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    BEHAALOSCHA: TWO APPROACHES FOR STAYING ENTHUSIASTIC ABOUT MITZVOS

    There is a famous
    Rashi at the beginning
    of Parshas
    Beha’alosecha which
    we comment on
    almost every year.
    Aharon was given the
    mitzva of lighting the
    Menorah every day in the Beis HaMikdash.
    The Torah says: “And Aharon did so, toward
    the face of the Menorah he kindled its lamps,
    as Hashem had commanded Moshe.”
    (Bamidbar 8:3) Rashi comments on the
    words “And Aharon did so” that “This is
    stated to tell the praise of Aharon in that he
    did not deviate.”
    On a simple level, Rashi is saying that this
    pasuk is a testimony to Aharon that he did not
    change what he was supposed to do.
    Everybody asks on this Rashi, what else
    would we expect of Aharon? Of course he did
    not deviate!
    In past years, we quoted the famous vort of
    the Sefas Emes (Rav Yehuda Aryeh Leib
    Alter, 1847-1905). Now, we are sharing a
    vort from the Ishbitzer Rebbe (Rav Mordechai
    Leiner, 1801-1854), which also tries to
    understand this Rashi, but has a totally

    different take on this question.
    The Sefas Emes says that when a person does
    something over and over again, by the
    thousandth time, it becomes a little
    monotonous and the person loses his
    enthusiasm. This is the time of year when
    schools let out for the summer. If you look at
    children coming into school on the first day
    of school in September or you look at the
    teachers on the first day of school, you can
    see an excitement and a passion for learning.
    However, in June, you can see the proverbial
    “child running away from school.” Why?
    Because it has become “Same old, same
    old… Day in, day out, same thing.” That is
    the way it is with people.
    If you ever see a Bar Mitzvah bochur putting
    on Tefillin for the first time, you see how
    carefully he wraps the straps around his arm
    to make sure that they are equidistant from
    each other and so on and so forth. After a
    person puts on Tefillin for thirty or forty
    years, his level of meticulousness is not the
    same. That is the way people are. Enthusiasm
    wanes.
    The Sefas Emes explains that this is what
    Rashi is saying. The Torah states the praise of

    Aharon that no matter how long or
    for how many years he lit the
    Menorah, his enthusiasm for the
    mitzvah never waned.
    The Ishbitzer, on the other hand,
    says that the word “sheenah” (in
    Rashi’s expression “melamed
    shelo sheenah“) can mean
    something else. It can mean that
    Aharon never did it the same way
    twice. He didn’t repeat. Each day
    he had a different kavannah
    (intent and focus) when he lit the
    Menorah. The hadlakas
    haMenorah of yesterday was not the same as
    the hadlakas haMenorah of today and
    tomorrow will yet again be a different
    hadlakas haMenorah.
    These are two different approaches to Rashi,
    but the similarity is that either there was a
    tremendous enthusiasm which did not wane,
    or there was newness with every single
    lighting of the Menorah that introduced a
    new kavannah with each new day.
    We just finished Parshas Nasso, the longest
    parsha in the Torah. It is not, however, the
    hardest parsha in the Torah because a good

    part of it is just repetition. Everyone asks why
    the Torah needs to repeat the offering of each
    nasi, even though they were identical to the
    offerings of the previous day’s nasi. The
    answer is that even though it was the same
    offering, each nasi had a special kavannah.
    We can relate to that, because we know that
    for different folks there are different strokes.
    Each person thinks in his own unique way.
    But it is perhaps even more noteworthy for
    the same person, doing the same thing over
    and over again, to have a unique kavannah
    each time. That is the praiseworthy attribute
    of Aharon haKohen.