17 October, 2006. A young Israeli Naval sergeant boarded the northbound train in Tel Aviv. I was on my way to a present a lecture in the Haifa area and he was returning to his base in the Haifa port. He sat down across from me, looking at me intently while I was learning my Gemara. I looked up at him, smiled, said “Shalom aleichem!”

He sighed deeply, as if relieved, and sheepishly asked, “Can I talk to you, Rav?”

“Of course,” I answered, asking him how he knows that I’m a “rav”. He said that he heard me eulogize one of his fallen friends during the war. The sailor had a relatively new beard, an almost new knitted kippa on his head, and the beautifully pure innocence in his eyes of a new Ba’al Tshuva. To make a long story short, he was a crewman on board the Israeli Navy ship Hanit (Hebrew for bayonet) when it was hit by a missile of shore in Beirut.

The sailor, who we’ll call Moshe, began to relate the dozens of miracles that happened aboard the Hanit the night that it was hit. “It was Friday night. Usually, the crew would eat Friday night dinner in two shifts. But this time, since we were in a war zone, our three religious crewmen went to Lt. Col. A – the skipper – and begged that we all need Hashem’s help. The first miracle is that the skipper agreed to leave only 4 sailors on the bridge, and allowed the whole entire crew to pray together; we piled into the chapel, and said a lengthy mincha and Kabbalat Shabbat. I was bored and wanted to eat quickly then catch a few hours sleep, because I had the midnight watch. But, I stayed with the rest of the crew. Then, all of us had a Shabbat meal together – 15 different sailors said Kiddush, each in the custom of his fathers; I’m talking about guys that aren’t (weren’t) even religious! The meal was drawn out – I had a headache and was dying to sleep. The religious guys started to say the grace after the meal, and BOOOFF! The missile hit, but on the opposite end of the craft. It should have sank the boat, but it hit a crane right above the chopper landing pad. What a miracle! If that’s not enough, the helicopter-refueling tank – filled to the gills with chopper fuel – didn’t explode despite the fact that the whole end of the boat was burned…”

At least twenty other crewmen aboard the Hanit should have been killed, but they were saved by Shabbat dinner on the other end of the ship. The four on the bridge all lost their lives.

Moshe had beads of sweat on his forehead; tears glistened in his eyes. “The newspapers don’t write about the miracles that we all saw. I ran to my bunk on the deck right below the landing pad. It was charcoal; my metal bunk was completely melted down and all my possessions were ashes. If I hadn’t been detained in the chapel and in the dining hall for Shabbat meal, I’d have been charcoal too. I haven’t stopped thanking Hashem since – I’ve changed my life…”

Moshe continued with more miracles, including the engine room burnt to a crisp but a pair of tefillin was found unscathed. If that’s not enough, amidst the embers of destruction, the sailors found a Book of Psalms – also unscathed – opened to Psalm 124. Read Psalm 124 and your hair will stand up!

The train was nearing my station, so I gave Moshe a blessing and a fatherly embrace, and we parted. The Hanit took a direct hit from a Hizbulla missile, but Moshe has turned the navy’s setback into a victory.

*******

Every day, I meet more and more “Moshes”. Unlike many of the politicians, the Israeli on the street – especially the soldiers and the reservists – are diamonds looking to be polished, and have started to ask the real questions in life. They’re looking for emuna. Were it not for the wars here, they wouldn’t have bothered.

The whole purpose of the wars is to bring us closer to Hashem. Once we get close to Hashem on our own initiative, Hashem won’t have to send us wars anymore, amen. I’d much prefer dancing with Moshiach to eulogizing fallen comrades.

Courtesy of Rabbi Lazar Brody  http://lazerbrody.typepad.com/lazer_beams/2013/04/the-miracles-of.html