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A Miraculous Revival | Rabbi Naftali Horowitz
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Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
Recently,
after one of my Vayimaen episodes ran,
I received an email message
from my assistant.
It said that there was a man from overseas
who had called me
and wanted me to call him back,
and he said it was extremely important.
I reached the man on the phone
and he was very emotional,
and he said to me: Naftali, I want to
thank you and the people of Vayimaen
for saving my daughter's life.
Obviously, I was quite intrigued.
He says: Yesterday,
after a very, very difficult
day in the office,
I found myself in a moment of weakness,
clicking somewhere on my computer
where I knew I shouldn't go.
As I was doing so,
I pictured myself tied to the tree
like the bull with a shoelace,
and I pulled the plug out of my computer
and I fled my office,
knowing that if I stayed there
another moment, I would succumb.
I said to the man:
That's absolutely amazing.
You accomplished וימאן and וינס החוצה,
just like Yosef HaTzaddik.
And he says: Yes,
but there's much more to the story.
He says: I live 12 minutes
away from my office.
As I drove down my street,
to my total horror,
I saw five Hatzalah cars
in front of my house,
with all the sirens blaring.
I rushed into my house, breathlessly,
to find my daughter,
laying on the foyer floor,
with three Hatzalah guys kneeling over her.
My wife was hysterically crying
and all my kids were crying
in the corner and saying Tehillim.
My daughter had some kind of a seizure,
fell backwards and banged her head
and stopped breathing.
Hatzalah was called
and Baruch Hashem, they revived her.
I realized that the exact second
that I pulled the plug out of the computer
was when Hatzalah had gotten her
pulse back and revived my daughter.
And that's why, he said,
I'm calling to thank you
and the people at Vayimaen.
I said to this man that this episode may
very well define the rest of your life.
It's extremely important
that you translate it correctly.
So I asked him the following question,
What would have happened, Chas v’Shalom,
had you succumbed at your computer,
only to come home and find
that, רחמנא לצלן, the worst
had happened to your daughter.
The man said to me,
I would have blamed myself
for the rest of my life.
I said: That's naturally
what I thought you would say.
Every father would think that.
However, you do realize
you would be absolutely wrong.
The pasuk tells us
that children do not die
for the sins of their fathers.
Here's the way
I would tell you to look at it,
even though I don't have Ru’ach HaKodesh.
At the moment that that test
was given to you in your office,
there was a debate going on in Shomayim.
Your daughter's life had come to its end.
The מלאך המוות said: Her time is up.
And the Mal’ach Refael stood up
and said: No, she's so young.
She still hasn't got married.
She still needs to have children.
How can you do that?
And the Satan said: No way, no way.
Her time is up, her time is up.
So the Mal’ach Refael said,
Let me get her a merit.
Let me find a way to save her life.
How about if we give her father
a tremendous test?
A test, that if he passes,
will give his daughter a new lease on life.
And at that moment,
that urge overcame you.
When you pulled the plug out of that
computer and you ran out of the office,
you gave your daughter
a new lease on life.
You gave your daughter her life,
and you have to remember that,
as you see Nachas from this child,
as she walks down the aisle,
as she dances at her wedding,
as she has children and grandchildren,
you should remember
that your moment of Vayimaen
is why all this is happening.
We never know
what a single moment can achieve.