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ב"ה

Racheli's Thoughts



 Thoughts and Reflections by Racheli Muchnik, in loving memory of her brother Rabbi Ariel Rav-Noy, of blessed memory.

Waiting for My Brother

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“NO! It’s NOT TRUE!”

That was all I could say and think for the first five minutes after my husband, Rabbi Dov Muchnik, broke the horrific news that my brother Ariel had suddenly passed away.

Dov gently and lovingly explained to me that we need to go down to L.A., the funeral will be tomorrow, and I will need to sit shivah. 

And I kept repeating those words. It’s not true. It’s not true. He did NOT die. I don’t believe you, Dov. You’re making a huge mistake.

Dov was overwhelmed with his own emotion. He had known Ariel even before he knew me! Dov and Ariel were buddies in yeshivah, they share the same birthday and often had their birthday farbrengens together. Ariel was the one who talked me into dating Dov, telling me – in his almost prophetic way – that he believes we are soul-mates.

Yet here stands Dov, crying bitterly, and sharing the most terrible news with me in the most sensitive way possible.

You know, I hope it's okay I say this - I think G-d Himself should learn a lesson or two from Dov!  About taking the perspective of His loved ones into consideration...  I'm sorry to say this to you Hashem, I just know You can do better... 

It’s time to tell our children that they have lost their uncle Ariel. I approach Moti, who is on the computer, in class in his Shluchim Online School. His rebbi is showing the class a video of the Rebbe. I see the subtitles: “When a tzaddik passes away, his soul is more present in the world than in his lifetime...”

Ariel - you were a tzaddik! I always knew that! You had a soul that almost didn’t belong down here in the first place. And I had the merit of having you as my brother!

But NO - this CANNOT BE TRUE!

Ariel - you have an incredibly dedicated wife, Miriam, and your beautiful children, Mendy, Chanie, Levi, Sheina Mushka, Sara’le, Hindy and Avreme’le, who need you BADLY.

It’s just not true. 

It can’t be.

We drive down and come to Ariel and Miriam’s home. Ariel’s holy body was removed less than an hour ago.

In the backyard I see Chanie. She is nine years old. She’s sitting on the grass outside with her mother. Chanie had the sweetest relationship with Ariel—I’ve never seen such closeness between a father and daughter. She’s staring straight ahead, with big beautiful eyes that speak volumes...

My father comes out. 

Here is a soldier—the strongest man I know—yet his spirit is broken today. 

Here is a man who lost his father when he was two years old. 

His brother to leukemia.

His younger brother was killed while serving in the IDF.

His mother (an Auschwitz survivor) he lost to a car accident. 

And just a few months ago he lost his step-father.

That’s all of his immediate family—lost tragically. 

And now his son. 

NO!!!

These things can’t happen. 

I will never forget the scene that followed.

My father bends over and gives Chanie a big hug. He cries. My father doesn’t cry! He speaks to her so lovingly, my heart breaks. He tells her, “I am sad, you are sad. We are all sad.” And he lets that emotion sink in. 

Then he continues softly, “But you want to hear something interesting? I am actually really hungry right now! I didn’t eat yet today! And even though I’m so sad, I’m going to eat now... and even though you are sad, Hashem will make you strong, and you will also do what you need to do. You will go back to school, and be strong. You are very brave and very strong, Chanie…”

My heart is breaking. From where does he get the strength?

I need to hear his loving words just as much as Chanie. Those words will stay with me forever. Hashem wants us to be strong. Despite the madness. 

I learned that a neshamah already knows five days before its passing that the time is approaching. 

Three days before, Ariel was shmoozing with a good family friend, Rabbi Nachman Kreiman, who tragically lost children of his own. He was probing, asking him lots of questions, in his “Talmudic” style. “So, what is it like to lose a son? What is the pain like for the father? For the siblings? Is it worse for the parents than the siblings?”

Not surprising, that his soul felt what was coming. And not surprising that he was subconsciously feeling so bad for the pain that my Abba, Ima, and all of us would have to go through. 

During the shivah, my mother and I sat and went through Ariel’s writings from when he was younger. Interesting that my mother kept all of his, and none of ours. 

We laughed and cried.

Then I went through all of his recent writings. Just a few weeks ago, on January 4, he asks his fellow Shluchim: “Where can I find the letter of the Rebbe that explains ‘haMakom yenachem,’ that we compare [their loss] to Jerusalem, just like Jerusalem is everyone’s aveilus and will be rebuilt, so too the niftar will come back?”

