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Publisher's Foreword

Rosh HaShanah: A Cry of Awe from the Soul

Teshuvah: An Entire Soul, An Entire People

Erev Yom Kippur: Sweet Cake and a Sweet Year

Erev Yom Kippur: Nourishing Body and Soul

The Sukkah: A Stage on One's Way Out of Egypt

Simchas Torah: Blessings by the Bucketful

In Study and Outreach: Plant Humbly, Plant Patiently

Tishrei and Kabbalas Ol: A Yoke that Liberates

The Eve of Simchas Torah: Making One's Hiskashrus Live and Last

Simchas Torah: "And Yaakov Set Out on his Way"

Silk Frockcoats for Shabbos and Yom-Tov

Shabbos Bereishis: "Let There Be Light!"

Parshas Lech Lecha: Surviving the Trek through Galus

Chayei-Sarah/Kislev: Body Higher Than Soul

A Letter for Yud-Tes Kislev

Vayeitzei/Tes-Kislev: Stepping Out into the World

A Day of Glad Tidings: Another Letter for Yud-Tes Kislev

A Request for Yud-Tes Kislev

Yud-Tes Kislev: Starting a Year that Heeds Its Head

Shabbos Mevarchim Teves: Preparing to Confront the World

A Letter: A Time for Stocktaking

Parshas Vayigash: Strength and Submissiveness

Kaddish: Beyond the Reach of Words

Chaf-Daled Teves: Of Live Rebbeim and Live Chassidim

Parshas Vaeira: New Toil for Old, New Habits for Old

Founders of Chassidism & Leaders of Chabad-Lubavitch

Glossary and Biographical Index

Proceeding Together — Volume 3 — Tishrei-Teves, 5711
Talks by the Lubavitcher Rebbe,
Rabbi Menachem M. Schneerson
After the Passing of the Previous Rebbe,
Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak Schneersohn
on Yud Shvat 5710 [1950]


Rosh HaShanah: A Cry of Awe from the Soul

Translated from Toras Menachem by Uri Kaploun

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  Publisher's ForewordTeshuvah: An Entire Soul, An Entire People  

1. Days of Chessed, Days of Gevurah.

As[1] is well known, the First Day of Rosh HaShanah can fall only on Monday, Tuesday, Thursday or Shabbos, and never on Sunday, Wednesday or Friday. To quote the classic mnemonic,[2] "Rosh [HaShanah] does not fall on [Yom] Alef, Daled or Vav." This calls for explanation: How can Rosh HaShanah never fall on Friday, when the very first Rosh HaShanah -- the day on which Adam was created -- was the sixth day of Creation?

At first glance one might seek to answer that the above rule applies only to an era in which the beginning of each month is calculated and determined in advance -- whereas [in the period of the Beis HaMikdash,] when each Rosh Chodesh was determined and sanctified according to the fresh testimony of witnesses who had just sighted the newly-born moon,[3] Rosh HaShanah could indeed have fallen on the other three days as well.

According to Rav Saadiah Gaon,[4] however, who holds that even during that period the Torah's requirement for determining Rosh Chodesh was chiefly dealt with by calculation, the above rule is binding at all times, even when Rosh Chodesh is determined by the testimony of witnesses. We thus need to understand the difference between the first Rosh HaShanah, which fell on Friday, and the Rosh HaShanah of every year since.

By way of introduction, let us see the words of Rambam:[5] "In the above calculation, why is [the First Day of Rosh HaShanah] not made to fall on Sunday, Wednesday or Friday?... The Sages decided to intersperse the days of the week on which Rosh HaShanah can fall between the days of the week on which [because of their deferment] it cannot fall, in order to arrive at the day on which the relative positions of the sun and the moon can be calculated precisely."[6]

Raavad protests: "According to him, it would never be advisable to fix [the First Day of Rosh HaShanah] on the day of its molad.[7] For what sin should Sunday, Wednesday and Friday be punished by never having their molad set for [the astronomically precise time of] yom hakibbutz haamiti? And for what merit should Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Shabbos be rewarded by having their molad on time, without deferment?"

