Printed fromJewishThailand.com
ב"ה

"Shabbat Shalom from Bangkok"

Assumptions

By the Grace of G-d

Dear Friend,

Assumptions are so important.

How could any of us make plans or decisions without feeling comfortable assuming certain things.

Have you ever bought an airline ticket?

Taken on a monthly mortgage repayment?

Committed to a spouse in marriage?

All these things require assumptions.

You assume that you will still be able to make the trip once the date of the flight arrives.

Mortgage payments can only be made if you have the resources to pay. The bank and you assume that you will be earning enough funds to pay your obligations for the next twenty – thirty years.

Marriage requires the great leap of faith that your spouse will turn out to be what you assume them to be.

To make it simple.

Have you made plans for today? Did you make those plans before today, perhaps yesterday?

That required (an implicit belief in G-d and) an assumption that G-d will grant you life this morning. 

Assumptions can also be misleading and even dangerous.

This week’s Parsha of Pinchas talks about Hashem's final decision that Moshe will not be the one to lead the Jewish People into Israel. The leadership will be handed over to Joshua. 

The Torah spells out Moshe’s mistake for all to see. Hashem clearly states the reason that he is not allowing Moshe (or Aharon) to enter the Promised Land is because they hit the rock instead of speaking to the rock. 

By providing water to the Jewish people in a different mode than instructed by G-d, was a ‘sin’ that denied Moshe the ultimate gift of leading his people into the land.

Why so? What was so grave about hitting the rock instead of speaking to the rock?

The core of the answer is as follows. Speaking to the rock in the presence of the Jewish people and having them all see how the rock miraculously gives forth water, would have caused the name of G-d to be glorified and sanctified. 

The message would have been ‘if even a rock is able to give forth water by merely being spoken to by G-d, we, the Jewish people how much more so we must listen to the word of G-d’.

Because of Moshe’s great and lofty level of saintliness, the small misstep of the missing of that opportunity is significant enough to have Hashem take away his entry into the land of Israel.

Why does the Torah state the cause of this prohibition of entry at every juncture that it arises? Is it not disrespectful to Moshe to repeat several times in the Torah his mistake of hitting the rock?

Rashi brings the following answer.

It would be more disrespectful not to spell out the issue clearly. Assumptions would be made about Moshe that would be worse than what actually happened.

It would be said that Moshe was part of the various rebellions against G-d that various sectors of the Jewish people had engaged in during their forty years of sojourn in the desert.

The parable is given:

Two women are brought to the Jewish court (in Biblical times when Jewish law governed the nation of Israel).

One has been convicted of promiscuity G-d forbid. If the proper advance warning procedure is followed, the punishment of lashes is administered. 

Another woman was also being punished by the court. Her violation is a much lower-level infraction. She has eaten the fruits of the Sabbatical year when they are still not ripe. The Rabbi’s decreed that this is a prohibition as the fruits of the Shmita are holy and intended only for proper consumption as an edible. Eating an unripe fruit is considered ‘destroying’ the fruit, not ‘consuming’ the fruit.

There is a vast difference between the moral violation of promiscuity to the subtle violation of misuse of the Sabbatical years fruit.

The woman who has committed the minor infraction requests that her violation be publicized. 

So that it is not thought that she too has been morally sinful.

I am sure that you can find parallels to this today, which I will leave to your imagination.

True, Moshe and Aharon erred. But it wasn’t a rebellious act of sin. It was a subtle and almost negligible change in fulfilling Hashem's instruction. After all, forty years earlier Hashem had told Moshe to hit the rock and bring forth water. The fact that after speaking to the rock and not getting results, he assumed that maybe he should try hitting the rock is hardly a reason for Hashem to punish him.

Yet, Moshe’s greatness is what causes him to be judged so exactingly. 

With Tzadikim the bar is higher than with regular lay people, and they are held to much higher level of perfection.

