Who can fake this?
Currently, we have one picture of the Rav on our wall. Itās that picture where his eyes are half closed, and heās looking down at the ground while wrapped in his tallit by the Kotel, where they did the
birchat ha Hama, or blessing of the sun, a few yearsā ago.

It has pride of place on the wall next to my table, and not infrequently, I have guests that ask me: āWho is that Rabbi?ā
And each time, I get a little nervous before responding, because the last thing I want is
machloket. And circumstances being circumstances, itās not always possible to avoid it. Sometimes, I tell them āitās Rav Berlandā and they nod, grunt and we return to whatever else we were talking about.
Maybe theyāve heard of him before, maybe they havenāt, but I answered their question and itās time to move on.
Then, thereās what happened last week, when a distant relative from the UK asked me about the picture, and when I said āitās Rav Berlandā, then replied: āIs that the one who got arrested?ā
I hate those conversations, because yes, he got arrested ā but it was all a big stitch up, and a huge miscarriage of justice, and donāt you know
I wrote a whole book about it and I can sit here and tell you the whole story for the next five days, and really, heās just a huge, pure tzaddik. The Tzaddik of the generation, even.
Last week, my guest just raised an eyebrow after my big long speech, and told me: āWhen I get home, Iāll google it for myself, and Iāll find out the truth.ā
And my heart sank, because I know what theyāll find on Google, and how many people have had their neshamas torpedoed by all those lies and lashon hara.
What's the right thing to do, here?
In hitbodedut afterwards, I went to talk to God about what I should be trying to do, here.
God, if this person googles stuff, and then sends me a yucky email full of lashon hara about the Rav, what should I do? You know how much I want to avoid getting pulled into any machloket, so should I say something now, to try to pre-empt that? Or should I just leave it alone?
The answer I got back is: leave it alone. The relative will forget all about it once heās home, as heāll have his hands full with other things.
But still, it bothers me, because part of me wants to bring the Rav into my conversations all the time, and to quote what the Rav is saying in his books and
shiurim, but Iām holding myself back because I donāt want to stir up a hornetsā nest again.
Is this the right way to behave?
I really donāt know.
The being of light
In the meantime, a couple of weeks back, someone happened to take another picture of the Rav that
came out all light. Literally, instead of seeing a person there in a tallit, you just see a Rav-shaped patch of incandescent white light that is eye-popping.
[caption id="attachment_8783" align="alignleft" width="269"]

This picture is the original, and has not been altered in any way.[/caption]
When my husband saw this picture, he was so taken with it he had it blown up and stuck on a canvas.
Who can fake something like that?!
He asked me in amazement, clearly very chuffed with this latest bit of evidence that the Rav really is the incredibly holy person that the people who see him day in and day out really know him to be.
Never mind the pictures, I thought to myself, who can fake his
shiurim? Who can fake yearsā worth of classes telling people to
accept insults with love, and that by accepting humiliation with love we can save the life of a thousand Jews (as Rabbi Nachman states in lesson 1:260 of Likutey Moharan)?
Who can fake the sort of
mesirut nefesh that sees an 80 year old man in poor health with awful leg pains
walk 10km in less than half a day, all over Jerusalemās steep inclines and dips? Who can fake a person giving
shiurim in no less than
four different locations, on Rosh Chodesh Cheshvan, and at each house, he has to run the gamut of all the Jews waiting out on the street to catch a glimpse of him, and ask for advice and a blessing.
Iām not a Rav, anything but, but can you imagine how exhausting that level of interaction with other people actually is?
How does the Rav do it?
How does he manage to squeeze in
visits to hospitals to resuscitate seriously-ill people in a coma before jumping on a plane to Uman, for Rosh Hashana? How does he manage to get by on an hourās sleep a night? How does he manage to go for days without eating so much as a carrot? How can he give away every single penny he possesses, every single night, like the Baal Shem Tov used to do?
How?
Who can fake something like this?!
Thatās really want I want to tell the people who tilt at my picture with a sly look on their face.
This person is an angel of God, donāt you know? You canāt begin to grasp him in a million years You canāt begin to understand what is really going on, here. And no amount of Jpost articles and googling the Rav is going to change that, quite the opposite.
But I canāt say that.
So instead, Iām planning on sticking the ābeing of lightā picture right next to our main picture of the Rav on the wall, so when they ask me: āWho is that person?ā, I can point to the incandescent white patch, and tell them the truth:
Heās the holiest person I know.
No more, and no less.
And that will have to suffice.
UPDATE:
After this appeared, I got sent a few more pictures and another (older) video of the Rav, that also seem to have captured some of his light. Here they are, below:
[caption id="attachment_8861" align="alignleft" width="225"]

The Rav giving a blessing with a massive aura of light on his head[/caption]
[caption id="attachment_8857" align="alignnone" width="225"]

No, that's not a lightbulb...[/caption]
[caption id="attachment_8858" align="alignnone" width="169"]

The Rav lighting up a shiur last week at a house in Jerusalem[/caption]
And if you click
HERE, it'll take you to a link where you can a video of the Rav's aura shining off his head.
Light is sown for the Tzaddikim...
You can read more of Rivkaās musings on her blog:Ā https://rivkalevy.com/