The sicha opens by mentioning that this Shabbos was Shabbos Hagadol, the Shabbos when we commemorate what the Shulchan Aruch calls “the beginning of the Geuloh and the miracles”. This does not refer to the 10 plagues (9 of which already occurred by this time), but to the armed revolt of the first-born Egyptians who demanded from Pharoah and the elders of Mitzrayim that they let the Bnei Yisroel leave Egypt. When Pharoah refused, the first-born took up arms and killed 600,000 Egyptians. The Rebbe is connecting this with the Gulf War (which ended 2 weeks before Shabbos Parshas Tzav), when the “first-born” (the strongest nations) took up arms against a tyrant who was threatening the Jewish nation. Recall the words of the Shulchan Aruch: “the beginning of the Geuloh and the miracles”.
But the focus of this sicha is on the redeemer, on Moshe Rabbeinu. What makes him singularly capable of redeeming the Yidden from golus Mitzrayim? (And since “the first redeemer is the last redeemer” (Moshiach) — this applies also to the final redemption.)
The Rebbe explains that Moshe is uniquely qualified, and endowed with the ability, to bring the Geuloh. To understand this, the Rebbe Continue reading