Have Questions or Comments?
Leave us some feedback and we'll reply back!

    Your Name (required)

    Your Email (required)

    Phone Number)

    In Reference to

    Your Message


    TZAV: USING OUR BLESSINGS TO UPLIFT

    One of the mitzvot that
    apply on Purim
    ismatanot l’evyonim –
    the requirement to give
    charitable gifts to the
    poor.
    This obligation differs from the
    standard mitzva of tzedakah, in several
    ways. First, even a poor person who
    himself relies on charity is required to
    give matanot l’evyonim. Strange as it
    sounds, this means that after a pauper
    receives charity, he needs to take some
    of the money and give it to another poor
    person. Why?
    Another surprising feature of matanot
    l’evyonim is that we give to anyone
    who asks. Normally, we check to ensure
    that people who request charity are
    truly in need. On Purim, however, the
    halachah is that we give to everybody,
    without asking questions – and even to
    non-Jews who approach us and ask for
    assistance.
    Of course, on Purim we also spend a

    great deal of time giving mishloah
    manot – food packages to other
    people. We know that the people we
    give to have no need for yet another box
    of wafers or another bottle of wine.
    Yet, we give package after package.
    Together, these two mitzvot have the
    effect of turning Purim into a day of
    giving. We give and give. We generate
    so much joy, excitement and friendship
    by giving, by sharing what we have
    with other people. And this is why
    everyone has to do it, and why we give
    to everyone, and even give things that
    people don’t necessarily need.
    When we think of materialism, we
    tend to think of greed, of an insatiable
    lust for money. But Purim shows us that
    our material blessings can be used to
    uplift people, to inspire people, to bring
    people joy, to spread happiness all
    around us.
    One of the sacrifices which the Torah
    speaks about in Parashat Tzav is the
    korban toda, the thanksgiving offering,

    which one would bring to
    express his gratitude to
    Hashem. This sacrifice
    has several unique
    features – such as a
    limited timeframe for
    eating the food. Normally,
    when the Torah allows
    the person bringing a
    sacrifice to eat its meat
    (as opposed to allowing
    only the kohanim to eat
    the meat), the sacrifice
    may be eaten for two
    days. The korban todah,
    however, may be eaten only the day it
    was offered, and that night.
    The reason, it has been explained, is
    that when somebody celebrates a festive
    occasion, he is encouraged to invite his
    friends and relatives to join him. He
    should not celebrate alone. He must
    invite lots of people to join him – and so
    the Torah limits the timeframe when the
    meat can be eaten, to ensure that this
    individual’s personal celebration

    becomes a large festive gathering.
    We all, baruch Hashem, have received
    many blessings, of different kinds. The
    Torah teaches us that all our blessings
    can and must be used to uplift others, to
    bring joy to other people, to make the
    world a better and happier place. Just as
    we celebrated the Purim miracle by
    giving, so should we celebrate all the
    blessings in our lives by giving, sharing,
    and spreading happiness to as many
    people as we can.