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    PARSHAS BAMIDBAR: BECOMING THE HEAD OF THE HOUSEHOLD

    The pasuk says,
    “And with you shall
    be one man from
    each tribe (ish, ish
    l’mateh), a man who
    is a leader of his
    father’s household (rosh l’beis avosav,
    hu).” [Bamidbar 1:4] The Sefer Imrei
    Shammai has an encouraging insight on
    this pasuk. The author comments that
    every person has the opportunity to be a
    leader of his family.
    The Sefer Imrei Shammai cites a cute
    story. A Jew who was an ignoramus
    (Am ha’aretz) approached another Jew
    who was a scholar (Talmid Chacham)
    and started bragging about his lineage:
    “You should know my ‘yichus’. I come
    from a line of great people! However,
    you do not come from anyone of
    importance.” The Am ha’aretz was
    obviously jealous of the Torah scholar.
    He had only one thing going for himself
    – his great ancestors – so he bragged

    about his lineage. The Talmud Chacham
    answered him sharply, “The difference
    between us is that your ‘yichus’ ends
    with you. In my case, my ‘yichus’ begins
    with me.”
    This capacity – to begin a distinguished
    family lineage from oneself – is hinted
    at in the above quoted pasuk. Every
    person (ish, ish), no matter from where
    he comes, has the ability to become the
    head of his own family (rosh l’beis
    avosav, hu) – meaning the beginning of
    an illustrious chain in his own family
    that will henceforth trace its origin to
    him.
    No person should feel discouraged
    because he comes from humble
    beginnings. On the contrary – ‘yichus’
    has to start somewhere. If it hasn’t
    started from one’s ancestors, let a person
    make every effort to insure that great
    lineage begins with him.
    A Chassidic tale is told involving the
    Maggid of Mezrich. When the Maggid

    of Mezrich was five years
    old, a fire burned down
    his house. His mother sat
    in front of the rubble
    crying. She explained to
    her son that she was not
    crying because she had
    lost her house. The cause
    of her great grief was that
    a family tree (shtar
    yuchsin) going back many
    many generations was lost
    in the fire. Tradition has it
    that the five year old,
    future Maggid of Mezrich,
    consoled his mother with
    the words, “Don’t worry
    mommy. I am going to
    start a new ‘yichus’.”
    He in fact became the start of a great
    line of Chassidic leaders. Today if
    someone can show that he traces his
    ancestry back to the Maggid of Mezrich,
    he is considered to be a person of great

    lineage. Every person has the ability to
    become the “head of the lineage of his
    household.” Some people have the fate
    of being the “end of the line” of the
    ‘yichus’ of their family. Others are able
    to begin a new line of ‘yichus,’ from
    themselves forward.