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After The Flood

by | Oct 31, 2008 | 0 comments

Noah and his family emerged from the ark. The population of the world was gone. All the men and women who had heckled Noah on a regular basis were missing.

It was not the same world that Noah had known. The Torah doesn’t record Noah’s emotions at that time. For us it would probably have been eerie, full of mixed feelings, overjoyed at the realization of survival, depressed at the massive destruction that lay before us.

The Torah records the first matter attended to by Noah. He planted a vineyard. He drank the wine, he became intoxicated, and he carried on in his tent.

Our sages of blessed memory tell us that a miracle happened. On the very same day that Noah planted a vineyard, it grew to full maturity, the grapes became wine, and the wine became aged. All in one day!

Our sages also tell us that generations later the ten tribes of Israel were lost from our people as a punishment for Noah’s actions. This is almost a contradiction. On one hand, Noah was privileged to experience a miracle. On the other hand, Noah with the same act caused the demise of 80 percent of the Jewish population.

The explanation is as follows. There are times in history where God has caused destruction. It has always been the case that, immediately following such destruction, He granted the world with abundant blessing and miraculous achievement. Either this is to help the world get back on its feet or it is a message from God to show us He still loves us. The first project we do after a major destruction will enjoy unprecedented success. It’s up to us to decide what that project will be.

Noah just survived the greatest destruction the world would ever see. He walked into the opportunity to take advantage of the greatest possible blessing. What did he do with this great moment? He planted a vineyard, made wine, and got drunk! It was blessed and went faster than ever before or after. Never was wine so good. But think of what he could have done and didn’t. There was one chance and it was lost. For this his descendants were punished.

A more recent, collective, example. The Holocaust was one of the greatest single blows to our people. The survivors were tired and war torn. They ran to America, to Australia, and to Israel, and to wherever they could find refuge. They too were rejoicing over their survival but sick over their loss. But after such destruction would come a time of blessing, of supernatural success. Whatever we would do would prosper miraculously.

And look what happened: the State of Israel, Torah in the world. There have never been as many institutions of Torah as there are today. Schools that were started then have record attendance. For those that took advantage of the time and rebuilt Yiddishkeit, Yiddishkeit was built. For those who put their energies into other movements and projects, they too succeeded. In under fifty years, as in Noah’s vineyard, a miracle has occurred.

I believe that history will look at the half a century just passed as the rebuilding period. And rebuild we did with unprecedented success.

By Rabbi Yaacov Haber

Rabbi Yaacov Haber has been a leading force in Jewish community and Jewish education for over forty years. He lived and taught in the United States, Australia and in Israel. He is presently the Rav of Kehillas Shivtei Yeshurun, a vibrant community in the center of Ramat Bet Shemesh, Israel, and serves as the Rabbinic guide to many of its wonderful organisations.

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