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the yeshiva.net
so dearest friends tonight we have the
privilege
to be with someone who broke hashem
has his pulse and ami surround and i
think amiso has their pulse on him too
uh and it's really a great suppose that
we have this especially on zostanika
this is by us already in eritrea
wherever you are
whatever is going on but it gives me
like a tremendous
sense of hanukkah does they have saying
thank you i would just say
thank you to the homies
i want to thank all those that made
tonight happen and specifically want to
thank my dearest dearest friends
the golovensitz family who have
sponsored tonight's
event the louis nishmat their precious
son the gibor david golovensitz
and it's a it's it's just for us to be
with yugo lavenzas
it's mishpacha and we hope and pray
that by next hanukkah or already maybe
even by the end of the zeiss hanukkah
we'll all witness together with david
singh the ko and god delight the menorah
and the base of english because of
already tonight it gives me great great
pleasure to introduce amisos dear cover
rabbi
jacobson can we hear it can we hear okay
i want to make sure
i can hear you and see you beautifully
what about me can you see me and hear me
i can see you in here you even when i'm
not looking at a screen because i have
your voice and your image in my uh
jacobson how's your channel been
to everybody to you and to all of our
participants today it's a pleasure to be
here with you and i send you all my
love and blessings from rockland county
new york where we're just finishing a
huge snowstorm
and close to a foot of snow so
everybody's excited
right thank you so much the trek to shul
this morning was a very
uh intensive one
it's very precious to wake up in the
morning and see the whole world bedecked
in whiteness and it brings me and i
think many of us back to our
you know childlike and childhood
memories
of those snow days that we looked
forward to so much in the united states
of america
well my kinder luck is still dreaming
about a a yerushalayim
winter a real snow so maybe your energy
will come up onto
us global warming works in israel miami
los angeles not new york
so i i i know that there are a bunch of
things we want to discuss there's a
bunch of things we want to schmooze
about
um i was just asked to sing one specific
to begin our fabregan this has been
uh one of our favorites here in earth
israel
so and i know you know this this is the
night of the balcenter
so everyone everyone listen we can't we
can't hear you
but we can see you so we could check to
see who's clapping or who's not clapping
that's what basically we can do
so in hebrew we always say we you know
not just when you're stopped by cops but
also just in general at concerts
lift up your handles and let's give give
out rhythm and let's
usher in this young of of hanukkah
with the light of the shiva in the bass
foreign
i
[Music]
i
[Applause]
[Music]
hey
foreign
i
[Laughter]
hey
i
[Music]
afraid i want to start rabbi jacobson
i want to start i want to start with
like one very simple shiloh and then
we'll get to
we'll get to something a bit more with
uh you know a bit more
flesh but we'll start with a little bit
a little a little bit of easiness
the shine that um that i have this is
what i have and then we'll get to other
shadows i'm a kohen so i give myself
rashoos to begin
to start first at what point did you
start believing
in your own light at what point did you
start believing
in the immune who has in you to be
mashipiya
you know simple stuff nothing too
nothing too deep if this is the simple
question what's the complicated question
[Laughter]
well i see that you're assuming
that i believe in it so i'm very
thankful for that but the truth is
that uh part of my sahara
and i think part of many of our eight
saharas is
to doubt that light there's a beautiful
line from the rapsadika
of lublin in the seyfried sitka satsadek
i think it's section kofnondalad 154.
