• Rules For A Just Society

    The Torah is concerned what type of society do we want. That is why it lays down laws concerning the behavior of the Priests, that we celebrate time, that we take care of the poor properly and with respect, and that we keep our speech within due bounds.

    Quick Devar Torah – Parshat Emor & Modern Leadership

    In Parshat Emor, the Torah isn’t just giving laws—it’s laying out a model for how a society survives and thrives. And when you look at it carefully, it maps almost perfectly onto the challenges of modern leadership.


    1. Leadership: Public Role vs. Private Life

    The Torah demands that the Kohanim live on a higher standard—not only in the Mishkan, but at home.

    In modern terms, this speaks directly to presidents, judges, CEOs—anyone in leadership.

    Take someone like Ronald Reagan, who was known for always dressing formally in the Oval Office because he believed he was representing something bigger than himself. The Torah would say: that’s not symbolic—it’s essential.

    Today, there’s a tendency to say: “What a leader does in private doesn’t matter.”
    The Torah rejects that outright.

    Because once private behavior erodes, public trust follows.


    2. Time & Identity: A Nation Must Remember

    The Torah then lays out Shabbat and the holidays—not just rituals, but identity markers.

    A modern nation does the same thing through:

    • National holidays
    • Memorial days
    • Shared historical narratives

    Think of something like Memorial Day or Independence Day. These aren’t just days off—they reinforce who we are.

    A society that loses its historical memory doesn’t just become forgetful—it becomes fragmented.

    The Torah’s message:
    Without shared time and memory, there is no shared identity.


    3. Economic Justice with Dignity

    The laws of leaving the corners of the field create a fascinating economic model:

    • The poor are supported
    • But they still work for their sustenance

    This is neither unchecked capitalism nor total dependency—it’s a middle path.

    Even Thomas Jefferson warned that:

    A government that gives you everything can take everything.

    The Torah’s approach preserves something critical:
    Human dignity.

    People don’t just want to survive—they want to earn, contribute, and matter.


    4. Speech & Responsibility: Words Shape Reality

    The story of the blasphemer is the Torah’s warning about language.

    Words are not neutral.
    They influence how people think—and sometimes how they act.

    We’ve seen in modern times how extreme rhetoric can:

    • Dehumanize opponents
    • Escalate tensions
    • Push unstable individuals toward dangerous actions

    The Torah allows disagreement—even encourages it—but insists on boundaries.

    Because once language breaks down,
    society follows.


    Putting It All Together

    The Torah is giving us a four-part framework that applies just as much today:

    • Leaders must embody the values they represent
    • Society must preserve its identity through shared time and memory
    • Economic systems must protect dignity, not just provide relief
    • Speech must be responsible, because words lead to actions

    Closing Insight

    What’s remarkable about Parshat Emor is that it doesn’t describe a utopia—it describes a working society.

    A society where:

    • Leadership is accountable
    • History is remembered
    • The vulnerable are uplifted with dignity
    • And speech is used carefully

    That’s not just a religious vision.

    That’s a civilization that can endure.

  • Protecting Our Dignity

    The Torah is concerned with the dignity of all members of society, even the poor. That is the reason that the poor have to glean the wheat so that they can say that they had a hand in making it into bread.

    🌾 Quick Devar Torah: Why Give Wheat, Not Bread?

    In this week’s parashah, the Torah commands the mitzvah of pe’ah—leaving the corners of one’s field for the poor to glean. At first glance, it raises a simple question:

    If you want to help the poor, why not just give them bread?
    Why make them go out, gather wheat, grind it, and bake it?

    Wouldn’t it be easier—and more compassionate—to just hand them food?


    💡 The Torah’s Answer: Dignity Over Convenience

    The Torah is not just concerned with feeding people—it is concerned with preserving human dignity.

    When a person works—even a little—for what they receive, they retain a sense of self-worth.
    They are not passive recipients; they are active participants.

    Gleaning gives the poor:

    • A role
    • A contribution
    • A sense that they are still part of society

    They are not being “taken care of”—they are engaged in the process.


    🤝 A Hidden Partnership

    There’s something even deeper going on.

    The landowner is commanded to leave the corners of the field.
    But without the poor person coming to glean, the mitzvah is incomplete.

    That means:

    • The landowner needs the poor person
    • The poor person enables the mitzvah

    They become partners.

