The Nechoma Greisman Anthology
Introduction — The Cosmic Mission
These excerpts from a shiur given by Nechoma in honor of the Sixth of
Tishrei -- the yahrzeit of Rebbetzin Chana, the Rebbe's
mother -- with the addition of a few of her handwritten notes, stand
in place of an introduction to this selection from her written works, classes
and thoughts. The excerpts speak for themselves, and seem to encapsulate many
of the matters which occupied Nechoma during her life. G-d willing, the complete
shiur will be found in the forthcoming volume of transcriptions of Nechoma's
taped shiurim.
On the yahrzeit of every Jew, and particularly that of a tzaddik or
tzadekes, their mazal, their neshama, is present, and radiates
powerfully on earth. The day when a person enters the world is a very critical day
in his or her life, and in the life of the entire cosmos, because that neshama
came down to a body on earth. And equally important and critical, if not more so,
is the day when a neshama departs from its body and from the physical world.
In Kabbalah, we are told that when a person passes away, he or she does not cease
to exist. Rather the person continues to exist on a different level. The neshama
is released from the limitations of a human body, and in a sense is much more powerful
after death than in life. In this sense, the presence of Rebbetzin Chana's neshama
is with us here tonight, her yahrzeit, in a very powerful way, as it has
been ever since she passed on to the World of Truth...A section in the book of
Shmuel I describes how Chana the prophetess accompanied her husband, Elkana,
to the Mishkan in Shilo. She cried bitterly because she did not have any
children. Her husband, Elkana, became aware of how empty and sad her life was, and
he said to Chana, "Why are you so sad? Am I not better for you than ten sons? There
are things in life other than children. Hashem has seen fit to prevent you from
having children. But you're a good woman, you do a lot of chesed, there are
many mitzvos to fill your life with, other than children!"
Now, interestingly, we do not see that Chana said anything to her husband in
reply. Actions speak louder than words. She didn't correct him, she didn't reprimand
him, she didn't contradict him, she just went ahead to the Mishkan and davened
from the depths of her heart, and she cried out to Hashem that He should bless her
with children. She didn't accept Elkana's attempt to appease her. She did not make
peace with the fact that she would not be able to bear children. The section goes
on to describe how Eli, the Kohen Gadol at the time, watched Chana davening
silently. At first he reprimanded her, accusing her of being intoxicated, but later,
when he discovered that she was simply pouring her heart out to Hashem, he blessed
her that she should have children. The story has a happy ending, for she became
the mother of the great prophet, Shmuel, and six other sons as well. Commentaries
explain that she is the joyous Em HaBanim mentioned in Tehillim, and
spoken of in Hallel.
Chana had made an oath that if she were blessed with a child, she would dedicate
him to the service of Hashem. When Shmuel was two years old, she made good her word.
She brought her young son to the Mishkan, and there he remained serving Hashem
for his entire life, becoming a prophet of the stature of Moshe Rabbeinu. However,
in the first two years of her child's life, when he was still a nursing infant,
Chana did not go to Shilo, where the Mishkan was located. Until that time,
before she had children, she always went along with her husband. But, when Shmuel
was born, she chose to stay home and take care of him.
From these facts about Chana, the Rebbe has derived several teachings, hora'os,
which apply to every Jewish woman. One of these teachings is the great importance
of every single Jewish child. We live in a world today that tells us that having
children is not such a great thing. It's not so important, especially if you already
have two. And if you already have three, or four, five, six, seven --
it's enough already. Maspik kvar! Who needs another one? We live in a world
that is filled with propaganda, if you will, regarding family planning, limiting
the size of your family, and spacing the children conveniently apart. But the Rebbe
emphasizes the value of every single Jewish child, even if it's the tenth, or the
eleventh, or the twelfth, or the fifteenth. Every Jewish child has tremendous importance,
not only to his mother and father and siblings, but to the Jewish People as a whole.
And as long as Hashem has granted a woman the ability to give birth to another Jewish
child, then that is her first mission, her most importance shlichus in the
world, which takes precedence over any other mission, and any other activity that
she is able to do. So that each woman who has a child, even if it is her tenth,
has mesirus nefesh to bring that child into the world.
