Sichos In English   Holidays  Shabbat   Calendar  ×‘×´×”

     Sichos In English -> Books -> Letters From The Rebbe -> I Will Write It In Their Hearts - Volume 3
Volume 1   |   Volume 2   |   Volume 3   |   Volume 4   |   Volume 5

I Will Write It In Their Hearts - Volume 3
A Treasury of Letters from the Lubavitcher Rebbe,
Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson
Selections from Igros Kodesh


Explanation with regard to Yaakov sending Yehudah to establish a yeshivah in Egypt

Translated by: Rabbi Eli Touger

Published and copyright © by Sichos In English
(718) 778-5436   •   info@SichosInEnglish.org   •   FAX (718) 735-4139


Add to Shopping Cart   |   Buy this now
  The importance of eagerness in the observance of the mitzvosTable of contentsCommunication regarding the Rebbe's mother; books sent for Lubavitch refugees in Europe; the significance of the name Naftali  

No. 259

This letter was addressed to R. Yosef Goldstein, one of the refugees who settled in Paris after WWII and devoted his energies to spreading the study of Chassidus there.
B"H, Tuesday of the week in which we read the parshah [beginning] "And Yaakov lived in the land of Egypt,"[127] 5707

Greetings and blessings,

We received your letter of 11 Kislev in which you share the good news that communal sessions of Torah study were established at an appropriate time. As per your request, we have sent you some of our publications in a separate shipment. Please notify us that you received them. It is incumbent on you to see that many use these texts, either by placing them in a public place (a synagogue, a reading room, or the like) or by lending them to others and then lending them out again. "Whenever one brings merit to people at large..., the merit of the many is dependent on him."[128]

We are not in possession of any copies of the Tanya, because they have all been sold. You should approach [the chassidim in] Tel Aviv directly for it appears that they still possess a number of copies.

In a letter of 14 Sivan, 5701 [129] (which I cited in HaYom Yom, p. 12), my revered father-in-law, the Rebbe Shlita, writes that when the Tzemach Tzedek was a young child, he studied the verse:[130] "And Yaakov lived in the land of Egypt for seventeen years." His teacher interpreted it according to the commentary of the Baal HaTurim, explaining that Yaakov lived his seventeen best years in Egypt.

When he came home from cheder, he asked his grandfather, the Alter Rebbe: "How is it possible that the best years of Yaakov, the chosen of the Patriarchs, were the seventeen years he lived in the land of Egypt, 'the nakedness of the land'?"[131]

The Alter Rebbe answered him:

It is written:[132] "He sent Yehudah before him to Yosef towards Goshen to show the way." The Midrash[133] -- quoted by Rashi -- states: "Rabbi Nechemiah says: '[He was sent] to establish a house of study'" so that the Torah would [be taught there]. Thus Yaakov's sons would contemplate the Torah. [This is the intent of the words:] "To Goshen, to show the way." When we study the Torah, we come closer to G-d.[134] [In this manner,] it was possible that even in Egypt, Yaakov "lived," i.e., experienced vitality.

It is possible to clarify an additional point: Why was it Yehudah whom he sent? It is possible to resolve the concept as follows: The Alter Rebbe's explanation (which is based on the Baal HaTurim's teaching) -- that through Torah study, one comes closer to G-d -- is difficult to understand. Obviously, when Yaakov [and his sons] were in Eretz Yisrael, "he was an elder, abiding in the yeshivah," like the other Patriarchs. (The verse is merely teaching that even in Egypt, Yaakov followed this pattern; see Yoma 28b.) Why then are his years in Egypt considered his best years?

[One might endeavor to reply that] in Egypt there were a multitude of [G-dly] sparks that were refined[135] (Torah Or, Parshas Vaeira, the maamar entitled VaYomer... VaYivla; see also ibid., Parshas Bo, the conclusion of the maamar entitled B'Etzem). [This, however, is not sufficient, because these G-dly sparks] were not refined until much later, until after the death of that entire generation.

