0:00 / 0:00
Mendel The Coat Rack
8 views
Categories:
Uncategorized
Comments(0)
Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
There was once a legendary man in
Brooklyn known simply as Mendele the
coat rack. And he earned that nickname
because at any given moment Mendel
appeared to be wearing what looked like
an entire coat rack's worth of clothing.
He had three jackets, a sweater, a
raincoat in weather that made absolutely
no sense for those coats, but he was
still wearing them. And nobody really
knew why. Mendel was one of those people
everyone in the neighborhood recognized.
He wandered the streets. He spent time
in the local Scholes. He was different,
a little eccentric, the kind of person
most people noticed, but few people
really paid any attention to. He sort of
blended into the overall background
noise of Brooklyn. Now, one morning,
many years ago, at around 8:00, there
was a from man who was getting ready to
go off to work when he hears a knock on
the door. And the man opened the door
and there stood Mendele. "Hi, can I use
your bathroom?" he asked. So the man
looked at him and felt bad. Here's a Yid
who apparently didn't even have his own
place to use the bathroom. And even
though he was almost late to work, he
said, "Sure, come on in." And Mendele
thinks him and heads into the bathroom.
While the man sat down in the living
room, expecting him to be out in a
minute or two, but a minute became 5,
and then five became 10, and 10
eventually became 15. And at this point,
he started to get nervous. He knocked
gently on the door and he said, "Men, is
everything okay?" Yes. Yes. Just a few
more minutes. A few more minutes. But a
few more minutes turned into 20 and then
30 and then 45. And the men didn't know
what to do. He needed to get to work.
But he certainly wasn't comfortable
leaving Mendele alone in his house. So
he sat sat there growing more frustrated
by the minute, staring at the clock and
wondering how in the world a bathroom
visit had turned into some hour-long
major life event. Finally, after nearly
an hour, the bathroom door opened and
outwalked Mendle, completely calm,
completely relaxed, as if spending an
hour in a stranger's bathroom was like
the most normal thing in the world. And
he turns to the man and he says, "Thank
you very much." And with that, he
marches out of the house. The man looks
at the clock in disbelief. He was
incredibly late. What in the world just
happened? His entire morning had been
ruined. Or so he thought. Because that
was not an ordinary day. And that was
certainly not an ordinary morning. That
day was September 11th. And that man
worked in the World Trade Center. And
had Mendele the coat wreck not knocked
on his door that morning, had he not
needed the bathroom, had he not taken an
entire hour inside, that man would have
been inside the building when the plane
struck. The hour he thought had been
stolen from him was the very hour that
saved his life.
How many of us make the mistake in
assuming that value and appearance go
together? Where we think the people who
look important must be important. Where
the people who seem impressive must
actually be impressive. And the people
who are successful and polished and
admired must be the ones carrying the
most significance. And the people who
seem strange and the people that make us
uncomfortable and the people who slow us
down and interrupt our schedules and
complicate our plans, those are the
people we try to avoid. But one of the
great surprises of life is that Hashem's
VIP list looks nothing like ours does.
The people we dismiss are often carrying
far more greatness than the people we're
trying to impress. And the interruptions
we resent are often doing more for us
than the opportunities that we're
chasing. That's often how Hashem works.
The salvation rarely arrives wearing a
name tag. It often comes disguised as a
delay, a traffic jam, a canceled
meeting, a difficult conversation, a
person you didn't want to deal with, a
detour that you would have never chosen.
We spent so much of life asking, "Why is
this getting in my way?" When perhaps
the real question should be, "What is
this standing in the way of?" The man
thought Mendele was costing him an hour,
but in reality, Mendel gave him the rest
of his life. That's why a Jew is never
allowed to measure people by how useful
or polished or impressive they appear.
Because heaven's calculations are pretty
different than ours. The person we
barely notice may be carrying a mission
far greater than the person everyone is
applauding. The interruption may be the
protection. The inconvenience might just
be the blessing. The detour might be the
miracle. And sometimes years later, we
discover that the thing we were begging
Hashem to remove was the very thing he
sent to save your life.