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    SUKKOS: ESROG

    Tzaddikim said that
    if people knew the
    value of the esrog, they would spend all the
    money in the world to acquire it.
    The Gemara (Succah 41) tells us that
    Raban Gamliel once paid one thousand zuz
    for an esrog. “This teaches us how much
    they loved the mitzvos.”
    Until not very long ago, esrogim in Eastern
    Europe were extremely expensive because
    they had to be imported from Italy or other
    countries. In those days, there were only
    one or two esrogim per community, and
    they were costly. Therefore, for months in
    advance, the Jewish community would save
    up money for this purchase, and they did
    so with joy, for they wanted to keep this
    precious mitzvah.
    One year, there were very few esrogim,
    so the Vilna Gaon zt’l gave a couple of his
    students a large sum of money and told
    them to seek an esrog.
    The students searched hard, but there
    wasn’t anything available. Finally, they
    found someone who had an esrog. However,
    this man wasn’t an esrog merchant; he

    wanted the esrog for himself. The students
    offered him a lot of money, but he refused to
    part from his esrog.
    They explained to him that they needed it
    for the Vilna Gaon. So he agreed to sell it
    to them on the
    condition that
    he would be
    accredited with
    the reward for
    the mitzvah.
    The students
    feared that the
    Vilna Gaon
    wouldn’t be
    happy with this
    condition, but
    as they didn’t
    have another
    esrog, they
    agreed to those terms.
    The Vilna Gaon was extremely happy when
    he heard about the condition. He explained
    that this was his opportunity to perform
    the mitzvah entirely leshmah. He won’t be
    getting Olam HaBa for the mitzvah, so his
    only gain and intention will be to make a
    nachas ruach for Hashem.
    Reb Yohonoson Eibshitz’s zt’l would

    spend a lot of money to purchase a beautiful
    esrog. By the testimony of his student,
    Reb Hirsch of Hessin zt’l, Reb Yohonoson
    Eibshitz zt’l would buy an esrog, and if he
    found a more beautiful one, he would buy
    that one. And then,
    if he found an even
    more beautiful esrog,
    he would buy that
    one, too. His succah
    was also decorated
    with costly items. His
    students write, “All the
    money of his house was
    valueless to him when it
    came to loving Hashem
    and His mitzvos.”
    There are different
    versions of the
    following story, and I

    will write it as I received it:
    Rebbe Michel of Zlotchev zt’l was very
    poor. Sometimes, his children went hungry.
    But there was nothing the family was able
    to do. There was no money in the home.
    Actually, there was one item of value. It
    was an inheritance- the holy tefillin of Reb
    Michel Zlotchever’s father, Reb Yitzchak of
    Derohovitz zt’l, but Reb Michel refused to
    sell them.
    His Rebbetzin zt’l pleaded many times
    that he sell the tefillin to support their
    family, but Reb Michel refused. Once,
    a wealthy person came to Zlotchev and
    offered a lot of money for the tefillin,
    but Rebbe Michel turned down the offer.
    “My father’s tefillin aren’t for sale,” he
    explained simply.
    But then came a year when there were
    hardly any esrogim in Eastern Europe.
    An esrog merchant came to Zlotchev
    with an esrog, but he asked for a lot of
    money. Reb Michel sold the tefillin and
    bought the esrog for fifty reinish. Rebbe
    Michel’s joy was endless. He had a
    beautiful esrog for yom tov.
    His Rebbetzin wanted to know how
    he had money to buy the esrog, but Reb
    Michel didn’t respond. She asked again
    until he told her that he had sold the
    tefillin. She angrily said, “I asked you
    to sell the esrog for our family, but you
    refused, and now you sold it?!” And
    with that, she bit into the esrog.
    Rebbe Michel said, “Ribono Shel
    Olam! I don’t have the tefillin anymore.
    I don’t have an esrog either. Should
    I also be angry? That would be yet
    another loss!
    That night, he saw his father in his
    dream. His father told him that it was a
    great deed when he sold the tefillin to buy
    the esrog, but his second deed, that he
    controlled his anger, was an even greater

    accomplishment. His
    father said, “Your
    ability to control
    your anger was more
    precious in heaven
    than your mesirus
    nefesh to buy the
    esrog. In the merit of
    your restraint, many gezeiros raos [harsh
    decrees] were annulled.”
    B’derech Tzachos, the Tiferes Shlomo zt’l
    explained what we could gain by spending
    a lot of money to buy the four minim. He
    explains that by the judgment of Rosh
    Hashanah and Yom Kippur, the Satan
    tells on the aveiros of the Jewish nation.
    Malachim counter the Satan and say, “The
    Jewish nation isn’t guilty of their sins. You,
    the Satan, are guilty because you convinced
    them to sin.”
    “Why did they listen to me?” The Satan
    replies. “They are a wise nation, and they
    should have ignored my enticements.”
    “They aren’t as wise as you think,” the
    malachim reply. “Just wait a few days, and
    I will show you just how gullible they are.”
    A few days later, they buy an esrog, a citrus
    fruit with a retail value of a few cents, and
    they pay a lot of money for it. The malachim
    say, “Just see how easily they are tricked.”
    So, the Satan remains guilty for their sins,
    and they are signed for a good year.
    The Berdichiver Rav zt’l relates that he
    once saw the Satan and asked him why he
    appeared so sad.
    The Satan said, “A shipload of esrogim is
    arriving, and I’m very upset about that. The
    Gemara (Succah 38.) says that when Yidden
    shake the four minim, it is like arrows in my
    eyes.”
    Sometime later, the Berdichever Rav
    found the Satan, and this time the Satan
    was happy. “Why are you so happy?” the
    Bardichever Rav asked. “Just a while ago,
    you were sad because a shipload of esrogim
    was arriving.”
    The Satan laughed and said, “I’m happy
    because the ship with the esrogim sank.”
    Chol HaMoed Succos, the Satan was sad
    again. The Berdichever Rav asked him what
    the cause for his sadness was.”
    The Satan replied, “This year, most Yidden
    didn’t shake lulav, but they all yearned
    immensely for the mitzvah, and their
    yearning was very precious to Hashem.
    Additionally, a few Yidden somehow found
    a way to buy esrogim at very high prices,
    and they were extremely happy with the
    mitzvah. All these matters (the desire, the
    price, and the joy) are very precious to
    Hashem, even more than had all the esrogim
    arrived.”