As Lag B’Omer approaches, Rabbi Ratzon Amrousi is calling to remember the real meaning of the day.
“We tend to see people getting caught up in the details instead of what really matters, and turning visits to tombs into the main event while at the same time continuing to do wrong,” he told Arutz Sheva.
This is a particular concern on Lag B’Omer, he said, “when the memory of the righteous (Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai) could really help, but there are some bad things done that evening.”
“We need to remember his teachings, which were based on ‘love your fellow man as yourself,’ love between people and between man and G-d.”
“We tend to see people getting caught up in the details instead of what really matters, and turning visits to tombs into the main event while at the same time continuing to do wrong,” he told Arutz Sheva.
This is a particular concern on Lag B’Omer, he said, “when the memory of the righteous (Rabbi Shimon Bar Yochai) could really help, but there are some bad things done that evening.”
“We need to remember his teachings, which were based on ‘love your fellow man as yourself,’ love between people and between man and G-d.”
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