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Chabad.org » Inspiration & Entertainment » Daily Dose of Wisdom » Be Within Stay Above » Where the Essence Dwells » Purpose of a Leaf
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Based on letters and talks of the Rebbe, Rabbi M. M. Schneerson
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Purpose of a Leaf

As a young boy, Rabbi Yosef Yitzchak (the sixth Lubavitcher Rebbe) would go with his father on walks through the woods. One time, as they talked, the boy absent-mindedly plucked a leaf off a tree and began to shred it between his fingers. His father saw what his son was doing, but he went on talking. He spoke about the Baal Shem Tov, who taught how every leaf that blows in the wind—moving to the right and then to the left, how and when it falls and where it falls to—every motion for the duration of its existence is under the detailed supervision of the Almighty.

That concern the Creator has for each thing, his father explained, is the divine spark that sustains its existence. Everything is with Divine purpose, everything is of concern to the ultimate goal of the entire cosmos.

”Now,” the father gently chided, “look how you mistreated so absent-mindedly the Almighty’s creation.”

”He formed it with purpose and gave it a Divine spark! It has its own self and its own life! Now tell me, how is the ‘I am’ of the leaf any less than your own ‘I am’?”


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Based on letters and talks of the Rebbe, Rabbi M. M. Schneerson   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author


From the wisdom of the Lubavitcher Rebbe, of righteous memory; words and condensation by Rabbi Tzvi Freeman. To order Rabbi Freeman’s book, Bringing Heaven Down to Earth, click here.

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Feb 8, 2012
purpose of a leaf
loved reading this daily dose. it brought a smile and I thought - oh, boy, a tree hugger!! as a lover of nature, it was beautiful. reading the posts is always a learning experience. the word 'intent' would never have occurred to me; in fact, it struck me how kind - yet strong - the father of the sixth Rebbe instilled this in his young son. i would bet the 6th Rebbe looked at a leaf in a totally different way after that one time!!
Posted By valerie, akron, oh

Posted: Feb 8, 2012
absentminded
I have never seen a young boy touch nature absentmindedly. The young boy touched nature, felt it, and that is what young boys do. The purpose of that leaf was to put the young boy in touch with the wonders of G-d's creations, even a leaf, being at Oneness. That leaf will fertilize the ground.

While i am not at odds with what the Rabbi did. Perhaps it was a Divine Plan for the young boy to learn a life lesson at that moment. I would have handled the situation differently. In any event, the story has a very Buddhist quality to it.
Posted By Anonymous

Posted: Feb 8, 2012
purpose
Perhaps had not this son behaved in such a way towards a leaf...His father would not been able to teach his son such a lesson, which he will apply to everything he will do in the future...Acknowlodging...G-d created all...So think before any action?
Posted By Carmen Rosenberg, Altamonte Springs, FL

Posted: Feb 8, 2012
Purpose of a Leaf
What a kind reminder of the Rebbe that the same G-d I worship as my own also of any other creature and that I should not defile the purpose accordingly lest I offend Him.
Posted By Anonymous, Forest Hills , NY

Posted: Feb 8, 2012
Purpose of a Leaf
Wonderful teaching through this story. For if everything is the Will of our Just Creator. This special leaf was meant to be destroyed by this child so that he would learn its purpose told by his father. A leaf is a part of creation, not like a human being. Therefore, we are not to destroy the life of another human being under any circumstance, I belief. Sometimes we use agression, in certain moments of anger or despair for self defense, when someone attack us. This act is something that most human being encounter at one point or another in our lives. We can only pray to Hashem, blessed be He, to help us control our inner evil inclinations. One thing that amazed me, when reading the comments here, how sensitively is Torah ingraned in all the readers who made the comment. Praise Hashem, for this wonderful work in our heart. Blessings to all of you
Posted By Anonymous, Mesa, Arizona, USA

Posted: Feb 8, 2012
destroying for no reason
The boy was blessed to get such a worthy lesson.

My lesson comes from this story about respect to trees as an adult.
As a child i used to poke the bubbles in the bark of the sugar maple tree and watch the sap flow for no reason. Half of that tree recently was toppled over in a storm. and then the rest of the tree was cut down by a tree service. My mother was heart broken to lose the tree. The stump of the tree had no rings in it. Surprisingly now there are some trees growing form the stump. We cannot tell if they are maple.
There is no need for us to not be educated in our childhoods about this topic and the consequences of our ignorance.
Posted By Anonymous, ma, mA

Posted: Feb 8, 2012
the purpose of a leaf
how joyous for this leaf, that the Creator knew that this leaf''s purpose was to serve as the basis for this lesson for the Rebbe and generations of K'lal Yisroel to come!
Posted By Anonymous, portsmouth, oh

Posted: Feb 8, 2012
Purpose of a leaf
With respect, the son did not act with intent: he acted absent-mindedly and without thought about the mitzvah. He also has his youth to take into account. Regardless that he has no inherent "nature" (not sure I agree with that either) his action, too, is part of H's plan. Just as sometimes, H' forbid, we are cut off in our prime and nevertheless hold firm in our trust that this is part of His plan, so too that leaf was meant to endure a fate which was part of a plan.
Posted By Harry Friedland, Cape Town, South Africa

Posted: Mar 2, 2006
Author's response II
In response to a reader, I wrote:
Each thing in the world is guided by a plan, a "kavana" behind all of Creation. The human being, having free will, is the only creature that is able to get around that plan. We can't subvert it--nothing can subvert the Creator's plans--but we can make ourselves, G-d forbid, into the villains of the plan.
Therefore, we are the only creatures that need to be commanded, to be told, "do this" and "don't do this"--while every other creatures simply follows it's nature. We have no real nature, so we need one imposed upon us, on that we can choose to follow or to disobey.
The Torah forbids us to destroy anything without reason--it's called "Bal Tashchis". We learn this from the Torah's prohibition to wantonly destroy fruit trees. However, it can also be understood from G-d's command to Adam when He set him in the Garden of Eden "to serve it and to protect it."
The young boy was destroying for no reason. That goes against the plan of creation.
Posted By Tzvi Freeman, Thornhill, ON



 


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