B"H
THOUGHTS FOR THE EIGHTEENTH OF TEVES
Dear Friends:
What is the significance
of the Eighteenth of Teves?
Good question.
If you have read
my book, FROM CENTRAL PARK TO SINAI, you
will perhaps recall the passages (see below) describing
some of the most significant moments of my life, which
took place beginning at 2 am on Monday, January 10, 1966
in Ann Arbor, Michigan. In
later years, after we became observant, I discovered that
the Hebrew date of this event was the eighteenth day of
the month of Teves, which falls this year on Sunday night
and Monday, January 7 and 8 in the year 2007 of the Western
calendar.
About one month
ago, Leah and I had the privilege of returning to Ann Arbor,
Michigan, after an absence of forty years! We were
invited to speak to students at the University of Michigan
who are enrolled in the famous Maimonides Program under
the auspices of Rabbi Avrohom Jacobovitz. This was
a trip laden with spiritual significance for us, as we
visited our old home, 606 East Ann Street, where the following
event took place in 1966. Here is how I describe
it in FROM CENTRAL
PARK TO SINAI
At 2
a.m. on January
10, 1966 I awoke with a start.
Things
had not been going too well lately. Our marriage
seemed to be falling apart and I began to think I myself
was coming unraveled.
Through
all the years I had always done well academically, but
lately, in graduate school at Michigan ,
I couldn't concentrate. There was one course, Old
English, that I just couldn't deal with. I
kept getting bad marks, and I began to think I was cracking
from the strain. In graduate school, if you get bad
marks, you are in trouble. You're supposed to be
good to be there in the first place. I was afraid
I was going to be thrown out. I was afraid I was
going to be thrown out of my marriage. I was afraid
everything was spinning out of control.
Old English
finals were scheduled for Friday at 9:30
a.m. I had stayed up very late
Thursday night studying. Friday morning from some
distant place I heard the sound of an alarm clock. I
must have gone back to sleep. Sometime later, I groggily
opened my eyes.
"NO!"
"It couldn't
be."
9:20 !
I grabbed
clothes and ran out of the house. I jumped on my
bike. As I weaved through the Ann
Arbor traffic racing for the final,
tears streamed down my face. I'm cracking, I thought. My
life is coming to an end.
Saturday
night I was lying on that old green couch with the stuffing
coming out. I can see it now, thirty-four years later. I
couldn't breathe. I was so afraid. I didn't
know where to turn. I couldn't discuss the problems
because I felt so selfish, just talking about myself. But
the problems wouldn't go away, and I didn't know how to
make them go away.
When I
awoke at 2 a.m. I
was desperate. I saw a chasm opening in front of me, a
pit from which there was no escape. I looked back on my
life. I was twenty-three years old and we had been
married just over two and a half years. We loved
each other, but there was something between us; the tensions
were terrible.
I felt as if
my life were a long corridor, with many doors along each
side. I had opened each door, hundreds of doors. There
was a door for "hiking in the wilderness." A door for "singing
folk music." A door for "toughness" and "coolness." There
was a door for "political activism." A door to the
psychiatrist's office. A door for "writing poetry." A
door for studying "comparative religion" and a door for "The
Ethical Culture Society." Each door had led NOWHERE,
into a blank wall. Was there no door that led
to truth, to freedom, no door to sunshine and happiness?
I began to cry. I
was through. There was no future. I was dying. There
was no place I hadn't tried, no door I hadn't opened. I
was drowning. My life was ending. Can you
imagine this feeling? There was nothing to live for. No
hope.
I was
sliding: down, down, down.... falling through space. And
then, as I fell, a thought brushed by me. A little
thought, a little voice, like a feather floating by in
the midst of the void, a crazy little idea..
No, it
couldn't be true.
But then ...
WHAT ELSE
WAS THERE BESIDES DEATH?
