Ullim LeTroofah
עלים לתרופה
Leaves for Healing
LETTER SEVENTY-TWO
Blessed be Hashem  ·  Thursday, Parshas Metzora  ·  Year 5592 (1832)
Written from Breslov
To My beloved son, my dear one. [Yitzchok]

At this hour I have arrived from Nemrov — from the joy of the wedding — praise be to G-d. And blessed be Hashem — all is properly established from Hashem. The right hand of Hashem is exalted forever [וִימִין ה' רוֹמֵמָה — Tehillim 118:16, from the Hallel Psalm sung on Pesach and festivals: "the right hand of Hashem is exalted — the right hand of Hashem acts valiantly." Reb Nussun's use of this Hallel verse as he arrives from the wedding — days before Pesach — charges the greeting with festive resonance] — as I will tell you when you come here, if Hashem wills. And there is no leisure at all now to extend. But since I travelled here with the bearer of this letter — the wagon driver from your community — I said I will not hold back from inquiring after your wellbeing. For I know the force of your yearning to see my letters always.

Rejoice greatly and be glad at the joy of the holy festival coming upon us for good [וְשׂוֹשׂ תָּשִׂישׂ וְתָגֵל — the same phrase as Letter 71's closing messianic note: sos asis from Yeshayah 61:10 — "I will greatly rejoice in Hashem — my soul shall exult in my G-d." The deliberate repetition of this messianic joy-phrase across two consecutive letters as Pesach approaches is not accidental — Reb Nussun is sustaining the same note of redemptive joy across the transition from Rosh Chodesh Nissan to the eve of the festival] — and see to rouse yourself to send the wine and so forth with urgency beforehand. And write me a clear reply to all that I wrote you. And if it is possible that you arrange for a letter to reach me from Rabbi Nachman — the grandson of our Master, our Teacher and Rebbe, of blessed memory — how good that would be. More than this — life and peace and gladness and joy.

For soon we will merit to eat the bread of the soul — the food upon which the angels are nourished [מֵזוֹנָא דְּנִשְׁמְתָא — Aramaic: the nourishment of the soul. The Zohar identifies the Pesach matzah as the bread of faith — michla d'mehaimnusa — and the food upon which the ministering angels are sustained. Matzah transcends physical nourishment: it is spiritual food of the highest order, consumed on the night of liberation in complete faith] . And may Hashem Yisborach be with us — to burn the chametz properly — and to merit to go out from chametz to matzah, from death to life, from sadness to joy [מֵחָמֵץ לְמַצָּה מִמָּוֶת לְחַיִּים מֵעַצְבוּת לְשִׂמְחָה — a triad of transformations echoing the language of the Hallel and the Haggodah. The movement from chametz to matzah — from leavened inflation to the flat simplicity of pure faith — is the essential spiritual movement of Pesach] and so forth.

Nussun of Breslov.

Overview: A brief letter of arrival from a wedding in Nemrov on the eve of Pesach. The opening verse — the right hand of Hashem exalted (Tehillim 118:16 — a Hallel verse) — charges the greeting with festive resonance. The messianic phrase *sos tasis v'tagel* from Yeshayah 61:10 is the same phrase used to open Letter 71's closing section — its deliberate repetition across two consecutive letters sustains the note of redemptive joy as Pesach approaches. The Zoharic *mezona d'nishmata* identifies matzah as the bread of the soul — the food upon which the angels are nourished. The threefold transformation of Pesach — chametz to matzah, death to life, sadness to joy — echoes the Hallel and Haggodah.

Key Themes

Sos Tasis — Yeshayah 61:10, Repeated The same messianic joy-phrase from Yeshayah 61:10 that opened Letter 71's joy-section reappears here deliberately — Reb Nussun sustains the note of redemptive exultation across two consecutive letters as Pesach approaches. The repetition is not casual; it is a sustained chord.
Mezona D'nishmata — Soul Food of the Angels The Zoharic identification of Pesach matzah as the bread of faith and the food upon which the ministering angels are sustained. Matzah transcends the physical: it is consumed on the night of liberation in a state of complete faith and freedom.
From Chametz to Matzah The threefold transformation of Pesach — chametz to matzah, death to life, sadness to joy — echoing the Hallel and Haggodah's movement from servitude to freedom. The spiritual movement of the festival compressed into three pairs.
Send the Wine — Letter from Rabbi Nachman Two practical requests frame the theological: send the wine urgently beforehand, and — if possible — arrange for a letter from the Rebbe's grandson. The cosmic and the domestic inhabit the same breath.