    The poor are not outsiders—they are essential to the spiritual life of the community.


    🏗️ A Modern Parallel: The 1930s

    This idea isn’t just theoretical.

    During the Great Depression, programs like the Civilian Conservation Corps (CCC) didn’t simply hand out money. They gave people jobs—building roads, infrastructure, contributing to society.

    Why?

    Because a person doesn’t just want a check.
    A person wants to feel: “I matter. I contribute.”


    📌 A Powerful Halachic Detail

    Halacha reinforces this idea:

    Even someone who lives on charity is still obligated to give tzedakah.

    Why?

    Because the moment you say, “You don’t have to give,” you are really saying:
    “You’re outside the system. You don’t count.”

    The Torah says the opposite:
    You always count. You always have something to give.


    🔥 The Takeaway

    The mitzvah of pe’ah teaches a profound lesson:

    • True kindness is not just giving
    • It is empowering
    • It is preserving dignity
    • It is making someone a partner, not a burden

    In a world that often measures people by what they have,
    the Torah insists on measuring them by what they are.

    And every person—rich or poor—is part of the story.


    Something to think about.

  • Evil Speech Has Evil Effects

    We learn that we have to be careful in what we say. There are those who will take our words and use them to justify evil acts. One who speaks like that is as guilty as the one who pulled the trigger.

    Quick Devar Torah – Metzora, Lashon Hara, and the Power of Words

    A couple of weeks ago, in Parshat Metzora, the Torah deals with lashon hara—harmful speech. What makes lashon hara so dangerous is that it doesn’t have to be false. In fact, it’s often true—or at least believed to be true by the person saying it.

    That’s what makes it so destructive.

    A lie is when I knowingly say something false. But lashon hara is when I repeat something damaging—even if I think it’s accurate—without considering the consequences. And once words are out there, they take on a life of their own. People interpret them, amplify them, and sometimes act on them in ways the speaker never intended.

    The Torah is warning us: words are not neutral—they create reality.

    We see this idea reflected throughout Chazal. In Pirkei Avot, we’re taught that arguments should be “for the sake of Heaven,” like those between Hillel and Shammai. They debated passionately—but with respect, friendship, and a shared goal of truth.

    Contrast that with Korach and his followers. The Mishnah doesn’t describe it as a disagreement between Korach and Moshe—it calls it a dispute “of Korach and his assembly.” Because it wasn’t about truth. It was about ego, power, and self-interest. And that kind of conflict inevitably destroys itself.

    That’s the dividing line:

    • Healthy disagreement seeks truth.
    • Destructive speech seeks to tear down.

    We’re also in the period of the Omer, when we mourn the students of Rabbi Akiva. The Gemara tells us they died because they did not show proper respect for one another. These were great scholars—but even great people can fail in how they speak to and about each other.

    That’s the message for us.

    We can disagree—strongly. Anyone who’s learned in a chavruta knows that debate can be intense. But at the same time, we must always remember:
    the person on the other side is not the enemy.

    Words matter. Tone matters. Framing matters.

    If our speech builds understanding, it’s like Hillel and Shammai.
    If it fuels division and disrespect, it risks becoming something else entirely.

    You see how relevant this is in today’s world. Take how President Trump is often spoken about in parts of the political sphere.

    You hear very extreme language—labels, comparisons, and characterizations that go far beyond simple disagreement. Now, people absolutely have the right to disagree—even strongly. That’s part of a healthy society.

    But the Torah is reminding us:
    when disagreement turns into dehumanization, we’ve crossed a line.

    Because once people stop seeing someone as a human being and start seeing them as something evil or beyond the pale, it changes how others hear it—and potentially how they act on it.

    That’s not the way of Hillel and Shammai.
    That starts to look more like Korach—where the goal is no longer truth, but tearing down.


    One-line punch closing

    “The Torah doesn’t ask us to agree—it asks us to speak in a way that disagreement doesn’t turn into destruction.”


    And that’s exactly what the Torah is warning us about.


  • Know Whom You Represent

    The priests in the Tabernacle had to be physically perfect. They could not have a blemish. The reason is that they were the spiritual representatives of the people to God and God’s representatives to the people.

    This week’s parsha, Emor, gives us the laws of the Kohanim, the priests who served in the Mishkan and later in the Beit HaMikdash. One striking law is that a Kohen with a physical blemish could not perform the service of the offerings.

