09 Aug COMFORTING “EACH OTHER”
The Shabbat after Tishah
B’Av is famously known
as שבת†נחמו†, a reference to
the haftarah read on this
Shabbat which tells of
Hashem’s call to console
the Jewish People as they
grieved for the
devastating hurban (destruction): נחמו†נחמו
עמי¨†יאמר†אלוקיכם†– “Console, console My
nation, says your G-d.” The meaning of
נחמה†(consolation) can be understood from
a pasuk in the beginning of Megilat Echah,
which we read on Tishah B’Av, that
describes what it’s like without נחמה†. The
pasuk says: ≠¨†בכו†תבכה†בלילה¨≠†ודמעתה†על†לחיה
אין†לה†מנחם≠†מכל†אוהביה†. She [Yerushalayim]
cries at night, and her tear is on her cheeks;
she has no one from among all who love
her giving consolation… Yerushalayim is
described as someone who weeps and
grieves alone, with the tears pouring down
her face because there is no מנחם†, no one to
comfort her and wipe away her tears. We
live in a very lonely generation. We live in
a time where we enjoy unparalleled
comforts and so many benefits that
previous generations could never have
dreamed of, but people today feel so
lonely. We are all so good at putting on a
show – wearing a smile, responding to
“How are you” with a happy “Baruch
Hashem,” and making it appear as though
everything is fine. But everyone is
struggling with something, with some fear,
some anxiety, something that upsets them,
something that depresses them, something
that makes them miserable. Even worse,
so many people feel they have nobody to
talk to, nobody who understands them,
nobody who knows what they’re going
through. בכו†תבכה†בלילה≠ÆÆÆאין†לה†מנחם≠†מכל
אוהביה†. People today have many ,אוהבים
friends and family members who like
them, but אין†לה†מנחם†– they feel alone. And
so בכו†תבכה†בלילה†, they cry in hiding, in the
dark, alone. Perhaps the call of נחמו†נחמו†עמי
is directed to each and every one of us.
The way we experience נחמה†, consolation,
is by making an active effort to provide
נחמה†to others, to see to it that nobody is
alone, that nobody has to cry בלילה†, in
solitude. A man once overheard someone
on the phone – who turned out to be a
gardener – asking the person on the other
line if he needed a gardener. He explained
that he is very experienced and does a very
good job. The person on the other line said
he already had a gardener whom he is very
happy with. The gardener then called
somebody else, and got the same response.
He ended calling 15 people – and they all
said that they already had a gardener whom
they’re happy with. Finally, the man
overhearing the phone calls, feeling very
bad for the gardener, approached him and
offered to hire him to take care of his lawn.
“Sorry,” the gardener said. “I’m booked. I
can’t take on any more customers.” The
man was startled. “You just called up 15
people asking them to hire you!!” “You
don’t understand,” the gardener said.
“These are my customers. I work for all of
them, but I never receive a single
compliment. I called them pretending to
be somebody else so I could hear them say
that they’re happy with their gardener…”
So many people in our community feel this
way. They feel alone, unappreciated,
unloved, and ignored. But it doesn’t have
to be this way. Is it that difficult to give a
compliment? It is that difficult to be
gracious? Is it that difficult to give a warm
smile? Is it that difficult to pick up the
phone and call somebody who lives alone
or who is struggling with some problem,
and lend an ear? Is it that difficult to go
over to a visitor or new member in shul
and warmly introduce yourself? Is it that
difficult to reach out, to express concern,
to show some warmth and friendship?
נחמו†נחמו†עמי†. Of course, only Hashem can
bring us complete consolation, and we
pray for it each and every day. But the
process starts with the נחמה†we give each
other, by uplifting one another,
encouraging one another, and supporting
one another, so that no man, woman or
child ever feels alone.