Moreover, the Alter Rebbe's wording indicates that the matter is dependent on Torah study itself and not on the refinement of the sparks [of G-dliness]. (If [one would say that the resolution is dependent on the teaching:][136] "This is the path of the Torah:... live a life of difficulty... you shall be happy and it shall be well with you," [that teaching focuses on relinquishing] delights as it states: "Eat bread with salt...." On the contrary, in Egypt, the Jews ate "the fat of the land."[137] We do not see that they [enjoyed such prosperity] in the land of Canaan.)

Egypt, however, is "the nakedness of the land," while with regard to Eretz Yisrael from which they departed, it is said: "The atmosphere of Eretz Yisrael grants one wisdom" in Torah study (Bava Basra 158b. It is difficult to say that [the concept]: "The atmosphere of Eretz Yisrael grants one wisdom" began to apply only after the Jews entered Eretz Yisrael, as our Sages relate [regarding another matter] in Megillah 14a.)

For this reason, [Yaakov] sent Yehudah before him, for [his Divine service] reflects the kabbalas ol (the acceptance of the yoke) demonstrated by a simple servant. [Such a servant] takes pleasure in performing his Divine service with kabbalas ol, for the Master's pleasure is his pleasure. (See Kuntreis Etz HaChayim, the conclusion of ch. 19; the maamar entitled Acharei Havayah Elokeichem Teileichu, 5666, and other sources.) For the Master has very deep pleasure in Torah study in the land of Egypt. With regard to the Divine service of refining [the sparks of G-dliness], there is room within logic to say that one must descend to Egypt as explained above. With regard to Torah study, by contrast, [the descent to Egypt] is illogical, unacceptable even to the intellect of the G-dly soul. It is, however, one of the deep conceptions of the Master [of the world], a revelation of His essence (Or Torah, the maamar entitled Yodua Teida). Through the attribute of Yehudah, it is possible for the servant also to experience deep and essential pleasure [in this study]. Hence it was Torah study in Egypt that granted Yaakov his best years.

With the blessing "Immediately to teshuvah, immediately to Redemption,"

Rabbi Menachem Schneerson
Chairman of the Executive Committee

   

Notes:

  1. (Back to text) [Note the explanation of the verse mentioned in the letter and the connection with R. Goldstein's efforts to spread Torah study.]

  2. (Back to text) [Avos 5:18.]

  3. (Back to text) [See the Igros Kodesh of the Previous Rebbe, Vol. V, Letter No. 1451.]

  4. (Back to text) [Bereishis 47:28.]

  5. (Back to text) [Cf. ibid. 42:9. See Koheles Rabbah 1:4.]

  6. (Back to text) [Ibid. 46:28.]

  7. (Back to text) [Midrash Tanchuma (Buber edition), Parshas Vayigash, sec. 12.]

  8. (Back to text) [The explanation depends on the dual meaning of the Hebrew terms employed. Goshnah, translated as "towards Goshen" shares the root gash, meaning "approach," and lihoros, translated as "to show the way," can also be interpreted as "instruct" or "deliver halachic rulings." Implied is that instruction in halachah enables one to approach G-d.]

  9. (Back to text) [I.e., in every material entity, there are sparks of G-dliness. Through using an entity for a Torah purpose, these sparks are elevated and united with their source in holiness.]

  10. (Back to text) [Avos 6:4. The Rebbe's intent appears to be that one might say that the advantage of Torah study in Egypt over Eretz Yisrael is that in Egypt, the Torah study is associated with difficulty. To this, the Rebbe replies that the teaching cited focuses on material difficulty, reducing one's pleasure, and the Jews' Torah study in Egypt was not distinguished by that quality.]

  11. (Back to text) [Bereishis 45:18.]


  The importance of eagerness in the observance of the mitzvosTable of contentsCommunication regarding the Rebbe's mother; books sent for Lubavitch refugees in Europe; the significance of the name Naftali  


Other Sections:

123456789101112131415
161718192021222324252627282930
313233343536373839404142434445
464748495051525354555657585960
616263646566676869707172737475
767778798081828384858687888990
919293949596979899100101102103104105
106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120
121

Volume 1   |   Volume 2   |   Volume 3   |   Volume 4   |   Volume 5
© Copyright 1988-2024
All Rights Reserved
Sichos In English