Dear Friends,


Today we remember the 23,741 soldiers who have fallen establishing and defending the State of Israel.


We all have heroes. Our personal definition of a hero often changes as we go through life. But what is a hero?


A hero is willing to put the needs of the other before his own. A hero is selfless. A hero is committed to a vision, a dream, an ideal, so intensely that he would lay his life down for it.


Today we remember thousands of heroes. Men and women who have given their lives for Am Yisroel and Eretz Yisroel. Some were religious, some were not; some were learned, some were not; but all were heroic. There were soldiers who served in fulfillment of a spiritual and religious mandate, others served because of a secular Zionist ideology, and others served because they were drafted. They all served with honor and courage and paid the highest price for our nation. These precious soldiers gave up their dreams, their aspirations and their lives for their people and their land. How privileged we are to be part of a nation of heroes.


Let us take a few moments today to daven for their neshamos and their families. Let us try to feel the broken hearts and the silent sobs of bereaved parents, children and spouses. Let us utter a word of gratitude for their sacrifice and a  tefilah for their aliyah.

And yet, in Israel, the celebration of Yom Ha'atzmaut has already begun. Because through the sadness and loss, the great State of Israel was born. "V’amar lach b’damayich chayi (and I say to you, through your blood we live)." The sacrifice was not in vein. The sacrifice has created the fertile soil to rebuild our homeland. Yeshivos, agriculture, chessed, technology, a Jewish army; a society the likes of which we have not experienced for the last 2,000 years; and it is here, it is now.
We must give thanks to God for providing us with such a gift. We must utter a prayer of gratitude for the privilege of having a homeland for us and governed by us. We must thank Hashem for honoring the promise He made to Avraham. We have must thank God, for allowing us to come home. And even though many of us still live on the other side of the ocean, nothing warms the heart and inspires the soul like knowing that the arms of our homeland are open to us, inviting us to return.


May we be zocheh to see the continued redemption of our people, with the coming of Moshiach, speedily in our days.

With much bracha,
Rabbi Shmuel Silber