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Shlomo's Thoughts on the TorahAuthor: Shlomo Bar-Ayal
After morning prayers Shlomo Bar-Ayal gives a daily, brief, one to three minute talk on the Portion of the week. Language: en Genres: Judaism, Religion & Spirituality Contact email: Get it Feed URL: Get it iTunes ID: Get it |
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Get Up & Do Your Job
Sunday, 19 April, 2026
Acharai Mot–Kedoshim: Getting Up After the FallThe Torah opens this week’s parashah with a striking phrase:“אַחֲרֵי מוֹת שְׁנֵי בְּנֵי אַהֲרֹן” — “After the death of the two sons of Aaron” (Nadav and Avihu).Imagine the scene. Aaron has just suffered an unimaginable personal tragedy—the loss of his sons. And what does the Torah do next?It doesn’t linger in mourning.It doesn’t pause for extended reflection.Instead, the Torah immediately turns to Aaron and says:Get up. There is work to do. Yom Kippur must be prepared. The service must continue.This is not a lack of sensitivity—it’s a profound lesson in life.We will get knocked down.We will experience loss, disappointment, even tragedy.But the Torah is teaching us:Judaism does not allow a person to remain stuck.Aaron is not told to forget.He is told to carry forward.Think of a quarterback in football. He gets sacked—hard. Crushed into the ground.What happens next?He doesn’t lie there replaying the hit.He gets up, returns to the huddle, and runs the next play.That’s life.That’s Torah.This message is built into the Jewish calendar itself:Yom HaShoah – remembering the destruction of European JewryYom HaZikaron – honoring fallen soldiersImmediately followed byYom HaAtzmaut – celebration and renewalThe sequence is deliberate.We mourn.We remember.But then—we rise.After the Holocaust, many believed the Jewish people could never recover.Yet just three years later, the State of Israel was born. Today, Israel stands as one of the strongest nations in its region.That is Acharai Mot in action.In 1964, Look magazine predicted the “disappearance of the American Jew.”They missed what was actually happening:The rebuilding of Torah scholarship after the warThe rise of Jewish day schoolsThe explosion of outreach movements like Chabad-LubavitchInstead of fading, the community rebuilt—stronger than before.The Torah is not telling us to ignore pain.It is telling us what to do after it.Remember the past.Honor the loss.But do not remain there.Like Aaron, we are commanded:Get up. Dust yourself off. And continue the avodah—the work of living a Torah life.Something to think about.The Torah’s Message: Rise and ContinueA Modern Mashal: The QuarterbackFrom National Tragedy to National RenewalA Lesson from American Jewish HistoryThe Takeaway