Moshe understood that some people may not understand this. They may assume that his non-entry into Israel is just the same as the People of Israel’s non-entry. That it was a result of not believing in G-d. 

Moshe wanted the narrative to be very clear that he believed in G-d fully and the only reason he was not being allowed to go to Israel was the omission of speaking to the rock and further sanctifying G-d’s name.

I recall a story told about the Rebbe when he was running from the Nazis. One of his sojourns was in the city of Vichy, France. The authorities required all residents to be registered. When the registrar came to the Rebbe’s hotel, the Rebbe’s wife stated their religion as ‘Orthodox’. When the Rebbe came home, his wife shared this incident with him. The Rebbe promptly went to the registration office to amend the religion to read ‘Jewish Orthodox’. For ‘Orthodox’ could have been assumed to mean Greek Orthodox or something like that.  

The Rebbe stated, ‘I don’t want to be separated from Hashem even if only on paper’.

Moshe insists that his minor sin be recorded in the Torah, so that there can be no misunderstanding from what is written in the Torah that he had been participant in a sinful group that rebelled against G-d, Heaven forfend.

If I wasn’t sure what topic to write about today, Hashem sent me a sign.

Yesterday I wrote a note to a vendor in the USA that did some work for the new Synagogue being built in Bangkok’s Sukhumvit Soi 22. I asked him for more favorable payments terms. Sometime after midnight, my telephone woke me up (I keep it with me in case someone needs to reach me in an emergency) and I saw this vendors name on the call screen. I assumed that he was calling me to discuss my request which could certainly wait till the next day. 

I assumed that he simply didn’t realize the time difference. When I looked at the text messages, I saw that it was indeed an emergency and called him right back. He has a family member traveling in Asia and they had a medical emergency. The emergency was not in Thailand but since he is contact with me, and I live in Asia he reached out to me. May Hashem send complete and swift healing!

This was a personal reminder to me not to assume and jump to conclusions without investigating what the situation is.

What was remarkably Providential to me was the fact that I was thinking to write this article about assumptions, but I wasn’t sure. Having a personal story like this happen to me on Thursday night as I was formulating my weekly article, was like a sign from Heaven to write about this topic.

(As I thought about it more I realized that the very opening of the Parsha is also about dispelling assumptions. See below*).

We are humans, and we all make assumptions.

Thankfully we have Hashem's guidance that tells us what direction our assumptions should be leaning toward.

The Pirkei Avot teaches ‘judge every person in a favorable way’. 

Here is a story that R’ Yanky Tauber shared that brings the point home:

R’ YT relates: The incident I'm going to tell you about occurred more than ten years ago, but hardly a week goes by in which I don't think about it.

I had popped into a Jerusalem synagogue for minchah (afternoon prayers). A few rows in front of me there was this man, sitting with his four kids. The fellow in front of him had his arm over the back of the bench, and the fellow behind him was also disturbing him in some way. He kept snapping at his kids. What a jerk, I thought to myself. Ok, you're nervous, you're rude, that's fine, there are lots of nervous and rude people in these stress-ridden times, but does the whole world have to know it?

I'm really a live-and-let-live kind of guy, but this fellow was impossible to ignore. His ill-will and discontent filled the room. Yes, I thought, your kids are a rowdy bunch, but do you have to yell at them all the time? Why don't you leave them home if they get on your nerves so much?

At the conclusion of the service, his four kids—the twelve-year old, the nine-year old, the eight-year old and the six-year old—stood in a row and recited the mourner's kaddish. What a jerk, I muttered—meaning myself of course—my face hot with shame.

(Click here for an in-depth article about this topic. Or click here for a short lecture by Chana Weisberg on this topic). 

How fortunate we are that the Torah clearly guides us on being positive people. On projection a positive outlook on those around us. On seeing the inherent good at every juncture possible.

The way we judge others is the way Hashem ultimately judges us.

Let us judge others the way we want to be judged. 

With a good and positive eye.

