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Tanya for Tuesday, 11 Cheshvan, 5785 - November 12, 2024

Tanya
As Divided for a Leap Year

Tanya for 11 Cheshvan

10 Cheshvan, 5785 - November 11, 202412 Cheshvan, 5785 - November 13, 2024


Epistle Twenty-Seven

Part (a)

[The Alter Rebbe wrote this letter of condolence to his chassidim in 1788 after the passing of his colleague and mentor, the saintly R. Mendele of Vitebsk (or Horodok), who had settled in the Holy Land in 1777.

It concludes by rousing them to the mitzvah of tzedakah in general, and particularly of maintaining the family of R. Mendel.

The Alter Rebbe is here addressing chassidim who in the past had benefited from their connection with the tzaddik both through his advice and blessings on material matters, and through his guidance in matters of the spirit.

He comforts them, therefore, with the teaching of the Zohar that a tzaddik is to be found in this world after his passing to a greater extent than while he was physically alive.

His disciples are thus able to receive his guidance in their Torah study and divine service to an even greater degree than before.

Materially, too, the tzaddik protects this world after his passing even more effectively than he did during his lifetime.]

This letter was written [by the Alter Rebbe] to the [chassidic] inhabitants of the Holy Land (May it speedily be rebuilt and reestablished in our own days, Amen!), [1] to console them with redoubled support [2] over the passing of the celebrated rabbi and Gaon, holy man of G-d, [3] "lamp of Israel, pillar of the right hand, mighty hammer," [4] our mentor R. Menachem Mendel (May his soul rest in Eden!).


My beloved, my brethren and friends, who are [as dear] and so forth [to me] as my soul.

[Likkutei Haggahot on Tanya likens the opening three terms of address to the three Scriptural terms of endearment successively addressed by a king to his beloved daughter in the parable cited by the Midrash: [5]

"My beloved" recalls the paternal love expressed by the phrase "my daughter";

"my brethren" recalls the fraternal love expressed by the phrase "my sister";

and "my friends" recalls the filial love expressed by the phrase "my mother."

The further phrase "as my soul" indicates the love that one has for his own life, as in the phrase of the Zohar, [6] "he called her by his own name";

while "and so forth" indicates a love even greater - a bond with the ultimate soul-level of Yechidah.]

May [the Name of] G-d be upon you, [7] and may you live forever, and your children with you, the seed of truth; may you be blessed by G-d for evermore.

[According to the above interpretation of Likkutei Haggahot, the Alter Rebbe's blessing that "the Name of G-d be upon you" is intended to elicit a transcendent mode of Divine benevolence, while the blessing "may you live forever" is intended to draw down this transcendent benevolence so that it can be internalized within its finite recipients. (Or, in the terms of Chassidut, it is intended "to be mamshich the makkif into the pnimi.")]

Having first duly inquired after the welfare of those who love [G-d's] Name, I have come to speak to the heart of the smitten, who are sighing and groaning [over the passing of R. Mendele], and to console you with redoubled support with what my ear has heard from others and with what I have understood myself, [8] regarding the idiom used by our Sages [9] [to signify the passing of a tzaddik], "He has left life for all the living."

[If this simply means that others have remained alive after his passing, what are we to make of the expression "left life"? Did he leave them life?

Surely, the life they are living is their own.

The Alter Rebbe will explain below that the idiom means quite literally that the tzaddik left something of his own life to others.

For the true core of a tzaddik's life is not fleshly; rather, it comprises the spiritual qualities of faith, awe and love of G-d.

When a tzaddik departs from this world he leaves over his faith, fear and love to all those who are bound to him, so that they will be able to receive even more than they received from him while he lived his physical life together with them.

All three qualities are alluded to as "life" in the verses enumerated below]:

For [10] "a tzaddik lives by his faith,"

and by [11] "the awe of G-d [which leads] to life,"

and by [12] the flashing and fiery sparks of his love [for G-d, that is even greater] than life,

investing in them - [in his faith and awe and love] - the life of his Ruach [13] [V.L.: and, moreover, of his Neshamah] throughout his life.

[As the Alter Rebbe will soon say, disciples receive their influence from the soul-level of the tzaddik which is called Ruach.

In addition, as explained in Likkutei Haggahot, those disciples who are also [as close as] children receive their influence from the higher soul-level called Neshamah].

When, [at the time of his passing], G-d elevates his Ruach and gathers up his soul unto Himself [14] and he ascends from one elevation to the next, to the very highest of levels, he [then] leaves over the life of his Ruach, the deeds in which he has formerly labored with Israel, [i.e., the faith, fear and love which he drew down to them from his Ruach.

On a less literal level, the Hebrew word lefanim (here translated "formerly") can also be understood to mean "to the inwardness"; i.e., the tzaddik infused and integrated this faith, fear and love into the innermost core of his disciples, this being] - "the labor of a tzaddik for life." [15]

[Or, less literally, "a tzaddik's labor for the living," to provide them with life. At any rate, at the time of his passing, the tzaddik bequeaths the fruit of his lifelong labors] - to every living being, that is, to the soul of every living being [who lives a life of Torah and mitzvot], who is bound to his soul by the thick ropes of a magnanimous love, and an eternal love, that will not be moved forever.

