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    DO THEY SEE OUR SOUNDS?

    Every year, about 11
    million children in the
    United States

    participate in school-
    level spelling bees. The

    most prestigious
    competition is the
    annual Scripps
    National Bee that has been held since 1925.
    The words have gotten progressively more
    difficult over the decades as the competition
    has stiffened. In 1940, the winning word was
    “therapy,” whereas last year’s was
    “psammophile.” (It means a plant or animal
    that prefers or thrives in sandy areas, in case
    you were not aware.)
    Indian Americans comprise about 1% of the
    U.S. population, yet for the last 20 years, they
    have dominated the Scripps Spelling Bee.
    Two weeks ago, a 12-year-old Floridian
    named Bruhat Soma became the 29th (of 35)
    Indian American champion since 1999. What
    can explain this phenomenon? Are they on
    spelling steroids? Are Indian American’s
    brains wired to spell better than anyone else?
    ְו ְכל־ָהָָעָ֩ם֩ ֹרִֹ֨א ַ �֨ים- ֶאֶת־ַה ַ ּקֹוֹ֜ל�֜ת ְו ְֶאֶת-־ַהַּלִּּפּיִ֗ד�֗ם
    ְו ְֵאֵ֙ת֙ ֣קֹ֣ול ַ – ַה ֹּׁׁשָ֔פ֔ר ְו ְֶאֶת־ָהָ֖ה֖ר- ָעֵָׁ֑ש�֑ן ַוַַּ֤֤י ְְרא ָהָָעָ֙ם-֙
    witnessed people the All “ַוַָּיֻּ֔נ�֔עּו ַֽוַַּֽיַעְַמ֖דּ֖ו ֵֽמ�ָֽרָֹֽח�ֽק׃
    the thunder and lightning, the blare of the horn
    and the mountain smoking; and when the
    people saw it, they fell back and stood at a
    distance.”
    Matan Torah remains the most seminal event,
    not only in Jewish history, but in all of history.
    The Creator and Master of the Universe shared
    His blueprint for creation, handed over His
    manual for meaningful living, opened up His
    personal diary that is the description of His
    essence, and the world has never been the
    same since. Empowered and inspired with the
    tools of Torah, the Jewish people have
    transformed the world in so many ways.
    That event, that moment, was uniquely
    momentous; yet, of all the miracles and
    special moments, the Torah doesn’t mandate
    that we commemorate it. Hashem took us out
    of Egypt, and we have Pesach and a mitzvah
    to tell the story, and to do so over matzah and
    marror. He took us through the desert, and we
    have a Yom Tov of Sukkos where we sit in
    Sukkahs and remember the booths our
    ancestors sat in, exposed to the elements,
    under the Divine protection. On Chanukah
    we light the Chanukah candles, and on Purim
    we listen to the Megillah. And yet, this
    greatest moment in our history has no mitzvah,
    no ritual or ceremony, no commemoration?
    Yes, the Torah does command us to celebrate
    a Yom Tov 50 days after the second day of
    Pesach, but nowhere does it mention that this
    holiday commemorates the revelation at Har
    Sinai,