Especially during these ‘Three weeks’ of national mourning, when we remember the destruction of the Bet Hamikdash, we need to mindful of how we can rectify the cause of the destruction.

This exile started almost two thousand years ago because of ‘Sinat Chinam’ – baseless hatred – the way to fix it is by love without strings attached.

One of the important mindsets to have, is the ability to assume that your fellow is good at his or her core. 

May we all have much success in creating an atmosphere of unity and love within Am Yisrael.

We pray for the hostages, the soldiers, the wounded and for Am Yisrael at large, to merit to bring this world to its perfected state with the coming of Mashiach NOW.

Shabbat Shalom

Rabbi Yosef Kantor

 

*here is a brief explanation of how the Torah dispels the assumption one may have made about Pinchas’ character. Or click here for more in-depth on this topic.

Pinchas the son of Elazar the son of Aaron ( Numbers 25:10)

Why does Gd refer to Pinchas as “the son of Elazar the son of Aaron”? Because the tribes of Israel were mocking him, saying, “Have you seen this son of the fattener, whose mother’s father (Jethro) fattened calves for idolatrous sacrifices, and now he goes and kills a prince in Israel?” Therefore, Gd traces his lineage to Aaron.

(Talmud, Sanhedrin 82b)

Few professions are as cruel and inhumane as the fattening of calves for slaughter. So when Pinchas slew Zimri, many said: “Look at this holy zealot! He acts as if motivated by the desire to avenge the honor of Gd and save the people, but in truth he has merely found a holy outlet for his cruel and violent nature. After all, it’s in his blood—just look at his maternal grandfather . . .” So Gd described him as “Pinchas the son of Elazar the son of Aaron” in order to attest that in character and temperament he actually took after his paternal grandfather—the compassionate and peace-loving Aaron.

The true greatness of Pinchas lay in that he acted in complete opposition to his nature, transcending his inborn instincts to bring peace between Gd and Israel.

(The Lubavitcher Rebbe)

Divine precise providence of G-d

The bombs were falling on Warsaw in September of 1939. Under the barrage of the German onslaught, the residents of the bustling Polish capital were sheltering in basements. A nearby building collapsed from a direct hit.

Rabbi Yosef Yitschak Schneersohn the sixth Rebbe of Chabad addressed those sheltering with him with calming words.

‘Every bullet has an address’. Even during times of war, when mayhem reigns, the Divine precise providence of G-d is in charge.

There is a pattern we find with true leaders.

They don’t spread panic and fear.

It requires balance.

Certainly, one must do everything humanly possible to protect oneself from danger. A responsible leader shares pertinent information if there is something that needs to be done.

At the same time, a true leader projects and exudes calmness and inner resolve and fortitude. A leader who shepherds their flock with faith, doesn’t need to fearmonger to stay relevant.

We see this so clearly in this week’s Parsha

Balak is the king of Moav. When he gets information that frightens him, he passes it straight on to his nation and now they are all dread filled.

Contrast that with Moshe’s leadership. Moshe is scared of Og, but he keeps his fears to himself and exudes confidence to his people.

This has its applications to the way we act as leaders of our families and any other leadership role we may play.

The ramifications and sometimes long-term effects can be huge. Take this story for example:

"A young girl from a very poor family was having terrifying dreams. Her parents consulted a rabbi about this problem. He said: "The Sages say that we dream at night what we think about during the day. Ask your daughter what she is afraid of."

When they asked her, she replied: "I often see how you both sit and worry over the poverty we live in. Of everything, I am most afraid of your fear…"

Click here for a fuller explanation of this and the way R’ MK sums it up in the below one-liner.

So fake it, in order for your child (or spouse or friend) to make it.

I would like to pick up on the axiom that ‘every bullet has an address’.

Earlier this week there was a bullet that seemed to have an address.

A US presidential candidate.

G-d Almighty showed His Hashgacha Pratit – Divine individual providence.

