With Passover behind us we may have forgotten all about bad Pharoahs, plagues, miracles and wine. Sometimes as hard as we try to forget the evil Pharoah, the legacy of evil can haunt us forever.

Why does what happened in the past even matter? Maybe we should let the past be the past? Leave your old life and the people you left behind alone! Right? WRONG!!! Many have a hard time realizing that how we approach the mistakes of the past often shapes our future.
Taking a scientific approach, we recall Sir Isaac Newton discovered that "Every action has an equal and opposite reaction". And what about propulsion? Propulsion is the concept that in order to move something forward, something else needs to move back - Like a balloon that you blow up and release, the air in a balloon will push it forward. OK..Enough with the science lesson.
In life nothing just happens, it always happens for a reason. Weather you believe that Hashem (G-d) creates your life as a test of your endurance and strength or you believe the little old lady across the street put her evil eye on you - the fact remains, your life was meant for YOU! It was meant to teach you to face the challenges of the past and embrace the hopes of the future. The challenge is that if you put the past in the past without your lessons learned, you will soon be faced with the same issues all over again. Now that, ladies and gentlemen, is an act of G-d!

Listen, learn, love - open your soul.
Speaking of someone who lacked having a soul...Osama died on Holocaust Remembrance Day! A day that reminds us that the past often comes to haunt future generations of Jews who lost their identity as people because of fear, hate, prejudice! But was this not in the past? Shouldn't we just not talk about it - it was horrible! Don't you just want to go on with your happy life and forget this sad segment in our history? NEVER FORGET! Never let your children forget! Talk about it, write about it, cry about it, but never, never forget.
A teenager recently commented that the date of Osama's death is ironic. Some debate on whether we should rejoice at the loss of his life - we dare not judge, but someone who causes pregnant women to jump from a burning skyscraper on 9/11..., was this person ever human? Hitler was in the past, Osama is now part of the past, how many more lessons do we need to learn to know that sometimes even 10 years of remembering will mean nothing without the precautions to make sure these mistakes are not repeated. We now have stronger armies (armies of those that pray as well as armies of those that fight). We now have better education for our children. But have we learned our lessons from the past? Or did we just leave our children behind without any knowledge of the past?

In this week's torah portion we are told to leave the corners of your harvest for the poor, so they can have something to eat. We are told to leave it for them, not to give it to them directly (since that may cause embarrassment). Personally, I don't have a harvest to pick - I don't even like gardening! So how does this apply to modern times? Giving something to someone anonymously is the best way to give. Why? You are just the middleman between G-d and the receiver. If every action has an equal and opposite reaction, if you give - you shall receive. This may not mean you will get a million bucks, but you might live a more fulfilling and happier life.

Dedication: This is dedicated to everyone that has been troubled by the haunting memories of the past. Know that it is not your fault that modern day Pharoahs uprooted your life. At the end every Pharoah has the same fortune - Not because you took revenge, but because Hashem (G-d) saw your struggle. Every person has a holy war going on inside between good and evil. May the good always win! Don't cry over spilled wine, refill your cup of life to the rim and know that if you can only afford to fill it half way it's always half full and never half empty. Amen.
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