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    KI SAVO: THE GREATNESS OF EVERY YID

    Many yungerleit in Eretz
    Yisrael don’t own a car.
    Although financially
    easier, and the bus
    system is good, taking
    buses can make traveling
    long and tiresome.
    Sometimes, a person
    can spend most of his
    day on busses.
    Such happened to a
    yungerman from
    Kiryat Gat. After he
    davened shacharis at
    the netz, he took a bus
    to Yerushalayim, to be
    menachem avel a
    friend. As soon as he
    arrived at his friend’s
    house and sat down, he got a phone call. He
    would have ignored it, but it was his father, so
    he went to the back of the room and answered
    the call.
    “I have a medical procedure in Ramat Gan
    today, around noon, and I want someone to be
    there with me. Can you be there?”
    “Certainly. I’m in Yerushalayim now, but I’ll
    be there as soon as possible.”
    He apologized to his friend that he couldn’t
    stay longer, was menachem avel quickly and
    left to catch the next bus to Bnei Brak, from

    where he would take yet another bus to Ramat
    Gan.
    On the bus to Ramat Gan, his father called to
    tell him that the procedure was completed.
    and that he didn’t need to come. As it turned
    out, he spent half of the day on buses, and the
    only mitzvah he performed was a brief
    nichum aveilim.
    He got off the bus and crossed the street. It
    was time to head home. He would take a bus
    back to Bnei Brak and then another bus to
    Kiryat Gat. The automated sign at the bus
    stop showed that the next bus would arrive in
    half an hour. He had some time to refresh
    himself. He went to a convenience store and
    asked the non-religious storekeeper if he
    could use the restroom. The storekeeper
    readily agreed.
    The yungerman asked, “Can I leave this bag
    with you for a moment until I come out?”
    “Why don’t you take it into the bathroom with
    you and watch it yourself?”
    “I have my tallis and tefillin in this bag, and it
    isn’t proper to bring them into the bathroom.”
    The storeowner’s eyes sparkled. “Can I put on
    your tefillin?”
    “Of course! It will be my privilege.”
    When he returned, he found this irreligious
    Yid wearing tefillin on his tattooed arm on his
    bald-shaven head, wearing a tiny kipa.
    The storeowner said, “I’m not religious, but I

    put on tefillin every morning. Today, I didn’t
    have time to put on tefillin in the morning,
    and I came to work without tefillin. I prayed
    that Hashem help me wear tefillin today. I
    was certain Hashem would help. And as you
    see, now I’m wearing tefillin.”
    The yungeman thought, “I thought I did
    almost nothing this morning, but I helped a
    Yid wear tefillin.”
    And then the yungerman had another inspiring
    thought: “Yesterday, if you would have asked
    me the worth of an irreligious Yid’s mitzvas
    tefillin, I would have said not much. How
    precious could it be? But I discovered how
    important it was for him to put on tefillin, and
    Hashem had me make this long trip just to
    help him. So, I guess I misjudged to what
    extent Hashem loves our mitzvos.”
    Bikurim teaches us this lesson as well.
    The Mishnah (Bikurim 3:3) states, “When the
    people bringing bikurim arrived close to
    Yerushalayim, the [elders from Yerushalayim]
    came out to greet them. All craftsmen in
    Yerushalayim stood up for them and greeted
    them.” They received immense honor. The
    Yismach Yisrael (Savo 1) explains that this is
    to teach us the value of every mitzvah
    performed by any Yid. It is to let us know that
    one deserves endless respect for every
    mitzvah he performs.
    The mitzvah of bikurim is relatively easy. It

    isn’t expensive. The first phase of this mitzvah
    can even be performed in one’s thoughts. If
    one thinks, “This fruit should be bikurim,” it
    becomes bikurim. The immense honor they
    received teaches us that there is no such thing
    as a simple mitzvah. Every mitzvah is
    extremely precious.
    The Yismach Yisrael writes, “The honored
    kohanim and gizbarim (gabaim) of the beis
    haMikdash came out to greet them to show
    them that even a simple mitzvah from the
    simplest person — and even just a good
    thought — is accepted by Hakadosh Baruch
    Hu with desire and compassion. All malachim
    put many crowns on his head. Each person,
    no matter who he is, can get chizuk from this.
    Even if he only performed one mitzvah during
    his entire life or had one good thought, it is
    also enough. He should be embarrassed about
    all the times he didn’t grasp an opportunity to
    perform a mitzvah. Now that he sees the vast
    value of the mitzvos, he should be embarrassed
    that he lost out in the past on opportunities to
    perform mitzvos.”