- להאזנה ראש השנה 060 סימנים קרא דלעת תשעה
060 Depth of Simanim
- להאזנה ראש השנה 060 סימנים קרא דלעת תשעה
Rosh HaShanah - 060 Depth of Simanim
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Introduction
With siyata d’shamaya (Heavenly assistance) we will speak a bit about the day of Rosh HaShanah.
The Gemara[1] states, “One should be accustomed to eat in the beginning of the year [Rosh HaShanah] kara (gourd), rubya, kartis, silka and tamri (dates). The Tur[2] cites additional foods, but in the actual words of the Gemara in front of us, it is these five foods that are mentioned.
The Gemara elsewhere[3] does not say that one should eat these foods, but instead to look at them. So there are two differing opinions in the Gemara: if we need to eat these foods on Rosh Hashanah, or if we should look at them.
First we will define what the concept of simanim is, and then we will go through the particular simanim that we eat, in-depth.
Simanim: Revealing The Hidden Essence of Something
A siman is a symbol to the essence of something. When something isn’t openly revealed to our eyes, it needs a siman so that we can know it exists. The siman of something is how we can become aware that the something exists; it draws the Heavenly essence behind the matter onto This World so that we can see it.
The Acharonim (later scholars) dispute about what the tefillos are that we say by the simanim. The Avudraham understands that the prayers we say before we eat the simanim are a prayer to merit a good judgment, while the Chochmas Shlomo is of the opinion that it is not a tefillah, rather, because we have bitachon (faith) that we will merit a good judgment. Either way, the simanim represent something that we cannot see here on this world, and we can draw down their Heavenly essence to this world through the simanim.
This concept, that a concept is hidden from our view but we can still draw it down from Heaven, is really the concept behind death. We will explain.
Rosh Hashanah is about both life and death, for the “book of the living” and the “book of the dead” are open on Rosh Hashanah. Had Adam eaten from the Eitz HaChaim, there would be only life, but when Adam ate from the Eitz HaDaas, death came to the world. He connected himself to death ever since then. In other words, the real life is hidden from us in our current state, so we do not have the essence of life in our current state. But we have a siman that can awaken to us what the essence of life is.
Siman is from the word sam, poison. When simanim are used for a holy purpose, there is simana milsa hi, “A siman is regarded”. When the evil of the sam in the siman is removed, through using it as a siman, the evil of siman\sam becomes rectified; it becomes “simana milsa hi.”
Siman As A Means For Finding A Lost Object
Until now we explained one use of a siman, which is when something is hidden and we need some way of reminding ourselves that a concept exists.
But there is also a kind of siman because it has become lost and the siman can help us find it again, because a lost object is recognizable if it has a siman on it. What is the deeper meaning behind this kind of siman?
The simanim on Rosh HaShanah are either eaten or they are seen, as we brought earlier. Chavah saw the Eitz HaDaas and she ate from it. Thus, eating or seeing the simanim of Rosh HaShanah is what rectifies the sin of Chavah when she saw and then ate from the Eitz HaDaas. There were two parts to the sin – seeing the Eitz HaDaas, and eating of it.
Rashi says that some of the foods we eat on Rosh HaShanah are foods that grow quickly and some are foods that are sweet [because they grow slowly]. Why do we eat foods that grow quickly? The simple understanding is that it symbolizes how we should merit to quickly grow in our spirituality. This is understandable according to the opinion that the simanim are tefillos, we eat them to get the merits and thus increase our spiritual level.
However, according to the other opinion that the simanim are an expression of our bitachon, why do we eat foods that grow quickly?
The Eitz HaDaas was an unripe fruit. The way this is rectified is by eating fruit on Rosh Hashanah that grows quickly, which is reminiscent of the unripe fruit of the Eitz HaDaas.
Chazal state that in the future, women will give birth the day they conceive. The depth of this is because it will rectify the first evil of eating fruit that grew quickly and was unripe; by the Eitz HaDaas, it was an evil kind of quick growth, thus it was unripe. In the future, when women give birth right away, there will be quick growth, but it will be ripe results.
Elevating The Mundane
There is a deeper meaning as well to why we eat foods on Rosh HaShanah that grow quickly.
