Food 4 Shabbos Va'Yetzeh - Israel at war!

Food 4 Shabbos Va'Yetzeh - Israel at war!


B.H.

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Shalom from Safed,

? May Hashem protect all of the inhabitants of the land of Israel within all the Jewish nation all over the world and grant the return of all hostages healthy, safely and immediately. Immediate victory in this war, eliminating ALL our enemies without casualties. True and lasting peace with the revelation of the Rebbe Melech Ha’Moshiach immediately NOW! We are taught in this week's portion that Yackov Aveinu before going down to Charan, to get married and build the twelve tribes of Israel, prayed at the future place of the Beis Ha'Mikdash and enacted the evening prayer. Why would the choice of the three fathers enact a prayer which we are told was initially non-obligatory? In Kabbalah it is explained that this is the secret of illuminating the darkness. The empowerment that our Father Yackov gives us in the evening prayer when darkness falls. Exile is compared to darkness. In order to dispel the darkness of Galus the initiation must come from bellow from each and every individual. Therefore the evening prayer was initially not obligatory. Only later the Jewish nation took this upon us in our daily prayers. May we merit illuminating the darkness completely through our Prayer Torah study and acts of goodness and kindness with the revelation of the Rebbe Shlita Melech Ha'Moshiach NOW Mammesh! ?To receive, guidance and consultation in illuminating the darkness from within and without, you are invited to contact me. Good Shabbos. May we all have a Safe, Victorious, Healthy and Warm Winter Moshiach NOW! Eliyahu

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This Week’s Portion

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Find your Shabbos? candle lighting times anywhere in the world here. Upcoming anniversary, Monday Yud Daled Kislev (5689/1928), of the Rebbe Melech Ha'Moshiach and Rebbetzin Chaya Mushka. Click?here ?to watch a stirring video presentation?about the Rebbe and Rebbetzin's chasuna.??

B.H. ?

?Va'Yetzeh –?Light and Strength in the Darkness May Hashem protect all of the inhabitants of the land of Israel within all the Jewish nation all over the world and grant the return of all our hostages healthy, safely and immediately. Immediate victory in this war, eliminating ALL our enemies without casualties. True and complete peace with the revelation of the Rebbe Shlita Melech Ha’Moshiach immediately NOW!

In the merit of my Grandfather's Neshomo Ephraim ben Etta and Shimon Whose Yahrzeit is today Friday Kislev 11th ?

