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The newly released book “Exhilarating Torah Insights on Recreation and Vacation” is now available (as a paperback, hardcover and digitized version) for purchase and delivery on Amazon at https://www.amazon.com/dp/B0DF4ZHPKJ or by sending a WhatsApp to +972 54 849 5217. Alternatively, you can call 054 849 5217 (Israel) or 917 732 2371 (United States) or send an email to [email protected].

This insightful and thought-provoking book delves into these questions and many more, offering profound insights. With over 50 meticulously crafted essays, it masterfully conveys the Torah’s perspective on recreation and vacation. As an indispensable guide, this work will enable readers to attain a deeper understanding of these important topics.

It makes a great gift for parents, siblings, friends, relatives, neighbors, business associates, acquaintances and learning partners. Purchase it at https://amzn.to/3eyh5xP.

Some of the questions discussed in this book are the following.

What role does recreation play in our service of Hashem?

What does the Torah teach us about music?

What lessons can we glean from specific types of recreation, such as sports?

Is there a mitzvah to take a vacation?

What does the Torah say about comedy and humor?

To join the thousands of recipients and receive these insights free on a weekly email, obtain previous articles, feedback, comments, suggestions (on how to spread the insights of this publication further, make it more appealing or anything else), to sponsor this publication which has been in six continents and more than forty countries, or if you know anyone who is interested in receiving these insights weekly, please contact the author, Rabbi Yehoshua Alt, at [email protected]. Thank you.

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לעילוי נשמת שמואל אביגדור בן יצחק מאיר

These Torah articles can also be viewed in French and Hebrew at https://www.dirshu.co.il/category/הורדות-עלונים.

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Rabbi Alt merited to learn under the tutelage of R’ Mordechai Friedlander ztz”l for close to five years. He received Semicha from R’ Zalman Nechemia Goldberg ztz”l. Rabbi Alt has written on numerous topics for various websites and publications and is the author of the books, Fascinating Insights and Incredible Insights. His writings inspire people across the spectrum of Jewish observance to live with the vibrancy and beauty of Torah. He lives with his wife and family in a suburb of Yerushalayim where he studies, writes, and teaches. The author is passionate about teaching Jews of all levels of observance.

Please feel free to print some copies of this publication and distribute them in your local shul for the public, thereby having a hand in spreading Torah.

Cool Combination

The gemara[1] enlightens us by telling us that מחשבה טובה מצרפה למעשה, a good thought (if one entertains the thought of fulfilling a mitzva) is regarded as a good deed. The wordמצרפה  doesn’t seem to be the right fit in this context as it literally means to combine. Why doesn’t the gemara instead say מחשבה טובה נחשב כמעשה, a good thought is considered like a good deed?

 

R’ Zusha of Anipoli[2] explains that many times a Jew performs a mitzva out of rote.[3] Consequently, in such a situation, the מחשבה, the proper thought and intent, is lacking. However we do have the מעשה, action. On the other hand, at times, a person has the מחשבה, thought, to do a good deed but for some reason he is unable to execute it. What comes out is that one Jew has the מחשבה while the other has the מעשה. Each one is like a half a mitzva. What does Hashem do? He takes these two and matches them with each other. As a result, together it is a complete mitzva because when the two are combined we have a מחשבה and a מעשה. This is why the term מצרפה is employed here.

 

In October 1940, during the Holocaust, the Piacetzna Rebbe wrote that the Akeida was a test of the desire and intention of Avraham and Yitzchak. it was never actually completed because the malach told Avraham אל תעש לו מאומה, do not do anything to Yitzchak.[4] As a result the murder of a Jew by idolators, which as an action empty of devout intent is in total contrast to the Akeida, actually completes the Akeida. The Akeida was just the beginning, the expression of intent and desire, while the murder of a Jew is the completion of the act. Consequently, the Akeida and all the murderers of Jews since are components of one event.[5] So Jews killed Al kidush Hashem are the completion and perfection of Akeidas Yitzchak. The Akeida was intention without action, but for many killed in the Holocaust it was action without intent.



[1] Kidushin 40a.

[2] The wife of R’ Zusha had a dress sewn by a local tailor. The tailor expressed to her his poor state saying that his daughter who was a kalla still didn’t have a dress for the wedding. As a result she gave him the dress he sewed as a present. When she told this to her husband R’ Zusha, he asked her if she paid him for sewing the dress. She volleyed back, “Why should I pay him?  I gave it to him as a present.” He answered, “When you gave it to him to sow he worked for you and do there was a mitzva of לא תעשק שכיר, you shouldn’t cheat a hired person, as well as ביומו תתן שכרו, you should pay his hire on that day (Devarim 24:14-15). When he worked, he worked for you. You gave him the dress as a present only afterwards.”

[3] The Kotzker Rebbe once remarked that he believed he could bring the dead back to life but he much preferred to try to bring the living back to life!

[4] Breishis 22:12.

[5] Aish Kodesh, 140.

Writer of the weekly Fascinating Insights Torah sheet in Englishעברית ,אידיש and français
image.gifAuthor of Nine Books including the recently released “Exhilarating Torah Insights on Recreation and Vacation

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