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ב"ה
 
Vaeira 5761 - January 26, 2001
 
COMMENT
What To Do Now

What To Do Now Many of us are feeling helpless, asking, “What can I do about the situation in Israel?” We have plenty to tell the politicians, the world leaders, the military and all the other major players. But for the rest of us, those who feel powerless in the realm of politics, what are we supposed to do besides sit and read the papers?

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PARSHAH
Vaeira
Exodus 6:2-9:35
Torah Reading for Week of January 21 - 27, 2001


Vaeira Blood, frogs, lice, hordes of wild animals, dying herds, boils, hail... all to get the Jews out of Egypt and Egypt out of the Jews.

The Parshah in a Nutshell

Full Parshah summary with commentary

More on the Parshah from the Chassidic Masters

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VOICES
Uncle Irv

We don't do anything, not even read. There's something in the atmosphere and experience that takes away the ability to concentrate or focus. One's greatest desire is simply not to be there, not to be doing this, and to have it be over with as quickly as possible.

There are two groups of people in the room. Those who, like me, have their wives or husbands sitting by their side. And those who are alone.

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HEAVEN EXPOSED
Playing G-d

Playing G-d I would know the life of a predator or a victim, even a worm, or a plant or a rock. I would experience the satisfaction of munching green leaves, the fear of an attacked animal; the choices of the hero, of the villain, or the coward.

All would recognize the Me that is within them, and even I would find Myself there. And be surprised. If you’re G-d, you can surprise even yourself.

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STORY
The Seventh Year

The Seventh Year It was in 1950, after we had completed our army service. At first we lived in tents, in the middle of a barren wilderness. At that time, there were not yet water pipes reaching our moshav. We had to content ourselves with what could be grown in dry rugged fields.

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ESSAY
Body
The Physical World According to Rabbi Schneur Zalman of Liadi

Body In winter of 1812, while fleeing Napoleon’s armies, Rabbi Schneur Zalman arrived in the town of Pyena, where he fell ill and returned his soul to its Maker. It was there that he penned the famed "Section 20" of Igeret HaKodesh, as well as a short discourse entitled The Humble Soul.

The two Pyena discourses present something of an enigma to the student of Rabbi Schneur Zalman’s philosophy, who expects to see a recapitulation of the Rebbe’s earlier works in these products of his final days. Instead, one finds what appears to be a departure from--or even a reversal of--certain key principles of his previous teachings.

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QUOTE FOR THE DAY

DAILY THOUGHT

LINKS
THE REBBE: 50 YEARS


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