In the aftermath of an inspiring and
spiritually uplifting Rosh Hashanah and Yom Kippur, during which time our faith
and belief in God play a central role, I am posting an op-ed that I wrote that
appeared in The Jewish Press in December 2010, in which I recounted a
personal familial experience that greatly enhanced and strengthened our faith
at that time.
FORTIFYING OUR FAITH
By: N. Aaron
Troodler, Esq.
When the shrill
sound of the telephone ringing shattered the silence in our home at 5:30 in the
morning on Monday, October 18, I got out of bed and answered the call with great
trepidation and a sense of dread. I realized that if someone was calling our
house that early in the morning, it was in all likelihood not good news. The
voice on the other end of the line belonged to my father-in-law, who, in a
trembling voice, told me my sister-in-law had passed away suddenly. I then had
to turn to my wife and gently tell her that her sister was gone.
That phone call
began a whirlwind of events: planning a funeral, working out the details of the
shiva, and explaining to our children that their aunt had died. Working
through our grief and the shock of such a sudden loss, we somehow dealt with
all the pressing issues that had to be immediately addressed.
As we were
dealing with this unspeakable tragedy, we were simultaneously preparing for the
birth of our fourth child. My wife, who had a Caesarian section scheduled for
just eleven days after her sister passed away, spent a great deal of time
during the shiva fielding questions about how she was faring with the
pregnancy.
The week of shiva
was utterly exhausting for all of us, especially for my wife, my father-in-law
and my brother-in-law, who were mourning their loss. My wife left the shiva house
late Sunday night after having received a steady stream of visitors throughout
the day, and, though she was physically and emotionally drained, she went to
sleep taking solace in the fact that the seemingly endless week of shiva was
coming to a close the next morning.
Just a few
hours later, at 1:30 in the morning, my wife’s water broke. Ironically, just as
the phone call from my father-in-law exactly a week earlier had set into motion
a dizzying sequence of events, so too we began our Monday with a flurry of
activity. We called the doctor, who told us to go to the hospital immediately.
The medical staff monitored my wife throughout the remainder of the night, and
the doctor performed a C-section early Monday morning, four days earlier than
originally scheduled.
My oldest child
was breech, and therefore the doctor at that time was compelled to perform a
Caesarian section, as opposed to opting for a natural delivery. After the first
C-section, we had scheduled C-sections for each of the next two pregnancies,
and both children were born on the dates their respective C-sections were
slated for. There had been no reason in our minds to think things would be
different with our fourth child.
At 7:22 a.m. -
the same time the last minyan in the shiva house was taking place
– our daughter was born. Instead of being at her brother’s house and getting up
from shiva with her father and brother, my wife was in the hospital
having a baby.
The proximity
between the two events was particularly striking. In the span of just one week’s
time we personally experienced the high and low of the life cycle and rode our own
personal emotional roller coaster.
We named our
new daughter Orit Netanya - “God gave us light.” One week our world was plunged
into darkness, and then the next week Hashem once again brightened our world and
illuminated our lives. Thankfully, God gave us light when we needed it most.
Our entire
family feels especially blessed by the birth of our daughter. Though her arrival
in this world can in no way cancel out my sister-in-law’s sudden departure, her
birth nonetheless lifted our spirits and helped fortify our faith in Hashem
during an incredibly difficult and traumatic time.
The
significance of having our daughter born several days before she was “scheduled”
to arrive - at the very time my wife was “supposed” to be getting up from shiva
for her sister - was not lost on us. We are big believers in hashgacha
pratis, divine providence. We recognize the importance of seeing the Yad
Hashem, the Hand of God, in everything that occurs during the course of our
lives.
That being
said, we are not always capable of discerning the Hand of God in every instance.
However, in this situation, we certainly recognized, and very much appreciated,
the Yad Hashem that was extended to our family.
But there is
one other significance to the day our daughter was born that took our breath
away and ensured that we could not possibly overlook the Yad Hashem that
appeared so clearly before our eyes. Orit Netanya was born on the seventeenth
day of the month of Cheshvan, which not only was the day my wife got up from shiva
for her sister - it is also the yahrzeit of my wife’s mother.
Exactly
seventeen years to the day before our daughter came into this world, my wife’s
mother passed away unexpectedly. The day we commemorate her yahrzeit each
year has always been a difficult one for my wife. We are especially blessed
that God saw fit to help us instantaneously transform the seventeenth of Cheshvan
into a day during which we not just mourn a loss but also celebrate a birth.
In times of
tragedy, people’s faith in God is tested mightily. Maintaining a strong sense
of belief in Hashem during times of personal crisis is often a powerful and
daunting challenge. However, when He personally reaches out His Hand, as He did
in our situation, it serves to fortify our faith in the Almighty and bolster
our belief that everything happens for a reason. In the midst of despair the Yad
Hashem was there to lift us up, light up our lives, and remove the darkness
that had enveloped our world with my sister-in-law’s passing.
God put forth
His Hand, and we feel humbled and privileged that we were able to grab hold and
benefit from His incredible compassion and indescribable kindness.
N. Aaron
Troodler is an attorney and a principal of Paul Revere Public Relations, a
public relations and political consulting firm.
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