Mr. Trump moved his head ever so slightly, the bullet aimed at his head grazed his ear and brought forth blood, but nothing more serious took place.

I have not read any political analysis of this story at all.

If I thought the story was about politics, I wouldn’t address it in this article.

The lessons we take from this event is what I am seeking here.

Click here to read the Rebbe’s remarks after the attempted assassination of President Reagan in 1981.

As well, I would like to focus on our gratitude to Hashem for His miracles.

To me it seems that regardless of one’s political affiliation or preference, one should be mindful of the miracle that happened and thank Hashem for showing His precise supervision.

Would have the assassin have been successful in killing Mr. Trump, there may have been massive instability in the USA.

This would inevitably have spilled over into the world at large.

Our world is unstable enough as it is with the major issues and crises that are currently going on…

In this unplanned, instinctive and purely providential head movement of a mere millimeter or two, the trajectory of world history was affected.

What is uniquely remarkable about this incident is the fact that it is documented by pictures that were being snapped at the exact time that the bullet was making its way to and past the would-be victims’ head.

This makes me want to stop and think for a moment about all the miracles that are taking place far from the camera lens. And far from our conscious awareness.

Remember the Covid 19 pandemic?

The pandemic highlighted how many trillions of microbes exist in our bodies. And how critical it is that they coexist and interact with each other. An errant microbe resulted in millions of deaths around the world.

Every microbe is under the direct supervision of Hashem.

It’s a mind-boggling statement to make but it is at the core of our belief in G-d.

Can one even imagine how much coordination needs to take place for the human body to function healthily?

A while back I was transiting through a huge airport. We had deplaned from a bus gate. The bus to the terminal from the plane was driving for a full fifteen minutes through the labyrinth of planes, gates, luggage crates and catering trucks.

It dawned on me that to keep an airport running is a mammoth organizational challenge.

There must be very expensive computer programs that help bring all the parts together. Hundreds or perhaps thousands of employees pool their abilities together to keep an airport running.

Our very own bodies are even more complex.

The eyes we view the world with. An eye is incredibly complex.

Our gut is another wondrous hive of activity. It is constantly active with trillions of microbes dancing in unison to take care of our nutrition delivery and waste elimination.

Some miracles can be caught on camera. Like the assassination attempt last week.

Others, we know about and understand and appreciate Hashem’s kindness only after we realize that they have happened.

Yet other miracles we may never even find out about.

The cancer gene that Hashem didn’t allow to metastasize and develop, and it stayed dormant till the person passed away from old age.

The would-be terrorist who got cold feet just before carrying out his murderous plans.

The virus that you didn’t catch.

The close to one thousand breaths we breathe every hour.

And the many other myriads of miracles that happen out of our sight or awareness.

For all of these and more we thank Hashem.

We have the morning blessings that address the wonders of the gifts we get just by opening our eyes, putting our feet to the floor, going to the bathroom and getting dressed.

One of those open miracles is the victory that Rabbi Yosef Yitschak had over the KGB in 1927 after he was arrested for ‘subversive’ activities of teaching Jewish children Torah, keeping mikvah’s open, sending rabbis to lead Jewish community and establish Yeshivas. The communists were bent on stamping out connection and belief in G-d.

The Rebbe was courageously fighting to teach and inspire Jews and especially children to be faithful to G-d and His Torah.

The soviets arrested the Rebbe and sentenced him. First to ‘the opposite of life’. This was then changed to ten years of exile in Siberia. It was then further changed to three years exile in a closer location. A bit more than a week after arriving at his exile the Rebbe was released outright and emigrated from Russia.

It's 97 years later, the same calendar day as the great miracle release from the clutches of the Soviets which was a statistical impossibility.

Therefore, the way the Jewish calendar works, in a cyclical way, there are ‘victory and liberational possibilities in the air’ today.

Today is a good day to open up our eyes and see the miracles Hashem is doing for us.

