Parshas Netzavim
The Difference Between The Two Tochachas
These divrei Torah were adapted from the hashkafa portion of Rabbi
Yissocher Frand's Commuter Chavrusah Tapes on the weekly portion: Tape #
869, Mitzvas Chinuch Father or Mother? Good Shabbos!
There are two portions in the Torah known as "Tochachas" [chastisements].
There is the Tochacha at the end of Sefer Vayikra in Parshas Bechukosai and
there is the Tochacha we read last week in Parshas Ki Savo. There is a stark
difference between these two sections of chastisement in that the Tochacha
at the end of Parshas Bechukosai ends with words of consolation.
After hearing all the terrible things which would befall the Jewish people
if they did not keep the commandments, they were at least given the
comforting message: "And yet for all that, when they are in the land of
their enemies, I will not reject them, neither will I abhor them, to destroy
them utterly and to break My covenant with them; for I am the L-rd their
G-d. But I will for their sakes remember the covenant of their ancestors,
whom I brought forth out of the land of Egypt in the sight of the nations,
that I might be their G-d: I am the L-rd." [Vayikra 26:44-45].
The longer and perhaps scarier words of chastisement that we read in Parshas
Ki Savo do not end on a positive note. The Torah merely ends with more of
the same: "And the L-rd shall bring you back into Egypt in ships; by the way
whereof I said to you: 'You will see it no more'; and there you will sell
yourselves to your enemies for bondmen and for bondwomen, and no man shall
buy you." [Devorim 28:68].
Rav Yosha Baer Soloveitchik, z"l, asks: Why the difference? Rav Yosha Baer
answers that in fact the Tochacha in Ki Savo also ends with consolation...
except the consolation only appears in Parshas Netzavim: "And it shall come
to pass, when all these things are come upon you, the blessing and the
curse, that I have presented before you then you will take it to your
heart among all the nations where Hashem, your G-d, has dispersed you. And
you will return unto Hashem, your G-d, and listen to His voice, according to
everything that I command you today, you and your children, with all your
heart and all your soul. [Devorim 30:1-2] The consolation is that at the end
of all the punishment and suffering, the Jewish people will do Teshuva
[repent] and return to G-d.
But the question can still be asked: Why is it that in the Tochacha in
Devorim, there is a pause and we have to "wait for the consolation", so to
speak, while in the Tochacha in Bechukosai, the consolation comes
immediately? Rav Soloveitchik answers this question by explaining that there
is a fundamental difference between the two Tochachas. The Ramba"n says that
the Tochacha in Bechukosai foretells and refers to the period of the
destruction of the First Bais HaMikdash and the exile from the Land of
Israel at that time. The Tochacha foretold in Ki Savo refers to the
destruction of the Second Bais HaMikdash and the exile that occurred at that
time. The Destruction of the First Bais HaMikdash and the Babylonian exile
which followed it had a prophesized finite end to it. The prophets foretold
that the people would be in exile for 70 years and indeed following this 70
year period, the Jews were given permission to return to the Land of Israel
(where they eventually rebuilt the Bais HaMikdash). Therefore, it makes
sense that the Tochacha which foretells the Babylonian Exile features the
consolation in close proximity to the end of the pasukim of chastisement.
As we now know, we do not know of a specified date for the redemption from
the Destruction of the Second Bais HaMikdash. We have now been in this exile
for close to 2000 years! However, there will be an end to this exile. As the
Rambam writes in the Laws of Repentance: "Israel will only be redeemed
through repentance. The prophets have already promised that the Jews will
repent at the end of their exile and immediately thereafter they will be
redeemed, as it is written..." (and then the Rambam quotes the pasuk in this
week's parsha) "...And it will be that when all these things come upon
you... you will return unto Hashem your G-d."
When will that occur? We do not know, but it will come. This is precisely
why the consolation does not immediately follow the Tochacha here in
Devorim. We need to wait. We need to wait until we return to the L-rd our
G-d. We are going to be in the mess in which we find ourselves until we do
Teshuva.
This is the difference between the two Tochachas. In the first, we just had
to wait a (relatively) short time. When the clock struck 70, we were able to
go home. The current exile is not like that. Eventually, we will get out of
it because "in the end Israel will repent and immediately thereafter they
will be redeemed" but we do not know when that is going to happen.
I received an e-mail last May in which someone told me a story of an true
story. I filed it away saving it for this parsha.
Rav Yisrael Dovid Grossman, the Rav of Kiryat Migdal haEmek in Northern
Israel was visited by a fellow named Moti Dotan, who is the head of the
Lower Galilee regional council. Moti Dotan was in Germany to celebrate a
"Sister City" arrangement with Hanover, Germany. While there, he was
approached by a German who related the following story. The German had a
father who was quite old. On his death bed, he confessed his own part in the
Holocaust to his son. He explained that since there are many holocaust
deniers, he wanted his son to know that it was true and to tell him some of
what happened. The father told the son that he had been an officer in the
German Air Force in World War II and handed him an envelope that contained a
wallet made out of parchment which contained within it the officer's
military ID certificate. The father explained that while destroying a
synagogue, he had found a scroll made of parchment. He cut out a piece of
the parchment from the Sefer Torah to make the wallet. He later discovered
that such scrolls were very holy to the Jews. He told his son to give it to
the first Jew he meets and to have it brought to Israel to determine the
significance of the particular words that were written on the parchment.
