Chai Elul, 5710 [1950]
Brooklyn
To1 our brothers and sisters,
the sons and daughters of Israel,
wherever they may be:
May G‑d’s blessing be upon you.
Greetings and Blessings!
As we stand on the threshold of the new year (May it bring us and all of the sons and daughters of Israel goodness and blessings!), every man and woman among us is aroused to take stock of everything that has happened with him in the course of the passing year - everything that he has done and everything that was done with him. Each of us resolves to improve his ways, and turns in prayer to our Father in heaven with the request that He inscribe and seal each of us and ours for a good and sweet year, materially and spiritually.2
Our Sages have taught3 that in the wake of tzedakah given to a needy person, prayer secures and draws down a good life, redemption and salvation, livelihood and sustenance.
Now man,4 like all created beings and including even heavenly angels,5 has a body and a soul, and just as a man can be poor in body and in the needs of the body, so, too, a man can be poor in soul and in the needs of the soul. This is reflected in tzedakah: there is material tzedakah and spiritual tzedakah. As our Sages teach (in Tanna dvei Eliyahu Rabbah, sec. 27): “How does one fulfill the obligation [Yeshayahu 58:7], כי תראה ערום וכסיתו - ‘When you see the naked, clothe him’? If you see a man who has no words of Torah, bring him into your house, teach him Kerias Shema and prayer; teach him…, and encourage him to observe the commandments.”
Just as each man and woman among us asks to be inscribed and sealed for a good year materially and spiritually, so should each one of us exert himself in extending both material tzedakah and spiritual tzedakah, particularly in the days of Elul and Tishrei.
And as we stand during these days before the King of Kings, the Holy One, blessed be He, each man and woman among us will have in hand a large account6 - large in proportion to his ability - of acts of tzedakah that he has undertaken to save the pauper in body, and of acts of tzedakah that he has undertaken to save the pauper in soul.
Just as with material tzedakah7 even a person who is poor materially is under an obligation, for there is no poor man who cannot find a way to help a fellow pauper, so, too, with spiritual tzedakah: even a person who is poor spiritually is under an obligation - for there is no Jewish man or woman who cannot influence the sons and daughters of the Jewish people, and bring them nearer to the awe of heaven and to the Torah and its mitzvos.
“The burden matches the camel”8 : those who are wealthy materially and those who are wealthy in spirit - i.e., Torah scholars and yeshivah students - should disburse their money and their knowledge generously, in order to save, heal and rehabilitate the soul and the body of their brothers and sisters.
May our Father, the All-Merciful Father,9 inscribe and seal every man and woman among us, together with all of Israel, for a good and sweet year - with good that is visible and overt, materially and spiritually. And may He bring us, speedily and in our very own days, the true and complete Redemption through our Righteous Mashiach, Amen.
From one who blesses you and who seeks your blessing - that we all be inscribed and sealed for a good year,10
Menachem Mendel ben Chanah Schneerson
Son-in-law of the Nasi, his holy honor,
Our master, mentor and Rebbe;
May the memory of a tzaddik be a blessing,
for the life of the World to Come;
His soul is in the hidden realms on high;
May his merit protect us;
And may I serve as an atonement for his resting place.11
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