Lech Lecha
The One Thing You Need To Know Before You Vote
If you are an American, you may be about to vote. Or perhaps you have already done so.
No matter whom you voted for or what the outcome, one thing is certain: this election year has left America more fractured, angry and divided than it’s been for a long time. Especially troubling for Jewish people of every party is the degree to which anti-Semitism has made a frightening return in public discourse.
But there is something we can do about it. This week’s Torah portion, Lech Lecha, speaks of the journey our forefather Abraham took from his father’s home in Charan, a most hateful place, to the Promised Land. It is a journey that we can also take towards our inner refinement: We must leave our negative desires, the bad influences of society, our habits, until we reach the inner promised land of transcendence and unity.
We must bring this country together, and by finding that core inner unity we all possess, we can elevate the conversation and remind every member of our great nation that while we might strongly disagree, we are still united as one.
The Lubavitcher Rebbe once shared the following wish with New York City mayor David Dinkins:
“In the near future, the ‘melting pot’ [of America] will be so active that it will not be necessary to underline every time [when speaking of others] ‘They are Black,’ ‘They are White,’ ‘They are Hispanic,’ etc., because they are no different. All of them are created by the same G‑d, and created for the same purpose, to add to all good things around them.”
The candidates would best serve their supporters by sharing with them the Rebbe’s strong, powerful and important words: “We were all created by the same G‑d, for the same purpose.”
That purpose, and our journey on earth, should be paved with acts of lovingkindness—of mitzvahs and goodness—that truly make us great.
Mordechai Lightstone,
on behalf of the Chabad.org Editorial Team
First, we need to understand an underlying philosophical difference between the Constitution and the Torah.
I never get tired of my favorite books, TV shows and movies, and I daydream about a world filled with magical people and creatures. I wonder if I’m living more in my fantasy world than the real world.
I’ve read the Tehillim portion in English on trains, buses, in Starbucks coffee shops and anywhere necessary to stick to my commitment.
You pulled on me while you whined and screeched your loudest. And I just couldn’t anymore. I couldn’t hold it together.
As human beings, we have compassion and can be empathic. We see someone in pain and want to help. But only very few righteous and holy people are at the level where they would be willing, if they could, to take away that pain and feel it themselves.
The procession slowly wended its way to the main synagogue, where the sage was to give his first talk.
When you’re feeling distraught, what do you do to calm yourself? Do you try a new experience or do you revert to what is familiar to you?
For an informed reading of the weekly haftarah: Isaiah 40:27–41:16
A condensation of the weekly Torah portion alongside select commentaries culled from the Midrash, Talmud, Chassidic masters, and the broad corpus of Jewish scholarship.
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Sometimes you feel like you’re going about life as just another grain of dust blown by the wind.
You get to your home and there’s a mezuzah on the door.
You are a Jew. You are the Jewish people.
You are Abraham. You are Sarah. You are every Jew who has ever lived.
You, your family, your home, every moment of y...