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    BEHALOTKHA: WHEN EVERYONE ELSE IS MAKING A SPLASH

    Parashat Beha’alotecha
    begins with the mitzvah of
    kindling the menorah.
    Each and every day,
    Aharon was to clean the oil
    lamps of the menorah in the
    Mishkan and light the candles.
    Rashi explains that this command is
    directly connected to the final section of
    the previous parashah, Parashat Naso,
    which tells of the special gifts and
    sacrifices brought by the nesi’im, the
    leaders of the tribes of Israel. In honor of
    the inauguration of the Mishkan, the
    leader of each tribe brought an elaborate
    series of sacrifices – except one: the tribe
    of Levi. Aharon, the leader of tribe, did
    not participate in this special celebration.
    And he felt left out. He felt upset.
    Hashem therefore told Moshe to remind
    Aharon of the great privilege he had to
    light the menorah each day. He was
    telling Aharon, in Rashi’s words, “Yours
    is greater than theirs.”

    Aharon was assured that he should not be
    disturbed by not taking part in the special
    offerings of the nesi’im, because he had
    the privilege of kindling the menorah
    each day.
    We have all experienced this feeling
    which Aharon had – and more than once.
    We have all had times when it seems as
    though everyone is “making a splash,”
    doing something big and monumental,
    except us.
    We look around and see one person
    making a fancy wedding, another one
    buying a beautiful house, somebody else
    hosting a lavish bake sale in his gigantic
    home, and someone donating a Sefer
    Torah and hosting a huge celebration.
    We look around at all these people and
    think, “What about me????”
    “I’m just struggling to get by, barely
    covering my bills, just trying to do my
    thing, preparing dinner, getting the kids
    set for school, and then waking up in the

    morning and doing the same.”
    Hashem’s response to Aharon
    is the response we need to
    give to ourselves whenever
    we feel “left out,” when we
    feel small and
    unaccomplished: “Yours is
    greater than theirs.”
    Your simple, day-to-day
    struggle is greater than the
    splash and the excitement!!!
    This is not to say, Heaven
    forbid, that there’s anything
    wrong with making large,
    festive semahot or making
    generous donations – just as there was
    nothing at all wrong with the nesi’im’s
    lavish gifts and offerings. These are all
    very beautiful and precious.
    But we need to remember that the simple,
    day-to-day struggle is something great.
    Sitting down and working out problems
    and difficulties, figuring out how to
    squeeze by with a limited budget – this is

    something great.
    Let us not allow the “splash” made by the
    people around us to define for us what
    success and failure are. Working within
    one’s circumstances and making the most
    of every situation is the greatest form of
    success.
    If we do that, then indeed, we are great
    and special, and we have no reason to
    feel left out.