Let those miracles inspire us to come closer to Him.

If it seems like the odds are against us, or the barriers in the way of reaching your aspirations are too formidable, utilize the potential for miracles and liberation on this day of redemption.

May we be blessed with miracles, liberation and transformation.

In this week’s parsha of Balak, the curses that Balaam tries to give, are transformed into blessing.

There is a timely transformation that we are aspiring to later next week.

The transformation of the upcoming ‘three weeks of national mourning’ (starting with the fast of 17th of Tammuz on this coming Tuesday click here for more and culminating in Tisha B’av three weeks later).

May these days be transformed to days of Redemption with the coming of Mashiach.

AMEN

Shabbat Shalom

Rabbi Yosef Kantor

A lesson in empowerment from the Rebbe

Dear Friend,

Earlier this week I waited in a line, in the NY heat wave, that took four hours to complete.

Whilst waiting, I gained a deeper appreciation for the Rebbe’s greatness. And a new perspective on the story in this week’s Parsha about Moshe hitting the rock.

Here is what I mean.

Three thousand three hundred (and some) years ago, Moshe was chosen by G-d to shepherd the Jewish people.

Taking them out of Egypt, through the sea that split, transmitting the word of Hashem at Sinai and bringing them to the banks of the Jordan river poised to enter Israel.

Ever since then, the Jewish people has been gifted with shepherds that guided, uplifted, advocated and motivated the Jewish people of their generation.

The Rebbe, whose day of passing we marked earlier this week, was a modern-day Moshe, the leader and shepherd of our generation.

As I mentioned, I waited close to four hours in a line of people that entered the Ohel of the Rebbe for two minutes of prayer time.

In those two minutes as I walked by the Rebbe’s resting place with the line that passed through the Ohel, I crammed in prayers for myself, my loved ones, my community, my partners and for the collective of Am Yisrael.

(During the year one can pray there for as long as one wants. On the Hilula/Yartzeit day of passing, when tens of thousands of people want to visit on the same day, the time is limited).

I didn’t feel frustrated by the long lines.

On the contrary, I was inspired.

The obviousness of the relevance of the Rebbe’s legacy is the fact that more and more people are inspired to come and soak up the atmosphere and blessings of the Tzadik.

Thirty years ago, the crowds were considerably smaller. The line would have taken less than an hour. Now the lines are four hours.

The facts speak louder than any explanation or sermon.  There is a reason why myriads of people are paying a visit to the grave of a person who passed away thirty years ago.

People are usually forgotten after they pass.

(Thank G-d for that. It allows people to move on and not get mired in sadness).

With Tzadikim things are a lot different.

A Tzadik continues to live even after they have physically passed away.

Through his teachings. Through his students, you and I, who glean inspiration and commitment to Hashem via his guidance.

After standing on my feet in a line for four hours and feeling quite tired, I got a new perspective and deeper appreciation of the incredible shepherding of the Rebbe.

The Rebbe stood on his feet for more than four hours every week greeting people. During his eighties. In respect to those who came to see him, he didn’t even agree to sit down but stood as he greeted those who came to meet him.

Click here to see how the Rebbe greeted thousands of Jews ever Sunday to give them a dollar to give to a needy person.

Here am I, a youngish person, yet after four hours on my feet I was a bit tired.

Additionally, I know how emotionally depleted I feel on a day that I have had multiple meetings with all kinds of people. Meeting people is tiring. You have to focus on the person. Then you need to remove your focus from the first person and refocus on the next one.

Exhausting work.

The Rebbe did it, week after week, with thousands of people.

Is it difficult to fathom?

Yes.

It highlights the fact that we really don’t understand the life and feelings of a Tzadik. Saintliness is a plateau that is achieved by only a select few. It is not a standard experience that we can really say we feel.

We humans tend to judge other people based on the feelings and thoughts we have ourselves. If we truly understand what a Tzadik is, we will understand that we cannot understand them. They are too different. On a totally different level.

