Categories: In Print / Sivan Rahav-Meir
Carrying the Light Forward

Keeping His Light Alive
One year ago, on the ninth of the Hebrew month of Sivan, 21-year-old IDF soldier Sgt. Eliyahu Moshe Zimbalist was killed in Gaza. He had made aliyah with his family from Silver Spring, Maryland, lived in Beit Shemesh, and studied at Yeshivat Shaalvim.
A Story About a Jerusalem Grocery Store
On Friday afternoon, Meir Shua was getting ready to close his grocery store, located on Ussishkin Street in Jerusalem. But just as he was about to lock up, he realized that the key was missing. He searched high and low and when he couldn’t find it. He asked the family members who help run the store with him for a spare key, but the closest one was in Ashkelon.
Kindling the Spark
In this week’s parasha, Beha'alotcha, Aharon the high priest is commanded to light the lamps in the Mishkan. Rashi comments that he was told to light them “until the flame rises by itself.” As the commentators explain, he brought the fire near the wick until the flame burned on its own. There is no need to use force, just let go and allow the flame to burn on its own. We learn from here an important principle in educating our children and teaching our students. There is no need to stifle your children and students if you want to educate them well. It is sufficient to inspire them, and to light the flame in their own hearts. Stay close but know that sometimes you need to step back and let the flame rise by itself.Inside the Box
There is a lot to be said for creativity and thinking “outside the box,” but the Torah teaches us about the value of the other side of the equation. After the command to light the Menorah, the Torah emphasizes that Aharon fulfilled the task exactly: “And Aharon did so.” Rashi explains that the Torah is telling us this, “in order to praise Aharon that he did not deviate.” He did not do more or less than what he was commanded, he did not look for new or different ways to fulfill the commandment, and he did not suggest an alternative format for lighting the Menorah. It is not as simple as it sounds to do something exactly as you are told to. Some 200 years ago, Rebbe Nachman of Breslov wrote a statement that I find amazing: “The time will come when being an upright and simple person will be as revolutionary as being the Baal Shem Tov.” Have we already come to the point when everything is so confusing and challenging that the person who is not constantly reinventing things and thinking out of the box is in fact the biggest novelty of all?Translated by Yehoshua Siskin and Janine Muller Sherr.


June 26, 2026 







