Friday, October 26, 2012

Thinking Outside The Box

Rabbi Amichai Gordin in Shabbat Bi-shabbato - Lech Lecha 5773

The Machpelah Cave – the year 2000 B.C. – Eisav stubbornly blocked the entrance of the cave. "Nobody else will be buried here," he said. "Half the cave is yours, half of it is mine. You already used your half when you buried Leah. The second grave is waiting for me."

Yosef replied, "You sold your birthright to our father. You are very well aware of that." But Eisav made believe he was innocent. "What does that mean, I sold it? Bring me some proof." And everybody looked at Naftali, who was the fastest runner of them all. Fast as a deer. There was no doubt that he would be the one sent to Egypt to bring the written contract.

One of Yaacov's grandsons, Chushim, sat on the sidelines. He was deaf and could not hear the discussion. He asked one of the others, "Why don't we bury our grandfather?" And he was told, "We are waiting for Naftali to return from Egypt with the contract."

Chushim screamed. "Are we going to leave our grandfather lying in the sun until Naftali comes back from Egypt? Here he lies before us, and we are waiting for a piece of paper?" Without waiting for any answer, Chushim chopped off Eisav's head. The head rolled down and came to rest near Yaacov. (See Midrash Agadda Bereishit 49.)

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The Golan Heights – The Yom Kippur War – "A battalion quartermaster blocked the entrance to the armory with his body. Nobody would get any weapons from him without the proper forms, filled out in duplicate. He would not allow any weapons to be given out without the forms.

No matter what happens. He has had some bad experiences. Nobody will tell him what to do – not a sergeant, not an officer. In the armory he is the one who is in charge. Nobody else. If there will be any problems, they will come to him, and then no explanations will be accepted. War or no war, nobody will cover for him. He knows the ropes, this is not his first day in the army.

Many soldiers crowded around the open window of the armory. Everybody was under great stress, and the quartermaster was asking the next one in line for his personal ID number. He was trying to write on a small piece of paper with a pen, using the light of a small flashlight. The pen doesn't write, why do they give such bad pens to a quartermaster? Does anybody here have a pen? Nobody replied. In his anger, the man threw away the pen, closed the window, locked the armory, and went looking for a pen.

An officer on patrol arrived at the warehouse, he needed a scope to put on his jeep. He saw us all and started yelling: What is holding you up? We told him that the quartermaster went looking for a pen. He shouted: Are you nuts? Don't you understand what is happening? People out there are dying, and you are looking for a pen?

Without waiting for an answer, the officer kicked the box holding the weapons, and it fell apart. Dozens of well oiled Uzi rifles fell onto the floor, and the soldiers grabbed them and ran to their tanks.

(Source: Rabbi Chaim Sabato, Te'um Kavanot (Adjusting Sights), pages 89-90).

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Archimedes, the Greek philosopher, made great improvements to the principle of the lever. By the proper use of the lengths of a lever, he was able to pull on a rope and lift an entire warship out of the water. Without any visible emotion, he told the amazed onlookers that he could also move the entire earth.

The people said to him, "Okay, go ahead!" And Archimedes replied, "No problem. Just get me a fulcrum outside of the globe..."

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It is very hard to decide what is a major issue and what is a minor matter. Our daily routine inundates us with the mundane. It leads us to forget why we came here. In order to return to the proper proportions, we must find a balance point that is external to us.

Chushim the son of Dan managed to extract the sons of Yaacov from their dizzy spin. The fact that he was deaf and therefore did not take part in the discussion helped him see matters from a different perspecitve, an angle that was purer in nature. Thousands of years later an anonymous officer on the Golan Heights acted in the same way.

People who come from the outside are able to see things that we cannot see.

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"In the Talmud Yerushalmi it is written that only with great difficulty was permission given to greet other people on Shabbat." [Tosafot Shabbat 113b].

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The Talmud Yerushalmi felt that on Shabbat we must avoid any unnecessary talk. They found it very difficult even to allow people to greet each other on Shabbat. Even though this approach was not accepted halachically, we can still learn a lesson from it about an important gift that Shabbat offers us – the concept of maintaining our silence.

Shabbat can allow us not only physical rest but also a unique viewpoint of our lives. On Shabbat we can rest from the powerful flow of life and - as it were - view ourselves from the sidelines. Shabbat allows us to be Chushim, son of Dan, for one day.