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Camp HASC
HASC Alumni Bulletin, Passover - April 2011

 HASC SignGreetings!
 

 

A Message of Freedom. In the Haggadah, it is documented how the saintly Hillel would wrap together, as in a sandwich, matzo, a portion of the Pesach sacrifice, and bitter herbs and eat them together.  The provoking question which needs clarification, why did Hashem place us in such a tormenting situation, in a wicked land and ultimately redeem us to become a free independent nation with our own unique identity.  Why didn't Hashem begin just with the end of the story whereby He chose us to be His children marking our Genesis as a free mighty nation to be reckoned with among the nations of the world? 

                             

The message conveyed by Hillel is that "galuth" "exile" "eating moror" is a pre-requisite and paramount to our understanding and to appreciate the great value of our freedom and our relationship with Hashem and mankind.  As we recite in our daily prayers: "Hashem sustains the living with kindness, resuscitates the dead with abundant mercy" the paragraph concludes,'מלך ממית ומחי'ה ומצמיח ישועה'  "O King who causes death and restores life and makes salvation sprout." (Shemonah Esrei) Death is listed prior to "restores life and brings about salvation". Chazal teach us that death - servitude - exile - confinement is a precursor to redemption and ultimately to salvation. 

 

At times, for reasons beyond our comprehension, we are challenged with our own individual arduous exile, yet, we must fully believe, that in the long run, we will emerge stronger, more compassionate and loving human beings.  That is the pinnacle message conveyed by Hillel and why Hashem in His infinite wisdom found it necessary to subject His loving children into a formidable exile for several hundred years.  The yielding results, for generations to come, proved to be so remarkable and so significant, that over the span of time, the exile while a bitter process, proved to be an invaluable factor in the lives of our forefathers.  Perhaps, that is the reason why Hashem chose the entire process of an exile in the land of Egypt which ultimately followed by  redemption.

 

The purification process, as difficult as it may have been, proved to be rewarding and made us into a kindhearted and sympathetic nation.  Hence, we need to see ourselves, as authored in the Haggadah, "In every generation, one is obliged to regard himself as though he himself had actually gone out from Egypt," for the Torah says: "you shall tell your son on that day, saying:'בעבור זה עשה ה' לי בצאתי ממצרים' 'For the sake of this, Hashem did for me when I went out from Egypt.'  Not only our fathers did the Holy One, blessed be He, redeem, but He also redeemed us with them, for so it says: 'And He brought us out from there, so that He might bring us and give us the land which He had promised to our fathers."

 

On Pesach night, every year, the spirit of redemption bestirs itself anew.  It is our task to ready ourselves by uncloaking the contaminated spiritual and physical shackles of our society, and sanctify our lives as servants of Hashem.  This is the personal redemption which everyone - in every generation - must strive to achieve. 

 

 On behalf of the HASC Executive Office, we  wish you and your family a Chag Kasher V'Sameach!

 

Best Regards,

 

Rabbi Solomon Stern, Executive Director

 

Grant E. Silverstein, Director, Special Projects & Alumni Relations



 

 

 

 

 

 

 

Alumni Profile... LeibYudinYudin

 ('00-'02)

During my years learning in Yeshiva, Harav Aharon Bina, Shlita the Rosh Hayeshiva, instilled in us a love for Camp HASC. He spoke fondly of it all the time in his signature high pitched voice. "Az you go to Camp HASC, betach that you go to Gan Eden." I decided to give it a shot.

 

My three summers at Camp HASC has left an indelible mark on my soul. All feelings of fulfillment aside, those summers were just...fun! There is no better concert than a Camp HASC concert. There is no better havdalah than a Camp HASC havdala. There is no better Tisha b'Av than a Camp HASC Tisha b'Av. A Camp HASC Tisha b'Av is what rebuilds the Bet Hamikdash. Ahavat Chinam.

 

During my three summers in camp, I hung out all the time in the therapy gym. I watched the PTs, OTs, SLPs, and all the other acronyms do their thing. I was awestruck every single day. Camp became not just a mere experience of fun and gemillat chesed, camp was a place that enriched the whole being of the camper.

