War and Revenge

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A Message from the Kalever Rebbe
Parshas Vayechi 5784

Resist the Temptation to Seek Revenge

Samson in the Temple of the Philistines. Yahuda Haggadah Germany 1470-1480

Samson in the Temple of the Philistines. Yahuda Haggadah, Germany 1470-1480

shabbes in edison

"Shabbos Chizuk" with the Rav Shlita - Edison/Highland Park, NJ

"Yoseif wept when they spoke to him". (Breishis 50:17)


The Temptation of Revenge

During war and conflict, a lot of people become absorbed by the news. They thirst for the latest updates; any tidbit that will make them feel like their side is "winning" the war.

Some people are spending a lot of time to search and look at images taken from the battlefield. They feel tempted to see more and more images of destroyed buildings, and injured and dead people, from their enemies. Because they want revenge. They want to see their enemies suffer for their aggressions.

However, this is not how a yid behaves. A yid must never seek revenge. It is an emotion that contradicts the emunah that is at the foundation of Yiddishkeit.

Emunah demands that a yid has faith that everything that happens in this world is the direct result of Hashem's Hashgacha Pratis, Therefore, when there is suffering and pain, when there is war and conflict, yidden don't seek revenge. Rather, they acknowledge and recognize that everything – including what has been done to them by others - all occurs with Hashem's Divine Intervention and Providence. As Chazal taught (Chulin 7a), a person cannot even move his finger if it was not decreed Above.

Certainly, people have free choice, and if a person choose to harm another, that person will be brought to justice as outlined by the laws of man and he will face the Heavenly courts for his evil actions. The victim, however, must accept that what has happened to him was ultimately decreed by the Heavens, and if this person had not inflicted that pain, Hashem would have sent other messengers to deliver that decree. The outcome would always be the same.


We Do Not Rejoice

There were times throughout history when the Jewish kings had to send their armies out to war. They would have to battle those who intended to harm the Jewish people and desecrate Hashem's Honor. However, even in the fog of war, they were careful to ensure that the soldiers never forget that the intention of the war was sincerely for the sake of Heaven. They would not allow themselves to be consumed with vengeance.

Shlomo HaMelech warned in Mishlei (24:17), "When your enemies fall, do not rejoice". Chazal explained (Yalkut Shemoni on Mishlei) that this pasuk is even referring to the Egyptians, and - they explained - this is the reason we do not recite the complete Hallel on the 7th day of Pesach, the day when the Egyptian army drowned in the sea.

During the plague of the Firstborns, the pasuk says (Shemos 12:22), "And you shall not leave the door of his house until morning". The Kadmonim explained, that if the Jews would have gone outside that night, they would have seen the Egyptians in complete agony over the deaths of their firstborn males. Seeing their slave masters suffering, might have roused a feeling of satisfaction and revenge. The Jews may have taken pleasure in the Egyptians' suffering, and this may implant cruelty in their heart. This cruelty would have caused them to fall from the lofty spiritual level they had achieved through the Korban Pesach.

The Seforim (Meshech Chachma, Shemos, 12:15 and others) note, that the non-Jewish nations, even the most civilized, celebrate their victories. When they win a war, that day becomes a holiday. The Jews, on the other hand, do not rejoice when their enemies fall. They don't celebrate their victories with a holiday.

Therefore, at Pesach, the Pasuk doesn't mention that we celebrate because the Egyptians suffered harsh judgements. Rather, we focus on the salvation that came solely because "Hashem took Bnei Yisroel out of Mitzrayim.

On Chanukah, we only celebrate and commemorate the miracle of the Menorah and the rededication of the Beis HaMikdash and the resumption of the service there. We don't commemorate the downfall of the Greeks.

We also do not celebrate Purim on the day that Haman was hanged or on the day when the enemies of the Jewish people were destroyed. Rather, we celebrate the day when there was a resolution and a salvation. We celebrate the day when they did not need to worry anymore about what would happen at the hands of their enemies. We do not celebrate their deaths.


Be Like a Serpent

The Seforim HaKedoshim (Siftei Tzadikim, Parshas Kedosim, and others) quote a teaching from the Baal Shem Tov, zt"l:

Chazal taught (Yoma 23a) "Any Torah scholar that does not take revenge and holds a grudge like a snake is not a Torah scholar". The Baal Shem Tov explained, that sometimes a Torah scholar is obligated by Torah law to punish evildoers who harm him. However, he must do so like a snake. When a snake kills and eats its prey, it does not rejoice because, as the Gemara explained (Taanis 8a), everything that a snake eats tastes to him like dirt. He does not enjoy it. Similarly, when a Torah scholar must take action against those who have harmed him, he must do so for Heaven's sake and not for his own pleasure. If he isn't careful to behave like this, then he isn't worth to be called a Torah scholar.

This provides an insight into the pasuk in our Parsha that says (Breishis 49:16-17), "Dan will be a snake on the road". Yaakov intended that Dan's descendant, Shimshon HaGibur, who would punish the Philistines to avenge the Jews, should not wage that war motivated by revenge. He should not take pleasure in the downfall of his enemies. Rather, he should be like a snake who eats his prey but does not enjoy it.


Don't Fight, Forgive

Throughout the generations, we have seen tremendously righteous tzaddikim who were harmed, victimized and disgraced by their detractors. There was an argument to be made that they should take action against these individuals, at least for the sake of the Torah's honor. Nevertheless, they chose not to act. They did nothing but offer forgiveness. They were afraid that if they acted, there might be the slightest subjectivity and the most minute enjoyment in their revenge. That remote possibility made them avoid taking actions at all costs.

These tzaddikim live with the pure faith that everything that happens in the world comes from the Heavens. Not only do they not take revenge. They worry about the well-being of their foes and they would pray for them to only have goodness.

My ancestor R' Issac from Kamarno, zt"l, relates that one-time R' Elimelech of Lizhensk, zt"l, was once struck by someone on the cheek. Instead of becoming angry or revengeful, chas v'shalom, R' Elimelech immediately declared: "Hashem, I forgive this person completely and joyously. Do not punish anyone because of me!"




A Lesson for the Brothers

Now we can have a deeper understanding of the pasuk quoted above:

Yoseif never had the smallest inkling to punish his brothers for selling him. He was never revengeful. Yoseif lived with the emunah that everything comes from Hashem. Therefore, he distanced himself from the very idea of revenge. It disgusted him.

Here, at this moment in the Parsha, after Yaakov has passed away, the brothers were worried that Yoseif will finally take his revenge. As they said (Breishis 50:15-17), Now Joseph's brothers saw that their father had died, and they said, "Perhaps Joseph will hate us and return to us all the evil that we did to him."

They sent messengers to Yoseif to deliver the message (Breishis 50:17), 'Please, forgive now your brothers' transgression and their sin, for they did evil to you. Now please forgive the transgression of the servants of the God of your father.' Joseph wept when they spoke to him.

Yoseif wept because this message pained him greatly. His brothers clearly felt that he would potentially take revenge because they felt that he lacked the proper emunah. Yoseif wept when he realized what his brothers thought of him. As Chazal taught in Yoma (19b) that the High Priest would retire and cry if he was suspected by others of being a Tzedoki.

Therefore, later when he confronts them, he says (ibid 50:20), "[but] God designed it for good". He was telling them that he had the emunah that everything in this world comes from the Heavens and Hashem does everything solely for one's good. When a person has this faith, they meticulously try to avoid being tempted by the desire for revenge.

 

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