Moti Dotan took the wallet and brought it to Migdal haEmek where he showed
it to Rabbi Yisrael Dovid Grossman. When Rabbi Grossman looked at the piece
of Torah parchment that was made into a wallet, he was literally shaken to
his core. The pasukim on the parchment were from Parshas Ki Savo [Devorim
28:58-62]: "If you will not be careful to perform all the words of this
Torah that are written in this Book, to fear this honored and awesome Name:
Hashem your G-d, then Hashem will make extraordinary your blows and the
blows of your offspring great and faithful blows, and evil and faithful
illnesses. He will bring back upon you all the sufferings of Egypt, before
which you were terrified, and they will cleave to you. Even any illness and
any blow that is not written in the Book of this Torah, Hashem will bring
them upon you, until you are destroyed. You will be left few in number,
instead of having been like the stars of heaven in abundance, for you will
not have listened to the voice of Hashem your G-d."
Out of all the places that could have been cut out from the Sefer Torah,
this wallet was cut out and made from the pasukim in the Tochacha! When
Rabbi Grossman saw that, he was reminded of a similar incident in Tanach:
The story in Melachim II of the young King Yoshiyahu. King Yoshiyahu was a
righteous king, but his father and grandfather had done all they could to
wipe out any vestige of Torah from the Jewish people.
When Yoshiyahu became king, he tried to refurbish the Bais HaMikdash and
reinstitute the normal functioning of traditional ritual amongst the Jewish
people. When they entered the Beis HaMikdash, which was in disrepair, they
found a Sefer Torah, which had been hidden away in an attic so that the
wicked King Achaz would not burn it as he did with other Sifrei Torah.
The King's scribe, Shafan ben Atzalya, read to Yoshiyahu from the the
pasukim in the Sefer Torah that appeared exactly at the point to which the
Sefer Torah had been rolled when it was hidden away many years earlier: When
the King heard those words, he cried and tore his garments in mourning. The
commentaries explain what did he hear that caused him to react in this
way? He heard the pasukim from the Tochacha in Devorim: "Hashem will lead
you and your king whom you will set up over yourself to a nation you never
knew neither you nor your forefathers and there you will work for the
gods of others of wood and of stone. [Devorim 28:36]. Yoshiayahu saw this
as a Divine omen that of all the places that the Sefer Torah could be open
to, these were the first pasukim that were read to him. Thereafter, he began
a mass Teshuva movement to return the people to Hashem. Yoshiyahu was
promised by the prophet that since he cried and repented, he would not
personally witness the terrible fate that would ultimately befall the Jewish
people.
Rabbi Grossman made the point that these two incidents were not mere
coincidences. He saw such "coincidences" as a clear call from Heaven to do
Teshhuva.
We see many events that are unfolding around us that bring us to the
conclusion that nothing will save us other than the promise of ultimate
redemption via the prophecy of "In the future the Jewish people will
repent". Only the Master of the Universe can save us from the mess we are
in. Our only hope is "You shall return to the L-rd your G-d."
This week's write-up is adapted from the hashkafa portion of Rabbi Yissocher
Frand's Commuter Chavrusah Torah Tapes on the weekly Torah portion. The
halachic topics dealt with in the portion of Nitzavim-Vayelech in the
Commuter Chavrusah Series are the following:
Tape # 022 - Reading Haftorah: Scrolls vs. Book
Tape # 112 - Shoteh: Mental Incompetence in Halacha
Tape # 158 - Schar Shabbos: How Do We Pay Rabbonim and Chazzanim?
Tape # 205 - Kiddush Before T'kiyas Shofar
Tape # 252 - Buying Seforim
Tape # 295 Burying the Dead on Yom Tov Sheni
Tape # 341 - The Brachos on the T'kios
Tape # 342 - Is Building a Succah a Mitzvah?
Tape # 385 - Fasting on Rosh Hashana
Tape # 386 - Succah Gezulah
Tape # 429 - Treatment of an Invalid Sefer Torah
Tape # 473 - Seudas Siyum Mesechta
Tape # 517 - What Exactly Is Mitzva of Shofar
Tape # 561 Lo Bashomayin He
Tape # 605 Selling A Sefer Torah
Tape # 649 Minhagim of the Yomim Noraim
Tape # 693 My Father's Chumros
Tape # 737 Borrowing and Lending Seforim
Tape # 781 I'm the Baal Tokeah and Not You!
Tape # 825 The Shuls of Gaza A Halachic Perspective
Tape # 826 Yom Kippur: Women and the Shehecheyanu; Women and Kor'im
Tape # 869 - The Mitzvah of Chinuch-Whose Responsibility? Mother or Father?
Tape # 870 - Yom Kippur - The Yom Kippur That They Did Not Fast
Tape # 913 - The Tefilah of Oleinu
Tape # 957 - Coming Late for Tekias Shofar and Other Rosh Hashana Issues
Tape # 1000 - Ta'amei Hamikra - The Tropp - How Important Is It?
Tape # 1044 - Must You Stand for Chazoras HaShatz on Rosh Hashana?
Tape # 1088 - Learning During Tkias Shofer?
Tapes or a complete catalogue can be ordered from the
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Call (410) 358-0416 or e-mail tapes@yadyechiel.org or visit
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