For any man who eagerly desires life [16] [and who seeks] to cleave to the living G-d, through his service [i.e., through the divine service of the tzaddik] his soul will cleave and will be bound up in the bond of life with G-d, [17] in the life of the Ruach [literally, the life-giving "breath"] of our nostrils of which we have said, "In its [protective] shadow we shall live among the nations." [18]

[This alludes to the Chayah of the tzaddik, the soul-level which is even loftier than the soul-level called Neshamah, and which infuses the followers of the tzaddik with a transcendent mode of life-force which enables them to withstand challenges from non-Jewish (i.e., unholy) sources.

[This] he left unto us, in each and every individual, corresponding to the degree of his genuine alliance with the tzaddik and his true and pure love of him, from the innermost core of man and from the depths of his heart. [19]

[To the extent of each individual's bond with the tzaddik, so does the tzaddik share with him his Ruach, and his faith, fear and love of G-d].

For [20] "as in water, face [answers to face, so is the heart of man to man]": [the individual's love for the tzaddik reflects back to him, eliciting a love of the tzaddik for him], and [21] "spirit rouses spirit and brings forth spirit" - [the spirit of love that one has for the tzaddik draws down the Ruach, the superior spirit of the tzaddik].

For, his Ruach remains truly in our midst, [within those of us who are bound to him, when he sees his children, [i.e., his disciples], [22] who embody the work of his hands, sanctifying [G-d's] blessed Name.

For [His Name] is magnified and sanctified when we walk in the straight path that he has shown us of his paths, and we will walk in his ways forevermore.

[With regard to the above sentence, the Rebbe Shlita notes that the Zohar (Part II, p. 215a; and Part III, end of Parshat Kedoshim) distinguishes between a "path" (derech) and a "way" (orach).

"Path" signifies a well-trodden track which the tzaddik has cleared for common use, while "way" suggests a trail that is presently being blazed, according to the spiritual needs of the individual's divine service.

The Rebbe Shlita refers the reader to Likkutei Torah, Shir HaShirim (12b).

The reason that the Alter Rebbe characterizes the tzaddik's life as consisting of faith, fear and love, is that (as explained in the very first Epistle in this series) faith is the underpinning, the "loins" that support the entire body of a man's divine service, and this finds expression in his fear and love of G-d, his "arms".

   

Notes:

  1. (Back to text) The Rebbe Shlita notes in his Luach HaTikkun that this letter was in fact written to chassidim in the Diaspora. The introductory statement that it was written "to the inhabitants of the Holy Land" is a copyist's error, "since the conclusion of this letter (published in Ginzei Nistarot - Or Rav, ch. 6) urges his readers not to diminish, `Heaven forfend, the sacred monies that they sanctify to G-d annually...for our masters in the Holy Land.' He continues, moreover, that the money should be ready to be sent promptly to the Holy Land."

    In a later addendum the Rebbe Shlita concludes: "The difficulty with all the above is readily understandable, for this introductory statement is found in all the editions and was seen by the Rebbeim over the generations, beginning with the author's children and the Tzemach Tzedek.

    "It would therefore seem that both things are true: The appropriate section (that which is printed here, minus the line about `the bearer of this letter,' from which we also understand that this letter was edited for publication) was sent to the Holy Land, while the letter in its entirety was sent to the `heartbroken...of our country.' For in any event it is reasonable to assume that the Alter Rebbe wrote a letter of consolation to the `heartbroken...of the Holy Land."'

  2. (Back to text) Cf. Iyov 11:6.

  3. (Back to text) Cf. II Melachim 4:9.

  4. (Back to text) Cf. Berachot 28b.

  5. (Back to text) Shmot Rabbah, end of Parshat Pekudei.

  6. (Back to text) I, 154b.

  7. (Back to text) Following the conventions of classical Hebrew, the original letter addresses its readers indirectly in the polite third person; here, for clarity's sake, this has been rendered in the second person.

  8. (Back to text) Cf. Ezekiel 9:4.

  9. (Back to text) Often used in halachic responsa. Addendum of the Rebbe Shlita:

    "Likewise in Rambam, Hilchot Yibum, end of ch. 4, in the text of a get chalitzah and a ketubbat yevamin, [the deceased is referred to as having] `left life to our Rabbis and to all of Israel.'"

  10. (Back to text) Chavakuk 2:4.

  11. (Back to text) Mishlei 19:23.

  12. (Back to text) Cf. Shir HaShirim 8:6, where the connection with "life" is implied by the context.

  13. (Back to text) Brackets are in the original text.

  14. (Back to text) Iyov 34:14.

  15. (Back to text) Mishlei 10:16.

  16. (Back to text) Cf. Tehillim 34:13.

  17. (Back to text) Cf. I Shmuel 25:29.

  18. (Back to text) Note of the Rebbe Shlita: "Quoting Eichah 4:20."

  19. (Back to text) Cf. Tehillim 64:7.

  20. (Back to text) Mishlei 27:19.

  21. (Back to text) Zohar II, 166b, et al.

  22. (Back to text) Sifrei (quoted in Rashi) on Devarim 6:7.



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