Messages of the ProPhets __________________________________________________________________________________ Haftara of Parshas Ki Savo 5780
by Jonathan Shooter
Coming soon… What’s the Haftara about? Following the Redemption, there will be a great light and the glory of Hashem will be revealed and shine outwards. There will be a great ingathering of the Jews and the wealth of the nations will come their way. The nations will serve the Jewish people and bring various gifts. There will no longer be suffering in Eretz Yisrael, but great blessing there and all her people will be righteous from then on. The Haftara concludes, ‘In its time, I will hasten it’ (60:22). This last point seems to be a contradiction: Will the geula be at its appointed time, or will it be hastened? Chazal say that there is a set time by which the Redemption has to arrive. However, if the Jews do teshuva and ready themselves suitably, then this time could come earlier, at any given moment. What’s the connection to the Parsha? This is the sixth of the Seven Haftaras of Comforting. A picture is painted of the future era, when the Jews are no longer the low, despised nation; their position as the chosen and special nation will be apparent. There are also connections to the Parsha. The curses in the Parsha mention being smitten with blindness, as well as confusion and terror. The Haftara says that by contrast, in the future, there will be a light, referring to the era of salvation for the Jews, and then all these problems will disappear. The Parsha says that children will be born, but they will become captives, while the Haftara speaks about the return of the exiles. The Parsha talks about the Jews’ possessions being plundered, but the Haftara talks about a great wealth arriving in the future. The verse says ‘And your people, they are all righteous, forever they shall inherit the Land, a branch of My planting, My handiwork for Me to glory in’ (60:21). Once Rav Chaim Brisk went to serve in the Rabbanut of Rav Eliyahu Meizels. He stayed by Rav Meizels and the whole town of Lodz turned out to greet him and wish him ‘shalom’. The city of Lodz was a chassidish town and despite this, they still wanted to greet him because the greatness of Rav Chaim was known. A certain group of chassidish avreichim stood all day watching him, observing his every action. At one point, Rav Chaim turned to them and asked what they were looking at. They answered that it says in the holy sefarim that if one looks at the appearance of a tzaddik, it’s a segula for yiras shomayim. Rav Chaim cited our verse ‘and your people they are all tzaddikim’ so they could look amongst themselves and each other and they would get yiras shomayim. He then explained that the main point isn’t to look at the face of a tzaddik, but to look at himself, at his ways and conduct, that it should all be in line with the Torah, and then he will reach yiras shomayim. Another version of the story says that Rav Chaim explained to them that looking at a tzaddik doesn’t mean just looking at them, but watching and learning from their actions. So when is it? The verse says ‘the smallest shall increase a thousand fold, and the least into a mighty nation, I am Hashem, in its time I will hasten it’ (60:22). The Gemora (Sanhedrin 98a) says that the verse seems to contradict itself, will the geula arrive in its time, in other words a pre-determined fixed time, or will it be hastened? The Gemora answers that if the Jews are worthy, it will be hastened; if they are unworthy, it will arrive at its pre-determined time. The Vilna Gaon says that when the Gemora mentions all the conditions that need to be fulfilled before Moshiach’s coming, that is only if it will be ‘in its time’. If his arrival will be hastened, then none of those conditions will need to be fulfilled, and that can happen at any moment. People ask, how can people believe that Moshiach can come any day, at any moment, when the Gemora (Pesachim 13a) says that Moshiach won’t come on Fridays or Erev Yomtov, so we see there are days when Moshiach cannot be expected? The answer is the same as above, if Moshiach were to