I 4., TORAH PORTION OF TROY • FINE ITALIAN DINING Sharing Blessings Sunday, gliay 14, 2006 Shabbat Tazria-Metzora: Leviticus 12:1-15:33; Numbers 28:9-15; Isaiah 66:1-24. RESERVATIONS ACCEPTED Buffet from II a.m. — 7:30 p.m. LUNCHEONS • COCKTAILS • DINNER 3775 Rochester Rd. • Troy 1/2 mile North of Big Beaver Rd. (16 Mile), N. of 1-75 (248) 689-8050 Open 7 days Mon — Thurs 11 am — 10:30 pm Fri 11 am — 11 pm Sat noon — 11 pm Sun noon — 9:30 pm Enjoy a Complimentary Cappuccino or Dessert With Any Entree Purchased One Person • With Coupon Expires 5-12-06 cannot be combined with any other coupon or offer 1108500 Ala Carte Menu od Featuring Lelli's favorites including our famous 6-course meal served in the Fine dining for your rehearsal dinner, shower, wedding or any special event. Accommodations for up to 150, Tailor-made menus available. Since 1939 885 N. Opdyke • Auburn Hills (1/2 mile north of the Silverdome) Call for reservations: (248) 373-4440 www.lellisresturant.com Mike Lelli & Family 44 April 27 • 2006 I magine sitting at God afflicts his home with home one day, and tzaraat to remind him that, you notice that a "You didn't build that home • patch of the wall in your by yourself; I gave it to you." And while God wants us to kitchen has suddenly turned a greenish-reddish enjoy our homes, He also color. What could it be? expects us to appreciate our Mold? Bad paint? If you're blessings by sharing them Rabbi Reuven living in Michigan, prob- with others. Spotter ably. But, the powerful connec- Special to the But if you were living tion to the Land of Israel Jewish News in Israel during the times sends another important of the Temple, instead of message. This coming Wednesday, May 3, we will heading to Home Depot to fix the spot, you would run to the celebrate the 58th birthday of the Kohen, the priest, to learn whether State of Israel. As a modern Orthodox Jew, I view the creation of the State your house had been afflicted with tzaraat. of Israel not just as an important national development for the Jewish Among the different types of tzaraat God can bring upon the Jewish people, but as a critical religious and spiritual event. people, the Torah lists tzaraat of the I celebrateYom Ha'atzmaut not home. "When you come to the Land only with a barbecue, but with joy- of Canaan that I give to you as a pos- ous prayer and song, giving thanks to session, and I put a tzaraat mark on a God for the great gift He has bestowed house in the land of your possession." (14:34) Rabbi Shlomoh Efraim of upon His people in our lifetimes. Sometimes, I feel like we forget the Luntchitz, the chief rabbi of Prague message of the tzaraat. We see Israel in the early 1600s and the author of not as God's gift, but as a result of the the commentary Kli Yakar, notes the "strength and power of our arms." strong connection between the giv- We must always remember that while ing of the land and the tzaraat of the Israel certainly needs our funds and home. Where else would the Jewish political support, it needs our prayers people have their homes, if not "in the and spirituality as well. land of their possession?" Moreover, There's no better time than Yom why make mention of the inheritance Hiatzmaut to not only celebrate, but of the land twice in the same verse? to -also give thanks to God for the exis- Kli Yakar answers these questions tence of the State of Israel. ❑ with a startling insight into human nature. Psychologically, our home rep- resents our own private domain, our own personal property. That mentality Conversations can often lead to a sense of entitle- Do you think that tzaraat still ment and stinginess: I built this home; exists, not so much in our homes, I filled it with fine furniture and pos- but on a larger scale? How else sessions (and that wide-screen plasma does God send messages to the TV), clothing and goods. And if I did Jewish people today? all the work, why should I have to share it with others? It is this sense of personal entitle- ment and stinginess that tzaraat of Reuven Spolter is rabbi of Young Israel the home addresses. When a person fails to share his goodness with others, of Oak Park.