 

During my first summer I was still in YU, majoring in business. In middle of my third semester of YU, I thought to myself why am I doing this? I daydreamed that semester of my summer and the therapy gym hang outs. I decided to leave YU and become a PT as a direct result of my incredible experiences at camp hasc. I am now a pediatric physical therapist, a partner in a practice in Williamsburg, Brooklyn and I have an amazing specialty from South America called MEDEK. I have seen miracles with what I do and can only attribute them to my experiences at Camp HASC.

 

 

 

 

 

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IT'S NOT TOO LATE... 

 Dear HASC Friends & Family,

 

For many people, living with a developmental disability life can be a challenge and become discouraging at times with feelings of little hope. The families caring for individuals who are disabled face enormous challenges. Each summer, there is an experience that these families and individuals get to experience that elevates their spirits.

 

This experience is The HASC Summer Program. Camp HASC offers children with disabilities the opportunity to immerse themselves in the sublime joy that camp creates for children each summer around the world. The challenges of the past year are forgotten, and a sense of excitement and comfort embraces each individual. Camp HASC is truly a magical place, where every blade of grass has the ability to heal, to soothe and reinvigorate bodies and souls. Passover Pic

 

Each year, the seder begins by reciting "Kol Dichfin Yaisay V'Yaichol," inviting all the needy to join us at the seder. HASC has adopted that philosophy by accepting children who apply to camp, particularly those whose families are in need of financial assistance.

 

It is friends like you, who we rely on each summer for the children of HASC. We depend on you to enable us to provide our campers with that priceless opportunity - to experience the love, self confidence and hope that defines Camp HASC, as a place where dreams come true.

 

As the 2011 camp season fast approaches, we need your support. In your preparing for the upcoming seders, we would like to ask for your kindness in following through with your Echarity.com registration and pledges.

 

It is with your graciousness that we are able to create a rebirth for all our campers that allow them to make it through the year until next summer at camp.

 

May it be His Will, that in the merit of your support for our precious children at Camp HASC, you will be blessed with a joyous Passover and boundless joy your own family.

 

All the best,

 

 

Rabbi Solomon Stern, M. Ed.

Executive Director

 

Grant E. Silverstein, MSW

Director, Alumni Relations & Special Projects

 

 

 

 

Click on image to participate in the 2011
HASC Passover Campaign:

Seder Table

Faster than TimeThis Passover, achieve the impossible. 

Rabbi Akiva Tatz

 

Both Rosh Hashanah and Passover are beginnings of the year. Rosh Hashanah is the occasion of new creation of the human as an individual; Passover is the occasion of new creation of the Jewish people. What can we learn from this observation?

The spiritual forces operating at Passover time each year are such that the Jewish people -- and in fact any individual Jew -- can achieve the impossible if these forces are used. An attempt to leap up, to reach a whole new level of sensitivity, of personality development, can have a degree of success if undertaken on Passover which may be far more difficult at any other time.

At this time achievement of many levels of growth in one leap is possible.

There is a special Divine assistance offered at this time which makes achievement of many levels of growth possible in one leap. Under normal circumstances such levels must be painstakingly acquired in gradual sequence. The very word Pesach -- the Hebrew term for Passover -- means "leaping over"; at a deeper level, the connotation is that of leaping over levels of growth which would ordinarily have to be attained one at a time.

This energy is particularly strong on the first night of Passover. It is a time of most intense inspiration. Mystical sources indicate that on all other nights our ma'ariv (evening prayer) builds certain connections in the higher worlds. On the first night of Passover these are built automatically, our work is not needed.

Why do we pray the evening service on Seder night, then? In order to connect ourselves with what is happening in the higher worlds! To bring down some of those very high energies to our level. This night needs none of the usual protection which night makes necessary -- it is a leil shimurim, a "night of protection." We are Divinely guarded to an extent which never occurs on any other night of the year. It is truly "different from all other nights!"

 

A DIFFERENT NIGHT

So let us ask, with deeper insight, the old question "Why is this night different from all other nights?"