    At first glance, this seems troubling. Why should physical appearance matter? Isn’t the Kohen doing God’s work?

    But the Torah is teaching us something about representation. The Kohen is not serving as a private individual. He represents the Jewish people before God, and he represents God’s holiness to the Jewish people. That is an enormous responsibility. A leader, especially a spiritual leader, has to understand that he is always carrying something larger than himself.

    We see this idea in the way leaders present themselves. President Reagan famously would not enter the Oval Office without a suit and tie, because he understood what the office represented. The king of Israel also had to maintain a dignified appearance, because he represented the nation.

    This does not mean that a Kohen with a blemish was less holy or less of a Kohen. He could still eat terumah and remain part of the priestly family. But he could not perform the public Temple service, because that service required a visible symbol of wholeness and completeness.

    The same idea explains why the Kohen had special marriage restrictions. It was not only about his private life. He represented something sacred.

    The lesson is powerful: when a person represents something bigger than himself — family, community, Torah, or the Jewish people — appearance, conduct, and choices matter. Leadership is not only about what you do. It is also about remembering whom you represent.

    Something to think about.

  • Spirituality Needs Structure

    The theme of the Torah is that without structure then spirituality will fail. We need structure so that our society will attain the spirituality we crave.

    Quick Devar Torah: Emor — Structure vs. Spirituality

    Last week in Parshat Kedoshim, the Torah seemed to take a sharp turn. In the middle of Sefer Vayikra, a book focused heavily on ritual—offerings, purity, and the service of the Beit HaMikdash—we suddenly get:
    “Love your neighbor as yourself,”
    laws of charity, honesty, and building a just society.

    Now, in Parshat Emor, we swing back again—this time to the restrictions on the Kohanim: who they can marry, physical standards, and elevated expectations.

    So what’s going on?

    The Balance the Torah Demands

    The Torah is making a deliberate point:
    Holiness is not one-dimensional.

    • Kedoshim teaches values — how to build a moral, just society
    • Emor teaches structure — discipline, boundaries, and standards, especially for leadership

    You cannot have one without the other.

    The Illusion of “Pure Spirituality”

    There are always those who say:
    “I don’t need rules. I’m spiritual.”

    But spirituality without structure is often empty.

    That famous story captures it perfectly:

    • A dry halachic class on returning a lost object seems uninspiring
    • A “deep” spiritual guru speaks beautifully—but keeps the money from a lost wallet

    In that moment, the truth becomes obvious:
    Real spirituality is tested in behavior, not words.

    Why the Kohanim Have Restrictions

    The Torah places extra limitations on the Kohanim not to burden them—but to elevate them.

    They represent:

    • The people before God
    • God before the people

    And therefore:

    Leadership must be above reproach.

    Not just inspirational—but accountable.
    Not just spiritual—but disciplined.

    The Takeaway

    The Torah is teaching a powerful principle:

    Holiness = Values + Structure

    • Without values → ritual becomes empty
    • Without structure → spirituality becomes meaningless

    True kedushah comes from living a spiritual life within a framework—through halachah, through responsibility, and through how we treat others.


    One-Line Message

    Don’t choose between being spiritual and being observant—Torah demands both.

  • Our Morality Reflects Our Piety

    The Haftorah for this week comes from Amos where he points out that piety is not enough. We were chosen to build a just society. That it is not a one way street. God gives the land but if we do not build a just society then we will lose the land.

    Acharei Mot–Kedoshim: Ritual and Responsibility

    This week’s double parashah, Acharei Mot–Kedoshim, forms a powerful bridge in the Torah.

    Up until now, the Torah has focused heavily on the Mishkan—the Tabernacle:
    how to serve, what to offer, the precise rituals, the exact procedures.

    Then suddenly, in Kedoshim, the focus shifts:

    “קדושים תהיו” — You shall be holy

    And what does holiness look like?

    Not offerings.
    Not rituals.
    But how we treat other people:

    • Honest business practices
    • Care for the poor
    • Respect for others
    • Justice in society

    The Torah is making a clear statement:
    You cannot have a relationship with God without a moral society.
    And just as importantly:
    A moral society without divine grounding will not endure.

    You need both.


    The Haftarah of Amos: A Warning

    This message is reinforced in the haftarah from Amos.

