Printed fromChabadIC.com
ב"ה

English Blog

Hundreds of Viglers at my Nephews Wedding

This past weekend, I flew to Israel for my nephew’s wedding. Mazal tov Menni and Sari!

Now, when someone says, “I went to a family wedding,” you might imagine a few aunts, uncles, and cousins. But this was not that. This was hundreds of relatives: aunts and uncles, nieces and nephews, great aunts and great uncles, children, grandchildren, great nieces and nephews, and every type of cousin imaginable—first cousins, second cousins, once removed, twice removed … you get the picture! Everywhere I turned, there was another Vigler. 

And it struck me just how deeply my roots are planted in this beautiful city of Jerusalem. In fact, if I’d been born there, I’d be a ninth-generation Jerusalemite! I might have been born in Zimbabwe, but the heart of our family still beats strongly in the holiest city in the world. 

My grandfather, Reb Sholom Vigler, grew up in Jerusalem under unimaginable circumstances. His father—my great-grandfather—was arrested by the Turkish police for selling bread on the black market, just trying to survive the immense hunger gripping the city. They beat him mercilessly and sent him home, where he died from his injuries two days later. His wife—my great-grandmother—soon died from starvation. 

And there was my grandfather, three years old, orphaned and alone, in a city gripped by hunger. He went to live in an orphanage and visited his parents’ graves every week. 

How easy it would have been to give up. Natural, even! He had no parents, no one to look out for him. But instead, he chose to fight. That little boy fought for his future, for his very survival, at three years old, at four years old, at five years old. He didn’t succumb to the hunger, the loneliness, the fear or the misery. 

He chose life. 

And because he made that choice, I was able to stand at my nephew’s chuppah almost a century later surrounded by five generations of his descendants! Five generations! 

There were cousins from every corner of Israel—farmers, soldiers, yeshivah students, religious, not religious—all dancing together with pure joy. 

Who could have imagined that one little orphaned boy who refused to give up could be responsible for so much joy!

I looked around and was reminded of what our Sages teach: that the souls of parents and grandparents come down from Gan Eden to be present at the weddings of their descendants.

And I could almost see him, my grandfather, Shalom, standing there, watching his great-great-grandchildren circle the chuppah. I could picture him smiling, saying to himself, “Look what I’ve done. Look what I built. Look what my suffering became.” And I pictured his parents, too, tears flowing, watching on with deep pride. 

Every joyous person in that room, every laugh, every hug, every dance, every smile, every mazel tov—all of it was his victory. 

Most of us don’t face circumstances nearly as dire, but we, too, face circumstances in which we have to fight to triumph. When we fight for what’s right instead of what’s easy, we win. When we go out of our comfort zone to help another or to do something for G-d, we are victorious. When we give more charity than is comfortable, we leave our mark on the world. 

Next time you’re considering giving up, picture my grandfather—that small orphaned three-year-old—and push yourself to keep going. Look what he accomplished—just imagine what your future holds!

Our Torah Fell Down!

Thursday morning I woke up and wondered what to write about for my weekly blog. I tried to think of anything exciting that happened this week, and realized I couldn’t come up with a single thing. Absolutely nothing. Thank G-d, everything’s great! No drama, no crises, no emergencies. Now, that’s great news but it would make for a very boring blog!

Still trying to come up with something, I arrived at our new daily morning minyan in our Chabad House at 7:15 sharp. It’s a brand new group and today is Rosh Chodesh - the beginning of a brand new month, which seems apropos. Everyone’s smiling, we’re feeling holy and accomplished, the coffee’s kicking in, the sky’s blue and the trees are vibrant with the changing season … in other words: good vibes all around.

I even made an announcement before we started: “It’s going to be a great month, everyone! New beginnings! Blessings! Success!”

And then, the table collapsed. Literally.

We opened the Torah, I called up the first aliyah, and with no warning at all, the folding table that the Torah was resting on completely caved in like it’d had enough of our minyan and was going back to sleep.

Apparently, whoever set it up didn't secure it properly, and now we were facing a terrifying scenario: the Torah was rolling off rapidly, a split second away from hitting the floor …

I started to panic, a succession of thoughts firing through my brain: “Not the Torah! Not today! Not on Rosh Chodesh! Not ANY day!”

But without hesitation, before the rest of us could even gasp, our hero, Steven - who had just received the first aliyah - sprang into action. And when I say sprang, I mean SPRANG! His reflexes kicked in like a Navy SEAL in tefillin, he dove forward, arms out, and somehow managed to catch the Torah literally a millimeter before it hit the floor.

The angels cheered, the minyan exhaled, and Steven became an instant legend.