Using the principles we have discussed previously, we can begin to understand that this night must have unparalleled power: on this night, the first Passover sacrifice was eaten. The culmination of the ten plagues, the smiting of the Egyptian firstborn, occurred at midnight. Our homes were "passed over" by God as He smote the Egyptians, Himself personally and not by means of angelic agents. The Exodus began, the redemption was manifest. The redemption occurred with lightning speed -- k'heref ayin -- like the blink of an eye. There was not time for the bread to rise and it was taken out of Egypt as matzah.

Such events are surely the physical expression of indescribable energies released on the higher plane. What can we understand of the nature of these events and their root? What is the deeper meaning of this speed? Of the nature of matzah?

Let us start by asking a question which has bothered some of the more recent commentaries. There is a well-known idea that the Jewish people in Egypt were on the 49th level of impurity and had to be redeemed, because had they remained in Egypt any longer they would have sunk to the 50th level from which there is no return. The redemption occurred when it did because there would have been no Jewish people to redeem had G-d delayed at all. We were saved at the last moment possible. This idea understands that at the very last moment in Egypt, the moment just before the Exodus, our existence was critically in the balance -- one moment longer and it would have been too late.

The problem is, though: How could one more moment of time in Egypt have caused us to disappear spiritually, to fail and fall into Egyptian impurity? That last moment was the greatest moment we had ever experienced, it was the instant of highest revelation, supercharged with awareness of God's closeness. That moment of midnight was incandescent with purity. It was the climax of a process which had begun months before with the first of the plagues at which time the slave-labor had ended. The subsequent plagues were appreciated by the Jews as ever-increasing revelations of God's guidance of world affairs. This night was the pinnacle of that process.

How is it possible to conceive of the imminent disintegration of the Jewish people into impurity and oblivion by a prolongation of that state of being? It would seem that more of that intensity of revelation would have transformed people into angels!

The sources which deal with this idea understand that what is being referred to here is literally one more moment in that state. Not more time in the previous phase of slavery and persecution in general, but very specifically more time on that last night in Egypt. What is the answer to this problem?

 

TRANSCENDENT BEGINNING

An approach to this question is found in the deeper Jewish sources. There is an idea that one can live in the physical dimensions of space and time and be subject to them, part of them. Or one can live within them and yet transcend them. To do this, one must minimize the contact between oneself and the physical elements. In the time dimension, this is known as z'rizus -- zeal or alacrity -- in performing God's commandments.

spiritual life is generated in the almost infinitely short-lived moment of the flash of conception.

The 16th century Maharal explains that if one moves fast, minimizes the time taken for action, one can overcome the stifling effects of time. Of course there is always a finite time needed for action, but the point is that spirituality is contradicted by unnecessary expansion of the physical dimensions of space and time. The minimum time needed is not a contradiction to spirituality at all, In fact zealous action elevates the physical dimensions to a spiritual level. Since the spiritual world is above time, explains the Maharal, we can make contact with it by coming as close as possible to it by our efforts, by shrinking the physical component of our actions to the absolute essential minimum.

Put another way: Laziness, or the slowing down of action, the expanding of the physical dimensions, makes us part of those dimensions. Sluggishness is the opposite of spirituality. Laziness is incompatible with spiritual growth.

What is meant here is that spiritual life is generated in the almost infinitely short-lived moment of the flash of conception, the male phase of reality. The work of the female phase is to maintain the spiritual energy of that first phase and to bring it into the finite world. But this can be done only if the creative conception phase is electric, alive, unburdened by physical heaviness.

Let us return to that moment of midnight in Egypt. The problem with more time in Egypt would not have been the contaminating effects of Egyptian impurity. That danger had long since ceased. No, the problem with more time in Egypt would have been more time itself!

Let us strive to understand. The redemption had to occur k'heref ayin, in the blink of an eye, because that alacrity is necessary for an event to remain spiritual. Had we left Egypt slowly, naturally, in a relaxed fashion, we would have been a natural people! The Jewish nation was being born then; the moment of birth had to be transcendent because "Everything goes after the beginning." We became and remain a spiritual people because our beginning was spiritual. Our moment of formation occupied the absolute minimum of time, and since then we have lived on the edge of the physical universe, at that edge which interfaces with the transcendent, the Divine.

