Different leaders have different tasks. They are wired differently to meet different challenges. And we need all kinds

My apartment building is a prime example of kibbutz galuyos. My husband and I are the only Americans. We have neighbors from France and Brazil, who speak five languages perfectly. Our neighbors cover the spectrum of chassidim, Lita’im, and Sephardim, all housed in our mini united nation.
Generally, we each go our own way with a nod, a smile, sharing simchahs and mishloach manos, but our lives don’t intersect that often.
A while back, our neighborhood was shaken up by tragedy when an entire family who had lived across the street was killed in a car accident. Our close proximity to the family shook us each to the core. We neighbors decided that although we may not have known or been friends with this family, it behooved us to do something as a zechus for their neshamos. So we women decided that every Friday night after lichtbentshen, we’d get together to say all of Sefer Tehillim.
Sometimes one neighbor hosted, other times a different one. Some women brought their children, babies, or older daughters, and after a minute or two of schmoozing, we’d each take a chelek of Tehillim and keep going until it was done. And then we’d say the yehi ratzon.
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