It could be suggested that Rambam did not clarify why these three particular days should be deferred (choosing instead to offer a partial explanation), because the real reason belongs to the realm of the Kabbalah (as will presently be explained). Rambam, though well-versed in the Kabbalah, was extremely wary about revealing any Kabbalistic perspectives, even by allusion (as, too, with Rashi), for doing so in his time entailed a risk. (This is discussed in the sichos of my revered father-in-law, the Rebbe [Rayatz].[8])

The deferment of Rosh HaShanah on these three days in particular may be explained according to the Kabbalah as follows:[9]

Sunday, Wednesday and Friday relate to the vector of Chessed: Sunday relates to the Sefirah of Chessed; Wednesday relates to the Sefirah of Netzach, which is a derivative of Chessed; Friday, a day concerning which the Torah twice writes "good,"[10] likewise indicates Chassadim. Man's task on Rosh HaShanah is to elicit G-d's sovereignty, and this is done specifically by accepting the yoke of heaven -- a mode of avodah that derives from the vector of Gevurah. Rosh HaShanah is therefore deferred from Sunday, Wednesday and Friday, which relate to the vector of Chessed, and is calculated to fall instead on one of the other four days of the week: on Monday, which relates to the Sefirah of Gevurah; or on Thursday, which relates to the Sefirah of Hod, a derivative of Gevurah; or at least on Tuesday, which relates to the Sefirah of Tiferes, on the median vector.[11]

With this in mind, we can understand the difference between the days of the week on which any Rosh HaShanah can fall, and the day on which the very first Rosh HaShanah fell -- for the above reason can apply only after the very first Rosh HaShanah, in the present era, when the function of Rosh HaShanah is secured by man's avodah. (In the present era, "it depends on a spiritual arousal initiated by man below."[12]) On the very first Rosh HaShanah, by contrast, all spiritual activity was initiated, though unsolicited, by G-d, "For He desires to bestow kindness."[13] On that occasion, therefore, Rosh HaShanah fell on Friday, a day concerning which the Torah twice writes "good" -- a day of Chessed.

2. Tears of Joy.

The Alter Rebbe once said that one's avodah on the evening of Rosh HaShanah should be done in a spirit of joy. Soon after, the Tzemach Tzedek and R. Nachum (the son of the Mitteler Rebbe) called on him and asked: If the avodah of Rosh HaShanah should be done in a spirit of simchah, why did he cry?

The Alter Rebbe replied: "Those were tears of joy."[14]

3. His Mercies Extend Over All His Creatures.

[Approaching the river bank for Tashlich, the Rebbe looked for a spot from which fish could be seen, and said:] It is recounted that once when R. Chaim Vital was teaching as he walked near a river for Tashlich, a frog suddenly poked its head out of the water. When his son made a move to frighten it away, R. Chaim Vital told him to let it be: it wanted to hear words of Torah.[15]

4. A Jew's Innermost Desire.

Even when one's prayers are not duly accompanied by meditation upon all the kavanos (the appropriate Kabbalistic intentions),[16] the audible recitation of the words of prayer fulfills its function -- because the recitation in itself reveals the individual's true desire that springs from the very core of his soul. And this core remains intact within every single Jew.

What is the source for this statement in the revealed plane of the Torah?

[In certain cases where a recalcitrant husband refuses to give his wife a bill of divorce which the court has decided must be given, the Sages apply the rule,][17] "He is to be coerced until he says, 'I want to do so.'" Rambam[18] explains the rationale for this rule as follows: "Since he wants to be part of the Jewish people and wants to observe all the commandments and distance himself from the transgressions, and it is his Evil Inclination that has attacked him, then once he has been smitten until his Evil Inclination has been weakened and he says, 'I want to do so,' [he has acted] according to his will." This means that making this statement is meaningful not because of the coercion, for consent extracted by duress is legally meaningless. The function of the coercion is solely to negate the threatening assault of the Evil Inclination. Once this is done, the statement -- "I want to do so" -- is meaningful because it reveals his real desire.

The same principle clearly applies to an individual seeking teshuvah. When one's actions are as they ought to be, and there is also a request for forgiveness, at least orally, then this request is effective even if it is not duly accompanied by meditation on all the relevant [Kabbalistic] kavanos -- because his spoken words reveal the true desire that derives from the innermost core of his soul.

Similarly, Chassidus[19] teaches that the Sounding of the Shofar is basically an outcry: "Father, father, save me!" One erev Rosh HaShanah the Rebbe Maharash commented:[20] "What matters most is not the words, 'Father, father...,' but the outcry.'" Even if the intention of 'Father, save me!' is imperfect, the outcry in itself suffices, because in it is revealed the innermost core of the soul.[21] (It is recorded, by the way, that as a result of the above comment of the Rebbe Maharash, that year's Rosh HaShanah was unforgettably powerful.)

Along these lines, too, the maamarim of the Rebbe Rashab[22] interpret the verse,[23] "For Israel is a child, and I love him." The Rebbe Rashab explains: Even though Israel, childlike, is lacking in his grasp of Divinity, I love him nevertheless -- by virtue of the essence of his soul.

