Waterbury, CT - Mar. 10, 2022 -  Teaching sixth grade affords me the unique opportunity to glance through the eyes of children. A sixth grade boy is often mature enough to comprehend his surroundings and what is “going on”, yet he still has the innocence of a young child. 

The Russian Ukrainian conflict is somewhat foreign to most adults. Most have not traveled there or may not even know anyone there. There are news clips, videos, and pictures yet it is hard to connect to the pain and suffering that our brethren there are going through. 

For children this is even harder as this is so distant from them. The gedolim conveyed the importance of davening for our brethren by instituting a Yom Tefillah on Erev Rosh Chodesh Adar when many would daven Yom Kippur Katan or say Tehillim. 

In our Yeshiva K’tana of Waterbury we were scheduled to say Tehillim five minutes before mincha. I tried to explain to the boys of my class the importance of this and offered a suggestion to hopefully help them. Close your eyes for five seconds, read one passuk and think about if your brother was running to a bomb shelter. Close your eyes and think about if your brother may wake up one morning and he no longer had a place to live and the only possessions he had were his clothes on his back. Imagine if your brother spent 40 hours on a bus fleeing the country and may never return. 

The time for Tehillim came and the Menahel spoke and was also mechazek the boys. The tehillim began and I scanned the faces of the boys in my class. Some had their eyes closed and were off in the pure world of Tefillah. Another had his two hands covering his face as he swayed to the words, “From the depths I call you.” I was moved and couldn't hold back my own tears. I turned around facing the wall to continue my own now heartfelt Tefillah. The children understand, and very often they are the ones who are mechazek us. 

Baltimorean Rabbi Moshe Dov Heber is a rebbi in Yeshiva K’tana of Waterbury. He could be reached via email at mdheber@ykwaterbury.org