Weekly Letter: Lessons and Guidelines of a Leap Year

In his letter to a group of students, the Rebbe brings out the lessons and guidelines of a Leap Year – a year in which an extra month of Adar is added, which is the case in our present year as well, of 5782.

By the Grace of G-d 27th of Adar, 5733
Brooklyn, N.Y.
To the Boy Students and Girl Students Lubavitch Yeshivah
Boston, Mass
Greeting and Blessing:
I was pleased to receive your letters, in which you write about your studies and ask for a brocho to be
successful in all your studies and in doing mitzvos.
I will remember each and every one of you in prayer at the holy resting place of my saintly father-in-law
of Saintly memory, for the fulfillment of your heart’s desires for good.
Inasmuch as everything is by hashgocho protis , and your letters reached me in this special month of the
Leap Year, when also my reply is sent to you, I want to take this opportunity of reminding you about the
special lesson of the Leap Year.
You surely know that the reason for our having a Leap Year from time to time is that our Jewish
Calendar is based on the Lunar Year, which is about 11 days shorter than the Solar Year. But inasmuch as
the Torah requires us to observe our festivals in their due seasons – Pesach in the spring, Succoth in the
autumn, etc. – it is necessary to make an adjustment from time to time to make up the deficiency
between the Lunar Year and the Solar year.
Here again also lies an important practical lesson. For not only does the extra added month of the Leap
Year fully make up for the past deficiency, but it usually also provides for an advance “on account” of
the following year.
The lesson is two-fold… a person must from time to time make a review of the past, to see what he or
she has accomplished. The first thing to remember is, therefore, that it is never too late to make good
past deficiencies. Secondly, it is not enough to make up a deficiency; it is also necessary to make an
extra effort as an advance on account of the future and then continue from strength to strength.
And when one makes a careful and honest review on the past, one will find that even if the past was
satisfactory, it is possible that with a little effort, more could have been accomplished. Certainly, if the
past was not quite satisfactory. In either case, we should not say, “Well, the past is gone and there is
nothing to be done about it.” For the Torah teaches us, and the Leap Year reminds us about it very
strongly, that there is much we can do also about the past, namely, to make up the deficiency by extra
effort. And not only make up the deficiency but do more than that as an advance on account of the
future, and then continue to go from strength to strength.
May G-d grant that each and every one of you should do all that is up to you to make up for any
deficiency in the past and, indeed, to do so with an extra measure on account of the future, as
mentioned above. The promise of our Sages “Try hard and you will succeed” applies also in this case.
There is also the additional promise “Nothing stands in the way of the will.” Wishing each and all of you
hatzlocho in all above and also a joyous and inspiring Purim,
With blessing,