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    RE’EH: ELUL – A TIME TO PREPARE

    The Zohar calls the yom

    tov of Rosh Hashanah-
    Hayom. This parashah –

    parashas Re’eh begins
    with the words, “Re’eh
    Anochi Nosen
    Lifneichem Hayom,”
    which can be translated
    as, “See that I am
    giving you days before
    Rosh Hashanah, so
    you can prepare
    yourselves on these
    days for the great
    judgment of Rosh
    Hashanah.
    When a person driving
    a car, presses on the
    brakes, the vehicle
    doesn’t stop instantly. Instead, the wheels
    still turn slowly, and the car will gradually
    stop. But the vehicle will stop short if
    someone pulls the emergency hand brake.
    There are times when teshuvah can be
    compared to someone pressing the breaks on
    a car. He has not yet changed his ways (the
    wheels are still turning) but is on the road to
    improve. This is the typical path of teshuvah.
    But there are times when gradual change isn’t
    sufficient. Sometimes it is time to put an
    immediate stop to bad deeds. This is
    compared to someone who pulls the hand

    breaks. Rosh Chodesh Elul is such a time.
    Although change is generally done in a
    gradual, step-by-step manner, Elul is a time
    to make an abrupt change and to improve
    one’s ways.
    The renowned and revered Lubavitcher
    chasid, Reb Mendel Futerfass zt’l, was
    imprisoned in a Soviet camp. He relays that
    when the evil Stalin died, life in the camps
    became more bearable for the inmates, and
    one inmate celebrated his partial freedom by
    demonstrating his talents as a tightrope
    walker.
    He tied a thick rope to two buildings that
    were ten feet high. The first two times he
    tried to walk across the rope, he fell. But he
    knew how to fall, like a cat, and he didn’t get
    hurt. He tried a third time and succeeded. He
    danced back and forth on the rope to the
    rhythm of the crowd’s clapping, who had
    gathered to watch the stunt.
    After the show, the tightrope walker asked
    Reb Mendel Futerfass, “When I told you that
    I know how to walk a tightrope, you didn’t
    believe me. But now you saw it with your
    eyes.”
    Reb Mendel congratulated him on his
    abilities and asked how he does it. He replied,
    “I focus on where I am going and never think
    about falling. The hardest part is when I get
    to the other side and have to turn around.
    That is the hardest moment because you lose

    sight of the goal for a second when you turn
    around.”
    This anecdote teaches us several lessons.
    One lesson is to keep your eyes on your
    goal, don’t get sidetracked. If your goal is to
    serve Hashem, don’t forget that ultimate
    goal, not even for a moment, so you don’t
    fall, and so you don’t lose sight of your
    primary mission.
    Lesson number two is to recognize the
    difficulty of turning around. The tightrope
    walker knew that the hardest part of his stunt
    was turning around, and the same is for those
    who do teshuvah. The hardest part is telling
    yourself to stop your previous ways and to
    turn around and begin a new path. That
    turning point is the most challenging aspect
    of teshuvah.
    Two weeks after their chasunah, a woman
    came to the Rav, saying that she wanted a
    divorce. “I don’t want to be married to
    someone who doesn’t keep kosher,” she
    explained. “Yesterday, after eating a fleishig
    lunch, my husband asked me to make him a
    coffee with milk. I told him, ‘You certainly
    mean soy milk.’ He said, ‘No, I want coffee
    with regular milk.’ I couldn’t believe my
    ears. How can I remain married to such a
    person?”
    The Rav said, “I can’t arrange a get before I
    hear the other side of the story.”
    Her husband came to the Rav, and the Rav

    gradually broached the subject. Finally, the
    Rav said, “You certainly meant that she
    should make you a black coffee, or a coffee
    with parve milk.”
    “No,” the husband said. “I asked her to serve
    me coffee with regular milk.”
    “Have you lost your mind?” the Rav rebuked
    him. “That’s forbidden! It is basar b’chalav!”
    The yungerman replied, “You don’t
    understand. I’ve been married for two weeks
    and know my wife a little. When I ask her for
    something, it takes her six hours before she
    serves it to me. So, I asked her for a coffee
    right after we finished the fleishig meal,
    knowing it won’t be ready for another six
    hours.”
    The nimshal is about teshuvah. We change
    our ways ever so slowly. When we are
    inspired to do teshuvah, it might take about
    six weeks until there is actual change. There
    are less than six weeks until Rosh Hashanah.
    We blow shofar from Rosh Chodesh Elul.
    Hopefully, by the time Rosh Hashanah and
    Yom Kippur come around, we will be able to
    do teshuvah.