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    NITZAVIM – ROSH HASHANAH: SIMANIM

    On Rosh Hashanah
    night, we eat
    simanim, such as
    an apple dipped in
    honey, among other
    simanim.
    The origin of this
    custom is the Gemara
    (Krisus 6), which
    states, symbolic signs
    have significance.
    Eliyah Rabba (quoted
    in Mishnah Berurah)
    writes, “The Shlah
    teaches that these signs remind the person to
    rouse himself to teshuvah and to daven for
    these matters.”
    Reb Shlomo Kluger (Chochmas Shlomo)
    writes, “Eating these foods isn’t a tefillah.
    Eating is never a tefillah. Rather, we eat
    these foods to show our trust that Hashem
    will give us a good year…and we say on
    them [that it should be a good year]. If chas
    veshalom there was a harsh decree, it will
    be turned for the good through our words.
    Amen, so shall be His will.” Words are
    powerful. Saying it will be a sweet year is
    like a prophecy, which has the power to be
    fulfilled.

    Reb Shlomo Kluger adds, “On Rosh
    Hashanah, after shacharis, one should
    say, Kol Ma De’avid Rachmana Letav
    Avid, ‘Everything Hashem does is for the
    good.’V’Gam Zu L’tovah’ And this is also
    for the good.’ Such words turn things over
    that everything will indeed be good.”
    The ultimate siman is to be happy on Rosh
    Hashanah. The Mishnah Berurah writes,
    “We do simanim as a good omen. Therefore,
    it’s obvious that one must be cautious not to
    become angry on these days. In addition to
    the severe sin, one must make a good sign
    for the new year. He should be happy and
    trust in Hashem.”
    People in Yerushalayim would say, “If an
    apple dipped in honey is a sign of a sweet
    year, certainly, if a person is a ‘sweet Yid,’ by
    keeping a smile on his face and by greeting
    others warmly, what better omen can there
    be for a sweet new year?”
    The Gemara (Brachos 18) relates a story of
    a poor chassid who gave tzedakah to another
    needy person on erev Rosh Hashanah during
    a famine. His wife was upset at him for
    giving away money they needed to tzedakah,
    so he spent that night in the cemetery. In
    the graveyard, he overheard a conversation
    between two neshamos. One said, ‘My

    friend, let’s float around the world and listen
    in from behind the curtain [of heaven] to
    know which punishments are decreed for the
    coming year.’”
    The second soul answered that she couldn’t
    leave her grave because she was buried in a
    mat of reeds.
    The first soul went alone. When she returned,
    she told her friend, “Heaven decreed that all
    crops planted by the first rains of the season
    will be ruined by hail.”
    The chassid, having overheard their
    conversation, planted his field by the second
    rain. Everyone’s crop was destroyed in the
    hail that year except for his.
    The following year, on Rosh Hashanah night,
    he returned to the cemetery and heard the
    two souls conversing again. Once again, one
    of them asked her friend to float around the
    world to overhear the heaven decrees, and
    the other replied that she couldn’t because
    she was buried in a mat of reeds. So, one soul
    traveled alone, and when she returned, she
    said that she heard that this year, the crops
    planted at the second rain will be destroyed
    by a disease called shidafon.”
    That year, everyone planted by the second
    rain (because they remembered from the

    previous year that only the chassid’s crops,
    planted at the second rain, survived). But a
    disease destroyed all the crops planted that
    year at the second rain. The chassid planted
    during the first rain, and his crops flourished.
    When we think about this Gemara, we
    understand that the chassid had terrible
    simanim on Rosh Hashanah. We can’t
    imagine worse simanim! His wife was
    angry at him, and he slept in a cemetery!
    But despite the ominous signs, he became
    wealthy two years in a row! This is because
    a person’s disposition and mood are even
    more important than the foods he eats.
    This chassid remained happy despite trying
    circumstances, and his happiness brought
    him success.