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    YOM KIPPUR: THE POWER OF TESHUVA

    Reb Baruch Ber zt’l
    (Birchas Shmuel)
    excelled in the
    mitzvah of honoring
    his parents, and when
    his father was ill, he
    stayed with his father
    almost every night. One
    night, Reb Baruch Ber
    couldn’t be with his
    father, so he appointed
    someone to take care of
    his father.
    Unfortunately, his
    father was niftar that
    night. Reb Baruch Ber blamed himself for
    not being more devoted. “If I were with my
    father that night, perhaps he wouldn’t have
    died.”
    The shivah passed, but Reb Baruch Ber
    couldn’t return to yeshivah to give his
    shiurim. His spirits were down, and he was
    afflicted with guilt.
    He went to Radin to seek encouragement
    from the Chofetz Chaim zt’l. The Chofetz
    Chaim told him, “When one does teshuvah,
    he becomes a brand-new person. He isn’t
    the same person who did the aveirah. This is
    the reason teshuvah atones. He is no longer

    the person who committed the aveirah.”
    Reb Baruch Ber came out of the Chofetz
    Chaim’s house singing and dancing. He
    shouted, “I’m a new Baruch Ber! I’m a new
    person!”
    Chazal say that when one does teshuvah,
    he is like a newborn child. This is the root of
    his atonement. He isn’t the same person as
    before. He isn’t the person who performed
    the aveirah.
    On the night of Yom Kippur, we say the
    brachah of “shehechiyanu.” Rebbe
    Yissachar Dov of Belz zt’l asks that due to
    the awe and fear of the judgment, it doesn’t
    seem to be the right time to say shehechiyanu.
    He answers that we aren’t saying
    shehechiyanu on the yom tov; we are saying
    shehechiyanu on ourselves. Because when
    we do teshuvah, we become brand-new
    people.
    Another aspect of teshuvah is that it can
    turn an aveirah into a mitzvah. The Gemara
    (Yoma 86.) states “Teshuvah is great
    because the aveiros become merits.” There
    are different explanations for how this
    works, but that is the reality. When one does
    teshuvah through the love of Hashem, the
    aveirah turns into merits.

    The Bardichiver Rav zt’l told a great
    sinner, “I am jealous of you because when
    you do teshuvah, you will have so many
    mitzvos.” The man replied, “Just wait
    another year, and you will have even more
    reason to be jealous.”
    The Tiferes Shlomo (Radomsk) zt’l visited
    the renowned baal teshuvah, Reb Chaim
    Dovid Doctor zt’l, who was on his deathbed.
    Reb Chaim Dovid Doctor moaned, and the
    Tiferes Shlomo assumed he was crying over
    the sins of his youth. The Tiferes Shlomo
    told him “The early days will fall away.” He
    was telling him, “Don’t worry about the
    past. You did teshuvah, and you won’t be
    punished. Those early days aren’t part of
    your life.
    Reb Chaim Dovid Doctor replied, “Chas
    veshalom! I’m not mevater on a single day!”
    Reb Chaim Dovid Doctor didn’t want to
    lose one day of his life, not even those days
    when he was irreligious. Because since he
    did complete teshuvah, his previous days
    were counted among his merits.
    Rebbe Yitzchak Meir of Zinikov zt’l met
    someone very worried about his aveiros.
    Reb Yitzchak Meir told him the following
    idea that he heard from his father, the Apter
    Rav zt’l:
    The Navi (Yirmiyahu 50:20) discusses the
    era of Mashiach and states “In at that time,
    says Hashem, the sins of Yisrael will be
    sought, but they won’t be there. And [they
    will search for] the sins of Yehudah, but they
    will not find, for I will forgive those I leave
    over.” It seems from this pasuk that people
    will be searching for sins. Why?
    The Apter Rav zt’l explained that every
    aveirah is a zero. When one repents with
    love, the teshuvah is a number placed before
    the zeros and becomes a vast, significant
    number. In the future, people will look for
    sins because the aveiros will increase their
    merits and virtues.”