For example. Do you ever feel an urge to do something wrong?

Think about it for a minute. Honestly. Even if you have never acted on your desire, it is almost guaranteed that you have felt a pull to do something inappropriate.

A true Tzadik never contemplates or is even pulled in the direction of doing something wrong.

You and I cannot begin to comprehend what it must feel like to be a Tzadik and totally sublimated and committed to Hashem.

That is why it is so difficult to understand the ‘sin’ of Moshe in this week’s portion. Where Moshe doesn’t speak to the rock but hits it. And Hashem gets angry and says that Moshe will have to stay in the desert.

It cannot be so simple. It doesn’t make sense that Moshe simply did not follow Hashems instructions.

The commentaries offer many perspectives. Click here for some.

Allow me to share the one I felt connected to most this week.

The opportunity for sanctifying Hashems name in the story of the rock is as follows.

The rock giving water after merely being spoken to, would create a chastisement of the Jewish people.

If even a rock gives water when Moshe speaks to it by command of Hashem, how much more so the Jewish people should be obedient of Hashems commandments to them’

It was precisely this comparison which would paint the Jewish people in a non-favorable light that Moshe wished to avoid.

He disregarded what not speaking to the rock would mean for his own future. Indeed, he didn’t go into Israel because of this. But he protected the Jewish people by not allowing this comparison to be drawn.

This interpretation fits my image of true leadership of a Tzadik. As it fits well with my vivid memories of the Rebbe standing for many many hours on his feet, gazing into the eyes of Am Yisrael as they walked by him for blessing.

The Rebbe life was lived in selfless service of the Jewish people.

His mission was to uncover and develop the innate greatness in each person.

Click here to hear from four leaders about the impact the Rebbe had on their lives even though they never met him.

The lesson is crystal clear.

We ought to carry out more acts of selflessness, giving to others and looking out for the good of the collective.

At the core it is about asking yourself, not what is best for me, but what is best for those around me.

What is best for the Jewish people.

And march forward with energy and joy to implement it.

Shabbat Shalom

Rabbi Yosef Kantor

PS Click here to see a clip highlighting the Rebbe’s message of empowerment for each of us.

Renovations

By the Grace of G-d

Dear Friend,

I had a very inspiring ‘joining of the dots’ happen to me over the past few weeks. I would like to share it with you. Pretend you are watching footage from my ‘bodycam’.

Earlier this week the following story was told in the Talmud I was teaching (tractate Berachot 5):

The Gemara relates another story regarding acknowledgement of the justice of divine punishment: 

Four hundred barrels of Rav Hunas wine fermented and turned into vinegar, causing him great financial loss. Rav Yehuda, the brother of Rav Sala the Pious, along with the Sages, and some say Rav Adda bar Ahava, along with the Sages, entered to visit him, and said: The Master should examine his actions, as perhaps he committed a transgression for which he is being punished.
Rav Huna said to them: Am I suspect in your eyes? Have I committed a transgression on account of which you advise me to examine my behavior?
They said to him: Is the Holy One, Blessed be He, suspect that He exacts punishment without justice? Your loss was certainly just, and you must examine your conduct to find out why. The Sages were aware of a flaw in Rav Huna’s conduct, to which they alluded (Tosafot).

Rav Huna said to them: If someone has heard something improper that I have done, let him say so. They said to him: We have heard that the Master does not give a share of his grapevines to his tenant farmers. A tenant farmer is entitled to a portion of the crop grown on his landlord’s property, as well as a share of the vines planted during a given year.

Rav Huna said to them: Does this tenant farmer leave me anything from the produce that he grows on my property? He steals it all. Consequently, in denying him his share of the grapevines I am simply recouping that which was stolen from me by this tenant farmer.

