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Chabad.org » Learning & Values » Kabbalah & Jewish Mysticism » Chassidic Thought » Anthologies » Life Vs. Terror: a 9/11 Anthology » Twin Towers - A Spiritual Reincarnation
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Twin Towers - A Spiritual Reincarnation


We were witnesses to mass murder, coming "live" into our living and bedrooms. Millions of viewers like you and I watched in stark disbelief the cold, callous, premeditated carnage. A mass murder planned for years, was executed with brutal betrayal of life's meaning. This was Nazi-like fanaticism at its ugliest and most potent. Instant ovens with no need for architectural planning and engineering finesse.

Or were we witnesses to an act of superb heroism -- freedom fighters prepared to nobly sacrifice themselves for their faith and respond assertively to foreign tyranny and subjugation? An act of pluck and courage arising miraculously from the downtrodden souls of suffering people, politically brow-beaten and financially whipped by western oppressors?

Would the real truth please stand up? And it will.

But why was I witness? Can I possibly understand the purpose of death, pain and suffering? No. But I can choose to learn from it -- or run away cowardly shrugging my shoulders and bearing a glazed look of disbelief. The Cosmos is providing me with an inglorious chance to learn a most painful lesson -- the hard way, through the involuntary sacrifice of thousands of souls. The temptation continues to wallow in my pain; to torture myself with titillating addiction to the scenes of human guided missiles exploding into balls of fire and body projectiles falling awkwardly to certain death, of two of the world's largest buildings imploding into dust and ashes bathing anyone the in vicinity in ghostly shades of ashen dirt, hiding the sun above and the sun within. Why am I witness?

So I shake myself out of such daze and stupor. I tear myself away from the image of that technologically frozen moment of impact, sharing disbelief with the curbside observers whose lives will be forever punctuated by the deafening staccato of crumbling buildings and of massive girders screeching in dismay.

No, I can't make sense of it all. But I am determined to give the events meaning -- to honor the gut-wrenching dissipation of loving souls gruesomely disemboweled from their loved ones for ever.

My hand cannot reach across the ocean and comfort survivors and mourners. My wishful meanderings of mind and thought cannot mask the scream of inner torment deep within. But I believe with absolute resoluteness that you and I have been afforded a soulful wake-up call. The price has been high, too high. But I cannot bargain with the dead. I cannot negotiate the terms or the coinage. I must pay the price of making their lives meaningful, their death a spur, their lives never reduced to futility. How do I pay? By making my life (and I ask you to make your life) one of contribution to a new society of empathy, peace and mutual understanding.

Utopian? I don't think so. Just as there is a threshold of national psychosis that promotes audacious terrorism, so is there a threshold of collective wisdom that yields a harvest of sweet fruits of compassion and caring. You, and I, are very real digits of spiritual energy that can tip the world across the threshold of moral fission -- the point where person and person, nation and nation, beast and animal, all synergise to multiply the powers of insight and wisdom throughout the world. Anything less is cheating the opportunity that the unchoosing martyrs are offering to us.

Let me share with you seven specific guidelines to draw upon for personal and global transformation:

(1) Recognize that you are uniquely gifted from Above. You are a spiritual configuration unlike any that has ever existed, or will exist. Confer your specialness on those who have been deliberately placed in your environ -- and that includes everyone you meet and encounter -- friend or stranger.

(2) Nurture your human qualities of compassion, sharing, and contribution. Practice these all the time, like a musician practicing scales. Keep putting small coins into charity boxes, dropping coins in the box of street buskers or vagrants. Pay compliments whenever the opportunity beckons. Offer random acts of goodness by maintaining a mindful and conscious awareness of life's opportunities. (You will be amazed at the prolific openings that come your way to serve others).

(3) Respond to personal provocation and personal insult with a sense of wonderful opportunity to practice other-centeredness. When someone insults, hurts, or demeans you, you are witnessing their pain, their camouflage, and their fear. They are the ones in true pain, whether knowingly or otherwise. Become a teacher/healer in that precise moment. Use your wisdom of words and silence to help heal them.

(4) Practice compassion. Compassion is not the same as giving in, turning the other cheek, or simple submission. Compassion includes self-esteem, assertiveness, and wisdom. Compassion is the wisdom of giving wisely. Not all giving is wise. Sometimes giving spoils and denies an opportunity for the other's growth. Wise giving provides the other with the opportunity for a growth spurt. This is true compassion.

(5) Nurture inner strength. Become strong of character, of purpose. Identify your visions, for self and humanity. Formulate goals for their achievement. Strategize practices for the soul's true expression -- at home, at work, and in the world. Inner strength and self esteem include the courage to defend one's integrity as a person, and property as a nation, but with tears streaming down our cheeks when a just war and battle are thrust upon us, or when punishing a recalcitrant child, or removing an anti-social presence from our midst.

(6) Dedicate your heart, mind, and body, to graceful balance. Mind: accumulate data, share people's life's experiences, and reflect and meditate. Heart: practice empathy and spend a few moments in the other person's genetic, environmental, and physiological "shoes". Body: discipline yourself to health and wellness practices so that the soul enjoys a beautiful temple as its abode and means of self-expression.

(7) Choose to be a person of faith. Accept the axioms of the sanctity of life over abstract principle, of quality of life over quantity of possessions, of compassion over ego. Allow that faith to be practiced mindfully, consciously, soulfully, at all times.

Each one of us is a microcosm of the macro-cosmos. When the world is in pain, it reflects our personal pain. When the world experiences wanton destruction, it is when we practice spiritual self-destruction through self-aggrandizement, self absorption, and self-centeredness.

The Twin Towers were monuments to our quest to touch the sky -- perhaps a latter day Babel. Now we need to reach inwards -- to touch the twin qualities of humility and love. Allow these new twins to emerge from the spiritual womb. Reincarnate the souls of those torn so rudely from us, but as practical visions for a much better, more caring, and truly faithful, stance of love and humility. You count. Do it and live it. You are a child of a living, pulsating, compassionate Creator.

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By Laibl Wolf   More articles...  |   RSS Listing of Newest Articles by this Author
Rabbi Wolf, a renowned mystic, author and speaker, lives in Australia and lectures worldwide on Kabbalah and Jewish mysticism. His daily meditations and weekly essays can be viewed on his website, www.laiblwolf.com

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Reader Comments
Latest Comments:
Posted: Sep 12, 2006
Why would someone do that?
What is the point of doing something like that?I would not be able to live with myself.I mean there where people of loved ones in that bulding.In fact my 4 cousion was in there at the time.She was going to work and all of a sudden she said that glass was falling and everything was comeing to an end.She came here after she got out of the hopspility with a broken neck,broken arm,and both legs broken.She was in there for 4 mouths.
Posted By Kayla Reagan, Carrollton, Georgia

Posted: Aug 4, 2004
Thank you for these beautiful words of comfort and especially the specific guidelines. I work in the shadow of what was the Twin Towers, and just today I was feeling like I must DO something, but I didn't know what.
Posted By Anonymous



 


Life Vs. Terror: a 9/11 Anthology
A Soldier's Boots
When Heaven is Evil
Dancing on 9/11?
Face to Face
How Do You Fight Evil?
Hasn't Belief in G-d caused as much Evil as Good?
Why I'm Not Afraid
Twin Towers - A Spiritual Reincarnation
The Sacred and the Good
Life After Terror
The Jewish Approach to Tragedy
Silence
Today the World Trembles; Today the World is Born
Nine, Eleven and Ten
The Burning Palace
Showing 3 - 17 of 25