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    LISTEN TO THE LIGHTS

    On recent trips to Eretz Yisroel, I noticed a
    change in the simple greeting of boker tov, good
    morning. Instead of receiving a boker tov in
    return, I would hear boker ohr, morning of light.
    Morning of light. What a beautiful way to start
    the day. To wish one another a day full of light,
    rays of sunshine and hope.
    As we are currently experiencing the painful
    darkness of war, boker ohr takes on a special
    meaning. The wish of a new day that will bring
    ohr, light to our nation.
    There are hints of Chanukah in the Torah. The
    very first mention of darkness is in Bereishis,
    where it is written, “v’choshech al pnei t’hom,
    and darkness on the surface of the deep.”
    (Bereishis 1:2) The Midrash teaches that this
    pasuk alludes to the era of the ancient Greek
    Empire “which darkened the eyes of the Jews
    with their decrees”.
    The letters of the word choshech, ches – shin
    – chof, can be rearranged to spell shochach,
    shin – chof – ches, meaning to forget. That is
    exactly what the Greeks wanted. As we say in

    Al Hanissim, “l’hashkicham Torasecha, To
    make them forget Your Torah”. To bring the
    Jewish people to a place where they would
    forget who they are, and what they are. A place
    where they would lose their identity as Am
    Yisroel, and their connection to Torah and
    mitzvos.
    But, within shochach, there is a small, yet
    powerful word – “koach” – kof – ches, meaning
    strength. HaShem, with His infinite kindness,
    gives each of us the bracha of koach, the
    capacity to withstand the challenges and
    overcome the darkness.
    In last week’s parsha, Yaakov battled the sar
    shel Eisav, the malach of Eisav, “ad alos
    hashachar, until the break of dawn”. (Bereishis
    32:25) The night is long, at times even
    frightening, and seemingly endless. Yaakov’s
    nighttime battle with the malach left him injured
    and limping, yet, he walked away with the
    crown of Yisroel, a prince of HaShem.
    Yaakov’s story is our story. We are Bnei Yisroel,
    children of Yaakov. It is a story that repeats
    itself time and time again. The story of our
    nation fighting the Greeks, the Romans, the
    Spanish Inquisitors, and the pogroms of Czarist
    Russia. It is the story of the Holocaust and the

    story of October 7. The battle
    continues, “ad alos
    hashachar, until the morning
    light”. The break of dawn,
    the coming of Moshiach.
    While Am Yisroel
    experienced darkness during
    the Greek rule, they merited
    to witness the miraculous
    light of the menorah.
    Chanukah takes place during
    the darkest time of the year.
    The days are the shortest, the
    nights are the longest. It was
    not just a time of physical
    darkness, but a spiritual
    darkness as well.
    The previous Lubavitcher Rebbe, Rabbi Yosef
    Yitzchok Schneerson, would tell his chassidim,
    “listen carefully to what the candles are saying.”
    Listen to the lights, they are speaking to us.
    When we gaze upon them, we can hear their
    holy messages. Messages that penetrate our
    neshama.
    After lighting, we sing “Haneiros Hallalu,
    These lights, kodesh heim, are holy”. We are
    not permitted to derive benefit from them. Only
    to look upon them. Linger and look upon the
    lights, taking in their messages.
    Message one. Daven, daven, daven. Chanukah
    is a most propitious time to daven. To reach
    out and connect to HaShem with heart and
    soul. Chanukah is a time of miracles – ask for
    a miracle. Nothing is too big or too trivial for
    HaShem.
    We need tefillos now more than ever. It’s been
    over a year since the terrible atrocities of
    October 7. It’s so easy to fall into the trap of
    “war fatigue” But, hostages are still in
    captivity, lives continue to be lost. So many
    are wounded, so many lives disrupted, so
    many families displaced. This Chanukah, let’s
    intensify our tefillos for acheinu kol Beis
    Yisroel, our brothers and sisters, the entire
    House of Israel. HaShem should have
    compassion upon them, and extricate them
    from pain to comfort, mei’afeila l’orah, from
    darkness to light. More davening, more
    Tehillim, more tzedaka. As the lights of the
    menorah ascend, so too should our tefillos
    soar to the Heavenly throne.
    Message two. Cherish the children. Each
    month of the calendar has a mazel, a sign. The
    mazel of Kislev, the month in which Chanukah
    falls, is a bow and arrow. The closer and
    tighter one pulls the bow, the further the arrow
    travels. The Kotzker Rebbe taught that the
    same is with our children. The closer we hold
    them, the greater the warmth and love we
    extend, the further they will go in life. The
    Kotzker cites a pasuk in Tehillim, “Like

    arrows in the hand of a warrior, so are the
    children of youth. (Tehillim 127:4)
    As we gaze upon the lights, let’s take a lesson
    in raising our children. To reach out with “aish
    – a fire”. Aish, spelled aleph, shin. Aleph for
    ahava, love; shin for simcha, joy. To reach out
    and teach our children with lights of warmth,
    love and joy.
    Message three. Life is about spiritual growth.
    Each night of Chanukah, we kindle an additional
    flame. A message to grow spiritually. To do
    more chesed, show more caring, engage in more
    learning. It’s easy to become complacent, to be
    satisfied with the status quo. Instead, let’s take
    a cue from Chanukah, and strive to constantly
    add spiritual lights to our life.
    Message four. Be a shamash, a helper. Find
    ways to use your inner lights, the talents you
    have been blessed with and the capabilities you
    have developed, to help others accomplish, to
    facilitate their growth and fulfill their mission
    in life.
    Chanukah is quickly approaching. We wish
    each other “ah lichtiger Chanukah”, a
    Chanukah full of light. After the choshech of
    Bereishis, HaShem said “vayehi ohr, let there
    be light”. In Israel, people wish one another
    boker ohr, morning of light. Yaakov fought “ad
    alos hashachar, until the morning light”.
    The Navi Yeshiyahu tells us that HaShem
    created Am Yisroel to be an ohr lagoyim, a light
    onto the nations. To open the eyes of those who
    are deprived of light, to redeem those who sit
    in the dungeon of darkness. We are a nation
    that lives with emuna and bitachon, the hope
    and faith in a better tomorrow. A tomorrow
    filled with light. As we gaze upon the menorah,
    let’s daven for the ultimate light, the light of
    Moshiach, quickly in our day.