Dayeinu During The COVID Plague And An Ice Storm
With Pesach barely a month away, one aspect of the Festival of Freedom is dominating my thoughts in recent days. Dayeinu. It would be enough for us; a popular Seder night responsive song.
Queens Jewish Link
Connecting the Queens Jewish Community With Pesach barely a month away, one aspect of the Festival of Freedom is dominating my thoughts in recent days. Dayeinu. It would be enough for us; a popular Seder night responsive song.
I perch, fatigued, in the eerily illuminated chambers of the Pharaoh’s palace. I am a lowly slave, whom people jeer at as they pass or don’t even grace with the courtesy of a contemptuous sneer. Even the little children smirk disdainfully at me. I rub my eyes dejectedly.
Recap: The new house looks like a haunted house. Yehudis and her father meet a nice rebbetzin and her daughter. The daughter is the same age as Yehudis and tells her about the theme of their Bais Yaakov yearbook. Yehudis will need some baby pictures; only, for some reason, whenever she asks her father where her baby pictures are, he is very evasive.
The laws of kohanim,
VaYikra,
Is the heart of the Torah.
The word korban means
To come close
By offering Hashem
Our animal souls
To channel lifeforce energies
To holiness
Through G-d’s decrees.
Writing “VaYikra,”
Moshe opposed,
Thought it showed
Hashem giving him
Too much kavod;
The smaller alef,
The compromise,
For Moshe was small
In his own eyes.
At the burning bush
He first heard
Hashem’s call;
Moshe thought himself unworthy,
Thought himself too small.
But when the need arose
To defend his flock,
He showed chutzpah and daring,
Pulling out all the stops.
David was just a shepherd
In the fields, on his own
He became the sweetest singer
Ever known.
Gave his flock tender care
Like no one else;
When beasts tried to kill his sheep,
He was a lion himself.
Goliath thought young David
A foolhardy knave
For G-d and Israel’s honor;
The boy stood proud and brave.
When crowned king,
Through the crowds
With his retinue,
David confessed to them:
I am as amazed as you!
Like the moon, both
Humble and majestic,
Man’s greatness
In this world, a cyclic dynamic
Broken and diminished;
Light concealed
Amongst the downcast,
G-d’s true greatness
Is revealed.
The alef is silent,
The spirit makes no sound
For, amongst the lowly
HaKadosh Baruch Hu is found.
Written backwards, alef
Spells “peleh” –
Wonder inexplicable,
Within all of existence
Hashem loves the humble.
Moshe Rabbeinu’s
Heart was broken;
He rejoiced in his mission,
But, by the same token,
In Moshe’s great humility
He believed another
Could have done
Better than him.
By Sharon Marcus
Recap: Yehudis is very upset that she has to move to Marietta because her father has a sabbatical research year: She will be missing her eighth-grade year, which is the senior year. She had to give up being editor of the yearbook and now she has to go to an interview at the Bais Yaakov in West Virginia, which is the closest Bais Yaakov to Marietta.
My wife, Shira, shops for the smallest packages of food in order to conserve space in our three-shelf pantry. When I find one of those ten-ounce boxes of Cheerios, I cringe and dream of buying supersize at Costco. I prefer a plethora of cereal options to mix and match my breakfast. Shira retaliates by purchasing mini-jars of peanut butter. My closet-full of clothes is another issue of contention. I have more than she does and she calls me a pack rat. I like having choices, and as long as they still fit, I see no reason to dispose of my favorites. So, too, it is with my CD collection, the gear in my music studio, and my extensive library.