All my life
I had been raised as a good American boy. I went to
the finest schools and met the most sophisticated people. NOBODY NORMAL BELIEVED
IN G-D . I mean, where is G-d? Maybe
thirteenth century monks believed in G-d, but
that was the Dark Ages. What else did they have
in life? But we lived in reality. This
was the Twentieth Century, the enlightened blossoming of
world culture, the age of science and technology. We are
liberated. I mean, just where is G-d? I
don't see Him. I can't touch Him. I'm supposed
to believe in something I can't see?
But there was
one big problem.
If all that
stuff were true, how come I - the sophisticated product of
the culmination of all civilization - was a total failure
who couldn't succeed at even the simplest things in life? I
couldn't breathe. I couldn't prevent myself from getting
angry and alienating those I cared about. I was a slave.
I "knew" that G-d didn't
exist.
The problem
was that I felt I also didn't exist.
Something
was terribly wrong.
Suddenly,
I began to turn the whole question around. Like Hagar
in the desert, my eyes opened and I saw something I had
never seen before. There was one unopened door in that
long corridor. Why had I never noticed that door
before? It was the door to G-d.
I had
been sure G-d did not exist. But now that
my own life seemed to be falling apart, I began to wonder.
Maybe
I had to turn the whole thing upside down. When
I examined it, it was very logical. When I was
honest about my life, I saw that I did not exist -
my life was empty - and at that time I was sure that G-d did
not exist.
But what
if G-d did exist? Maybe then
I could also exist. Maybe my existence
depends on G-d.
Maybe
there was a life I hadn't even dreamed about. Maybe
if G-d were really alive I could be alive. Maybe
I had been looking at things "upside down" or "backwards" or "inside
out."
Why
did my intelligence have to be the measuring rod of reality? Maybe
I did not understand and G-d did understand. Did
I have to comprehend something for it to be real? Was
I the center of the universe? Maybe there was a
reality beyond my understanding.
I began to have
this crazy thought. Could G-d exist? No,
it's crazy. CRAZY! All my life I had been raised
on "reality." No normal person believed in G-d .
And then
I began to wonder if I had ever met any normal people.
They say
there are no atheists in the foxhole. I was in a
spiritual foxhole. I was fighting for my life in
a "war to end all wars." My entire civilization was
falling apart. I felt the coldness of death and black
nothingness where chaos reigns. I was terribly afraid.
When you
are drowning you grab the life preserver. You don't
ask questions. I was drowning, and all of a sudden
out of the sky came this life preserver. I
grabbed it.
What choice
did I have? I wanted to live!
G-d, do
You exist? Could You exist?
Dawn was
beginning to break in Ann Arbor as
a new light began to glow inside me. All of a sudden,
I started to have this incredible feeling of hope, a new
idea that would enable me to live.
Do you think
we survive on "bread"? No, we survive on ideas. Our
life emanates from our soul and our soul emanates from G-d. "Some
[trust] in chariots, some in horses ... but we [trust] in
the name of G-d." [1] This "crutch" that
I had always rejected, the "opiate of the masses," maybe
this was the missing link.
As the
sun rose, I picked up a pen and began to write. A
volcano of thought and emotion exploded onto my paper. I
began to reassess my entire life. All of a sudden
I let G-d enter my soul and the sun came up.
Can I
describe to you the feeling of hope I had? For the
first time in my life I felt what it is like to live without
fear. I thought to myself that something good and
all-powerful governs the universe and that tremendous Force
would take care of me, through everything, internal and
external, that life would throw in my way. There
was something more powerful than Mr. Hyde. There
was Someone to protect me, Someone to take care of me,
Someone to show me the way.
I happened
to look in the mirror. I saw my face, but it was
not the face I had always looked at. It was a shining
face, a radiant face, mine but not the old face. It
was what I could be, or what I really was. Maybe
I wasn't a monster, after all. Maybe I wasn't crazy.
I think
I sat for a few days writing, with words ceaselessly pouring
out. For the first time, I could permit myself to
see the truth of my old life, the agony, the stifled cries,
the constant fear. I could let myself see it because
now I knew that there was another way, a path to freedom.