??? These are challenging times for our people and for all good people. For Jews, one of the most powerful resources for millennia has been thanksgiving and gratitude. In our transition, we express gratitude hundreds of times a day, at every step of the road. Before I eat an apple, after I come out of the bathroom when I open my eyes in the morning, and when I am about to retire. How do we cultivate this life-changing gift during times of visceral pain and distress? In this week’s Torah portion, Jacob traveled from Beer Sheva to Haran. Beer Sheva, Hebrew for the well of the oath, was named after the oath of friendship taken by Abraham and the Philistine king, Abimelech. Haran was named after the Hebrew word?haron, which means anger. The people of Haran, chief among them Laban, Jacob’s uncle, angered G-d with their deceitful ways.?? Jacob left Beer Sheva to escape his wicked brother Esau, who wanted to kill him for absconding with their father’s blessings. It seems that Jacob couldn’t catch a break. In attempting to flee one wicked place, he went to another. The truth is that Jacob did not go to Haran merely to flee danger. If G-d wanted to protect Jacob from Esau, he could have done so in Beer Sheva. There was no need for Jacob to flee to Haran, another den of wickedness and deceit. Jacob was on a mission of marriage. His parents sent him to Laban’s home to find a wife. To Jacob, it was about bringing light to the spiritual darkness of Haran and Laban’s home. When a holy, righteous person enters a city, an aura of holiness enters with him. When a righteous person marries into a family, the entire family is uplifted by his holiness. He wanted Haran to be the birthplace of the twelve tribes. He wanted a place that angers G-d to fill with people who please G-d. That was Jacob’s aim. Entering Haran was not a time of darkness for Jacob. It was a time of strength?to fill the void with light. Of course, he could have married Laban’s daughters and brought them back to Beer Sheva to have their children. But Abimelech would have exacted a steep price that Jacob was unwilling to pay. When Abraham took an oath of friendship with Abimelech to secure his family’s safety and freedom to practice Judaism, he paid a steep price. As a result of this oath, the Jewish inheritance of the land of Israel was postponed for seven generations. You will recall that Abraham gave his oath to Abimelech along with a tribute of seven sheep. These seven sheep resulted in the postponement of the Jewish entry into Israel for seven generations Abraham, Isaac, Jacob, Levi, Kehat, Amram, and Moses. Had Abraham not given his oath along with seven sheep, Abraham would have inherited Israel in his day. In the next generation, Abimelech exacted a similar oath from Isaac. Isaac and his servants had dug six wells, each contested by the Philistines. They then dug a seventh well that the Philistines left alone, but not before Abimelech exacted a heavy price. Abimelech demanded another oath of friendship from Isaac. Once again, this oath secured Isaac and his family’s safety and freedom to practice Judaism.??But it cost the Jewish people another generation. Indeed, Moses did not lead the Jews into Israel. It fell to his successor, Joshua, because of the seven wells that accompanied Isaac’s oath. Jacob knew that he, too, could remain in Beer Sheva and build his family in Israel, but the price would be another oath to Abimelech. Jacob was not prepared to delay his children’s entry into Israel by another generation. He was willing to expose himself to the foreign, unholy atmosphere of Haran and build his family there if this would spare him from taking an oath. Jacob’s role was to create light amid darkness. To build up holiness in a bastion of wickedness and deceit. It was not enough for him to accept Abimelech’s oath of protection if, in turn, he would need to assent to another generation in exile. He, therefore, opted for Haran. A place where his righteousness, holiness, and integrity would be challenged at every moment. But a place where he could be the architect of his own success. This tells us that Jacob’s departure from Beer Sheva was not a journey into exile. It was a signature statement that ensured an early Jewish return to Israel. It was not a moment of darkness. It was a moment of strength. He left Israel from a place of strength and arrived in Haran from a place of strength. For Jacob, Haran was not a place that angers G-d.??Haran was a place in which he would build a family that pleases G-d. Indeed, the word Haran has another connotation. It doesn’t only mean?haron—anger; it also means?horin—freedom. Our sages said we are only truly free when we study the Torah. Jacob went to Haran to study and observe the Torah. He went to transform the place from?haron?to?horin, from anger to freedom. Freedom to dismiss the mockers and their hold over people. Freedom to choose G-d. Freedom to be a Torah Jew in Haran. Nothing could hold Jacob back. Not the power of persuasion, not social pressure, not poverty, not ultimatums, and not the cheating and deceit of his father-in-law. He was impervious to it all. Despite every challenge thrown his way, Jacob remained free to plot his own course toward a life that pleases G-d. He was able to do that because he left for Haran from a place of strength ensuring that his descendants would return to Israel as soon as possible. In his mind, he was always on his way back to the Holy Land. The message for us is that we are not in a time of darkness. We are in a time of strength. The IDF is waging an existential war to rid the world of the Nazi Hamas terror group. A time of war can feel like darkness. But we are not in a place of darkness. We are in a place of strength. This is not a time of darkness. It is a time of strength. Surely, Jacob could have interpreted leaving Israel for Haran as a time of darkness. But he didn’t. To him, it was a time of strength a time to hasten his children’s redemption . ? The October 7?Simchat Torah massacre was a dark and difficult time. But within days, our nation rallied and turned the tables. Jews around the world are experiencing an unprecedented wave of unity, trust, faith, confidence, and even joy. We are strong in our conviction that?beyachad?nenatzea’ach—together, we will triumph. Can this be viewed as a time of darkness? Well, only if one insists. To me, it is a time of unparalleled Jewish strength that will soon fill the darkness with light. When this is over, the Jewish people will be in an unprecedented position of strength, unity, peace, and complete liberation, with the revelation of the Rebbe Shlita Melech Ha’Moshiach immediately NOW!? ?

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This has been made available by:? Rabbi Y. Geisinsky Chabad of Great Neck NY

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