Showing posts with label netivot shalom. Show all posts
Showing posts with label netivot shalom. Show all posts

Monday, September 3, 2012

The Netivot Shalom on the Root of One's Soul

an excerpt from Netivot Shalom on Pirkei Avot on the mishnah "Shimon the Righteous was one of the last survivors of the Great Assembly.  He used to say: On three things the world stands: on the Torah, on the service, and on deeds of loving kindness." 

"This can also be understood by way of divine service: the world stands upon the personal world of each and every person, because each and every person is a microcosm. And as it is taught in "Yesod Ha'avodah"[1] in the name of the Holy Ari, from the day of the creation of the world each and every person has been assigned a certain task to be carried out in accordance to the root of his soul and it is for the rectification of that particular matter that he came down into this world. And it is also written that each and every day since the creation of the world comes with a special task that must be rectified on that very day, so that every person every day is like a special creation and a microcosm.
It is in this context that Shimon the Righteous comes to show how a Jew can make his world stand when confronted with crises in his life in such a way that he may fulfill his task and purpose in his world. The 
mishnah introduces him as having been "one of  the last survivors of the Great Assembly" in order to say that after the demise of the members of the Great Assembly he came to teach the last generation what possibilities are still open for a Jew to fulfill his task and purpose in the midst of life's turmoil: when dark forces overwhelm him and he is surrounded by troubles, how can he fulfill his task and purpose in his own personal world for which he had come into the world. Concerning this it is said that his own personal world "stands", on the three things that strengthen a Jew's stand so that he can fulfill his task and purpose in any situation and through this rectify that which pertains to the root of his soul.




[1] "Yesod Ha'avodah" by Rabbi Avraham Weinberg Alter of Slonim (1804 or 1809 - 1883)

Wednesday, August 29, 2012

The Netivot Shalom on Pirkei Avot

It was in a mussar class with Rabbi Ira Stone that I first heard about Rabbi Shalom Noach Berezovsky (or Brazovsky) of Slonim's zt"l writings on Pirkei Avot. Subsequently I bought the book, started reading it and wanted to know more about its author and his teachings.

With one exception* Rabbi Shalom Noach Berezovsky's teachings are available only in Hebrew. His main opus is called Netivot Shalom, "Pathways of Peace" and, in the tradition of calling a Rebbe by the title of his main work, its author is also known as "the Netivot Shalom". In its entirety it consists of seven volumes, five devoted to commentaries on the Torah and two containing more general writings on mussar, Torah and holidays. Like most of the other publications by the Mechon Emunah Ve'Daat associated with the Beit Avraham Slonim yeshiva in Jerusalem, these volumes are beautifully produced and a delight to hold in hand, look at and learn from.
The Va'Yikra volume, in addition to the commentaries on the weekly parasha, also contains the Netivot Shalom's schmuessen on selected sayings from the six chapters of Mishnah Pirkei Avot. In his wisdom, the publisher has also made available large photocopied excerpts from the volumes in low cost pamphlet form. "Netivot Shalom on Pirkei Avot" (נתיבות שלום על פרקי אבות) was one of the first such publications, followed by others on Chanukkah, Purim and the Holocaust.

I continued reading the Netivot Shalom on Pirkei Avot in chevruta with someone who has a great love and knowledge of Pirkei Avot: every Shabbat we would devote some time to reading and translating a little. The Hebrew text is not particularly difficult, but one must bear in mind that it is a transcription of the Rabbi's sichot kodesh, "holy talks," delivered  at the seudah shlishit during summer Shabbats**. As such, they display some of the elliptic and repetitious nature that oral teachings tend to have. Although in the beginning these might be a distraction, as one reads on they coalesce into something familiar and become the Rabbi's voice.
As we read on, I started taking notes of what we had translated and ended up with a full translation of the first chapter and parts of some others. Together with my chevruta we brought the translations to an adult class and the translation of the first sicha, on "A person who wants to be saintly should fulfill the precepts of Avot," is now available here.

* "Nesivos Sholom : Haharugoh Olecha - Essential Perspectives on the Holocaust "
**In Slonim, like in other chassidic communities, the seudah shlishit is an exalted occasion: it is what the Zohar calls the ra'ava d'ravin, the "most favorable of favorable" times for being in presence of the divine.