They said to him: That is the meaning of the folk saying: One who steals from a thief has a taste of theft. Despite the fact that the property was stolen to begin with, one nevertheless engages in theft. Although he did not violate a prohibition per se, it is still a form of theft, and one who is held to a higher standard than others will be punished for it.
He said to them: I accept upon myself to give my tenant farmer his portion in the future.
Thereupon, as a result of Rav Huna’s repentance, God restored his loss. Some say his vinegar turned back into wine, and some say that the price of vinegar rose and it was sold at the price of wine.

(copied from Torah Texts by Chabad.org)

As I was reading Rav Huna’s heartfelt question ‘have I done anything wrong to deserve this great loss’? someone else’s voice popped up in my mind.

A few weeks ago, when I was in NY, a businessman friend asked me to come over to his home for a chat. Sipping wine in his backyard he opened his heart to me that times were tough for him financially. Particularly he was bothered by a seventy-thousand-dollar payment that was being withheld for a construction job he had completed for a building contractor. 

‘What am I doing wrong’? was his anguished cry. ‘Tell me Rabbi Kantor, what more can I be doing in my service of Hashem, in my study, in my observance, in my Tzedaka giving’?

I felt sorry for him. I believed him that he is trying to serve Hashem to the best of his ability. Of course, it would be misplaced of me to try and answer his question. Hashem has His reasons, and we don’t always have to understand them. I blessed him. ‘May Hashem shower you with an abundance of parnassah (‘wherewithal’).

As the conversation unfolded, there was something that my friend mentioned that I considered very significant. He mentioned that his kitchen was inadequate for the large amount of hosting that he and his wife do on the Shabbat and Chagim. He told me that his wife was a bit fed up and wanted to do a major overhaul but as he had just explained, he couldn’t see how to do it.

My mind started racing. 

I pointed out to my friend the statement in the Talmud

A person must always be careful about sustaining the honor of his wife, as blessing is found in a person’s house only because of his wife, …. And that is what Rava said to the residents of Meḥoza, where he lived: Honor your wives, so that you will become rich.

And I shared that I had read many letters written by the Rebbe where he had urged that the house and its furnishings be according to the taste of the wife. 

Could it be that this is where you could get better? To really make every effort to get your wife a more functional kitchen with which she could be happy.

My friend agreed in concept, that when times would improve he would make his wife’s kitchen a top priority. 

This was two weeks ago. This week when I read this story of Rav Huna in the Talmud, this story jumped back into my mind. I was happy to teach the happy ending in Rav Huna’s case. The moment that he had identified where he could better his behavior towards his farmer, Hashem turned around his financial loss and he recouped his money. 

Now that my friend had firmly decided to get his wife a kitchen that she would be happy with, shouldn’t my friends story also have a happy ending, I thought to myself.

In the middle of the night (in Bangkok local time) I got a text from my friend. It was a picture of a check for more than thirty-four thousand dollars. 

In the morning, he explained to me what happened. His wife had called and asked him to accompany her to shop for something that needed to be upgraded in the kitchen (even before the major renovation). It was a busy day, the workers needed to be supervised, but as he is self-employed, he was able to make the noble and holy decision that his wife’s request should come first. He dropped everything he was involved with and took her shopping. As he dropped his wife off back home after their shopping trip, he got an email with a picture of the check that was waiting to be picked up.

When he went to pick it up, someone he didn’t know walked into the room. The unknown man praised him for his craftsmanship. It was the owner of that very company. And the conversation continued right then and there for additional even more significant work in the future.

I was so inspired to hear this story play out in 2024. Just as it had been recorded in the Talmud almost two thousand years ago.

It speaks to one of the basic premises and truisms of our Torah. 

Hashem is true. His Torah is true.

Following the path of Hashem is the source of all blessing.

If you do what Hashem wants, you are connected to the greatest faucet of blessing, not just in terms of spirituality, but right here down on earth.

It is this reality that is at the heart of the Mitzvah campaigns that the Rebbe promoted. 

