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    A TORAH REACTION TO TRAGIC EVENTS

    Recently, the
    wonderful Jewish
    community of Staten
    Island was hit by two
    terrible tragedies. First,
    the passing of a very
    young Mrs. Miriam
    Winiarz, zlzy”a, who
    left her wonderful
    children orphaned from
    both their father and their mother. Then,
    secondly, less than a week later, another
    young mother and wife Mrs. Rachel
    Eisenberg, zlzy”a, passed away also
    leaving behind young unmarried children
    (besides her married children) and a
    grieving husband. As Torah Jews, we are
    always searching for the Torah response to
    such cataclysmic events.
    I want to share with my dear readers a
    Gemara in Sanhedrin [104]. Here, the
    Gemara relates that there was a woman
    who tragically lost her husband. A short
    time before, she had also lost her son. This
    woman lived right next to the great Rabbi
    Gamliel, the Nasi (Prince) of Israel. Rabbi
    Gamliel and the widow shared a common
    wall and thus Rabbi Gamliel would hear
    her copious weeping as she wailed

    incessantly over her double loss. The
    Gemara relates that upon hearing her
    crying, Rabbi Gamliel also cried until, like
    Leah Imeinu before him, his eyelashes
    came out from the excessive crying.
    In Eichah Rabbah, the Medrash adds an
    important caveat to the story. Rabbi
    Gamliel attached to his crying also the
    calamity of the destruction of the Temple.
    I had thought that the intent of this Medrash
    is that once Rabbi Gamliel was already
    crying, he used his weeping productively
    to also bemoan the loss of the Temple and
    the pain of the Shechinah. There are some
    people who don’t easily cry. So, if they are
    motivated by a moving play or a poignant
    novel to cry, they should utilize those cries
    and extend them for the Temple.
    But, the Aleinu Lishabei’ach says a better
    reason for rabbi Gamliel’s crying over the
    Temple. When he empathized over the
    double loss of this woman, it triggered in
    him that this could only happen because
    we don’t have a Temple. If we had the
    Temple, the ketores, the daily incense
    brought on the Altar would have protected
    us from such tragedies. The Mizbei’ach
    HaChitzon, the Outer Altar, which makes
    peace between us and our Father in Heaven

    would have forestalled such calamities.
    So too, as we reflect upon the double
    tragedy experienced in Staten Island, a
    proper reaction is to mourn over the
    absence of the Beis HaMikdash whose
    cloak of protection would have surely
    safeguarded these two wonderful women.
    We might add that as so many of our
    brothers and sisters are suffering
    economically, either because of the
    tuition crisis or the parnassah crisis, we
    mourn over the absence of the Shulchan
    in the Beis HaMikdash from which
    emanated a blessing for the financial
    prosperity of Klal Yisroel.

    This should spur us to have more kavana-
    concentration and devotion when we say

    Ki leeshuascha kivinu kol hayom-for your
    salvation we hope every day, in our daily
    shmone esray. When we say Racheim na
    Hashenm Elokeinu al Yisroel amecha
    v’alYerushalayim irecha-Have Mercy
    Hashem our God on Yisroel your nation
    and Yerushalayim your city, every time we
    bentch. And when we say thrice daily in
    Aleinu Al kain nekaveh lcha Hashem
    Elokeinu liros mheira bsifers oozecha-I,
    Therefore hope Hashem our God to see
    speedily your splendid might revealed.

    In the merit of our daily praying and
    pining for the Beis Hamikdash, may
    Hashem bless us with long life, good
    health, and everything wonderful.