Yud (×) is the 10th letter of the Hebrew alphabet
Numerical value: 10
Sound: "Y"
Meaning: 1. Jew 2. hand (of Gâd) 3. continuityâYehudah
Story
As a young pupil, the Chassidic master Reb Yisrael of Ruzhin (1796-1850) was instructed by his teacher to pronounce Gâdâs name whenever he saw two dots next to each other.1 Now, at the end of a verse in the Torah, there are also two dots: one above the other. That evening at home, the young Reb Yisrael began to read, and every time he reached the end of a verse he uttered Gâdâs name. His father repriÂmanded him: âWhatâs going on here?! Who taught you that?!â The boy responded, âMy teacher did. He taught me that whenever I see two dots together, I should pronounce Gâdâs name. So thatâs what Iâm doing.â
Reb Yisraelâs father explained to his son: âThe dot, the yud , represents a Jew. When one Jew is beside another, when one Jew respects the other, then Gâd dwells in their presence. Their alliance becomes Gâdâs name. But when one Jew is on top of the other, when one Jew thinks heâs better or smarter than the next, or disrespects his neighbor, then thatâs the end of the passage. It creates a separation in the relation between a Jew and Gâd.
Design
Yud is the 10th letter of the aleph-bet and also the smallest.
On the simplest level, the design of the yud is a point: a dot which represents Gâdâs essential power; the one Gâd Who is indivisible. Furthermore, the yud looks like a flame that soars ever higher, representing the soul of a Jew yearning to unite with Gâd.2
Additionally, the yud represents the method by which blessings descend from Gâd to His people. The letter yud when spelled out is ×-×-×. The yud represents a seminal drop, the concentrated power of Gâd. The vav represents a descent, for its form is that of a chuteâand through this the blessÂings of Gâd travel downward to our world. The dalet , having height and width, represents the physical world, signifying how Gâdâs blessings are manifest in every aspect of nature. This teaches us that Gâdâs blessings donât only reside in heaven. They flow down to this corporeal world and endow us with physical health, sustenance and success.
Perhaps this is why the first word of each of the three pasÂsages of the Priestly Blessing begins with the yud : 3
××ר×× ×' ××׊×ר×âMay Gâd bless you and guard you.
××ר ×' ×¤× ×× ×××× ×××× ×âMay Gâd shine His countenance upon you and be gracious to you.
××Š× ×' ×¤× ×× ×××× ×××Š× ×× ×Š×××âMay Gâd turn His countenance toward you and grant you peace.
Furthermore, every letter of the aleph-bet begins with the yud , a point. This illustrates the inherent spirituality of every letter of the Hebrew alphabet, and that the Torah and Gâdâs teachings are all for the sake of the Yid , the Jew.
Gematria
The numeric equivalent of the yud is 10. Up until now, weâve been discussing the single integers of the aleph-bet . Now we enter the realm of two-digit numbers. After the yud , each letÂterâs gematria increases by 10 instead of one. Yud is 10, kaf is 20, lamed is 30, mem 40, and so on. In Judaism, the number 10 is quite significant. Throughout the teachings of Torah, Talmud, Kabbalah and Chassidism, the number 10 is a fundamental building block for every aspect of Creation.
First, there are the 10 Utterances of Speech through which Gâd created the world. Next come the 10 generations from Adam to Noah, and the 10 generations from Noah to Abraham. There were 10 plagues that Gâd brought upon the Egyptian people, and 10 miracles that He performed for His people to save them from those plagues. Gâd challenged the Jewish people with 10 tests in the desert. And, of course, Gâd gave us the 10 Commandments.4
The fact that 10 represents sanctity and holiness is another reason for the importance of the yud . The Talmud tells us5 that when 10 Jews assemble, Gâd dwells in their presence. The Tanya6 gives an example of just how powerful that congregaÂtion is. It states that if an angel were to fly above the room in which 10 Jews were gatheredâeven if there were no words of Torah exchanged between themâthe angel would be burnt out of existence from the holy light radiating from their comÂbined energy. This is the power of 10 souls. And when these 10 souls are gathered together for Torah study and prayer, how much mightier is their force!
How do we know about the sanctity of 10? From the story of the Spies. Moses sent 12 spies to scout the land of Canaan (the Land of Israel) ahead of their arrival. Two of the spies, Joshua and Caleb, delivered a positive report: âIf Gâd desires it ⌠we shall surely ascend and conquer it.â7 The other 10 reported negatively: âWe cannot go up against those people ⌠It is a land that devours its inhabitants.â8 Gâd responded, âHow much longer must I remain amongst this evil congregation ( eidah )?â9 referring obviously to these 10 men.