Tefillin, Shabbat candles, Mezuzah, Mikvah - Family Purity are some of the ten.

In particular these mitzvahs engender peace, security, health, and protection for our soldiers and for our people. In Israel and wherever Jewish people live.

How can a kosher mezuzah bring security and safety to the home?

What is the connection between us laying Tefillin and the soldier’s safety in their holy work in protection of Israel?

How does eating kosher food promote material health?

How does keeping the laws of Family Purity bring blessings for physically, emotionally and spiritually healthy children?

At the core of our Torah is the belief that Hashem created the world and its entirety. 

The blueprints of the world are the Torah.

When a Jew fulfils his mitzvahs he or she is connecting to Hashem in the deepest and most consummate way.

This connection to Hashem automatically provides the greatest opening of the faucets of blessing even here down on earth.

It is simple. We all believe in Hashem. He created the world. It makes sense to follow the ‘instructions’ of the ‘manufactuer’.

But I will admit, it is not always easy to keep that mindset.

It is not intended to be effortless.

Hashem designed us with an ‘animal soul’ that tends to be skeptical. 

Hashem embeds into the natural cycle of the world things that obscure His presence. 

And to make thing more confusing, sometimes good people suffer. This creates questions and doubts in the minds of those who witness it.

It is for this reason that Hashem also positions great spiritual leaders into every generation so that we have human beings who by their personal example are living and breathing this absolute connection to G-d in the real world.

Hashem sent Moshe to take the Jews out of Egypt, to teach them the Torah and to shepherd them through the desert on their way to Israel.

In every generation Hashem implanted a continuation of Moshe to shepherd the Jews of that day and age.

The Rebbe’s teachings – (the Hebrew acronym רב"י  stands for ראש בני ישראל ‘head of the generation’ - are so relevant and pertinent for our modern age. 

Find out for yourself.

Explore more of what the Rebbe taught in honor of the thirtieth year of his passing which is going to be on Tuesday Tammuz 3, July 9.

Thirty years is a long time. I miss the Rebbe’s physical presence dearly.

Counterintuitively, the more time that passes, the more that the Rebbe’s teachings and directions for living contemporary life, become prevalent and recognized.

Just look at the growth of the number of Rebbe’s emissaries since his physical passing. At the time of the Rebbe’s passing my wife and I who arrived in Bangkok in 1993, were the second Chabad couple in Asia having arrived several years after the first shluchim to Asia, Rabbi & Mrs. Avtzon in Hong Kong. 

Today, baruch Hashem, there are nearly fifty shluchim couples that serve the Jewish communities of Asia.

The message of the Rebbe is clear. Each of us, you and I, have a mission from Hashem to bring Mashiach. And we have all been provided with the toolbox needed. Torah and Mitzvahs.

Let us ‘wake up and smell the coffee’, that the only and singular way that ensures the eternity and success of the Jewish people nationally, and for each and every Jew individually, is the way that Hashem has instructed us at Sinai. 

Learning Torah and performing Mitzvahs.

This is a blessed life spiritually.

This is a blessed life materially and emotionally. 

May we merit to have MASHIACH come NOW.

Shabbat Shalom

Chodesh Tov (tonight thru Sunday is Rosh Chodesh Tammuz)

Rabbi Yosef Kantor

 

PS. Thirty years after the Rebbe's passing, his presence is felt stronger than ever. His teachings continue to inspire and guide us, and his insights remain as fresh and relevant as if they were given today. Each of us is a beneficiary of the Rebbe's inspiration in one way or another, and our lives are affected by his visionary leadership.

Click here to explore more about the Rebbe's life and how one can send a letter to his Ohel - resting place and commit to fulfilling more Torah and Mitzvot and making the world more ready for the imminent arrival of Moshiach, AMEN.
And if you are in Bangkok, join us this Motzei Shabbat — Saturday night as we remember the Rebbe and commit to carrrying his message further.

Looking for older posts? See the sidebar for the Archive.