The Rebbe mentioned that some women feel that they have done their duty in the
way of childbearing. They have a girl and a boy, a big one and a little one. Perhaps
now is the time to take a break, not (G-d forbid) to do a little tap dancing, but
to do worthy things, mitzvos, like bikur cholim, being active in the
Rebbe's mivtzoim campaigns, etc. So what's wrong with that? That's very noble,
very right. The Rebbe responded as follows: Anything that a Jewish woman could do
for the world, for Am Yisroel, had she not been pregnant and given birth
to that child, comes nowhere near the great accomplishment of having, and bearing,
and bringing up another Jewish neshama in the world. No one should think
that anything is more important than that activity. And if Hashem has decreed
that a certain sector of the population will have the shlichus of bearing
and tending to and educating a large family, then those women must know their priority
-- that their main contribution to Am Yisroel is another Jewish
neshama.
Moreover, this also hastens the coming of Mashiach, because our Sages
declare that, "Mashiach will not arrive until there will be no more neshamos
in Guf." Now, the word "Guf" in this context does not follow its traditional
meaning of "body." Here the word "Guf" refers to a heavenly treasury. Just
as there is a treasury of rain, and of other things, there is also a treasury of
neshamos that have not yet been born. Somewhere in the upper worlds there
is this treasury, and its name is "Guf." And only when all the neshamos
in this treasury have been born will Mashiach come.
The Rebbe has repeated time and again that our generation is on the threshold
of Mashiach, and so this mission becomes even more vital than in the past.
After I had given birth to my sixth child, my parents came from the United States
to celebrate the birth and the bris. It was a Thursday night, close to midnight,
and I was taking care of the laundry, the cooking, nursing the baby and the phone.
My father was sitting in the dining room, learning. At some point he looked up from
his sefer, and said, "This is the most difficult of all the Rebbe's mivtzoim."
We know that if it were not for the Rebbe pushing us and encouraging us, we might
not have the strength and motivation and determination which is required after seven,
eight, and nine children. It was this sicha in which the Rebbe spoke about
the mission, the cosmic mission, of bringing each Jewish child into the world.
Perhaps a woman's ability to bear children, or the lack of it, is due to previous
gilgulim, incarnations. We must believe in gilgulim to make any sense
of this world. This world is like a puzzle. Did you ever clean the house and find
one piece of a puzzle? What is it? Is it a tree? Is it a house? It just looks like
a blob of color. It has no meaning until you find the rest of the puzzle, and then,
all of sudden...
There is a famous story from the Baal Shem Tov and the Maggid of Mezritch, regarding
gilgulim. The Maggid had been learning the Zohar's commentary to the
portion of Torah called Mishpatim. The Zohar explains that this
parsha contains the secret of gilgulim. The Maggid was puzzled by this
comment, and asked his Rebbe, the Baal Shem Tov, for an explanation. But the Baal
Shem Tov merely suggested that the Maggid go to a certain spot in the woods outside
the city, and carefully observe whatever would take place. Those events would answer
his questions.
The Maggid dutifully did as the Baal Shem Tov had suggested. The next morning,
he positioned himself discreetly at a vantage point from which he could see the
grassy clearing, next to a river, of which the Baal Shem Tov had spoken. He did
not have long to wait. An obviously wealthy man came riding up to the patch of grass,
and since it was a hot day, he took off his coat and hat, washed his face and hands
in the river, ate, and lay down for a nap on a silk sheet which he had spread out
for this purpose. Some time later, he woke up, put on his coat and hat, and left.
It was only after the wealthy man had left that the Maggid noticed a bulging wallet
which the wealthy man had obviously dropped.
But, right away, another person appeared. He was very obviously poor. His clothing
was tattered, and his hat was old and shapeless. He was also feeling the heat of
the day, and just as he was about to take off his coat to rest under a tree at the
edge of the grassy spot, he spied the wallet. Without stopping for a moment, he
picked up the wallet, pocketed it, and ran off with it.
A few minutes later, a man of dignified appearance, possibly a Rav or a Rosh
Yeshiva, also passed by the spot in the woods. He too, decided to take a rest there.
After he had been sitting there for some time, the wealthy man came galloping up
to the grassy patch to search for the wallet which, by this time, he had discovered
was missing. Seeing the Rav sitting in the same spot where he had been lying earlier
that morning, he naturally assumed that the Rav had found his wallet. He demanded
its immediate return, but when he was greeted by the innocent protests of the Rav
that he knew nothing about it, the wealthy man flew into a rage. He began forcefully
searching all of the Rav's pockets and possessions. Finding nothing, he vented his
anger and frustration on the Rav, to whom he gave a sound beating. He then left
in a huff.