From here we learn that a congregation (an eidah ) refers to a group of 10, a minyan, a quorum. A number of important questions logically follow. Why is the concept of 10 men constituting a minyan based on the fact that there were 10 evil spies returnÂing from the Land of Israel? How do we ultimately say that 10 traitors represent proof that Gâd can only dwell among a comÂmunity of at least 10, and that the Shechinah (a manifestation of Gâdliness) can exist only in such a gathering?
In examining the treason of the Spies, we come to realize that, in essence, they werenât such grave sinners. The Spies were the heads of the 12 Tribes. They were holy people.10 When Moses sent them into the Land of Israel, they saw a beautiful land, rich soil, a wonderful climate, and large, succulent fruits. Upon their return, they said to Moses, âIt is a land that devours its inhabitantsââmeaningââItâs not that we couldnât conquer Canaanâs inhabitants physically, but if we reside in this materialistic environment, there is no way we will be able to maintain our current spiritual level. We will be swallowed up by materialism.â
Gâd chose us to study His holy Torah. He chose us to be a light unto all the nations of the world. How could the Jewish people accomplish this if, by living in Israel, by indulging in this physical wonderland, they would forget their reÂsponsibilities? Instead of studying and praying all day, they would be working the soil. They would be reaping delicious produce. And they would forget all about why they ultimately came. In the desert, the Jewish people were essentially provided for. They had manna from Heaven to eat. They had water from the Well of Miriam to drink. Their clothes were washed and maintained by the Clouds of Glory. So what did they do all day? They learned Torah. They discussed its instructions and delved into its secrets.
In Maimonidesâ Introduction to the Mishnah , he discusses how the Oral Law was imparted to the people. Each time Gâd gave a law to Moses, Moses taught it four times: first to Aaron, then to Aaronâs sons, then to the 70 elders, and then to the Jewish people. After all this, the nation divided into small groups and discussed the particular law, analyzing it over and over again until they were utterly clear about every one of its aspects. This was the daily routine of the Jewish people in the desert.
Mosesâ spies were great Torah scholars and holy Jews. They said, âLook, if we go into the Land of Israel, weâre not going to have time to sit around and discuss all the minute details of halachah . We wonât have the opportunity to analyze the law in depth or pass it on scrupulously to our children. For this reaÂson, Israel is a land that will eat up its inhabitants. The Jewish people will become immersed in the physical rather than the spiritual.â The Spies therefore told Moses, âWe donât want to go.â Obviously this was a sin, but why was it a sin for which they were mortally punished? Because Gâdâs original and funÂdamental intention in bringing us into the world was not to eschew physicality, but to transform the physical into the spiritual. That is the ultimate goal of the Jewish nation.
So the incident of the Spies represents a rather unique paraÂdox. The Spies sinned because they didnât follow Gâdâs objective in conquering the land. On the other hand, they had a valid point. They knew of the temptations that awaited the Jewish people.
Now imagine this scenario. A mother wakes up her eight-year-old son for school and he says, âNo! I donât want to go and Iâm not going to go!â How does the mother respond? Does she say, âGet up! Youâre going to school whether you like it or notââorââOh, you donât want to go to school? No problem. But youâll have to stay in bed for the next forty years!â ObviÂously sheâll tell him to go to school.
Similarly, when the Spies said, âWe donât want to go into the land,â why didnât Gâd just ignore them and demand that they go in anyway?
Because they werenât ready. There was much more studying to be done. 11
Now if only we would all be on the Spiesâ levelâcommitted to learning Torah and striving to be spiritual and connected to Gâd every minute of the day! In their own way, the Spies wanted the era of Moshiach to begin at that very moment.12 But the time simply wasnât right. First, the Jewish people had to enter the Land. They had to work it and bring its fruits up to Gâd, exemplifying how everything in this physical world is linked to the spiritual. Then, and only thenâin that era and our ownâwould we be fit for the coming of Moshiach. This is the richness of the passage from which we derive the concept of a minyan . To this very day, any time 10 Jews gather for any reason it creates a quorum of holiness.
Meaning
The meaning of yud is a Yid âa Jew. The yud can also repreÂsent a yad âa hand, which is an allusion to Gâd, for we say that Gâd took us out of Egypt with a mighty hand.