The terrible danger of more time in Egypt would have been the time itself; that is the impurity which is meant here, the impurity of a nation destined for spirituality becoming merely physical, merely natural.

 

OVERRIDING TIME

And that is the secret of Passover -- riding the wave of minimum time. Overriding time. We left Egypt too fast for the natural to take effect. Too fast to be in danger of becoming slowed by friction with the natural world. Too fast to be slowed into the material and the finite. Too fast for dough to rise, for the food which sustains our lives to expand into the swollen, bloated dimension.

A people only just within the physical, sustained by a food which is only just the sum of its ingredients.

If we think a little further: what is matzah, one of the central commandments of Passover? What is the difference between chametz (leaven) and matzah? Only time! Not a difference in ingredients, only a difference in time. Flour and water if baked within a certain minimum time become matzah. A second's delay beyond that minimum: chametz.

And what a difference: eating matzah is a positive mitzvah of the Torah, its reward is immeasurable. Eating chametz is a prohibition of the Torah and its punishment is spiritual excision! Literally the difference between life and death, rooted in a few seconds of time.

 

MITZVOT AND MATZOT

This is the secret of the statement of the Sages: Mitzvah haba'a leyad'cha, al tachmitzena -- "When a mitzvah, a commandment, comes to your hand, do not let it become stale" (literally "do not let it become chametz, sour"). U'shmartem es ha'matzot -- "And guard the matzot," which can be read as "And guard the mitzvot". No mere play on words; the idea here is that just as matzah becomes chametz if left too long, so too a mitzvah, spiritual life for the one who performs it, becomes chametz, fermented, sour, if it is allowed to become part of the natural.

A mitzvah is a physical action containing unbounded spiritual energy, but it should be performed thus. If it is performed as no more than a physical action, it may lose its connection with the spiritual world. Mitzvot are like matzot: performed at the higher level, with zeal and alacrity, they are transcendent. Performed sluggishly, slowly, they sour.

The first night of Passover. Incredible energy, incredible opportunity. A time of transcendent beginning. A time to inspire children, beginners in spirituality. A time to be inspired. A time to reach for the impossible, to reach above time.

 

  


On behalf of the entire administration we would like to wish a special Mazel Tov to :

 

  Rachel (Frohlich, '94-'97) & Yisroel Orenbuch on the birth of twin boys, Shimaya Yonah & Levi Yitzchak!

 

  

Looking for a new job...

Looking to hire a new employee...

 

Take a look what HASC Alumni can offer you!

 

Join the HASC Group on...

 

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Group Name: HASC- Hebrew Academy for Special Children

 

For more information, please contact:

Grant Silverstein, Director, Special Projects & Alumni Relations

(718) 686-5920

Grant.Silverstein@hasc.net 

 

 



SaMeaCH
A Camp HASC Weekly Dvar Torah L'Ilui Nishmas   

                                   Shmuel Menachem Chaim Ben Daniel V'Shoshana A"H -
     Stevie Newman  


 

 

Pesach- ONE BIG HAPPY FAMILY

            One of the popular parts of the Haggadah is the Arbah Banim, the four sons. I know families like to have fun with this, where siblings point to each other, labeling who is the wise son, who is the wicked one, etc. (I think in past years I was labeled the wicked one...) However, aside from being a fun "game," it is imperative to understand what role it plays in our Haggadah. If one looks at the structure of the Haggadah, it may look the the excerpt of the Four Sons was just stuck in there a bit randomly.

 

            Many Meforshim explain that the Four Sons is there to fit in with one of our fundamental themes of the night- V'Higadta L'Bincha, the commandment to teach one's children all about the miracles that Hashem performed for us during our Exodus from Egypt. So the Haggadah presents four unique sons, each that need to be taught about the story in a way that caters to their individual needs. However, the meaning behind the four sons, and really, the mitzvah of teaching children, goes much deeper than that.