At the end of the day, the Maggid returned to the Baal Shem Tov, even more mystified
as to the secret of gilgulim than he had been some hours before. But his
teacher explained the story behind the events he had just witnessed. In a previous
lifetime, there were two business partners who had a falling out over some financial
matter. They decided to go to the local Rav to solve their dispute. The Rabbi was
busy with some other matter, and without much thought, he decided in favor of one
of the partners. The other partner immediately paid his colleague the large sum
which was the subject of their dispute.
After some time, all three -- both partners and the Rav --
passed on from this world. When they appeared before the Heavenly Court, it was
found that the Rav had inadvertently favored the wrong party, due to his hastiness
and lack of research. The Beis Din then decided that all three would have
to return to earth to make amends. The rich man was the partner who had unwittingly
gained money that did not belong to him, and the poor man who found it was the unfortunate
partner who had been forced to part with his money. And the Rav also got his due
reward...
This is also true of our lives. They make no sense, unless you know what has
happened earlier, in a previous gilgul, or what will happen later. Perhaps
a woman with ten children didn't have any in a previous gilgul. And she needed
to go through the experience of raising children to complete the mission of her
neshama. Perhaps the woman who cannot find a shidduch, and therefore
cannot have children, had done that mission to the utmost in a previous gilgul.
Who knows? But one thing we do know: "G-d's judgments are true, they are righteous
together" (Tehillim 19:10). When the entire picture is seen altogether,
then it becomes apparent that His judgments are true. There are no mistakes. Everyone
has been given, exactly and precisely, the shlichus that requires her to
develop those angles and areas of her life that were not completed in previous visits
to this earth...
The saintly previous Rebbe's name was Rebbe Yosef Yitzchok. On many occasions,
and particularly during shnas ho-arboim -- forty years after the
passing of the previous Rebbe on the tenth of Shevat, 5710, the Rebbe spoke about
the significance of his name, which comes from the verse in the Torah that Rachel
said as she gave birth to him -- "Yosef Hashem li ben acher" --
"May God grant me another son." The Rebbe explains that we too must ask Hashem to
grant us the abilities to make from an acher, someone who is in the category
of "other' -- a ben, a son of G-d.
Take a Jew who considers himself an acher. He thinks he's American, he
thinks he's English, he thinks he's French. Here is a Jew who doesn't really care
about being Jewish, who does not count himself as being part of the Jewish nation.
A Jew who would write his nationality as U.S. rather than Jewish. Take that Jew
and work with him by showing him a Shabbos, by showing him hospitality, by teaching
him and helping him find out about his Jewishness, so that the next time somebody
asks him to answer a questionnaire, he will write his nationality as "Jew". Then
you have made an acher into a ben, into a son of the Jewish people,
and a son of G-d. That was the lifework of the Rebbe Yosef Yitzchok, making many
many achers into banim and banos of Am Yisroel.
What is the significance of the name Yitzchok? It derives from the word tzchok,
like simcha -- meaning laughter and joy. The way of Chabad, the
way of Lubavitch, and the way of Rebbe Yosef Yitzchak's successor, the Rebbe
Shlita, is not to go about this work of making an acher into a ben
with a stick, and bang people over the heads if they don't change their ways. On
the contrary, the way to bring someone closer is with simcha, with joy, with
a big smile and lots of warmth and friendliness...
As the years go by, we are coming that much closer to the arrival of Mashiach.
Our Sages teach us that there will be different periods in the era of Mashiach.
During the final period, Hashem will remove the ruach hatumah, the power
of impurity, from the world. [This will be the time of techias hameisim (resurrection
of the dead) Ed.]. But in the meantime, in order to pave the way for a life of more
kedushah and less tumah, or no tumah at all, the Rebbe has
instructed us how we ourselves can remove the tumah in many small ways --
by getting rid of treif animal toys, by more tznius, by not using
those English names, by teaching our children to say Baruch Hashem. In all
different ways, we can add more kedushah, and remove the tumah. We
must get ready for a new world -- the world in the time of Mashiach.
And so we have to keep in touch with the Rebbe, listen carefully, and know that
EVERY hora'ah is another step in getting the world ready for a life of
Mashiach. |