, "greeting" Shabbat is rooted to the concept of the obligation to "add holiness from the mundane (weekday) unto the holiness (Shabbat)", that is, to voluntarily 'greet' or initiate Shabbat upon ourselves at least a moment before it 'dawns' upon us involuntarily.

 

This concept is learned by our Sages from the verse in regard to Yom Kippur, the tenth of Tishrei, which begins according to the Written Torah "at the ninth of the month at evening", an expression that highlights the obligation to initiate Yom Kippur upon ourselves at least a moment before it begins. According to many poskim this rule applies not only to Yom Kippur, but also to Shabbat and Holidays.

 

In our title quote of this week's parsha, this concept of 'initiation of holiness' is taken to another level (see Rashi on verse). According to our Sages, the explanation of the latter part of the verse, "in the plowing and harvesting you shall rest", refers to adding on to the Shemitta/SeventhYear the last month of the sixth year before it to rest from 'plowing' and agricultural work, and also the beginning of the eighth year afterwards to rest from 'harvesting' produce that grew during Shmita. The reasoning in this explanation is that the verse does not need to tell us that plowing and harvesting are forbidden on Shmita year, since all agricultural work is already forbidden in the Torah. 

Therefore, the verse teaches us that even in the permissible sixth and eighth years there are times that are forbidden from work. However, it should be noted that according to our Oral Tradition this law applies only when the Bais HaMikdash is standing.

 

This idea gains even greater meaning in context of our title quote which juxtaposes the Sabbath of the week to the Sabbath of the Land. Just as we 'greet' the Holy Presence of the weekly Shabbos, so may we 'greet' this year, the sixth year before Shmita, the Holy Presence inherent in our Holy Land with the building of the Bait HaMikdash. By 'greeting' the Holy Presence, we unite with the Holy Presence in a greater way, for we express with our initiative an 'awakening from below' and the Holy Presence comes to us from an 'awakening from above', thus awakening a great holy union in all the spiritual worlds.

 

This ideal is especially poignant in Hebron, the City of Unity (hibur) of our Holy Land, which unites us with the Holy Presence of the past, present, and future to 'greet' the Messianic era at the end of the sixth millennium before the seventh Shabbat millennium when "HaShem 'recreates' His World" into a world of far-greater holiness.

 

Real Stroies from the Holy Land #57: "One day, our oven, which had been working for many years, stopped working, so we called a technician to check it. While working, the technician 'happened' to notice a smell of released gas from the stove, and he advised us to call a gas technician. When the gas technician examined the stove, he alarmed us that the whole stove was open to release gas, and that we must cease immediately all use of the stove to not endanger the lives of our family..."

 

Sources: Yoma 81b, Rambam Shvitat Asor 1, 6 and Shmita vYovel 3, 1, Orah Haim 261,2  Ex. 34, 21 and Rashi, Sanhedrin 97b