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        Orchard of Delights                                                                                                                                              Va’etchanan            24107-EYAL - 24107-EYAL | 17 - B | 18-01-28 | 12:12:05 | SR:-- | Cyan


               master’s surrounding light, that is, his overall philosophy of Torah                       because only now does Moses himself finally completely understand
               and life. Symbolically, the master places his hands on the student’s                       this message. He had to undergo his own trial of faith to understand
               head to figuratively pass on this light as he physically and figuratively                  that even when God seems to ignore our prayers or responds in a
               envelops the student with his philosophy. This surrounding  light                          manner not to our liking, we must still cling to the belief in God’s
               is indispensable to  the student’s ability to  translate  his master’s                     oneness, that God is the source of everything and that everything He
               general overriding principles into the daily practicalities of life and                    does is ultimately for the good.
               the practice of mitzvot.                                                                     Va’etchanan is always read on the Shabbat after the Ninth of Av,
                 When Moses asks God to appoint a leader he addresses him as “God                         the day dedicated to mourning the Jewish people’s tragic history.
               of the spirits of all flesh.” God answers by saying: “Take for yourself,                   Perhaps this is another reason the Shema appears in this portion.
               Joshua son of Nun, a man in whom there is spirit” (Numbers 27:15-                          After the fasting and the mourning, we need to declare once again
               18). Rashi explains that the phrase “in whom there is spirit” means                        our enduring belief in God’s oneness. Just as the Mourner’s Kaddish
               that Joshua was able to directly relate to the unique spirit found                         (recited after the death of a loved one) exalts God’s greatness despite
               in each and every person. God is, in effect, fulfilling Moses’ exact                       the mourner’s recent personal loss, the recitation of Shema on the
               request by providing a leader who will be, as it were, like God, able to                   Shabbat following the Ninth of Av reaffirms our belief in the justice of
               relate to “the spirits of all flesh.” Joshua is graced not only with keen                  God’s decrees and signals our acceptance of His Divine Providence.
               insight but also with the ability to relate to and communicate with
               others. His appointment is certainly a rectification of the breakdown
               of communications that lead Pinchas to kill Zimri (see “A Covenant
               of Peace” above).                                                                                             ££The Heart of Heaven
                                                                                                                             £The Heart of HeavenThe Heart of Heaven
                 The meaning of the word “mitzvah” is commandment, but on a
               deeper level the root of the word means “to connect.” Each mitzvah
               in a sense helps heal the broken vav in this portion and each time
               we experience  Shabbat and the  holidays we connect  to a more                             In Va’etchanan, Moses once again recounts the awesome Giving of
                                                                                                          the Torah at Sinai. A key phrase that describes the event is “and
               transcendental reality. At present the world lacks the vessels necessary
               to experience Shabbat during the six weekdays, represented by the                          the mountain was burning in fire till the heart of heaven” (Numbers
               vav, the straight line whose numerical value is six. However at the                        4:11). “Till the heart of heaven” was one of Rabbi Shlomo Carlebach’s
                                                                                                          favorite expressions, one he often used when trying to describe the
               End of Days, in the seventh millennium, when the cycle of history
               comes full circle, we will experience each day as being “all Shabbat.”                     very depths of an experience, the inner core and essence of a matter.
                                                                                                          Another favorite rhetorical question of his was, “What is higher
               At that time the lights of tohu will be fully integrated into the vessels
               of rectification.                                                                          and deeper than the Garden of Eden?” His answer: “The heavenly
                                                                                                          Jerusalem.”
                                                                                                            Since, as we learned above, the Ninth of Av always falls the week
                                                                                                          after the portion  of  Devarim  is read, it follows  that  Va’etchanan
                                                                                                          always falls the Shabbat after the Ninth of Av. This Shabbat also
                                                                                                          has a special name, Shabbat Nachamu, which is derived from the
                                                                                                          Haftorah read on that Shabbat. “Nachamu” means “comfort,” an



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