    Amos delivers a stark reminder:

    Yes, the Jewish people are chosen.
    Yes, God gave them the Land.

    But—

    That privilege is conditional.

    God did not give the land so the people could simply live comfortably.
    He gave it with a mission:

    👉 To build a just and moral society.

    If that mission is abandoned, Amos warns, the consequences are severe.
    Even the strongest nation cannot survive without justice.


    A Modern Echo: Yom HaZikaron → Yom HaAtzmaut

    This idea becomes especially powerful in the calendar we just experienced:

    • Yom HaZikaron — remembrance of those who fell
    • immediately followed by
    • Yom HaAtzmaut — celebration of statehood

    This sequence is not accidental.

    It teaches:

    • A nation is built through sacrifice
    • But it is sustained through values

    You can have:

    • A strong army
    • A thriving economy

    But if society is not just—
    those foundations will eventually crumble.


    Morality: Natural or Built?

    There’s a common claim that morality is “natural.”

    But history suggests otherwise.

    Even thinkers like Friedrich Hayek—not a religious figure—recognized that:

    A functioning economy depends on a moral framework.

    The Torah said this thousands of years earlier.

    Without a moral core:

    • Trust collapses
    • Justice erodes
    • Society weakens

    Israel: A Case Study

    When the modern State of Israel was founded, there was a fundamental question:

    Would it be a Jewish state
    or just a state of Jews?

    Many founders were not traditionally religious.
    But they carried a deep moral inheritance shaped by Torah values.

    And that shows itself in moments like:

    • The response to Ethiopian Jews during Operation Solomon
    • The instinctive culture of giving
    • A society built not just on survival—but on responsibility

    The Bottom Line

    Amos, Kedoshim, and modern Israel all deliver the same message:

    God’s promises are not one-sided.

    It’s a covenant.

    God says:

    • I will give you the land
    • I will give you the opportunity

    But you must:

    • Build a just society
    • Treat people with fairness and dignity
    • Live up to the mission

    A Closing Thought

    A nation is not judged only by:

    • its strength
    • its wealth
    • or its power

    But by something deeper:

    👉 How it treats its people

    That is the true meaning of:

    “קדושים תהיו” — You shall be holy


  • Creating A Just Society

    The Torah is clear, the reason for the offerings in the Tabernacle was so that we would create a better society based on God’s laws.

    Kedoshim: Holiness Beyond the Temple

    Parashat Acharei Mot–Kedoshim marks a turning point in the Torah’s message.

    Up until now, much of the focus has been on the Mishkan—the Tabernacle—and the intricate details of the korbanot (offerings): what to bring, how to bring it, what to say, and how the Kohanim must perform the service. Everything is precise, structured, and sacred.

    Then suddenly, the Torah declares:

    “Kedoshim tihyu — You shall be holy.”

    So we expect: now we’ll learn the highest levels of ritual holiness.

    But instead, the Torah shifts dramatically.

    There is almost nothing here about offerings.

    Instead, Parashat Kedoshim speaks about:

    • Honesty in business
    • Fair treatment of workers
    • Respect for parents
    • Care for the vulnerable
    • Loving your fellow as yourself
    • Justice in the courts

    Holiness, the Torah tells us, is not confined to the Temple—it is lived in society.


    A Radical Idea of Holiness

    In the ancient world, temples were everywhere. People assumed that the purpose of religious service was to feed or appease the gods.

    The Torah rejects that outright.

    God does not need our offerings.

    We need them.

    The korbanot are meant to refine us—to shape discipline, awareness, and humility. But if that system exists in isolation, it becomes hollow.

    Kedoshim comes to correct that imbalance:

    Ritual without ethics is meaningless.


    Two Extremes—and the Torah’s Balance

    Throughout history, people have tried to separate these two worlds:

    1. Ritual without morality
      People meticulously observe every detail of religious practice—but neglect justice, kindness, and human dignity.
    2. Morality without law
      Others claim, “We’ll follow the prophets—justice, compassion, good values”—but detach those ideals from the structure of Torah law.

    The Torah rejects both.

    The prophets themselves stood on the foundation of the law.

    A just society must be built within a framework—not based on feelings alone.


    Justice: The Ultimate Expression of Kedoshim

    Later in Sefer Devarim, the Torah commands judges to pursue absolute justice:

    • Do not favor the rich
    • Do not favor the poor
    • Do not be swayed by status or influence
    • Judge only based on law and facts

    This is the real-world application of kedushah.

