By Rabbi Yair Hoffman
“Yes, Mommy, but what does the key mean? Why do we put it in the Challah dough?”
Last Shabbos, we read a fascinating Pasuk in Shir HaShirim – the standard reading for Chol HaMoed Pesach. The verse (Shir HaShirim 5:2) states, “”I was asleep but my heart was awake. A voice! My beloved was knocking: ‘Open to me, my sister, my darling, My dove, my perfect one!..’” In this verse, Hashem is talking to Klal Yisroel.
Chazal darshen this pasuk in Yalkut Shimoni (Shir HaShirim 988), “You have become My sister with the observance of the two Mitzvos in Mitzrayim the blood of the Korban Pesach and the blood of Bris Milah..Open for Me an opening like the eye of the needle and I (Hashem) shall open for you like the opening of a wide hall.”
THE GATES HAVE CLOSED
Rav Avraham Yehoshua Heshel of Apt zt”l, known as the Apter Rebbe or Apter Rav (1748-1825) is the author of the Ohaiv Yisroel. In his Likkutim al HaTorah ( Pesach) he explains that during the entire Yom Tov of Pesach, the Tefilos of Klal Yisroel achieved entry into the gates of Heaven. But slowly, they closed. It is now time to re-open them.
HOW TO RE-OPEN?
But how? How do we re-open the gates of Shmayaim so that our prayers can once again receive entry? What is the key?
He answers that the key is through the merit of Shabbos observance. This, according to the Apter Rav is the reason for Schlissel Challah – baking a key inside the Shabbos Challah.
It brings home the fact that it is the merit of Shabbos observance, and honoring it, that will re-open the gates of Shamayaim and bring us bracha – in all areas. Parnassah, Torah, Nachas and all matters.
Anyone who has ever truly experienced Shabbos, knows the following truth: Shabbos is very special. Perhaps the prayer of Lecha Dodi recited every Friday evening captures it best: Ki hi m’keor habracha – Shabbos is the source of all blessing.
Shabbos has always been viewed as the symbol or flag of the Jewish nation. Just as patriots look at their flag as more than a mere dyed cloth with fancy designs, so too is Shabbos viewed in the eyes of the Jewish people. It is a sign of our deep belief in G-d – that it was He who Created the world. But it is more than this too.
Our belief in G-d is not just limited to the notion that an omnipotent entity created the world. No. An integral aspect of Torah theology is that this omnipotent entity is the source of all good.
He rewards good and punishes evil. The Jewish understanding of G-d and His unique Oneness is that ethics and monotheism are intrinsically interwoven with each other.
In other theologies they may be two separate concepts.
Not so in Judaism.
A belief in the Oneness of G-d perforce also includes the notion that He defines what goodness is. Altruism, goodness, and ethical behavior are not the results of evolutionary biology – no, they are part and parcel of the Creator Himself.
Indeed, this is the raison d’être of Creation itself – so that Hashem – G-d can reward those who do good and follow His will .
If, in the path of life, we successfully attempt to emulate G-d – then we will be rewarded. The Observance of Shabbos is thus the flag of the Jewish people – the idea and notion that represents all this.
The Apter Rav’s explanation highlights this remarkable flag of the Torah nation.
The custom of Schlissel Challah has become very widespread, not only in the Chassidish world but in many other communities as well.
There are also other reasons to this custom in Klal Yisroel. Most of the reasons have to do with the Kabbalistic notion of “Tirayin Petichin” that the gates to Heaven are opened. This concept of opened gates is found throughout the Zohar and is discussed by such authorities as the Shla (whose father was a student of the Remah).
The earliest reference is in the works of Rabbi Pinchas Shapiro of Koritz (born 1726), a descendent of the Megaleh Amukos and a student of the Baal Shem Tov. In his work called Imrei Pinchas (#298) he explains that the reason to bake Schlissel Challah on the Shabbos following Pesach is that during Pesach, the gates to Heaven were opened and remain open until Pesach Sheni. The key alludes to the fact that these gates are now open and that we should focus our prayers ever more on that account.
The Apter Rav also mentions other reasons for the Minhag -primarily that Hashem should open His “store house of plenty” for us as he did in Iyar after the exodus.
The Belzer Rebbe (Choshvei Machshavos p. 152) provided the explanation that although the Geulah may not have happened yet as it was scheduled to occur on Nissan, at least the key to Hashem’s storehouse of parnassah and plenty have been opened.
The Taamei HaMinhagim (596 and 597) provides a number of reasons as well. There have been people that have questioned the origins of this minhag. Unbeknown to many, much of the content upon which many of the attacks were based upon was written by a scurrilous writer who studied in a messianic institution.
The author can be reached at [email protected]
8 Responses
It is also not even the custom of many Chasidim, for example, it is not minhag of Lubavitch.
Also not of Yemenites, Eidos Hamizrach.
“There have been people that have questioned the origins of this beautiful minhag. However, these conjectures are filled with serious scholarly errors.”
Rabbi Hoffman,
Please elaborate on those arguments and your refutation. Because there is a case say the custom originated from another religion.
MDG, there is NO case that the custom originated from another religion. The person who publicized that theory is a well-known crackpot, and none of his so-called “evidence” stands up to even the slightest examination. He made it up himself. It’s exactly like the claims that the Wuhan Disease is caused by 5G networking, or that autism is caused by the MMR vaccine.
The minhag is kadosh! My husband remembers the Alte Kapishnitzer Rebbe, Reb Avrohom Yehoshua Heschel, niftar in 1968, telling every single person on Motzaei Pesach to remind “the shteeb” to make shlissel Challah. He was the Rebbe that Rav Aharn Kotler said that he was a chossid he would be a chossid of the Kapishnitzer Rebbe.
As for the first comment by Lit, don’t say “many chassidim” just say Lubavitch doesn’t. Nice people but they’re just one tribe.
The argument that this custom originated from the goyim is just as weak as the argument that it is a genuine Jewish custom.
The shlissel challah is a pagan custom that we learned from the goyim! (They use a cross or a key that is in the shape of a cross!)
Sometimes they just carve the sign of the cross on the bread before baking. (See hot cross buns.)
This is done on easter which usually coincides with Pesah. This goyish custom is well known and documented!. For them it symbolizes the rising and resurrections of a dead god. (The bread “rises”, get it?)
No true Jew should do this! It is pure hukot hagoyim if not avoda zara.
Why did you not publish my comment?
The truth will not go away if you ignore it!
Edgar Hoover, it is NOT the truth, it is a LIE made up by a well-known crackpot. If you repeat it you make yourself a crackpot too.