By the Grace of Gâd
1 Iyar 5711 [May 7, 1951]
Brooklyn, N. Y.
Blessing and Greeting;
This is to acknowledge your letter of Nissan 13, and to thank you for your good wishes for Pesach. I trust you had an enjoyable and inspiring Yom Tov.
Pesach ushers in sunny and warm springtime. In nature, spring brings forth to the surface the natural forces which were hidden during the winter, and out come the blossoms, which turn into ripe fruits later on.
Applying this idea to the human element, there can be a state of âwinterâ of apparent un-productivity in the life of a person. But no Jew or Jewess should consider themselvesâand certainly should not be considered by othersâas having terminated their usefulness, even though a long time of fruitlessness has elapsed. Given the proper inspiration and stimulus, the state of âwinterâ can easily and suddenly be changed into âspringâ and blossom time, which eventually will ripen into good fruits for Gâd and man.
The significance of âspringtimeâ in Jewish life is suggested by the festival of Pesach which we have just celebrated, as indicated in the Torah, âYou are going forth (from Egypt) this day, in the month of spring.â For two hundred and ten years the children of Israel lived in Egypt, in physical and spiritual slavery, stagnating in the abominations of Egypt. It did not seem that there could be a revival of Jewish life. Yet, there came the Exodus in in the middle of the Month of Spring, and the children of Israel were quite free, so free in fact that in a very short time they became worthy of receiving the Torahâthe zenith and completeness of the entire universe.
With all good wishes,



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