Even teenagers need the True Tzaddik
TEENAGERS AND THE TRUE TZADDIK Three months ago, my 15 year old came over to me and asked me if Iād let her go to Uman by herself, with a friend of hers who is also 15. > I said: āNo way! Are you kidding?!ā Not because I donāt think going to Uman is a great idea for teens ā au contraire. Itās the single best thing probably anyone can do for their child, to connect them up to Rebbe Nachman as early as possible. In fact, Hashem has helped me to take my two girls to Uman three times each, already, and each time they went, some big stuff moved, in a very positive way, both spiritually and emotionally. But thereās a world of difference between me taking them to Uman as part of a family trip, and them going by themselves. The Ukraine is not a nice country, even though the veneer of civilization is getting painted on thicker every year. If it wasnāt for the fact that Rebbe Nachman, and some other ginormous Tzaddikim, were buried there, I wouldnāt touch it with a barge pole. As it is, Rabbenu taught that everywhere a true Tzaddik is buried attains an aspect of Eretz Yisrael, and you can see that clearly with your own eyes in Uman, on Pushkina street, where all the signs are in Hebrew, and all the music blaring out is Rabbenu Trance. Even the non-Jewish taxi drives there drop āBaruch Hashemā into their everyday conversation, and tell you about all the miracles āthe Tzaddikā is doing for people. LONG STORY SHORT, THE KID DIDNāT GIVE UP. Her friend had never been before, and it was really the friend who was the main engine for them to go now!!! As soon as possible!!! I ummed, I ahhed, I prayed on it. I offered to come with them as a āsilent chaperoneā who would pretend we werenāt related, and would avoid talking to them as much as possible. At 17, my oldest daughter has got past that stage where being seen in public with a parent is as appealing as sticking a fork into your eyeballs. At 15, my youngest one hasnāt, so that was rejected out of hand. AND STILL THE KID DIDNāT GIVE UP. So then, I prayed on it some more, I ummed, I ahhed, and then I told the kid: you can go with a women-only tour, where you are surrounded with enough people to keep an eye on you, and all the transportation, accommodation and food is taken care of. Those trips can be expensive, especially around Chanuka time, when so many people like to go, but I could see that Rabbenu was calling them both ā they didnāt stop talking about it for months, literally, and the friend even started working like a crazy person, to try to get the money together ā so really? What could I do? They found the group...the group agreed to take to 15 year olds, as long as we got notarized documents that said they had permission to leave Israel aloneā¦we got the money together to pay for it⦠And this morning, at 2am, me and my husband took them to the airport. Of course, we came in with them too, at a discreet ānon-embarrassingā distance away, where we could check that theyād hooked up with the group OK, and that all the paperwork was fine. I felt like Mossad, spying on my daughter over the top of the self-check-in computer stand thingy in Ben Gurion. And now. SHEāS THERE. > Which of course is when Hashem sent me a news article telling me that Ukraine is having a low level war with Russia, and voted to implement martial law two days agoā¦. What?!?!? Uman always brings up the work a person has to do, one way or another, so Iām sitting her typing, and trying not to feel too much panic and worry. Godās in control. Rabbenuās got my daughterās back. The Ukraine is always in some sort of state of chaos, meltdown and turmoil. BH, sheāll be back soon, sheāll be back safe, and sheāll be back with some of the spiritual fortitude, insight and help you can only get in Uman. And in the meantime ā Iām off to do some praying at the Kotel, because my brain doesnāt seem to be functioning too well today. Annoying as these teens can be, we still all just love them so very much, donāt we? And when my daughter gets back, Iām going to make sure I tell her.