The above-quoted Gemara says to eat rubya, and Rashi[4] translates this as “tiltan.” Rav Shlomo Zalman Auerbach zt”l was asked that the Gemara mentions elsewhere that tiltan is a kind of animal food; if so, how could it be that on Rosh HaShanah we should eat animal food? Isn’t this a bad siman?
First we need to define what it is, and then we can understand.
The simanim we eat on Rosh Hashanah are not just because of their Heavenly essence that they represent. It is more than that – it is to take something mundane and reveal how they are spiritual. So when we eat rubya, which is animal food, a mundane kind of food, that is precisely how we sanctify animal food - by using it for a spiritual purpose.
Why Kara and Rubya Are Eaten Together
Based upon the above, now we can also understand the depth of why we eat kara.
Rashi says that kara is called dalaas (gourd). This is mainly food fit for human consumption, but the Mishna elsewhere says the animals also eat dalaas.[5] Thus, rubya represents how we sanctify animal food; how do we sanctify it? We sanctify it by eating dalaas, which raises it from the level of animal food to human food. Rubya\tiltan is mainly animal food; through eating kara\dalaas and rubya together, we raise animal food to the level of human food.
Beinonim: Going From The Level of Servant To The Level of Son
Avraham told Eliezer, “Stay here with the donkey”, and Chazal expound to this to mean that he was telling him, “You are a nation that is like a donkey”. In other words, Eliezer was his slave, and a slave lowers himself from the level of a human to an animal.
On Rosh HaShanah we say, “Whether we are like children, whether we are like servants, have mercy on us.” These are two sides to the coin – either we are a son, or we are a servant. For every two sides, there is always a middle point that connects them, so there are really three groups of people. On one side there are the tzaddikim, who are like children to Hashem. There are the wicked on the other side, who are like servants to Hashem. The middle group is the beinonim, who are on the level between tzaddikim and the wicked.
Beinoni has the same numerical value in Hebrew as 128; when the words ben and eved are added together, it also adds up to 128. The beinoni is between the ben and the eved. An eved goes out to freedom either when his tooth or eye is removed. A person eats with his tooth and sees with his eye – the depth of this, is that a person goes out of exile when he rectifies his eating and his vision.
Thus, a person either sees or eats the simanim on Rosh HaShanah, so that he can leave the level of eved and go to the level of ben. An eved goes out through either tooth or eye; therefore a person should eat the simanim because that is how he goes free with his tooth, and he should see them so that he can go free through his eye.
But there is a deeper understanding a well.
When eved and ben is combined, it is 128, which is also the value of beinoni. If beinoni is added to both eved and ben, it is 128 and 128, which equals 256, equal to the numerical value of Aharon. Aharon loved peace and pursued peace and thereby brought people closer to the Torah; his whole essence was to serve as the intermediary and attach the wicked to the righteous. He brought together husband and wife, and he brought together one to another. Aharon is the one who connects that which has been separated – he represents a beinoni, the connecting point between the righteous and the wicked; a beinoni connects the levels of ben and eved together.
Kara\Dalaas: Either A Deadly Poison or Life-Giving
Kara is dalaas, which can be rearranged as the word la-daas, to know – a hint to the root of the sin with the Eitz HaDaas, for there was a desire to know of the Eitz HaDaas. It can also be read dal es, to take away time – because as a result of eating from the Eitz HaDaas, death came to the world; the time of man’s life was cut short.
The Gemara[6] lists a few kinds of dalaas. What kind of dalaas do we eat on Rosh Hashanah? The Gemara[7] describes dalaas yevonis, “Greek dalaas”, which is called a prominent kind of dalaas. The Gemara elsewhere describes a kind of dalaas that is used for vinegar, and this represents a kind of dalaas that is destroyed so that it can be used for something else; this is the lowest use of dalaas. There is regular dalaas, there is Greek dalaas, which is prominent dalaas, and there is unimportant dalaas.
Thus, the avodah of eating dalaas is to take ordinary dalaas on Rosh HaShanah and elevate it to the level of prominent dalaas.
The Gemara[8] says that kara was once brought into one the Sages’ homes, and the Sage said, “Remove the angel of death from this house!” The Gemara explains that dalaas can sometimes harm an ill person or heal him. Another opinion in the Gemara is that it depends how the dalaas is eaten; if it is eaten by itself, it is deadly to an ill person, but if it is eaten as together with other herbs, then it heals. From here we see that dalaas can be deadly poison.
