Faith Can Turn the Desert into the Hilton â Daily Chizzuk by Rabbi Eliezer Berland Shlitâa
THE DAILY CHIZZUK BY MOREINU HARAV ELIEZER BERLAND SHLITâA â MONDAY 27 SIVAN 5785 These are his holy words: It is written in the Zohar (Behar, 110) that Rabbi Chiya saw from afar two men walking. He saw that they were standing at a distance of a kilometer away. He had a looking glass with which he could see exactly what was happening. They saw in front of them two men walking in the desert. When a person walks in the desert, he doesnât know when heâll make it out of the desert. Today, there are already roads in the desert, but then, there was no Waze. People would walk in the desert and get lost; they wouldnât make it home. Rabbi Chiya wept. Rabbi Chiya shed tears and said: âI want the merit of this mitzvah [feeding the needy] myself. Why didnât I merit it?â If a person asks, âWhat will we eat,â he stops the shefa (influx of bounty)!! Now a person [who performs the mitzvah of kindness] will see twice the shefa, âI will command My blessing for you in the sixth yearâ (Zohar Behar, 110b). Rabbi Chiya and Rabbi Yossi were walking on the way and came to a mountain. They found two men who were walking. They saw with a looking glass with which they could see to the end of the world. They saw him taking out a cloth [with food to give to the poor man]. Not like Nachum Ish Gamzu, who told the poor man to wait (Taanit 21a). Rather, he made sure that he first ate and drank. He gave him all his food. After he ate, he gave him even more food. He gave him everything he had left. His friend told him, âWe are in the desert. You canât [give him all the food]. Give him [just] a sip. Give him a bite. Someone else will come [besides us] and give him another bite, so that little by little, he will be revived.â The poor man said, âI havenât eaten in two days.â  He gave the poor man all his food and drink. He said, âI only walk with Hashem.â Thereâs no difference whether youâre in the Plaza or the Hilton. Thereâs no difference whether youâre in the middle of the desert or on Yarkon Street. If itâs written that, at noon, you are supposed to receive a hamburger, fattened gooses, then youâll receive fattened gooses. It makes no difference whether youâre at the Hilton, on Yarkon Street, or if youâre in the middle of the desert. By Hashem, itâs all the same thing. Itâs not the Hilton or the Plaza that make the difference. Itâs brought in the Gemara in Ketubot (67b) that someone came to Rava and said to him, âI eat a chicken every day at noon!â âWhat happened, have you gone crazy? The entire chicken?! People eat 100 grams, 50 grams, but you want a whole chicken? This couldnât be!â He told him, âNo. Everyone day at noon, I eat a chicken.â Within five minutes, Ravaâs sister â who hadnât seen him in in 13 years â arrived and brought him a chicken in honor of the meeting. Rava said to him, âBehold, your chicken is ready.â The same Gemara continues and brings a story of someone else who asked to eat a chicken and then died. Itâs all according to the faith of a person. You have faith that Hashem will send to you in any place in the world. If itâs in the heart of the desert, it makes no difference â thereâs no distinction. If I remain in the Plaza, the Hilton, on the Yarkon beach, or I remain on King George in Jerusalem, Hashem will always send me the best lunch. Now [at the time of the shiur] Shavuot will be in a little while, and there will be shefa such as hasnât been since the creation of the world. So he [the friend who was against giving food] said to him, âKnow, that by me this is a matter of principle [not to give Tzedaka]. I wonât give you anything.â There are people with principles. âHe wonât receive a thing from me.â He stands up for his principles. âIâm telling you that you wonât receive a thing from me.â Rabbi Chiya saw this and went crazy. He said [to Rabbi Yossi], âLetâs give him food already.â Rabbi Yossi answered: âNo, no, no. I want to see the miracles.â [Rabbi Chiya said], âWhy didnât we merit?â [Rabbi Yossi said:] âApparently, there was a decree of death on him.â âHe has a decree a death on him?â Suddenly, he sees that after walking with him for half an hour in fifty degree [C] sun, he falls unconscious. Rabbi Chiya says [to Rabbi Yossi], âLetâs give him food.â Rabbi Yossi says, âIn no way whatsoever! Hold steady! Then a giant snake came upon him [the hungry man who passed out]. Rabbi Chiya said, âThis is the end.â Rabbi Yossi was a true Breslover. He said to Rabbi Chiya, âNow youâll see the miracle.â Within a second, they saw another snake come and bite the first one, swallowing it up. Bezrat Hashem, everyone should live 120 years. https://vimeo.com/1095481232 https://ravberland.com/without-torah-theres-no-trust-and-faith-parashat-behar-by-rabbi-eliezer-berland-shlita/