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    TAZRIA: THE BEAUTY OF STRUGGLES

    It states (Shir
    HaShirim 7:2)
    “beautiful are your
    footsteps in the
    shoes…”
    The Gemara (Succah
    49:) says that “in the
    shoes” refers to Aliyah
    L’regel when the
    Yidden go up to the
    Beis HaMikdash for the
    mitzvah of R’eya
    L’regel on the three
    regalim.
    The Vilna Gaon zt’l
    asks the following question. How can the
    pasuk be referring to the mitzvah of Aliyah
    L’regel? Why, it is forbidden to enter the
    Har HaBayis with shoes!
    The Vilna Gaon zt’l answers that the Torah
    promises (Shmos 34:24) “No man will
    covet your land when you go up to appear
    before Hashem, your G-d, three times a
    year.” However, as they walked to the Beis
    HaMikdash, there were certainly many
    moments when they became very scared.
    They thought, “I shouldn’t have come!
    Everything I own will be stolen!” They had
    to repeatedly remind themselves to rely on

    Hashem’s promise and that they had
    nothing to fear.
    When they came to the Beis HaMikdash,
    they no longer had these anxious thoughts.
    They were overcome by the kedushah they
    saw and felt in the Beis HaMikdash, and
    they totally forgot about their anxieties.
    Which part of the pilgrimage did Hashem
    enjoy most? Was it when they journeyed to
    the Beis HaMikdash with a heavy heart or
    when they were in a state of spiritual bliss
    as they stood in the Beis HaMikdash?
    Most people will say Hashem enjoys more
    when we are in the Beis HaMikdash,
    wholly attached to Hashem.
    But the pasuk tells us that the opposite is
    true. The pasuk says, your feet are so
    beautiful when you perform this mitzvah of
    aliyah l’regel, and the most beautiful part is
    “in the shoes” when you were still wearing
    your shoes, walking up to the Beis
    HaMikdash. Those are the most precious
    moments to Hashem. It is your struggles
    with the yetzer hara that Hashem loves the
    most.
    Reb Shlomo Zalman Auerbach zt’l repeated
    this vort from the Vilna Gaon and noted
    that it is a great chizuk for bachurim.

    Bachurim struggle with their yetzer hara,
    and they think that Hashem doesn’t have
    nachas ruach from them because of their
    struggles. But it is the opposite. These are
    the times that they are most precious to
    Hashem.
    Reb Yitzchok Hutner zt’l writes in a letter,
    “When we tell stories of the greatness of
    tzaddikim, we have a habit to begin at the
    end [of their lives] and discuss the great
    levels the tzaddikim reached. We skip the
    many years they struggled with their yetzer
    hara, and we think they were born
    tzaddikim. Everyone praises the Chofetz
    Chaim’s shemiras halashon, but who speaks
    about his struggles and the ups and downs
    he encountered until he reached that level?
    This is just one example among a thousand.
    Leaving out these chapters of their lives is a
    problem because when a bachur with a
    strong desire to grow in avodas Hashem is
    confronted with a challenge or a downfall,
    he becomes convinced he will never reach
    the levels of the tzaddikim he wishes to
    emulate. He thinks that if he faces
    challenges, he has no hope. But that is
    ridiculous. Know, my friend, you will fall
    time and again, and there will be battles
    that you will lose. But in the end, you will
    emerge victorious and wear the crown of

    success on your head. The wisest of all men
    said, ‘A tzaddik falls seven times and rises.’
    The wise understand that the tzaddik rises
    because he fell seven times [and kept lifting
    himself again]. I beg you, don’t think of
    tzaddikim as people who are at peace with
    their yetzer tov. Rather, when the yetzer
    hara is burning inside you, and you’re
    struggling to overcome the yetzer hara,
    those are the moments when you are most
    similar to the gedolim, even more than
    when you are at peace with the yetzer hara.”
    We daven that we shouldn’t have nisyonos,
    but when they come, we must know that
    these are the best times. There are various
    types of nisyonos, such as ben adam
    l’chaveiro, ben adam l’makom, and yiras
    Shamayim. Hashem loves those times more
    than when we are at peace with the yetzer
    hara because these are the times we struggle
    to serve Hashem.