BEYOND LIFE AND DEATH
In memory and honor of Gavriel and Rivka Holtzberg,
who gave their lives in serving others and G-d
As I was beginning to write this week’s column about the next level
of bittul
discussed in the Tzaddik-Dalet series (delivered 75 years ago this week), I was shaken
by two pieces of dramatic news – one joyous, the other tragic.
My only daughter, Rashi, gave birth to a daughter, Luba Alte Teibel.
My baby girl gave birth to a baby girl, rendering me a grandfather.
Bloodthirsty terrorists attacked innocent people in various
locations, among them a Jewish Chabad Center, in Mumbai, India.
As of this writing, over 350 people are wounded and 150
dead, including Rabbi Gavriel and Mrs. Rivka Holtzberg,
the leaders of the Chabad House at Nariman House. Their
2-year old child was miraculously saved.
There you have life in its full spectrum: Ultimate celebration; absolute
horror.
After all is said and done, they don’t cancel each other out. But
all the timeless questions come pouring out: Why do bad things happening to
good people? Why do innocent men and women have to die such senseless deaths?
Why? Why? Why does a young couple who came from Brooklyn
to Mumbai to spread light deserve to be annihilated by darkness? And when? When will it all end?
My thoughts go back to my new granddaughter. I stare at her pure
and innocent face. Touch her soft untarnished skin. Does she know what type
of world she has entered? Can her innocence counter the cruelty of our hostile
universe? Will she witness a better world than ours?
Mystics say that a newborn child cries as it emerges from the womb,
sensing for the last time the warm world of light it is leaving and the cold
dark world it is entering. But even as the door slams shut and she enters
our plane, she is given all the power to illuminate and warm our dark and
cold universe.
And then I wander back to the Tzaddik-Dalet discourse and
its esoteric messages. After explaining the two transcendent
dimensions of energy-consciousness – humility in face
of a higher presence, and utter nullification to the point
that the energy inherently senses that it is nothing but
a channel of the source (as discussed last
week) – the Rebbe Rayatz takes us to another, third
level:
Even the second dimension of the energy’s bittul entails two distinct entities: The energy
and its source. Though the energy senses that it has no existence of its own,
the emphasis is “of its own.” But together with the source, the energy is
very much existent, albeit as a channel.
The third level of bittul, however, is one in which there are no two
entities; only one: The source. The energy as it is engulfed in its source
senses only the source and nothing else. The only reason we still call it
“energy” is because it is not the source, but it is also not anything outside
of the source. This level of energy, which is called the “energy encompassed
in the source,” is compared to the geometric “point,” extending from the source,
which will at a later stage take shape and form as it manifests into a line
and then into three-dimensional tangible parameters. The “point” does not
occupy space, yet it is the basis of all space. An example for this is the
initial concept which arises in a brilliant mind. At its initial point of
departure, the concept is completely abstract and carries within itself a
multitude of details and explanations, even contradictory ones. The point
exists in a sort of “non-existent” fashion. You can’t say that it doesn’t
exist, but neither can you define its form of existence. It is not the essence
but also not outside of the essence.
Perhaps this is the tenuous bridge between existence and non-existence,
the black-hole where light meets dark, joy meets sorrow and death meets life.
And sadly, it is into this hole where the Holzberg’s
have now fallen, with so many others now and in the past.
They were (and we can say remain) emissaries, shluchim,
messengers of a power far greater than themselves. As discussed
in last
week’s article, emissaries are channels of a cause beyond
their own self-interest. And yet, there are levels of this
type of dedication, one more profound than another. Gaby
and Rivky Holtzberg paid the ultimate price for their commitment:
Giving their very lives for the most noble of all causes.
They did not travel to India for business or pleasure.
Only to help others and illuminate their world.
The horrible events in Mumbai, the inhumanity that only humans are capable
of, reveals the insanity of our existence. We are then left
with two choices (I am not including sticking our heads
in the sands of denial): Either we become cynical and detached,
losing faith and hope in justice and goodness prevailing.
We may be overcome by resignation and despair. Or we dig
deeper. And as we dig, we discover another dimension of
reality, which is not bound by our common rules of logic
and sanity. A reality that is beyond death as it is beyond
life, one that precedes all the joys and all the agonies,
all the births and all the deaths, all the beginning and
all the ends. And in the face of this essential reality,
you realize that nothing else really exists.
When all else fails, this is the only place left to go. We have no
choice but to access a deeper sense of reality, which may not make any sense
on our terms, but it nevertheless is a higher reality, and we can only stand
in utter awe of something entirely beyond us, even as we cry or smile.
How else can you explain the ability of Holocaust survivors, who
experienced unimaginable horrors, and still were able to – completely incomprehensibly
– rebuild their lives, create new families and achieve an unprecedented renaissance
of Jewish life? What power allowed then to transcend their shattered lives
and build anything?
We may never have an answer. But we know that in some utterly
mysterious way, they accessed the deepest, most concealed,
reservoirs of human spirit and dignity, which in some way
was more powerful than the most dreadful nightmares that
history ever witnessed.
Beyond all of life and death, a force remains that does not let go
and does not give up.
I take one more peek at the new life that has entered my world and
I am reinfused with hope: My granddaughter
just arrived from another world, and has brought us a message of hope. Despite
the tragic losses and senseless pain, beyond the incomprehension of it all,
life is born yet again. And with it – a new beginning with
new possibilities.
I look at my new granddaughter and I know what choice I will make.
~~~~~