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    EMUNAH

    Rebbe Shlomke of

    Zvhil would often

    say: People claim

    that they believe in

    Hashem, and they

    believe that they

    truly do, but the

    real test comes

    when something doesn’t go their way. Do

    they also remember their emunah at these

    times? Do they say: “Even this is from

    Hashem, and it is for the good,” or are they

    upset and distressed? These are the

    moments when it is seen whether one truly

    has emunah or not. Reb Yechiel Michel

    Feinstein’s zt”l daughter suffered from a

    severe case of asthma. The family had

    three breathing inhaling machines in the

    house, so there would always be at least

    one available in case of an asthma attack.

    One night, their daughter had an attack,

    and the family was franticly looking for

    the nebulizers, but they couldn’t find any

    of them. They called Hatzalah. By the time

    they came, she had already died. Only then

    did they find the machines. All three of

    them were stored under her bed. They

    didn’t think of looking there before. The

    family was inconsolable and they blamed

    themselves for what happened. Why

    weren’t we wiser and store the machines

    in a place where we will always find

    them? Why didn’t we think of looking

    under her bed? Their conscience didn’t

    give them peace of mind, and they were

    berating themselves and each other for

    what happened. Reb Yaakov Galinsky

    zt”l came to be menachem avel. He told

    them, “My rebbes taught me that the

    concept of hishtadlus is only about the

    future; not about the past. After

    something happened, one must believe

    that whatever occurred was exactly as

    Hashem planned it, and nothing could

    have been done to change it. Hakadosh

    Baruch Hu who does everything, caused

    it to happen. Therefore, the person who

    placed the breathing machines under the

    bed isn’t guilty, and the family members

    who didn’t consider looking there aren’t

    guilty either. This was Hashem’s plan,

    and nothing people did or did not do

    could have changed it…” Only after they

    heard these words, were they ready to

    receive condolences. Approximately

    twenty years ago, a bachur from Yeshivas

    Chevron was killed by Arabs, and Reb

    Nota Zehnwirth zt”l came to be

    menachem avel the father. (The father

    was a talmid chacham, one of the magidei

    shiur of Yeshivas Chevron.) Reb Nota

    came in, sat down, and immediately

    asked the father, “If Avraham Avinu

    would have slaughtered Yitzchok at the

    akeidah, would Avraham Avinu need to

    sit shivah for him?” “Of course he

    would,” the aveil replied. “Why shouldn’t

    he?” “I had my doubts,” Reb Nota

    explained, “because the death was

    Hashem’s will…” The father replied,

    “That isn’t a reason not to mourn. Every

    death is Hashem’s will. Whenever

    someone dies, it is Hashem’s decree, and

    yet, there is an obligation to sit

    shivah.” Said Reb Nota Zehnwirth,

    “That is exactly what I wanted to

    hear.” And then Reb Nota stood up,

    said the brachah, Hamakom

    yenachem eschem mitoch shaar

    aveilei tzion veyerushalayim, and

    left. His message was understood.

    He wanted the father to know that

    even this hard situation was part of

    Hashem’s plan. Reb Leibke

    Glauberman zt”l was one of the

    many tzaddikim who lived in

    Yerushalayim (in his younger years,

    he was among the chassidim of the

    Yanuka zy”a, Rebbe Yisrael of

    Stolin zy”a). In his old age, his legs

    were ill, and one day the doctors in

    the hospital decided that they must

    amputate them. Reb Leibke accepted

    Hashem’s decree, and he was

    brought in for the operation, while

    his loyal children waited outside the

    operating room. After the operation,

    a doctor told the children that they

    made a mistake; the operation

    wasn’t really necessary. They could

    have saved his legs. “But it is too

    late now,” the doctor said, “What’s

    done is done.” Reb Leibka’s children

    were very angry with the doctors for

    making this terrible error. When Reb

    Leibka woke up they told him that it

    was all a mistake, it shouldn’t have

    happened. “Your legs didnt need

    amputation.” Reb Leibke replied, “I

    heard from my holy rebbe, the

    Yanuka: ‘Volt ich, zolt ich [if only I

    would have done things

    differently…] is apikorsus.’

    Everything is destined from heaven,

    including this amputation. The

    By: Rabbi

    Elimelech Biderman

    doctors manuals

    say that an illness

    such as I had,

    doesn’t call for an

    amputation. But

    my foot needed to

    be amputated

    nonetheless. My

    proof is that this

    is what occurred.

    It wouldn’t have

    happened if it

    wasn’t Hashem’s will.” This is the

    approach of the righteous, always

    knowing and believing that whatever

    occurs, it is Hashem’s will. Reb Gad’l

    Eisner zt”l, the renowned mashgiach of

    Yeshivas Gur, suffered immensely during

    the Holocaust. He went through

    Auschwitz, but throughout this terrible

    ordeal he remained strong in his emunah.

    He would often tell his students the tests

    he endured and how he remained strong

    with his emunah. One student asked him,

    “How did you remain faithful to our

    emunah even during these terrible times,

    and even after losing your only daughter

    at the hands of the reshaim?” Reb Gad’l

    explained: “During the Holocaust,

    Hashem was very concealed; it was

    extremely hard to find Him. This is the

    reason so many people fell from their

    emunah. But I knew that Hashem was

    always with me, and therefore I never lost

    hope.” To demonstrate his point, Reb

    Gad’l took a bottle cap off the table, hid it

    in his hands, and asked the student, “If

    someone would come into this room, and

    seek the cap, will he find it?” “No,” the

    student replied, because it was concealed

    in his hand. Reb Gad’l explained that

    during the Holocaust, Hashem’s presence

    was so concealed, that even those who

    looked for Him, had a hard time finding

    Him. That is the reason so many people

    fell from their emunah. “Now I have

    another question for you,” Reb Gad’l said.

    “If someone knows that I am holding the

    cap in my hands, would he search for it?”

    The student replied that he wouldn’t

    search for it, because he knows where it

    is. Reb Gad’l explained that throughout

    the hardships of the war, he knew that

    Hashem was always with him and

    therefore his emunah remained strong. If

    he would search for Hashem, he may not

    have found Him, but he didn’t need to

    search for Hashem, because he knew that

    Hashem was always there. Reb Gad’l

    gave his student another analogy, “If

    someone lost a diamond that is worth

    billions in a dark room, will he stop

    searching for it because it is dark and it is

    hard to find? Of course not! He will crawl

    on his hands and knees and scan the floor,

    until he finds it. Similarly, when darkness

    covered the earth during the Holocaust,

    and it was hard to find Hashem, I knew

    that Hakadosh Baruch Hu was there. So I

    continued searching for Him, despite the

    difficulties and hardships.”