A Spiritual Sendoff to the Battlefield

Baila Olidort – Lubavitch.com
A high-ranking IDF General fills one of the final letters in the Torah scroll

The tensions that typically mark the divide between religious and secular in Israel are nowhere in evidence these days. In its stead is an enveloping compassion, empathy and love. The numinous spirit said to bind Jew to Jew beckons everywhere. On the lively streets of Jerusalem, in the coffee shops and on the city buses, focused prayers and intense hopes are prevalent.

Here in Israel, a country that depends on the courage of its young men–many still in their teens–for its day to day survival, every soldier is a hero. He is also everyone’s son. When one of them is lost, the grief is widespread, the heartache, pervasive. Israelis swell with the desire to protect them, to keep them safe and bring them back home alive.

The feelings are reciprocal. Soldiers are full of thanks for the smallest of gestures; they draw strength from the love and well-wishing that surrounds them. I met Yossi, a 26 year-old technician now in business. A marine in an elite IDF unit trained for specialized missions, Yossi leaves his young wife and heads to the battlefield this Sunday. “I’m a secular Jew,” he tells me, “but when you’re facing the enemy, there’s no such thing. You cry the Shema with the same fervor.”

The desire among Israel’s IDF forces across the spectrum, to bolster themselves in all ways possible, makes them especially receptive and filled with gratitude for spiritual avenues of reinforcement. So Chabad’s Rabbi Menachem Ofen makes his rounds to the army bases, installing a Sefer Chitat, or a book that contains Psalms, the Pentateuch, and the Tanya, in every tank. And now, he’s launched a project to write three Torah scrolls that will have letters corresponding to every member in the IDF.

It began on Monday, when Menachem was visiting the Golani Brigade at a northern army base, and a Druse battalion commander approached him. A mobile synagogue was on the base, but a Torah scroll was missing, he told Menachem. “The soldiers need it.”

Rabbi Yitzchak Kogan, of Moscow, Russia, heard this. Rabbi Kogan, who endured the worst of communist persecution, came from Russia for two days to give spiritual support to the soldiers. It took him no more than a few minutes and a few phone calls to secure a nearly completed Torah.

In a matter of 24 hours, the Torah would have to be delivered. The battalion was scheduled to leave the army base for Lebanon by Tuesday evening. Tuesday afternoon the Torah scroll was picked up from the scribe in Jerusalem, and the parchment sections were sewn together on the way up north while the car missed a falling katyusha by a few feet.

At the base Chabad rabbinical students were greeted by intense, last minute preparations.

“It was wild,” says Menachem who watched as army personnel tied up loose ends with breakneck speed. Shouting above the din, Menachem called out, “Dear soldiers! We’ve come here with a gift that will accompany you to the battlefield. We’ve come to bring you a Torah scroll, written specifically for you, the Israel Defense Forces.”

While faces were painted, provisions loaded into tanks, and orders delegated, soldiers surrounded Menachem. A cloth was spread out and the Torah scroll was unrolled. “They all wanted the scribe fill a letter in the Torah for them,” says Menachem. The General of the Golani Brigade was invited to write the final letter in the Torah.

In a spiritually charged moment, soldiers, officers, and the highest ranking generals covered their eyes and called out the Shema, “Hear-O-Israel.”

Rabbi Kogan, a Cohen, delivered the Birkhat Cohanim,: Yivarekhikha Hashem v’Yishmirecha . . . “G-d bless you and guard you. G-d’s countenance shine upon you and be gracious to you. May He turn his countenance towards you and grant you peace.”

The words reverberated against the surreal backdrop. “You could feel the entire Brigade absorbing the blessing with profound intensity,” says Menachem.

The soldiers then formed a circle around the Torah and began to dance. “It was the dance of life,” he says. “The joy was transcendent.”

Fortified with the blessings of the Cohen, the Shema prayer, and a Torah scroll, the soldiers took their leave, heading out into a dark and unknown night.

Rabbi Yitzchak Kogan speaks to an IDF officer.

Rabbi Menachem Ofen gives a Chitat to high ranking officers in the Golani Brigade

A high-ranking IDF General flanked by the scribe and Chabad’s Rabbi Menachem Ofen, fills one of the final letters in the Torah scroll

Rabbi Kogan offers spiritual inspiration to an IDF general.

8 Comments

  • A Yid

    The guy in the top pic is a captain, not a genaral, the guys with the starts are colnels and majors.

  • BORUCH BEN TZVI HAKOHAINE HOFFINGER

    Israeli soldiers: "Flock to the slaughter," by the timorous and callous Israeli government. The government won’t let you properly protect the people; they don’t care. They live in the center of Israel, in fine homes, far (for the present) from rockets.
    Soldiers, WAKE UP! Throw out your government or sit in jail. Anything is better than joining the IDF! Religious soldiers, sit in jail and learn Torah. If the society blacklists you afterwards—leave Israel! Your life is more important! The recent, tragic death, of 9 soldiers is an example. The enemy (YM"S) is entrenched and has the advantage. Why didn’t the government approve the dropping of some huge bombs (the US has them) or small Atomic Bombs, before the attack? Why? Because the goyim won’t like it! It’s the same old story. Heartless "leaders!" Jews, (R"L) prepare yourselves for more and bigger slaughter of IDF soldiers! THEN THE IDF AND THE POPULACE WILL WAKE UP OR MOSHIACH WILL COME. It will take a fire, as big as the one that destroyed the Bait HaMikdash, to destroy the ‘kelipah’ that runs Israel (The Rebbe).

  • BORUCH BEN TZVI HAKOHAINE HOFFINGER

    Hashem, Hashem, Father of the World, Creator of the Universe, protect all the IDF soldiers—they truly love you!

  • Possible correction

    I believe each of your pictures claiming to contain a general (or high ranking general) is mislabeled. The top picture with one of these labelse contains a captain; the next two colonels.

  • solder

    the man in the first pic. is not a top general, but a petty officer-namely a captain.

  • Tzvia

    Baruch Hashem for knowing the difference in ranks
    and baruch Hashem for the whole army and baruch
    Hashem for this wondrous people!

  • dl

    BS’D

    I want to give $ to support Chabad efforts to IDF soldiers – Does anyone know how to go about this??