The way we elevate dalaas on Rosh HaShanah is to go from eved to ben. On Rosh HaShanah we declare Malchiyos; we elevate eved to ben. Dalaas symbolizes how we must elevate our level, to declare Hashem as King over us.
Rosh HaShanah is from the word rosh, the head. Dalaas is to elevate; we elevate ourselves to declare the King. The highest point of the king is the crown, which is on the head. So too, in time, the malchus (kingship) in time is by the head of time, which is Rosh HaShanah.
The Gemara[9] discusses an animal whose head was severed, and it was given surgery and lived after that. What did they do to it? Rashi says that they chopped dry dalaas and used it to glue the animal’s head back to the body. Usually the rule of the Gemara is that “a treifah (dying animal) cannot live,” but this animal was an exception to the rule; it became a treifah and lived afterwards, when they glued its head back together, through dalaas. So dalaas can connect something that was previously dead back to the head, where it then can be alive.
We find this idea illustrated by a statement of Reb Pinchos Koritzer zt”l, that a person should be cautious not to think any evil thoughts on Rosh HaShanah, because those thoughts will carry over into the rest of the year, being that Rosh HaShanah is the head of the year, and the head drags everything else with it.
The Beinoni By Neilah Can Open Up A New Gate
Rosh HaShanah is when we are all written in either the book of life or the book of death, depending on if we are righteous or wicked. A beinoni, who is the connecting point between the righteous and the wicked, can be elevated to the level of the righteous, but he can also uplift the wicked with him.
The time of Neilah is called the “closing of the gates”, as we say be Neilah: “Open up for us at the time of the closing of the gates.” A gate is also called deles, which has the same letters as the word dalaas, hinting to how the beinonim (represented by the dalaas) at that time can connect himself to the level ofthe righteous and uplift the wicked. The beinoni opens a new door by Neilah and enables even the wicked to be uplifted then.
The Depth Behind Dipping The Apple In The Honey
The Gemara lists five simanim to eat, but as we know from Shulchan Aruch and as almost every Jew in the world does – we dip the apple in the honey. There are many reasons given for why we eat specifically an apple. According to the lines of our discussion, it is because apple means tapuach, from the word pesach, opening.
The first siman listed in the Gemara is kara (or dalaas), thus, since kara is the first siman listed (although we don’t have the custom nowadays to eat it first), all the other simanim are headed by kara\dalaas. Kara\dalaas is essentially the door to all the other simanim. Thus, we eat an apple, which is tapuach, related to the word patuach, to open the doors – and we eat it with honey, which “sweetens” what goes on by the door. The sweetness of the honey is what removes the closed doors and allows for an opened door.
Yaakov left the room of Yitzchok by the blessing at the same time that Esav entered. They miraculously did not each meet each other. The depth of this is because when the “doors” are “opened”, nothing can clash. Esav is called ish seir, a hairy man, because he represents hair, and hair is above the head, which hints to how he is like a removed head; a removed head symbolizes death, so Esav is like the hair, removed from his head, dead. Meeting with Esav is like meeting up with death, but when there is an “opened door”, symbolized by the dalaas\deles, nothing is closed.
[That is the message behind the dalaas, which is related the word deles, door – to show us that there is a new door being opened, all that was closed has been opened for us, and the opportunities are thus endless. This level will be fully revealed in the future. As for us who live in the current era, the dalaas reminds us that we can open for ourselves a new door.]
There is a door that can lead to the palace or a hallway, but the door that leads to the King is unlimited, because the King is unlimited in His power (“A king breaks fences”). When the malchus (kingship) of Hashem will be totally revealed in the future, it will be revealed that His malchus is unlimited; it will be an opening that has no end, no closing to it.
In the current Rosh HaShanah we are in, all is written and decreed; the year is sealed for a person. But when the “doors” get “opened” in the future, all seals will be torn, because there will be the revelation of the Endless, which is the eternal life that was contained in the Eitz HaChaim.
Conclusion
Thus, kara\dalaas is the first of the listed simanim on Rosh HaShanah, and it represents the entire depth to how we elevate ourselves on Rosh HaShanah from a lower level to a higher level, that “we should be as a head, and not as a tail”.
The main avodah of Rosh HaShanah is Malchiyos, that the kingship of Hashem be declared by us upon ourselves, and it is represented by the siman of dalaas, which is how we elevate ourselves from the lower level to the higher level.
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