 

            Rav Sobolofsky, Shlita, quotes the Gemara in Yevamos that tells us that an Eved Canaani, a slave, has no relationship and no familial binding with his children. Once his term of servitude expires, whatever children he had as a slave do not go with him. He has no "yichus," genealogy, and he is not considered to have fulfilled the mitzvah of "pru u'rvu," having children. Halachically, his children are not related to him. (It is interesting to point out that this is in contrast to a Ger. If a non-Jew converts along with his children, he retroactively is considered to have fulfilled this mitzvah, even though at the time of having children, he was not yet Jewish.) When the Jews were slaves in Egypt, although technically related to their children as parents, they had no relationship with them. As slaves, there is no such thing as a real family life. At the time of Yetzias Mitzraim, this relationship of father and son came to bloom. We see from here how important the mitzvah of V'Higadta L'Bincha is! It is more than just an obligation upon a parent to teach his children. It is there to emphasize the significance of the family unit. It is there to remind us how grateful and thankful we must be to have a family that is davka free to function as a family! It is a big bracha that we have, and it's the bracha that was given to Bnei Yisrael at the time of Exodus. That is why we emphasize this mitzvah so much, and that is why the seder, as seen through the Fours Sons, is revolved around family and parent-child relationships. In fact, it is no coincedence that so many of the mitzvos of Pesach revolve around the household- cleaning, bedikas Chametz, eating the Korban Pesach in the house, the commandment of putting blood on the doorposts in Egypt, etc. These mitzvos are a big positive! It's not just a mitzvas habayis in terms of mitzvos that take place in one's home. Rather, they are mitzvos for the family!

 

            We know that the Rasha, the evil son, is rebuked for excluding himself from the rest of the Jewish Nation. We say that because he excluded himself from the Klal, Kafar B'Ikar, he is a heretic. The Rambam, in Hilchos Teshuva, says "Kol Yisrael Yesh Lachem Chelek B'Olam Haba." Every Jew has a portion in The World to Come. However, there are exceptions to this rule. Those who uproot their very status as a Yisrael, as a Jew, and do not identify themselves with their Jewish brethren, do not have a portion in Olam HaBa. We say Kol YISRAEL Yesh Chelek. Every JEW has a chelek. But one who uproots his status as such, chas v'shalom, does not. A person who avoids identifying with other Jews, avoids helping others, does not pray with fellow Jews or for fellow Jews, uproots his status. One who does not allow himself to feel the pain of others, or does not care to try to comfort them, loses his status as Yisrael. He is "kofeir b'ikar." By excluding himself from the community, he denies G-d.

 

            The mitzvah of "V'higadta L'Bincha," as illustrated through the Four Sons, teaches us both sides of the coin of one lesson. We learn both the importance of achdus, unity, and the dangers involved when lacking that togetherness. Just as Hashem redeemed us from Mitzraim, it is our hope that every Pesach, Hashem returns to redeem us for a final time. As the Rambam tells us, every year must be seen through the lens of a new Exodus. Many question why we invite people to come join our Seder in "Ha Lachma Anya," once our Seder already started? While on any other given night, it would be strange to invite people once we are in the middle of the meal, I would like to suggest that on Pesach night, it is not so strange, but on the contrary, very appropriate. On the night where our focus is unity amongst Klal Yisrael, we tell outsiders "you should not feel uncomfortable coming into our homes! So what if we are in the middle of the Seder already?! You are our brother, and you can come in at anytime!" May we all be zoche to being m'chazek in our sense of unity and concern for our fellow Jews, and in merit of that, see the final Geulah arrive this Pesach. HAVE A CHAG KASHER V'SAMEACH!!!!!

 

  

 

HAVE AN UPLIFTING AND JOYOUS SHABBOS!!!

(Suggestions? Comments? Interested in writing for SaMeaCH? Please feel free to contact Aaron Fleksher at aaronflek@gmail.com)

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

 

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Ways to give back to HASC...

  • Become a member of the Echarity.com campaign 
  • Join the Maaser Initiative
  •  Make a donation in honor of a simcha or in memory of a family member or friend.

For more information on how you can  you stay involved with HASC and be a supporter to HASC, please contact Grant Silverstein, Director, Special Projects & Alumni Relations by phone at

(718) 686-5920 or by email at grant.silverstein@hasc.net



Shabbat Shalom
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