Ariel believed in Moshiach in a way that most people do not. That’s because he lived on a higher plane. Moshiach made total sense to him! This world and its craziness was a novelty and a big frustration to him. Moshiach - Redemption - Peace - love and fairness? NOW we’re talking!

He wanted people, all people, to be respectful and sensitive to one another. Anything less than that bothered him very deeply.

They’re telling me that I need to leave to his funeral in less than an hour. 

And my tantrum begins again. “NO, it’s simply NOT TRUE!"

But I think I get it now—it really is not true at all!

Let me tell you why. Because this is just a big bad joke, a terrible nightmare, and we’re going to wake up at any moment!

I learned that when Moshiach comes, we will say “hayinu kecholmim” and we will look back at this reality called galus as one long bad dream.

So perhaps I can just remain where I stand today, not accepting this as a reality! True, we are going to the funeral, followed by shivah. True, we have an indescribable journey ahead of us alongside seven orphans and an incredibly dedicated wife and mother...

But it really is not true because any moment now, literally any second, this reality will be busted. We will see that it was indeed never real to begin with! It is a facade, a process.

The truth is that G-d is good. He truly is. He is just hiding right now.

Ariel taught me how to believe. He taught me that you can live in this world yet believe in the ultimate truth.

What is true? What’s true is that Moshiach is coming and we are about to experience the ultimate Redemption.

You may be reading that and thinking, “Yeah, right, is that really something to believe?”

And I’ll beg you - in Ariel’s honor— can you believe it?

Just for today? 

Ariel, in your honor, I will believe in a world where people truly love and respect each other. I will believe in a world where people don’t die, and those who did will come back. I believe my eyes will see the day when you and your daughter Chanie will embrace, as she greets you and dances alongside you as you walk back home to your loving family!

Ariel, in your honor, I will do my best for your wife and kinderlach. I can never replace you, of course...

And Ariel, in your honor, I won’t let go of the dream ... wait... That is not the dream! THIS is a dream!

I will not let go of the truth—the reality—that G-d is good, and He does only good.

How crazy that you passed away on the day that the Torah portion speaks of the song that the Jews sang after the Splitting of the Sea?

I am so excited to dance and sing with our reunion, and with the reunion with our beloved Rebbe who—I know—held you especially close.

I love you, Ariel, and I will see you shortly.

Your sister,

Racheli

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A Song for My Daughter

 

This one is for women and girls only.  According to the Jewish laws of modesty, girls and women only sing in front of a female audience.  

The following is a song that my daughter Yehudis Yaffa and I wrote in honor of her Bas Mitzvah.  

Click on the image below to listen to a section of us singing it at her Bas Mitzvah, less than two weeks ago...

Here are the words: 


 Bas Mitzvah Song

Swaying gently in my arms
My baby sleeps so peacefully

I softly sing to her and tell her
Yehudis Yaffa - now you will be

With your new name you have
A holy spark from Above

Unaware of the world you're in
Showered by affection and love

Na na na....

Chorus:
Soon I’ll be older
And deep within me
My flame will dance and shine

A part
Of Hashem
My neshama, my soul will be mine

I will reach
I will teach
I will kindle other flames

I will overcome
The darkness 
And Glorify His name

Walking side by side together
I lovingly hold her hand

Her first day of school is here
I look on as she skips off with her friends

More aware of the world she's in
Friendships she begins to form

Caring for the feelings of others
Her neshama is more a part of her

Na Na…

Chorus:
Soon I’ll be older
And deep within me
My flame will dance and shine

A part
Of Hashem
My neshama, my soul will be mine

I will reach
I will teach
I will kindle other flames

I will overcome
The darkness 
And Glorify His name

  
Filled with nachas and with pride,
I see her blossom on her own

Her Bas Mitzvah now approaching
I marvel at how she has grown

With her talents and her friendly smile
She warms the heart of another.

An inspiring leader of tomorrow
I’m humbled to be her mother

Na Na…

Chorus #2:

Now I am older
And deep within me
My flame can dance and shine
A part
Of Hashem
My neshama, my soul is mine

And soon will be
A world of peace
We'll see that G-dly flame
Forever gone 
will be the darkness
As we glorify His name.

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Click the above image to see part of the song peformed, and click here for the ending.  