    In his Mishnas Rav Aharon, Rav Aharon
    Kotler explains that the miracles of yetzias
    mitzrayim were one-time events, parts of
    history that need to be remembered, recalled
    and commemorated so that we can come as
    close as possible to imagining what it looked
    like because it was so long ago. The same is
    true for Sukkos, Chanukah, etc. However, the
    revelation of Har Sinai doesn’t need
    remembering or commemoration because it is
    ongoing, it is still happening every day.
    All over the world, every time a Jew opens a
    sefer, attends a shiur, sits down with a
    chavrusa, plays a Torah podcast, or engages
    with Torah in any form—the conversation
    continues, Hashem is still speaking to us. And
    that is why 40 years after the Torah was given,
    in Moshe’s soliloquy to the Jewish people,
    reflecting back on their short history to that
    point, he describes Matan Torah as גדול קול
    יסף ולא. Kol gadol means a great sound, but
    what does “lo yasaf” mean? Says Unkelus, לא
    פסק, a great voice that hasn’t stopped. He is
    still speaking, the conversation never ended.
    Are we listening, are we participating?
    When Rav Meir Shapiro zt”l, the founder of
    the Daf Yomi, was seven years old, he found
    his mother crying and he asked her why. She
    explained that she was terribly sad because his
    melamed was scheduled to come that day but
    didn’t show up. The young boy didn’t
    understand why that moved her to tears. She
    explained, “You don’t understand Meir’l
    because you are too young, but my son, I
    want you to always remember, if you miss a
    day of learning, it cannot be replaced, it
    cannot be made up.”
    Rav Meir Shapiro’s mother understood
    something so fundamental, so basic and so
    ,כי הם חיינו ואורך ימינו – people our to core
    Torah is not information, it is not a set of
    facts, laws, it isn’t part of or commemorating
    history. Torah learning is not just a way of
    life, it is what provides life, sustains life and
    nourishes life. Without it we simply cannot
    live.
    Rav Meir Shapiro’s mother’s tears left an
    indelible impression and when the
    opportunity presented itself, he introduced a
    system and initiative which would ensure we
    would never miss a day of learning in our
    lives. It is estimated that today there are
    more than 300,000 people around the world
    who learn the Daf Yomi daily. Rav Meir
    Shapiro and his wife didn’t have biological
    children, but make no mistake, each blatt of
    Gemara learned daily by Jews everywhere is
    his continuity and legacy, each of the
    devotees of the Daf his progeny.
    Our Judaism must not be commemorative,
    our commitment to Torah must not be a
    casual connection because of a past. It must
    be vibrant, dynamic, alive, passionate in the
    present.
    The Midrash tells us that when Hashem
    He ,כפה עליהם הר כגגית ,Torah the gave
    held it over our heads and said accept it or

    קבורתכם תהא שם, there you will be buried.
    Many ask, shouldn’t it say פה, here, not שם,
    there? If Hashem is going to threaten us,
    shouldn’t He get it right?
    I believe, and we are sadly seeing empirically
    all around us, that if you don’t feel the weight
    of Torah over your head, the responsibility of
    a deep, profound and passionate commitment
    to it personally, you may not spiritually die in
    that moment. Perhaps you can go a generation
    or two. But שם, down the line, a few
    generations in, it will catch up. If we negotiate
    with our Yiddishkeit, if we pick and choose, if
    we are casual about it, down the road it will
    come crashing down on our head.
    Do you know why Indian Americans children
    dominate the Spelling Bee? As explained in
    one of many articles exploring the
    phenomenon, it is because Indian American
    parents value and celebrate spelling well.
    we Sinai Har At – ְו ְכל־ָהָָעָ֩ם֩ ֹרִֹ֨א ַ �֨ים- ֶאֶת־ַהּקֹוֹ֜ל�֜ת
    saw the sounds, we didn’t just hear
    instructions, we saw a vibrant image of a
    passionate inspired life. Indian American
    children don’t just hear their parents talk about
    spelling, they see the value of spelling, they
    see themselves as spelling champions and
    then they become that. For them it is more
    than just a competition, it is a true and genuine
    mission.
    What do our children see? What are we
    celebrating for our children, for our family, for
    ourselves? Are we celebrating the things and
    accomplishments that we truly value? Here is
    why that question is critical: Because
    whatever you celebrate, that’s what you’ll
    value and that is what you children will value
    and sacrifice for.
    Indian Americans celebrate spelling and they
    have therefore dominated the Spelling Bee.
    L’havdil, Rav Meir Shapiro’s mother
    celebrated Torah learning every day and she
    had a son who introduced the world to the
    most popular program of daily Torah learning
    in history. What do you celebrate, what does
    your family hear you talk about, see you care
    about, watch you invested in?
    Israel’s war against her enemies and the rise
    of antisemitism have posed formidable
    challenges but they also bring an opportunity.
    How we react, what we are doing about it,
    how focused we are on the fate of our people,
    can and will leave an indelible and enduring
    impression on our children and grandchildren.
    If we want our families to be passionate,
    practicing, and proud Jews, living and learning
    Torah and loving Israel when they are שם,
    ֹ,רִֹ֨א ַ �֨ים ֶאֶת־ַהּקֹוֹ֜ל�֜ת to need they ,road the down
    not only hear, but see our voices in action now.