il
|  
 |
Miracles
- Jews in recent times, too, have experienced
miraculous yeshuos - long-barren woman were blessed with children; sick
people whom medicine could not help were healed; older singles found
shidduchim; and countless other people were helped in many ways.
- Moshe S. was searching for a shidduch for years. Last Lag B’Omer, he called
Tzidkat Rashbi, and sponsored Chai Rotel mashke. He met his kallah just
one week later.
-
Baila had been married eleven years and was
childless. She told her husband about Chai Rotel, and they decided to do
it. Five weeks later, Baila conceived. Her beautiful son, now a
year-and-a-half old is her pride and joy.
-
Shalom Tzidkat
Rashbi. Thank you for your acknowledgement of my donation to Chai Rotel.
Gavriyah bat Sarah survived cancer and is now in complete remission B"h
Teffiloth work!
A Lag B'Omer Story
That year Lag B'Omer fell on a
Thursday night-Friday. Many of the celebrants elected to stay on for
Shabbat, knowing that the holy day emerging out of Lag B'Omer in the
presence of Rebbe Shimon would be an extraordinarily exalted occasion.
Friday
evening everyone prayed together, and the holiness and joy of the Shabbat
spirit was palpable. Then everyone turned to their lodging places, where
the pleasure of the holy day continued unabated throughout the evening
meals.
Early Shabbat morning, as soon
as the first streaks of light infiltrated the sky, the people returned to
the tombsite for the sunrise minyan. After them, the "regular" minyanim
took place, and finally, the chassidim arrived for the late-morning shift
in their own inimitable ecstatic style. Afterwards, when they too returned
to the large communal eating area, the happy singing of the earlier
arrivals left no doubt that the spirit of Shabbat joy was continuing to
expand with each passing moment.
But then, a loud bitter wail
shattered the shimmering atmosphere of Shabbat joy. A little boy, who had
come with his mother for his first haircut, had unaccountably fallen sick
and stopped breathing. Aid was given, but to no avail. He was dead, and
his broken mother was screaming uncontrollably. All the women around her
were crying too.
The word spread quickly. Almost
instantaneously, melancholy gloom replaced the exuberant rejoicing. The
singing stopped, the dancers froze; the mother's loud cries pierced every
heart.
Before they could recover from
their shock, a further development struck. The British Mandate police
assigned to keep order suddenly, without any warning, locked the gates of
the courtyard. They then announced that they were forced to take this
precaution because maybe the disease that had struck down the hapless
child was highly contagious, and they were obligated to do everything
possible to prevent it from proliferating.
Pandemonium spread. Many
families were divided by the padlocked gate; numerous little children were
cut off from their parents. The British police didn't seem to care, and
turned a deaf ear to every appeal. Masses of Jews were being prevented
from reaching Rebbe Shimon on the day of his celebration.
The stunned Jews still inside
pushed closer to the tomb site, to express their crushed hearts in fervent
prayer. Suddenly the crowd rippled, and like at the Splitting of the Red
Sea, a clear path miraculously opened. The grieving mother was staggering
determinedly towards the place of Rebbe Shimon, carrying her lifeless son
in her arms.
The sight was enough to break
every heart. Some sighed, some cried, others nodded their heads as if to
show understanding and empathy.
The distraught mother came up to
the tomb. She placed her son on the ground. Seemingly unaware of all the
people around her, in a quivering voice she spoke out through her tears,
"Oy! Tzadik! I, your humble maidservant, came here to honor you. Only you
know that in bringing my son here to you, I was fulfilling the vow I made
on this spot four years ago, before I merited to be a mother for the first
time. Yesterday we inaugurated him with joy and song in the mitzvah of
leaving peyot. And now, woe is me! How can I go home without my son!?"
All those present choked back
their sobs. No one dared to make a sound that might interfere with her
words.
The mother stopped crying. She
straightened up and took a deep breath. In a firm clear voice, she
pronounced: "Rebbe Shimon! I have laid my son on the ground next to you,
dead. Please do not disappoint me. Return my son to me alive and healthy
as he was when I brought him here to you. 'Yitgadal v'yitkadash shmei
rabbah' – “Exalted and blessed is His great name”, and also the name of
Rebbe Shimon Bar Yochai. Everyone knows that you are holy and He, our G-d,
is holy. Please give me back my son!"
She stopped speaking, and exited
the structure built around the tomb. Every other person present followed
her out. They closed the door after them, leaving the deceased child
behind, unattended.
A few minutes passed. From
inside, behind the closed doors, a weak voice was heard. "Mommy, water.
I'm so thirsty."
Everyone stood as if paralyzed,
trembling with conflicting emotions of fear and disbelief, of shock and
delight. The mother burst through the doors and swept up her child into
her arms. Everyone ran in and surrounded them, and spontaneously burst out
with overflowing hearts, "Blessed is He who enlivens the dead!"
The bewildered British quickly
re-opened the courtyard gates. The throngs of Jews impatiently standing
outside streamed back in. When they heard about the great miracle that had
just taken place, the thanksgiving and celebration multiplied sevenfold.
The sound of their enthusiastic
singing of the most popular "Bar Yochai" song (composed by the Kabbalist,
Rabbi Shimon Labia approximately 450 years ago) could be heard for miles
around - and, no doubt, penetrated to the highest heavens, including the
celestial abode of Rebbe Shimon.
"Bar Yochai, nimshachta
ashrecha, shemen sasson meihavarecha" - "Bar Yochai, fortunate are you,
anointed with joyous oil over and above your companions."
|
 |