The Mezuzah and The Menorah: Rabbi Benjamin Blech Where Do You Put Your Menorah?
The Mezuzah and The Menorah: Rabbi Benjamin Blech Where Do You Put Your Menorah?
The Mezuzah and The Menorah: Rabbi Benjamin Blech Where Do You Put Your Menorah?
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Simply put, the significance of these two items on either side of the door is to surround us with
mitzvot. How beautiful, indeed, to know that no matter which way we turn there is a reminder
for us of Gods providential and protective care.
But I believe theres something far more profound to this duality of religious expression that
demands an opposite side for each one of its component parts. It reflects upon the essential
meaning of these two major mitzvot even as it allows us to understand the unique message of the
festival of Hanukkah as the most relevant of all holidays observed by Jews in contemporary times.
Why a divine reminder at ones door? Let us define first the importance of the doorway to ones
home as the site for a religious symbol. The door of ones residence is, in fact, an all-important
location because it represents the meeting ground of two worlds in which every one of us lives.
We are part of the world; we are also at times apart from the world. We live as members of the
larger society interacting with others. We also have our own private lives, a very personal
existence. To use the categories of Shabbat laws, we occupy the world of reshut harabim, the
public domain as well as the world of reshut hayachid, the private domain. Our lives know the
clamor of the crowds and the silence of solitude. We are players in the games of our communal
activities, as well as isolated individuals engrossed in the pastime of solitaire.
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It is the door that serves as entryway from one world to the other. It is the bridge between our
two existences. It is the path from our private persona to our public faceas well as our point of
return once again from the scrutiny of the masses to the security and safety of self-awareness.
Small wonder then that the Torah itself decreed a Godly reminder at a spot filled with so much
need for ritual fortification. But what is not clear at first glance, is which trip served as the focal
point of biblical concern. The door of the home is both entrance and exit. For which route did
God most worry that we might forget His presence and therefore demand a divine reminder?
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Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary The Benjamin and Rose Berger CJF Torah To-Go Series Kislev 5775
even a Minchah or Maariv. It is, after all, not so very difficult being Jewish in Jewish
surroundings.
But oh how hard it is to remain pious and perfect in a world so alien to our ideology. Who has
not heard the rationalization for removing oneself from the burdens of religious practice when
traveling, when away from ones immediate surroundings, when placed in a new environment or
surrounded by those not religiously committed? When in Rome, goes the old saying, do as the
Romans do. So, too, say many, when surrounded by Gentiles or assimilated Jews, why stick out
like a sore thumb with antiquated religious traditions? It is the world outside which beckons
seductively and beseeches assimilation. When the Jew leaves the sanctity of his four walls, he
becomes susceptible to the dangers lying in wait. Perhaps this, then, is the real purpose of the
biblical mitzvah that reminds us to remember God as we cross over from one domain to the
next. Maybe halakhah is really most worried about our spiritual salvation not at the doorway of
entry, but rather at the doorway of exit.
be good. Pressure of peers guaranteed compliance. Only with privacy came the possibility for
transgressionand the need for the mezuzahs reminder that even if the eyes of others are no
longer upon us, , Behold the guardian of Israel neither sleeps
nor slumbers (Tehillim 121:4)the All-seeing one is always with us.
But the ideal world as the Torah envisioned it did not last forever. The very first time in history
the Jews living in Israel were forced to confront an alien culture was in the period of the
Hellenists. The Greeks projected an ideal that was in direct contrast to the teachings of Judaism.
Whereas we had stressed the beauty of holiness, the disciples of Sappho promulgated the
holiness of beauty. The outside world, instead of strengthening ones faith, now became the
battleground upon which the forces of assimilation and apostasy prevailed. Long before the Age
of Emancipation there were Jews, known as Hellenists, who became so seduced by the alien
culture that they chose as slogan: Be a Jew in your homebut a man of the world and a Greek in
the world outside.
In the aftermath of the victory of the Maccabees, our sages understood that this new challenge had
to be met. The Jew needed a reminder of God at his doorway not only when he entered his house
but, perhaps far more significantly, when he left it. And so, another mitzvah was established. The
menorah was to be placed opposite the mezuzah. Not simply because a Jew would then be
surrounded by mitzvot. Rather, the menorah was actually on the right side as well if one considered
that every Jew would be facing it on his right when he exited the precincts of his private dwelling to
confront the challenges of an alien world. It is when the reality of the outside was altered that the
position of Gods reminder symbol had to be switched from one side to the other.
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Rabbi Isaac Elchanan Theological Seminary The Benjamin and Rose Berger CJF Torah To-Go Series Kislev 5775