Below are my daughters words she spoke before we sang the song:


A few months ago, my mother and I wrote a song together which we look forward to singing tonight.   Before we sing, I want to share with you the thoughts that inspired this song. 

 

The soul up in Heaven waits for its turn to come down into a body and fulfill its mission here on earth.  

When a baby is first born – their soul begins the journey into the body.  

At first, a newborn is quite selfish – thinking only about him or herself.  

I think about my baby brother Menachem – who wakes up my mother each night, not bothered by the sleep she is missing, each time he needs to nurse; his G-dly soul is not completely within him.  

But as the baby grows and becomes a toddler, as the soul continues to go more completely into the body, he or she slowly starts to be aware of the world around him!  

I see this with my other siblings!  

I see how my two-year-old sister Devorah Leah, can say “sorry” when she did something wrong.  

And then I see my five-year-old sister Menucha- when she says sorry, she truly means it!  

And then I see my six-year-old-sister Bracha Leba, who can actually hold herself back from doing something wrong in the first place!

As a girl's G-dly soul continues to enter her body, she is increasingly able to think about others.

The older she gets, the more she can be in touch with spirituality and her own soul. 

And then, as she reaches Bas Mitzvah, a girl can really feel that urge within her to grasp things that are deeper, that are more meaningful; she starts to question, and wants to understand.  

She is aware of her actions and wants to make good choices. 

She understands that she is now able to shift her focus from her own wills and wants, and dedicate her life to the will of Hashem, to lead a most meaningful life possible, infused with spirituality.

Thinking about the world outside ourselves; G-d's desires, others' needs.

 

At the age of Bas Mitzvah, the soul is completely and entirely in her body. The soul is hers.  

This past Tuesday was my 12th birthday.

From that day – my soul became completely mine!

I now have the ability to truly make a difference.  

I now can reach out to others and bring light to this world.  

I can now utilize the power of my soul to the fullest!   

 

Thanks to my soul, I have the ability to be aware of Hashem, myself and others; I am able to live a life of purpose and meaning. 

 

My Moment With the Rebbe

 

I shared this at the end of my daughter's Bas Mitzvah.  


I want to close the evening with a story that happened to me 22 years ago.  

When I was 10 years old, I went with my parents to visit the Lubavitcher Rebbe in honor of my brother Ariel’s Bar Mitzvah.  

The Rebbe held a gathering for all Bar and Bas Mitzvah boys and girls and their families.  

At the end of the Rebbe’s talk, we lined up to receive a dollar from the Rebbe, one at a time.  

When it was my turn, the Rebbe asked me two words: “Bas Mitzvah?” 

I can still see the Rebbe’s deep blue eyes looking straight at me.  

I was frozen to my spot; I couldn’t move, I couldn’t speak. 

I wasn't nervous because the Rebbe could see me on the outside.

I was overwhelmed because I knew that he saw the depths of my soul.

Yet I knew I needed to answer the Rebbe… I found the courage to softly shake my head to signal that no – I was not yet Bas Mitzvah.  

Then my mother, standing right behind me, voiced the answer “od loh” – not yet… 

The Rebbe smiled and we moved on.  

I was very confused and excited. 

Confused because I did not know why the Rebbe asked me if I was Bas Mitzvah. Yet I felt so special – because the Rebbe thought I was already Bas Mitzvah but I wasn’t yet… And I was excited that I had an extra moment with the Rebbe than I expected to have… 

I think only when Moshiach comes, will I know what that exchange was all about for sure.  

But over time it has meant different things to me. 

When I turned Bas Mitzvah, I was actually not able to receive a dollar from the Rebbe; it was already after the Rebbe suffered his stroke and was unable to meet with Bar and Bas Mitzvah girls and boys anymore. 

Perhaps the Rebbe was giving me my blessing back then, in advance?  

Perhaps the Rebbe was telling me that I can always strive for higher…even if I am 10, I can move towards what a Bas Mitzvah girl is able to do… 

And tonight it has taken on yet another meaning: My daughter is Bas Mitzvah. The Rebbe surely knows, for the Rebbe is here. And I just beg Hashem, that my daughter Yehudis Yaffa be able to receive a dollar from the Rebbe’s holy hand tonight…with the coming of Moshiach…

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My mother and I recieving a dollar from the Lubavitcher Rebbe. 

Click on the image to see a short video clip of the Rebbe speaking to my mother and I... 

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