This week’s Pasrhah details the Birchas Kohanim of “y’varechecha Hashem v’yishmerecha…” (6:24-26).

Interestingly, we all say these pasukim of Birchas Kohanim each and every day. Why? Just as one must eat an apple immediately after making the bracha of “borei pri ha’etz”, one must recite Torah immediately after making Birchas ha’Torah each morning. Chazal instituted that we should specifically recite the pesukim of Birchas Kohanim, in order to satisfy this requirement (see Tosfos Berachos 11b).

R’ Moshe Feinstein* asks, why, out of all the vast pasukim in the Torah that Chazal could have chosen from, did they specifically choose Birchas Kohanim? Furthermore, wouldn't it have been more appropriate to choose pesukim that relate to everyone, not just to Kohanim? What lesson was Chazal imparting to us by specifically choosing these pasukim to be recited by every yid each day?

-Seán Quinn was the richest man in Ireland at the start of 2008 — estimated to be worth $6 billion dollars. He earned his wealth in the 1970’s by selling gravel, and he went on to build a business empire that spanned construction, real estate, and insurance. However, he is now bankrupt.

How did he suddenly lose his billions? When the 2008 financial crisis hit, his business empire crumbled. Not only did he lose the $6 billion dollars he was worth, he ended up over $3 billion dollars in debt before declaring bankruptcy.

- In 1999, Yasumitsu Shigeta was Japan’s Youngest Self-Made Billionaire. He also became the youngest CEO of a publicly-traded company in Japan, when he took his telecommunication company, Hikari Tsushin, public. At one point, the stock he owned in his company was worth a whopping $42 billion dollars. However, shortly afterwards, he swiftly lost $40 billion dollars.

How did he lose his billions so suddenly? The dot-com bubble burst; Over just a few months, Shigeta’s stock in his company decreased $40 billion in value.

- At his peak in early 2012, Brazilian businessman Eike Batista was worth an estimated $35 billion dollars, according to the Bloomberg billionaire index. That made him the seventh-richest person on Earth and the wealthiest person in Brazil. He was well on his way toward becoming the wealthiest man in the entire world. However, a year later virtually all of his wealth had swiftly evaporated. And by 2014, Batista found himself holding another rare title, that of a “negative billionaire”, as now he owed a net $1.2 billion to creditors.

How did he lose his billions so suddenly? He bid aggressively on oil land that failed to produce. You see, Batista’s oil company, OGX, leased land at several times the rates of other companies at the time. His aggressive bet did not pay off; the oil in the area was difficult to pump & could not produce the oil & revenue he needed, causing the loss of his $35 billion dollar fortune in just one year.

- Masayoshi Son was the CEO of SoftBank, a Japanese Telecom Company. At one point, he amassed $78 billion dollars. However, he lost about $75 billion dollars in just two months.

How did he lose his billions so suddenly? After the dot-com bubble burst, Softbank’s shares plunged 75% in two months and even fell 93% lower by the end of 2000. This resulted in Son swiftly losing about $75 billion dollars, & with the company nearly going bankrupt.

-Bill Hwang was one of the greatest stock-traders of all time. Starting in 2013, he parlayed more than $200 million left over from his shuttered hedge fund into a mind-boggling fortune, by betting on stocks. He took risk after risk, and, he was succeeding more than anyone could have imagined was possible. If he would have decided to retire at his financial climax, Bill, at age 57, would have stood out even among the world’s greatest billionaires. While there may be a few wealthier people, their money is mostly tied up in businesses, real estate, complex investments, sports teams, and artwork. Bill’s $20 billion net-worth, on the other hand, was as liquid as could be. But then, in just two short days, he swiftly lost it all.

How did he lose his billions so suddenly? In March 2021, Bill's family company “Archegos Capital Management” defaulted on loans that he used to build a risky $100 billion portfolio. The news came as havoc for Bill, and quite swiftly, all banks started dumping his portfolio. In just two days, he ended up losing all of his $20 billion dollar net-worth - one of the most spectacular failures in modern financial history: No known individual has ever lost so much money, so quickly. Ever. (Bloomberg.com)

R’ Moshe Feinstein quotes Rashi, who explains that the word “yiverechacha - [may Hashem] bless you” – refers to Hashem blessing one's belongings, while v’yishmirecha - and safeguard you” - means that He should prevent anyone and any circumstance from taking those belongings from you.

While anyone can give a gift, only Hashem can ensure that it remains in the recipient's possession.

This may be the most important lesson one can internalize each morning, one that can provide the proper mindset that one should work to maintain & focus on throughout one’s day: Everything we have comes from Hashem, and even what He gave us yesterday is not guaranteed to remain "ours"; it stays in our possession only for each moment that Hashem continues to gift it to us. The above true historical events are but a drop in the ocean illustrating this immutable fact.

This mentality is so important, and so relevant, that Chazal wisely specifically instructed us to articulate it at the start of each and every day.

Living Inspired

Every day, let us remember what a gift it is each and every moment that Hashem continues to give us the bracha that we had a moment before; let’s not take it for granted.

At the same time, may we also constantly turn to & rely on Hashem to not only increase bracha in our lives, but to maintain it as well - & may we all remind ourselves of this each time that we say “y’varechecha Hashem v’yishmerecha…” each day.

Gut Shabbos

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*- In Sefer Kol Rom