5. A Tallis Katan at Night.

[One of the chassidim accompanying the Rebbe asked whether the custom of wearing a tallis katan[24] even when asleep borders on bal tosef[25] -- the prohibition of adding to the commandments of the Torah. The Rebbe replied:] This prohibition disallows doing an actual deed which would entail an addition to the mitzvah proper. In the case under discussion, since the act of wearing a tallis katan does not [even by day] constitute a mitzvah [that one is obliged to initiate] and the mitzvah is fulfilled automatically, the question of bal tosef does not arise.[26]

   

Notes:

  1. (Back to text) The above is an unauthenticated record of teachings that were heard on the first day of Rosh HaShanah, 5711 [1950], on the way to Tashlich.

  2. (Back to text) Rambam, Hilchos Kiddush HaChodesh 7:1; Tur Shulchan Aruch, Orach Chaim, sec. 428.

  3. (Back to text) In the original, m'kadshin al-pi hariah.

  4. (Back to text) Quoted in Yesod Olam, Shaar 4, ch. 6; discussed at length in Torah Shleimah, Parshas Bo, Vol. XIII, ch. 3.

  5. (Back to text) Op. cit. 7:7.

  6. (Back to text) In the original, b'yom kibutz ha'amiti; defined in Rambam, op. cit. 6:1.

  7. (Back to text) This is an approximation arrived at in the preliminary stages of the Sanhedrin's calculation as to when the New Moon was first to be expected. See Rambam, loc. cit.

  8. (Back to text) Sefer HaSichos, Kayitz 5700 [1940], p. 41, and footnote there; see also the references listed there.

  9. (Back to text) Explained at length in Igros Kodesh (Letters) of the Rebbe, Vol. II, pp. 247, 249ff., 386.

  10. (Back to text) Bereishis 1:25, 31.

  11. (Back to text) There is no record of the Rebbe's explanation concerning Shabbos. [-- Note by the publisher of the Heb. edition.]

  12. (Back to text) In the Aram. original, b'isarusa d'l'tata talia milsa; see Likkutei Torah: Parshas Nitzavim, p. 47b, and Derushei Rosh HaShanah, p. 58b; and elsewhere.

  13. (Back to text) Michah 7:18. (This verse is read in the course of Tashlich; see Siddur Tehillat HaShem, p. 295.) See Likkutei Torah, loc. cit.

  14. (Back to text) See the note summarizing the sichah of the first night of Rosh HaShanah (after Maariv), 5707 [1947].

  15. (Back to text) Shaar Ruach HaKodesh by the AriZal, in the first gloss to Derush Gimmel; cited in Shaar Yissachar -- Maamarei Chodesh Tishrei, in the maamar entitled Shuvah Yisrael, sec. 23.

  16. (Back to text) This comment was evidently prompted by the sentences in the Siddur (p. 295) which introduce Tashlich by instructing the worshiper to read certain verses [relating to repentance] while bearing in mind the Kabbalistic connotation of certain related phrases. [-- Note by the publisher of the Heb. edition.]

  17. (Back to text) Rosh HaShanah 6a.

  18. (Back to text) Hilchos Geirushin 2:20.

  19. (Back to text) See the series of maamarim entitled VeKachah 5637 [1877], sec. 70; Sefer HaMaamarim 5696 [1936], p. 2; Sefer HaMaamarim 5705 [1945], p. 1 (in Sefer HaSichos 5705 [1945], p. 6).

  20. (Back to text) See the sichah of the Second Night of Rosh HaShanah, 5704 [1944], sec. 6 (in Sefer HaSichos 5704 [1944], p. 4ff.).

  21. (Back to text) See also Likkutei Sichos, Vol. II, p. 405ff.

  22. (Back to text) See: the maamar entitled Ki Naar Yisrael 5666 [1906] (published in the Hosafos (Addenda) to Hemshech 5666 [1906]); Sefer HaMaamarim 5678 [1918], p. 159ff.

  23. (Back to text) Hoshea 1:1.

  24. (Back to text) The subject presumably arose in connection with the custom of shaking the edges of the tallis katan at the conclusion of Tashlich. [-- Note by the publisher of the Heb. edition.]

  25. (Back to text) Cf. Devarim 13:1.

  26. (Back to text) See also: R. Yochanan Gourary, Tzitzis Halachah LeMaaseh (Eretz Yisrael, 5748 [1988]), end of ch. 11 (p. 139, footnote 11), and sources listed there.


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