
Parashat Vayikra
How Does Vayikra’s Small Alef Teach
that the Land of Israel is Designated for Revelation?
I’ll never forget it. Once, as I was boarding a flight for my annual international speaking tour, I passed a girl who looked like a typical gap-year student – denim skirt, casual T-shirt stamped with a bold quote. But it wasn’t her appearance that caught my attention. It was the sound of her loud, heartfelt sobs and the stream of sincere tears down her cheeks. I paused and asked gently, “Why are you crying?” offering her a tissue. “I’m leaving Israel – I’m leaving Eretz Yisrael! This is the saddest moment of my life. How can I be away from the Land of Israel?” she cried through her tears. As much as I wanted to engage in a deeper conversation with this girl, I had to move along – the line behind me was pressing forward. But even after I found my seat and recited the prayer for a safe air travel, I couldn’t stop thinking about the girl who cried so profusely because of leaving the Land of Israel. Her weeping was more than emotional; it was soulful. I’m sure if I had asked her to explain her deep attachment to Israel, she would’ve struggled to articulate it. Her connection was beyond explanation – it radiated from the depth of her Jewish soul. And perhaps her tears have etched into my memory so vividly because I feel the same way. Every time I leave Israel – even for a short visit to honor my parents – it feels like a murky cloud dulls my inner light. I sense myself drifting from my spiritual center, from the place where I feel most at home in my soul. Whereas some of my relatives fear visiting Israel, I always feel safest here, where the Divine Presence is near. Whenever I travel abroad, I remind myself of the Talmudic promise: “Those on the path to perform a mitzvah are not susceptible to harm” (Babylonian Talmud, Pesachim 8a). Still, I count the days until I return. And when I do, the moment the plane’s wheels touch the holy soil, and we break into applause, I am overcome by the quiet but unmistakable feeling of coming home. The holiness of the land touches me to tears of return.
Why is the Land of Israel the Only Place Where
Prophecy Blossoms?
How is the Small Alef a Sign of Moshe’s Humility?
How is the Land of Israel Designated for
Ultimate Intimacy with Hashem?
From the very beginning of creation, Eretz
Yisrael is the land “before Hashem” – the place where divine presence is
most tangibly revealed, and where humankind’s mission to connect with the
divine reaches its fullest expression. It is no coincidence that Cain and Hevel
fought over it, or that Yitzchak and Yishmael, Ya’acov and Esav, all contended
over who would inherit this holy ground. Rabbi Yehuda Halevi explains that this
is not merely a geographic conflict but a spiritual one – a struggle over who
will be attached to the divine purpose and who will fall away like a discarded
husk (The Kuzari 1:95). Although the desert experience conveyed the most
intimate connection with Hashem, who guided the Israelites with His Clouds of
Glory and fed them manna from heaven, nevertheless, the Zohar teaches
us that no matter how good it is in Chutz LaAretz – even from
a spiritual standpoint – something is lacking, for true Jewish perfection can
only be attained in The Land of Israel! Nowadays, until October 7, many Jews have
enjoyed tranquil spiritual lives in the diaspora, with bursting Jewish
communities and Torah institutions. Yet despite the spiritual intimacy of the
Israelites during the desert wandering, their existence was considered
imperfect, simply because it was still outside of Israel. We learn this from
the Zohar that puts the entire Book of VaYikra in
perspective, by explaining the small alef of Vayikra most
astoundingly: Why is there a small alef? Because this “calling”
was imperfect. Why so? For it took place in the Mishkan (Tabernacle)
and in a foreign land, because true perfection can only be found in the Land of
Israel (Tosafot HaZohar 1, quoted in Itturei Torah,
vol. 3, p. 7; cited by Rabbi Moshe D. Lichtman, Vayikra and the Land of
Israel). The diminished alef at the
beginning of Parashat Vayikra alludes to the truth that only by serving
Hashem in His Chosen Land can we attain our ultimate goal.
This Zohar transforms how we read the first verse of Vayikra which sets the tone for the entire book of Vayikra. The small alef doesn’t only reflect Moshe’s humility – it whispers a truth about the Land of Israel. Though hidden and subtle, Eretz Yisrael is the soil in which divine communication blossoms. Even the Vayikra, the “calling,” is specific to the Holy Land. Just as prophecy cannot flourish outside the Land, the highest expression of the Mishkan – the Beit Hamikdash could not be established elsewhere. The Shechinah rests only where Hashem has chosen – in the land uniquely fit for revelation. Thus, the small alef of Vayikra is not a diminishment – it is a distillation. It represents the concentrated holiness of a place uniquely chosen to carry divine presence. The Midrash affirms this by listing the times the word “Li” (to Me) appears – in connection with the Kohanim, the Levi’im, Eretz Yisrael, Jerusalem, the Beit Hamikdash, korbanot, and even prophecy itself. Wherever the Torah says “Li,” that entity or place is bound to Hashem for eternity – in this world and the next (Midrash Vayikra Rabbah 2:2). May we merit to live in the Land of Israel not merely as an inheritance of the past, but as the present and future landscape of our divine calling – the very ground of redemption and closeness to Hashem. May we merit to experience the return of prophecy in the land of divine revelation!