Every
year since then I have had a personal holiday on the night
of January 9/10, the anniversary of my liberation from
hell.
Thus ends
the account in FROM CENTRAL PARK TO
SINAI. Thirty five years to the
day after this event, we celebrated the birth of a grandson,
Yaakov Moshe ha Kohain Hess, in the Holy City of Yerushalayim!
Now it is
forty one years to the day after that event.
What exactly
happened on that fateful day? It is my opinion that
an angel appeared to me in Ann Arbor , Michigan ,
an angel dispatched by G-d to rescue me, my
wife and our future family from the hell in which I had lived
for twenty three years. Perhaps I had uttered a prayer
in my agony, a prayer which escaped from my heart and my
lips unbeknownst to me even though I "did not believe" either
in prayer or in G-d!
Of course,
in our deepest levels of consciousness, we all know that G-d rules
the universe that He created. We are sometimes, however,
too full of pride to admit that there could be Anyone above
us Who rules the entire creation! I was full of pride,
but also full of pain, and so perhaps, the pain prevailed
for one millisecond and a prayer went up to G-d, a
prayer which was heard with its accompanying tears! And G-d, in
His mercy, sent to me, that poor pathetic creature in the
prison of his pride, an angel who unlocked the door and freed
me so that I could make my way to G-d and His
Torah.
And so today,
on the forty first anniversary of the unlocking of the prison
in which I had incarcerated myself, I thank G-d for
my existence and all His countless blessings, among which
are the fact that He introduced me to my eternal soul-mate,
Leah, and blessed us with a beautiful family of holy children
and their children. May we all live in health
and strength along with Klal Yisroel and welcome as
one Moshiach ben Dovid soon in our days. The
blessings go on and on: I also thank our wonderful parents,
who bequeathed to us souls that searched for purity in this
polluted world; Rebbetzin Esther Jungreis, who first opened
our eyes to the Torah some thirty three years ago, and all
the countless holy teachers and friends who have helped us
so much along the way. G-d 's bounty is
truly endless!
If you ever
feel that you are living in darkness, please read this and
know that G-d will always provide light for
us to emerge from the darkness, no matter how black it may
seem. I want to give you just one contemporary example
of that, from an insight provided by our daughter Rebbetzin
Yaffa Jungreis.
Last Sunday
we Jews commemorated the Fast of the Tenth Day of Teves,
the anniversary of the day 2448 years ago on which Nebuchadnezzer
surrounded the City of Jerusalem before
the destruction of the First Temple . Since
then, it has never been the same for the Children of Israel. Even
during the days of the Second Temple ,
in many ways we suffered exile, sometimes figuratively and
often literally. But our Prophets and Rabbis tell us
that in the End of Days we will be completely redeemed and
our Temple will be rebuilt, never
to be destroyed again.
Do you think
the world is completely hopeless now? It often looks
that way. But Rebbetzin Yaffa pointed out an amazing
thing to me. On Shabbos, one week ago, when we read
the Portion of Vayigash, which describes the
reunion of Joseph and his brothers, Saddam Hussein of Iraq was
executed. Saddam Hussein had described and viewed himself
as a reincarnation of Nebuchadnezzer. He set out to
destroy Jerusalem just as his predecessor
had done and just as his neighbor, the president of Iran ,
would like to do.
But on the
day before the Fast of Teves, the day on which Nebuchadnezzer
began the siege of Jerusalem so
long ago, Saddam Hussein's violent life ended violently. So
will it be for all those who desire to hurt the Holy Nation
of Israel.
The Guardian
of Israel does
not slumber and does not sleep. [2]
Redemption
is near!
Whether in Ann
Arbor or Yerushalayim, we must now open
our hearts to Torah and to reconciliation and unity among
our people.
May we soon
hear the sound of the Shofar Gadol. May the
18th Day of Teves be a day of blessing for the
Nation of Israel and the entire world.
With gratitude,
Roy S. Neuberger