Nishmas Day 14 | Rabbi Ginzberg
The Morning Will Come
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It’s easier to hide in the darkness of night.
7:30 AM. Our alarm is ringing – and we wish it would stop.
We don’t want to pull ourselves together. We don’t to face another day of struggle.
Rabbi Meir Mazuz, was the leader of the Tunisian community in Eretz Yisroel, one of the Gedolei Hador for the Sephardic community.
When his beloved wife passed away at the young age of 56, he was utterly broken. The morning after her petirah, he shared with his family: "Last night, I could not imagine that morning would come”. Yet, he found comfort in the words of Reb Yehuda Halevi, in a poem written hundreds of years earlier, on the night he had left Eretz Yisroel. "The night of the separation we do not ask for light, yet the morning comes against our will.”
With profound emotion, Rabbi Mazuz said, "Against my will — morning is here." Surely, Hashem would give him the strength to endure another day.
No matter what we’re going through, every night is followed by dawn — a reminder that Hashem believes in us and He will give us the strength to continue.