קפיצה מעל החומה: למה "רגיל" זה מבוי סתום
לכתחילה אריבער ומשמעות המילה פסח — פריצת גבולות
The Motto of the Maharash
"Lechatchila Ariber" — the famous motto of the Rebbe Maharash (the fourth Lubavitcher Rebbe): when you face an obstacle, don't try to go around it, don't seek compromises — go straight over it, from above. The very word "Pesach" means a jump, a leap — a breakthrough beyond all boundaries of nature and logic. The Exodus from Egypt was not a gradual evolution: the nation literally "jumped" from the deepest slavery to complete freedom in a single night. This is the model for every Jew's life: refuse to settle for "normal," don't be content with "good enough." Living in the "Ufaratzta" model — breaking outward — means making Torah study a passion that fills all of life, not a "Shabbat hobby." The Rebbe taught that every Jew is capable of supernatural achievements if they reject the limiting beliefs about what is "realistic" and what is "not."
Beyond the Framework of Reason
In our generation it is not enough to be a "good Jew" — one must act beyond the framework of reason. The Rebbe demanded constant growth: what was an achievement an hour ago is now insufficient. To stand still is to slide backward. When you realize that help comes "from nowhere" — from above nature — you gain strength for the impossible. G-d does not ask us to be "reasonable" — He asks us to jump. The story of the Exodus proves it: Nachshon ben Aminadav walked into the sea up to his neck before the waters parted. Action that exceeds logic evokes a response that exceeds nature. This very principle underlies all of Chabad's activities: opening a Chabad House in a city where five Jews live, sending a young shliach family to the ends of the earth — this is madness from the standpoint of "normality" and the only strategy from the standpoint of Torah.
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