Today is the 14th of Iyar, an historic date for at least three reasons:

•    On the 14th of Iyar 5720 (1960), Adolf Eichmann was captured. In a thrilling undercover operation, Mossad agents succeeded in apprehending the person who organized the plan and led the effort to exterminate European Jewry. This was one of the boldest undertakings in the history of international intelligence operations and was intensely symbolic:  the man who sent millions of Jews to the gas chambers was captured by the Jewish State and tried in Jerusalem, the Jewish nation's eternal capital. The man who wanted to rid the world of Jews discovered how Jews had ascended once again onto the world stage, but that now the rules had changed.

•    On the 14th of Iyar, we note the passing of Rabbi Meir Baal HaNess and many will visit his grave in Tiberias today. Rabbi Meir was one of the five students that Rabbi Akiva taught after all of his 24,000 students had died because they did not show respect to one another.  Despite the tremendous grief over these deaths, this divine group of five students did not despair, began to study with respect and love for each other, and revived the world of Torah which remains with us until today.

•    And long before this, on the 14th of Iyar, while wandering in the Sinai Desert, the first Pesach Sheini or second Pesach was celebrated. Exactly one month after most of the nation had celebrated the Pesach festival by bringing the Pesach offering, people who could not join in the festival because of being ritually impure at that time approached Moshe Rabbeinu. They requested the opportunity to celebrate the festival now, one month later. God responded by establishing an additional, second time that the festival could be observed. Whoever was ritually impure or far away and was unable to bring the Pesach offering at the appropriate time was given the opportunity to bring it again one month later. Regarding this mitzvah, the Lubavitcher Rebbe said:  "Pesach Sheini teaches us that nothing is ever lost, that it's always possible to make amends."  And perhaps the other two events that happened today remind us of this optimistic message: it's possible to change the direction of history -- to punish a monstrous criminal, to grow and return to Torah study after a crisis. It's possible to change and to be changed. It's possible to make amends and rectify the past.