How do we differentiate between the yud that represents Gâd and the yud that alludes to humankind? We see many times in our prayerbooks that the name of Gâd is composed of two consecuÂtive, adjacent yuds. The two yuds constitute a vital force in two of Gâdâs names: The first name of Gâd, the Tetragrammaton, is spelled ×-×-×-×â yud - hei - vav - hei . The Tetragrammaton represents Gâd as He is beÂyond nature. The second name of Gâd is A-donai âwhich is ×-×-× -×â alef-dalet-nun -yud . It signifies how Gâd, the Master of the Universe, manifests Himself in nature. The yud at the beginÂning of the Tetragrammaton and the yud at the end of A-donai come togetherâa yud followed by another yud âto represent a fusion of these two expressions of Gâdliness.13 This fusion is an affirmation of the fact that while we live in a physical world of ânaturalâ order, Gâd is truly the one and only creator of nature.
The yud is also the first letter in the two names for a Jew. The first name is ×׊ר×× ( Yisrael ). Jews are called Bânei Yisrael âthe Children of Israel. Yisrael means both ×× ×¨×׊14ââI am the head,â15 and ׊ר ×-×ââminister of Gâd.â16 The terminology âminisÂter of Gâdâ represents the spiritual aspect of a Jew when he prays, studies Torah, performs acts of loving-kindness and all the other mitzvot .
The second name the Jewish nation is Bânei Yaakov âthe children of Jacob. Yaakov is a phonetic fusion of the letter yud and the word akeiv . Yud represents Gâd. Akeiv means âheel,â the lowest part of a person. The heel is what we use to tread upon the earth. Therefore, the mission of a Jew is to go forth into the depths of the materialistic world and infuse it with the yud of GâdâGâdliness. This isnât true only with regard to the Land of Israel or the synagogue. It refers to every place a Jewâs foot lands. We must journey from Shabbat into the weekday and from prayer into business with the same intention, with the same passion to fulfill and complete Gâdâs creation.
Weâve just said that there are two names for a Jew. But from where does the word âJewâ ( Yehudi in Hebrew) actually derive? We donât even see the term Yehudi in our texts until the Book of Esther, the scroll we read on Purim.
In the Book of Esther, Mordechai refuses to bow down to the wicked Haman âA man, a Jew ( ish Yehudi ), was in Shushan the capital, and his name was Mordechai.â17 The Talmud 18 observes that Mordechai didnât come from the tribe of Judah (Yehudah). ,he belonged to the tribe of Benjamin. He should thus have been called âMordechai the Benjaminite ( Yemini ).â The Talmud proceeds to state that anyone who denies idolatry and thereby acknowledges Gâd is called a Yehudi âYehudah, or the Jew.
It is interesting to note that the letter yud , when placed at the beginning of a word, represents constancy. This concept is illustrated in the verse in Job19: âSo did Job do ( yaaseh ) all of his days.â The verb asah (ע׊×), âto do,â would typically refer to a one-time accomplishment. Here, however, a yud precedes itâ×ע׊×. The yud empowers asa with continuity. Job offered burnt offerings for his children not just this one time, but every year at that timeâall of his days.
The same concept holds true with Gâdâs name. The name of Gâd is spelled yud - hei - vav - hei . The word hoveh ( hei, vav, hei )means âthe present.â Gâd continuously creates the worldâright now, even as you read this. The yud in front of hoveh reminds us that Creation was not a singular occurrence. Gâd is forming the world anew every moment.20
The word Yehudah (i.e., Yehudi )âthe Jewâalso begins with a yud . The Alter Rebbe explains21 that Yehudah means âpraiseâ and âacknowledgmentâ (etymologically, it stems from the word hod , to praise). A Jew, by nature, praises Gâd. But this isnât merely enacted once or twice in a lifetime, or even once or twice a day. Praise is expressed every moment of our earthly existence. This is the yud that is placed before the root word hod , âto praise.â It represents a Jewâs continuous, innate desire to praise Gâd. Of course, some days that desire can be concealed and we may be unaware of it. But that can never obscure a Jewâs perpetual, unyielding connection to Gâd.
In light of this fact, we may re-examine one of the darkest periods of Jewish history. Hitlerâmay his name be erasedâforced all Jews to wear a yellow star with the word âJudeâ (i.e., Yehudi ) on it. In retrospect, we can say that Hitlerâs attempt to extinguish the Jewish spark actually served to re-ignite and distinguish it. Wearing the star meant that even in the most harrowing times, the Jewish people would never stop loving and praising Gâd. Yehudahâ to praise Gâd constantly âwas emblazoned on our very being.
Yud . Gâdâs indivisible power. His hand. His name. A corridor to a heightened level of connection and understandingâforever embedded in our Jewish name and our inherent desire to praise Him.


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