Weekly Torah Portion

PARSHAS Vayakhel 5785

The Rabbi's Private Jet

Rabbi Binyamin Ehrenkranz

Director of Impact

A seasoned rabbi I know is a renowned teacher and one of the country’s foremost authorities on many areas of Jewish law. In a typical year he gives hundreds of classes at his yeshiva and in dozens of places around the world. His summer schedule is active as well, usually including time teaching teenagers in Israel and helping lead educational trips in Europe.

So when he gets just a few weeks to himself at a summer cottage rental in upstate New York, it’s a true respite, a time to study by himself and to enjoy the countryside’s calmness and fresh air. Yet sometimes duty still calls.

A student was getting married in Chicago. The date fell during the rabbi’s precious time away, but he agreed to officiate. He asked the family to arrange travel from a nearby airport, but they instead booked a flight from a larger, regional airport farther away. Either way the travel would have been burdensome, but now it was to be a trip of at least a day and a half.

Somehow one of the yeshiva’s philanthropic supporters got wind of the inconvenient situation. When he next encountered the scholar, who was then almost 70, he said, “Rabbi, I’m not going to let you do that.”

At noon on the wedding date, a chauffeured car pulled up in front of the small upstate cottage and collected the rabbi. They drove a short distance to a small airport, where a modest private plane awaited its sole righteous passenger. Upon the wedding’s end in Chicago, the plane again carried the rabbi back to upstate New York, where the chauffeured car returned him home to his own bed for the night.

There are several observations one could make about this episode. The rabbi himself was appreciative of the philanthropist’s cutting his time away by two-thirds. Others might be awed by the sheer expense that must have been involved, all in behalf of someone quite used to flying economy class. One person observed to me at the time both of these factors, noting that the value of saving a full day of the important rabbinic leader’s time was certainly worth the funds involved.

But there is another important, if obvious dimension to the story: the extraordinary generosity involved.

In this week’s Torah portion we read about the call to donate to the Jewish people’s holy Tabernacle. It was open to all, “whoever’s heart is willing” to bring a gift. The invitation was not based on a person’s quantitative capacity but his interest and care. In sacred spaces scale is only valuable insomuch as there’s intentionality behind each piece of the investment. Being magnanimous is dependent on sincerity, not the size of a gift.

Our sages say that generosity can be a gateway character trait, that when one becomes thoroughly generous he will achieve refinement of his or her character in many other key ways, as well (Rabbeinu Yonah to Avos Ch. 2).

Working to ease another person’s hardship or just reduce simple inconvenience to whatever extent we can makes us better people. Likewise, when we support or volunteer for key religious causes like our Torah day schools and synagogues, we help build not just one another, but our national interests. Through true generosity at any level, we strengthen others, ourselves and even the future of the Jewish people.

Send your questions or comments to the author

This field is hidden when viewing the form
This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Recent Articles

PARSHAS Tazria-Metzora 5785

A Two Word Message

Rabbi Dovid Yachnes

Have you ever walked away from a conversation and said to yourself “Wow! That was just amazing!” Maybe you felt empowered. Maybe energized. Maybe your heart felt a sense of calm. You know what I mean? Think back to one of those conversations. What about that interaction gave you those feelings? What made you feel…

READ MORE

PARSHAS Shemini 5785

What's in a Name?

Aliza Nabatian

One of the most remarkable, G-d-is-communicating-with-us-right-now moments I experienced was while leading a teen Israel trip two summers ago. A person’s Hebrew name speaks to the essence of who they are, but not all Jewish children are given one at birth. Many people choose theirs only later in life. So while on the trip, we…

READ MORE

PESACH 5785

Why Jews Spend Passover in Orlando

Rabbi Binyamin Ehrenkranz

On average, more than six million people visit Orlando every month, or roughly 200,000 people a day. So when some estimates put the Passover influx at about 50,000 Jews for the course of nine or ten days, it’s not quite a news story. Except that the “business” of Passover is distinctive. Besides the usual hotels,…

READ MORE

PARSHAS Tzav 5785 – Pesach

Only One Matza

Nina Ehrenkranz

It was the first Passover after the 1945 liberation. The Grand Rabbi of Skulen and his son were among the survivors, and did what they could to lift the spirits of those who had survived that darkest hell. Somehow they managed to get hold of a little flour to bake matzos for these bedraggled survivors….

READ MORE

PARSHAS Vayikra 5785

Who Am I?

Daniel Nabatian

Music is an important part of my life. I usually get the eye roll from the teenagers I work with at JSU when I tell them the only music on the radio worth listening to is country music. You either love it or hate it and I get that. Yet again, a thought from this…

READ MORE

PARSHAS Pekudei 5785

Yoda, Fishing and Moshe

Rabbi Gabi Gittleson

Yoda. The legendary master-teacher, known to millions across the world for his insights and leadership. Held in the highest ranks of fictional mentors and role models. At the risk of upsetting millions, I would like to use this week’s d’var Torah as a platform to publicly protest his most famous quote as anti-Torah values. “Do….

READ MORE

PARSHAS Ki Sisa 5785 – Purim

The Valley of Fire

Shifra Yachnes

Last week I had the opportunity to visit Las Vegas for a work retreat. Like most people, I had certain expectations—bright lights, flashing signs, and an energy that never stops. But what I didn’t expect was the breathtaking natural beauty just beyond the city. As we hiked through Valley of Fire State Park, I was…

READ MORE

PARSHAS Tetzave 5785 – Purim

High Stakes Gambling

Leora Estersohn

I’m not usually a gambler. But when we planned a high school production and left one scene in the script blank for the ninth-grade actress to improv as she saw fit…I started to wonder if my appetite for risk had grown a bit too large and if the stakes were maybe just a bit too…

READ MORE

PARSHAS Teruma 5785

No Place Like Home

Rabbi Dovid Yachnes

Vacation is great! It’s so good to get away, see wonderful sights, visit unique places, and spend quality time with family and friends in a different setting. But we all know that feeling when it’s over and we get back home, wash up from the trip, and sink our heads onto that very familiar pillow….

READ MORE

PARSHAS Mishpatim 5785

Strangers On A Plane

Aliza Nabatian

Every time I go on a teen trip to Israel I come back with powerful stories. But this time something happened before I even stepped off the plane. As I stood up from my seat, in front of me was a woman with “Bring Them Home” tags around her neck and wearing a T-shirt with…

READ MORE