    Holiness is not mystical abstraction—it is the creation of a society where truth and justice prevail.


    The Takeaway

    Kedoshim teaches a powerful and often overlooked lesson:

    Holiness is measured not only in how we serve God—but in how we treat other people.

    The Mishkan may be the center of divine service…

    …but society is where holiness is tested.


    Something to Think About

    It’s easy to be “religious” in private spaces—synagogue, ritual, study.

    The real challenge of Kedoshim is:

    Can we carry that holiness into the courtroom, the workplace, and everyday human interactions?

    Because that’s where holiness truly lives.


  • Liberation Of Our Land

    Today is Israel Independence Day. The story of the liberation of our land from foreign intruders is nothing less than miraculous. We celebrate the independence and security of the State of Israel.

    Quick Devar Torah – Yom HaAtzmaut & the Dry Bones

    Yom HaAtzmaut is not just a political anniversary—it is a living fulfillment of a prophetic vision.

    1. From Bones to Life

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    6

    The very word Atzmaut (עצמאות) shares a root with “atzamot” (bones).
    This echoes the haunting vision of Vision of the Valley of Dry Bones:

    “Can these bones live?”

    In 1945, the Jewish people were literally reduced to bones—survivors emerging from the camps, physically broken, a third of our nation destroyed.

    And yet—just three years later—in 1948:

    • A המדינה (state) is declared
    • A אנשים (people) stand up again
    • A צבא (army) is formed

    From bones → to עצמאות (independence).

    That transformation is nothing short of prophetic.


    2. Yom HaAtzmaut in the Middle of Mourning

    We are in the days of the Omer:

    • A period of mourning for the תלמידי רבי עקיבא
    • As recorded in Talmud Bavli, “they did not treat one another with respect”

    But as has been pointed out, on a deeper historical level:

    • Rabbi Akiva supported
    • Bar Kokhba Revolt

    Many understand that the tragedy of this period reflects not just interpersonal failure—but national catastrophe, the crushing of Jewish sovereignty.

    So what happens?

    Right in the middle of this mourning… comes Yom HaAtzmaut.

    A day that says:

    Jewish sovereignty is not gone forever.


    3. Not Chosen by Us — Chosen for Us

    The date itself was not “religiously selected.”
    It emerged from the moment the British Mandate for Palestine ended.

    That timing carries a powerful message:

    • History moved
    • Empires withdrew
    • And the Jewish people stepped in

    Almost as if:

    The day chose us.


    4. Against All Odds

    In 1948, no serious military analyst gave Israel strong odds:

    • Surrounded by enemies
    • Outnumbered
    • Undersupplied

    And yet:

    • Israel survived
    • Israel built
    • Israel thrived

    Today, the State of Israel is:

    • A מרכז (center) of Jewish life
    • A כוח (force) in global affairs
    • A living answer to history

    5. The Deeper Message

    Yom HaAtzmaut is not just celebration—it is the reversal of despair.

    From:

    • Shoah → Survival
    • Bones → Nation
    • Mourning → Hallel

    That’s why many say:

    • Hallel with a bracha
    • Full expression of gratitude

    Because this is not just politics—it is history bending back toward חיים (life).


    Closing Thought

    The Navi asked:

    “Can these bones live?”

    History answered:

    Yes—and they can build a nation.


  • The Importance of Ritual

    The reason that Acherei Mot comes before Kedoshim is to teach us that our rituals are what make our good actions possible.

    Acharei Mot–Kedoshim: Structure Before Spirit

    This week’s double parashah, Acharei Mot–Kedoshim, begins with a striking reminder: “after the death of the sons of Aharon.” The Torah immediately moves into the detailed service of the Kohen Gadol on Yom Kippur.

    Aharon, having suffered unimaginable personal loss, does not retreat. He steps forward—into a role defined not by emotion, but by precision. Every movement, every garment, every word is prescribed. There is no room for improvisation, no “I feel like doing it differently.” In the holiest moment, the Torah demands discipline over instinct.

    1. The Lesson of Acharei Mot:

    Life will knock a person down. Tragedy happens. But the Torah’s response is clear:
    Get up—and continue with what is required.

    Not based on mood. Not based on feeling.
    But based on what is נכון (right)—what the Torah prescribes.


