Thursday, October 12, 2023

Fw: Friday Night 13 October




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From: "Dr Tali Loewenthal" <cru@lubavitchuk.com>
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Sent: Thu, Oct 12, 2023 at 7:10 PM
Subject: Friday Night 13 October
Friday Night 13 October
בה

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Friday 13 October 2023 - 28 Tishrei 5784
 Sedra Bereishit
FOCUS ON THE LAND OF ISRAEL
 
LAST SHABBAT, THE FINAL DAY OF THE  FESTIVALS in Israel, and the penultimate day  elsewhere, a devastating attack against Israel and the Jewish  people was launched from Gaza, for the most part against  civilians: men, women and children.

On that last day of the Festival, the Torah reading includes  concluding the Torah and then beginning it again: "In the  beginning G-d created Heaven and Earth". Outside Israel this was  read on Sunday. This Shabbat, all over the world, the same words  are read again as the first Sedra1 of the Torah. As is well known,  this first Sedra gives an account of the Creation of the world: in  six days G-d created Heaven and Earth. It seems quite natural that  this is how the Torah should begin.  

The great Sage Rashi2 wrote a famous Commentary on the  Torah. He begins this Commentary with a question. He explains  that the Torah is primarily a book of laws and guidance from G-d.  Every word, even every letter, is teaching us something about how  we should act in our personal and public lives in order to bring the  world to perfection.  

Since this is the case, he asks: why begin the Torah with the  account of Creation? Why not begin somewhere in the Book of  Exodus, where we start to learn the specific commandments from  G-d to the Jewish people? Since the Torah is primarily a book of  laws, why does it begin with the ancient history of the past? 

Rashi's answer, written some nine hundred years ago, is that  the function of the beginning of the Torah is to clarify the status of  the Land of Israel. Despite international opinion, he says, it  belongs to the Jews. Rashi writes:  

If the nations of the world accuse the Jewish people of  being bandits, having unfairly taken possession of the  Land of Israel from peoples who possessed it earlier, the  Jews can answer: the whole world belongs to G-d. He  created it, and gave it to whoever He wanted. He chose to  give the Land of Israel to certain nations, then He took it  from them and gave it to us. 

Why should the nations of the world call us 'bandits'? Many  countries originally belonged to one nation and then were taken  over by another. What is special about the Jews?  

The Lubavitcher Rebbe explains this is because the  relationship of the Jewish people with the Land of Israel is on a  particularly deep level. It is not just the land in which we live.  Israel is indeed our ancestral land, the land of our early history:  yet it is also more than this. Our essence is bound up with the  essence of the sacred Land of Israel. Once we took possession of  the Land it became ours in an essential and permanent way. For  ever more, it was not just a country like any other, but the Holy  Land, the Land of the Jewish People, the Land of Israel.  

Hence, even when later we were sent away into exile, our  thoughts and our prayers continued to focus on our Land. We  are spiritually bonded with it. We call it 'our Land' even if we  have never visited it. Nothing can take the Land of Israel away  from us. For millennia, wherever we were, our prayers have been  directed towards Jerusalem, the heart of the holy Land.  

This deep relationship sometimes provokes a form of envy  among the nations. G-d has given us the essence of the Land in a  way which surpasses ordinary human experience. So at the very  beginning of the Torah we are taught our special relationship with  the Holy Land. G-d created the whole world and He gave the  Holy Land to the Jewish people, for ever.  

Through this bonding of the Jewish people with the Holy  Land, G-d's blessing to Abraham will ultimately be fulfilled:  "Go... to the Land which I will show you. I will make you into a  great nation, and I will bless you... and through you will be  blessed all families of the earth" (Gen. 12:1-3). As a result of the  deep bond of the Jewish people with the Land, blessing will  ultimately come to all humanity3
 

1. Genesis 1:1-6:8. 2. Rashi, Rabbi Shlomo Yitzchaki, lived in Franco-Germany in the 11th  century. He wrote a Commentary on the entire Bible and also on most of the Talmud. 3. Based on  the Lubavitcher Rebbe's Likkutei Sichot vo1.5, pp. 1-I5.
 
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