and he says and remember this was
written
in the 19th century this is not 21st
century psychology
and he writes and i quote i think almost
verbatim
just as the basis of judaism is that a
person ought to believe
and accept the reality of hashem believe
in god
afterwards he must also believe in
himself and realize that god's light is
manifested through him
and it's really fascinating words
because it's a challenge as a challenge
for me and i think it's a challenge
for many of us so i don't know that i
have a date that i say
now i started to believe in my light i
think it's always work in progress
there's always a struggle involved and
it's really waking up in the morning and
saying
you have given me a piece of you so that
your light should be manifested today
through me despite
the vicissitudes and despite the
fluctuations
that's my symbol brings me yeah that's
the simple answer my simple answer to
your simple question
right thank you if you want more details
i can give you the number of my
therapist
and you can find out exactly the date i
started to believe in my light
[Laughter]
my mind i could give you the number of
my wife i thought that was the same
person but
whatever we'll leave that for another
time um
so i so this is another one this is not
one of the child
that i actually wanted to ask you i only
i only had the privilege of i i bumped
into you one time
i bumped into you one time a number of
years ago i was in promo i was going to
pomona for chavez
to the pomona and thursday night i came
in to play in a tenth
uh enforcement four shane yeah yeah for
sure
eighteen for say i'm sure yeah for shane
eighteen for say
mommy it was it was a it was pouring
like crazy wind i'm from los angeles
when it drizzles job this morning
it's like knocked down everyone's
staying at home fear of a mobble right
right so i thought no one was going to
come to this thing thursday night but
all the hovercam
was beautiful and they said we have to
learn friday morning we have to learn
so we they took me they brought me to
the shul to the minion and the following
morning
and we were learning and we were coming
to the room that you were just finishing
a sheer in and i wanted to ask you this
then
but i want to ask you the following
shaiva even even so much more right now
and i have to give a bit of a preface
last night we ran a program with the
diaspora yeshiva band remember them
of course remember to ask for yeshiva
yeah no the greats
and what we did was we we kind of
brought them each back
to the public eye many of them have not
been in the public eye for a while
because they really are pioneers
and their their stamp on amiso is just
so beautiful
and whoever has memories from those days
is filled with nostalgia just by
mentioning the name
the aspiration yeah and whoever speaks
about that
kufa speaks about that period of time
separate and not the same as the period
today
what am i referring to when avraham
rosenblum the leader of the band was
was speaking about what it was like to
do those mulava malkas on art sion
and the actus and the hunger in the eyes
of all those that came to participate
this is this is eric israel post
1967 post 1973.
adam rosenblum said he has a kasha he's
going to have a kashan mashiach when
mashiach comes
he says i don't know if it's blasphemy
to say but i'm going to ask him
what was missing back then why didn't
you come then
that's part one of what i'm what i'm
trying to say
there was also a sense
probably around guimultanos
26 years ago
and maybe perhaps there was also some
kind of he started or some kind of an
awakening that oh
oh we're about to experience that which
we've been dreaming for
around the beginning of this current
crisis
yeah and so many beautiful beautiful
mishamas are literally standing on the
threshold of
kim we're waiting we're waiting
but it doesn't seem to be i don't mean
to be a downer this
is just an upper this is the man the
medusa that we learn together and this
is really the heart of what i want to
ask
see what do you think needs to happen in
the cloud of
israel today to get a renewed sense
of anticipation for the gerudo
okay a very beautiful and powerful
question
and i'm glad you're not calling this a
light a light question
and maybe the second question and the
first question are not so disconnected
because there's two components to google
there's the component to google that we
know very little about
certainly i know very little about and
that's the component you know the exact
date
when it's going to happen how exactly
it's going to happen
that the master of the world the creator
of the world who created this whole
i don't want to say the whole mess in
the first place but created the whole
universe and is ultimately responsible
for everything
for galos and goula for corbin and
binyan for darkness and light
by emerald kimi he irv but it follows
the kaiser kalpana sahim so ultimately
you know hashem
will decide what to do when to do how to
do and as one of the great masters said
those who know don't say and those who
say usually don't know so i think that's
a certain component of humility that
everybody has to have you know
when people start giving dates and i
know it's going to be this time and not
this time and it
you know even the greatest of the great
were very very
careful and cautious uh you know i grew
up by a rebel who did not stop talking
about moshiach
but uh he never ever was so careful
about dates
and trespassing
you know crossing over boundaries that
no human being knows
you can ask you can dive in you hope you
pray you believe but there's a certain
humility that we have
in the sense that god runs the world not
me and not you
and we're partners but ultimately we