    2. The Transition to Kedoshim:

    After all the intricate rituals of the Mishkan, one might think holiness is confined to the Temple. Then comes the command:

    “קדושים תהיו — You shall be holy.”

    And how is that holiness expressed?

    • Honest business practices
    • Respect for others
    • Loving your neighbor
    • Ethical daily behavior

    In other words, holiness is not just ritual—it’s lived reality.


    3. The Critical Connection:

    But here is the key insight:

    Kedoshim without Acharei Mot doesn’t work.

    There were movements that tried to say:
    “We’ll be good people—we’ll follow the prophets—but we don’t need the structure of Torah law.”

    History has shown that approach collapses. Why?
    Because the prophets themselves stood on the foundation of the Torah.

    Without structure, “being good” becomes subjective.
    One person’s morality becomes another person’s excuse.


    4. A Powerful Principle:

    The Torah is teaching:

    • Acharei Mot → Follow what is prescribed
    • Kedoshim → Elevate your everyday life

    But the order matters.

    👉 Holiness must be built on structure.
    👉 Feeling must be guided by law.


    5. A Modern Takeaway:

    There’s a saying:

    “An observant Jew is an observed Jew.”

    When a person visibly represents Torah, their actions reflect not just on themselves—but on the entire people.

    That’s the message of these parashiyot:

    • You don’t define holiness on your own terms
    • You live within a framework—and elevate it

    Bottom Line

    Acharei Mot + Kedoshim = Discipline + Meaning

    Without the discipline of Torah, holiness becomes empty sentiment.
    Without the call to holiness, observance becomes mechanical.

    Together, they create a complete vision:

    ➡️ Live by the law—and elevate life through it.


  • Get Up & Do Your Job

    Acherai Mot comes with the death of Aaron’s sons. He is instructed to proceed with his work in the Tabernacle. The lesson is that, while we remember tragedies that occur, we have to build for the future.

    Acharai Mot–Kedoshim: Getting Up After the Fall

    The Torah opens this week’s parashah with a striking phrase:
    “אַחֲרֵי מוֹת שְׁנֵי בְּנֵי אַהֲרֹן” — “After the death of the two sons of Aaron” (Nadav and Avihu).

    Imagine the scene. Aaron has just suffered an unimaginable personal tragedy—the loss of his sons. And what does the Torah do next?

    It doesn’t linger in mourning.
    It doesn’t pause for extended reflection.

    Instead, the Torah immediately turns to Aaron and says:
    Get up. There is work to do. Yom Kippur must be prepared. The service must continue.


    The Torah’s Message: Rise and Continue

    This is not a lack of sensitivity—it’s a profound lesson in life.

    We will get knocked down.
    We will experience loss, disappointment, even tragedy.

    But the Torah is teaching us:

    Judaism does not allow a person to remain stuck.

    Aaron is not told to forget.
    He is told to carry forward.


    A Modern Mashal: The Quarterback

    Think of a quarterback in football. He gets sacked—hard. Crushed into the ground.

    What happens next?

    He doesn’t lie there replaying the hit.
    He gets up, returns to the huddle, and runs the next play.

    That’s life.
    That’s Torah.


    From National Tragedy to National Renewal

    This message is built into the Jewish calendar itself:

    • Yom HaShoah – remembering the destruction of European Jewry
    • Yom HaZikaron – honoring fallen soldiers
    • Immediately followed by
    • Yom HaAtzmaut – celebration and renewal

    The sequence is deliberate.

    We mourn.
    We remember.
    But then—we rise.

    After the Holocaust, many believed the Jewish people could never recover.

    Yet just three years later, the State of Israel was born. Today, Israel stands as one of the strongest nations in its region.

    That is Acharai Mot in action.


    A Lesson from American Jewish History

    In 1964, Look magazine predicted the “disappearance of the American Jew.”

    They missed what was actually happening:

    • The rebuilding of Torah scholarship after the war
    • The rise of Jewish day schools
    • The explosion of outreach movements like Chabad-Lubavitch

    Instead of fading, the community rebuilt—stronger than before.


    The Takeaway

    The Torah is not telling us to ignore pain.
    It is telling us what to do after it.

    Remember the past.
    Honor the loss.
    But do not remain there.

    Like Aaron, we are commanded:

    Get up. Dust yourself off. And continue the avodah—the work of living a Torah life.


    Something to think about.