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May 10, 2026 5:50 pm at 5:50 pm #2546933SQUARE_ROOTParticipant
DISCLAIMER:
I did NOT write this article or any part of it.
I do NOT KNOW who wrote this article.
I just copied it exactly, from the Matzav Inbox.__________________________________________
Matzav Inbox: The Ache of the Empty Seat (2026 April 21)Dear Matzav Inbox,
I’m writing this because my heart is heavy,
and I suspect I’m not the only one feeling this way.We just went through another month of Nissan and moved into Iyar.
In our circles, this time of year is about Sefirah,
about the mourning for the talmidim of Rabbi Akiva
who didn’t show enough kavod to one another.We talk about it in every shul, we learn the Gemara in Yevamos,
and we warn our children about the dangers of Sinas Chinam.But then I step outside, or I open a group chat,
or I sit at a Shabbos table, and I see a different reality.
I see Yiden — good, erliche Yiden — who can spend
three hours debating a Tosafos, but can’t spend
three minutes acknowledging the neshama
of a brother who wears a different colored yarmulke.I see the way we talk about the “other side” —
the ones who say Hallel today, or the ones
who see the hand of Hashem in the State.We’ve turned our hashkafic differences into
a reason to delegitimize another person’s entire existence.We treat a fellow Jew like a project to be corrected or a threat to be avoided.
I’m not a politician, and I’m not a posek.
I’m just a Yid who is tired. I’m tired of the labels.
I’m tired of the “Us vs. Them” mentality
that has seeped into our kehillos.How can we look at a fellow Yid — someone who is
sincerely expressing Hakaras HaTov to the Ribono Shel Olam,
even if it’s in a way our Rabbanim don’t subscribe to
— and feel anything but a sense of shared connection?We are so quick to judge the method that
we completely ignore the sincerity of the heart.
We are so focused on being “correct” that we forget to be “kind.”The Chofetz Chaim says that the Beis HaMikdash
is waiting for one thing:
for us to stop being “right” and start being brothers.We are so busy guarding the walls that
we’ve forgotten who we’re supposed to be guarding them for.To my fellow readers who feel this “ache” in the middle:
You aren’t alone. It’s okay to love a Jew you don’t agree with.
In fact, it might be the only chumra that actually brings Mashiach.Let’s stop the argument for just a moment.
Let’s try to see the Pintele Yid again.Because at the end of the day, when we
stand before the Kisei HaKavod,
Hashem isn’t going to ask us if we were “right” about the State.He’s going to ask us if we loved His children.
A Pained Reader (Name withheld by request)
To submit a letter to appear on Matzav.com, email [email protected]
The opinions expressed in letters on Matzav.com do not
necessarily reflect the stance of the Matzav Media Network.May 11, 2026 11:31 am at 11:31 am #2547498qwerty613ParticipantTo SQUARE_ROOT
This thread really gets it. Rabbi Miller said that a person can keep the Torah and still not have any idea as to what Judaism really is. A person has to think about what Hashem wants from us and not only what He tells us.
May 11, 2026 11:31 am at 11:31 am #2547590Koifer BIkurParticipant“Because at the end of the day, when we
stand before the Kisei HaKavod,
Hashem isn’t going to ask us if we were “right” about the State.He’s going to ask us if we loved His children.”
How do you know that? Maybe He’s going to ask why didn’t we stand up for K’vod Shamoyim. Please don’t try to tell us what HaShem is going to ask at the final Din V’Cheshbon; Nobody knows that.
May 11, 2026 4:33 pm at 4:33 pm #2547743nevuahParticipantIt’s called dehumanizing others. And I’ve seen this behavior time and time again.
Means there’s some sort of rot in our bones or arragence or lack of humanity.
Not sure whichMay 11, 2026 4:33 pm at 4:33 pm #2547758DaMosheParticipantIt’s a terrible situation.
Personally, I wear a colored knit kippah. I’m not trying to make a statement with it or anything like that. I started wearing knit years ago, only because I found it more comfortable. When I first switched, I wore black ones. One day, my wife told me she likes the look of the colors, and said it would make her happy if I wore colored kippot. So I started wearing them, because my wife is happy with it.
To me, it doesn’t matter what type someone wears on their head, as long as they have something there. But I actually had someone who works in a kiruv organization once say to me, “You need to take that silly colored thing off your head, and replace it with a plain black one!”
Absolutely disgusting.May 11, 2026 4:33 pm at 4:33 pm #2547765qwerty613ParticipantTo Koifer
If, at 120, Hashem asks me why I didn’t go Baruch Goldstein and blow up the Knesset, I’ll tell him that Rav Moshe, the Gadol and Posek Hador supported the State once it came into existence. Checkmate.
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