Later, when I asked Steven how it felt, he said, “Rabbi, my reflexes worked so fast, it felt like I was holding a baby. It just felt so good to catch it and hold it.”

And he’s right. The Torah is not just a parchment scroll; it’s our baby. It’s fragile, precious, and alive. We hold it close, protect it, and never let it fall.

Now, according to Jewish tradition, if a Torah actually falls to the ground, the entire congregation is supposed to fast. Dropping a Torah scroll or tefillin is a sign from Heaven that one has done something wrong for which one must repent.

Although relieved we wouldn’t have to fast, I made an announcement right then and there: “Friends, we’re not fasting, thank G-d, but we are giving tzedakah in lieu of nearly having to fast!”

So everyone gave charity and our close call remained just that: a close call.

And I went from having a perfectly ordinary week with nothing much to write about to having a wild, heart-pounding morning with a fully fleshed out blog idea!

But here’s the takeaway that came to me as my breathing returned to normal and we finished davening as planned.

Sometimes in life, the “table” collapses. The thing you were relying on - a person, a system, a plan, etc. doesn’t come through and everything feels hopeless.

But that’s when G-d sends a Steven (or gives you the strength to be the Steven!) to step up and catch it before it hits the floor.

Because Torah i.e., truth, goodness, honesty, holiness never really falls. The world may wobble, but the Torah stands upright. Always.

That’s the story of our people, too. We bend, we shake, we’re battered by wild winds at times, but we never let go of what’s holy.

So here’s to Steven’s reflexes, to Rosh Chodesh miracles, and to holding on tight even when it seems like it might be too late.

L’chaim to an incredible month ahead! Chodesh tov!

My Car Vanished!

Last Thursday morning—right after the first two days of Sukkot—I went downstairs with my daughter, ready to head to the office. I walked to the spot where I knew I had parked just before yom tov, but lo and behold, the car wasn’t there.

Now, in our household, that’s not entirely unusual. We’re multiple people sharing a single vehicle. Sometimes my wife parks it, sometimes I do, and sometimes it's my daughter. We even have a dedicated WhatsApp group called “Where is the car?” and whoever parks it last is supposed to update the group.

So I called my wife.
“Did you move the car before yom tov?”
“Nope,” she said, “You were the last one to park it.”

I’ll admit, I can be a little absent-minded sometimes, and it’s possible I parked one block over.
I walked up 1st Ave, no car.
Down 2nd Ave, still nothing.
I circled the block twice. Gone.
I zigzagged back and forth to all the possible spots I would ever park the car, and nothing!

I called 311, in case it had been towed. They asked for my license plate number, which, of course, I’d forgotten. So I had to call my wife again (thank G-d one of us is organized!), but after checking, 311 said there was no record of any towing.

At this point, I started to worry. Could it have been stolen?
I called the police, who ran the plates and reported back: “It wasn’t stolen. It was repossessed.”

I found myself completely speechless.

Repos­sessed? How could it be?!

It turns out the car—our leased Honda—had been repossessed because we hadn’t paid the bills … for over a year!

Now, I am meticulous with bills. I thought everything was being paid by my secretary, but somehow, the lease invoices were sent to her, and for some reason she had ignored them. Honda even called multiple times, and again it was ignored.

To get the car back, I had to pay off the entire lease—$42,159—in one check. There was no way around it. Otherwise, my credit would be destroyed for years.

Frustrated doesn’t even come close to how I was feeling. This was next level! I had to get hold of the 42k and then go personally to the bank and get a bank check.

But there was no way around it. So off I went to the bank, all the while wondering how on earth this could have happened.

As of today, we still don’t have the car back.

But it’s been a good reminder that we are not in control, even though we often think we are! G-d and G-d alone runs every facet of our lives. For some reason, He wanted my minivan to be repossessed. And, since the Baal Shem Tov taught that we should seek a lesson in every experience and encounter, I’ve been wracking my brain. What that lesson is, I have no idea. Maybe it was to write this blog and inspire someone reading it!

But in Yiddish, there’s a beautiful saying: “Zol zayn a kapporah” — may it be an atonement. Maybe something far worse was supposed to happen, and G-d, in His kindness, decided to take it out on the car instead.

So should I get angry? Lose sleep? Take it out on my secretary? No way.

Clearly, G-d had some reason for wanting all those payments to go missed and all the phone calls ignored. This is Him showing us that He is in control and everything happens because He wills it—something we need to make a conscious effort to ingrain into every fiber of our being.

And after all: If G-d took the car, then He can give it back! And until then, I’ll just thank Him for trading a crisis for a car.

Looking for older posts? See the sidebar for the Archive.