don't control everything
that's number one but here we come to
the second point which i think is
equally important and may be more
important
and that is the consciousness what is
gula
what is mashiach what is it what's the
world going to look like
often we think of it in very abstract
and transcendent and supernatural terms
but the real point of goula is a
transformation of consciousness
in which we really begin to experience
the oneness of humanity
the harmony of existence the unity
within ourselves
and the fact that each and every single
one of us is the light of infinity in
this world
which doesn't mean that we're perfect
and we don't have challenges and we
don't have issues to work through
but it means that at my core i'm never a
victim
at my core i am a piece of hashem sent
down into this world to light up the
world
that recognition is the gula recognition
of
that each and every one of us is just an
aspect of divine light
an aspect of infinity if you wish each
and every one of us
is a hanukkah candle that's who i am and
in every situation that i face
all circumstances that i face adversity
challenges
maybe in my marriage maybe my family
maybe my mental health
maybe physical health every single
challenge that each and every one of us
faces
there is the goddess approach and the
goola approach the gullis approach is
i'm a victim the gula approaches
i was sent here on a schlicht like yosef
says
this week next week i was sent
i was thrown into a pit but sometimes
you feel like in life that you're in a
pit
and you were buried joseph says you
weren't buried
you were planted you weren't buried you
were planted
it makes all the difference that's the
gula consciousness
like it says in madrid goyle is exile
gula is redemption
the difference is one letter aleph the
circumstances may be identical
but in gulat is an aleph there's a
recognition that i
am one with the source of life i am
never separated
i am never detached i am never
disconnected
and therefore i must never despair or
surrender to mediocrity
i am always one with the source of one
lame
says i am one with the source of oneness
and as a
one who is connected with the source of
oneness i am sent
down into every place and every region
and every circumstance and every reality
to bring the infinite light and reveal
the opportunity
there living with this consciousness
this is called living with gullah and
that's
our responsibility to worry about
and to ask when hashem is going to bring
the actual
gula and the full revelation of mashiach
i don't know but what i do know is that
hashem has now
opened us all opened all of us up and
all of you man enough to the opportunity
to start
living with that light and with that
energy this we can do
this we don't have to wait for anybody
and we shouldn't wait for anybody
because we're forfeiting the historic
opportunity
mushrik is not just some you know flying
lakshman kugel eater that comes down
from heaven
meshiach is when you and i and every one
of us
opens our hearts opens our minds for
real very very deep way
and we allow ourselves to become
conduits of infinity
we bring the light of mashiach into our
lives
and when i do it in my life you do it in
your life we do it in our lives
that light grows and grows and grows and
it lights up the world
and i believe that is our mission today
and i think since the corona pandemic
the momentum and the opportunity for
this
has only only increased and can we sit
and ask questions why didn't it happen
in 94 and why didn't it happen that
pesach and why didn't
it happen in 1944 we can ask questions
and
some questions we have answers most
questions we don't have answers but i
think
questions should never deter us from
understanding our mission statement
and our power and there is unbelievable
power now
everywhere you go you know anyone who
has their pulse
their finger on the pulse of the people
on the nation in israel
outside of israel jews love
there is a unique openness today in
people's hearts
we have been humbled we have been made
vulnerable
and as the balatanya says the reason
people are humbled in life is not to
punish them
it's to open them up to infinity to open
them up to a broader perspective
that's the situation now and we i think
every one of us must
seize the moment as they say
in latin carpe diem seize the day
sees the moment because these moments
don't come around
often and turn your life
into a manure into a source of love and
light and hope and healing
and don't think you have to get from
everybody
you're looking for love become the
source of love
when people see you in the supermarket
in shul
in basement rich and coil in your home
in your street wherever it is in school
in your workplace based of course on the
guidelines of health officials
wherever people see you they should
right away look at your face and say
there's a source of love there's a
source of light
there's a source of infinity there's a
source of healing
well a shayla just came in that i'll go
to now because it has to tie in with
this
is that what you said this is the shaila
is this what rabbi jacobson
sensed when he was in the presence of
the bhava chirabi
that's a beautiful question and
i'll respond with a resounding yes the
the the conscious this was the
consciousness
that one i can't speak about everybody
but that one
orphan and i often felt in his presence
there was a certain sense of two things
number one the rebel would not recognize
and acknowledge mediocrity in people
he just didn't register at him he just
he like
saw people and he just saw something
infinite
and when you were in his presence enough
you started to believe it
[Laughter]
you know what i mean you started to
believe it maybe not always as i said
before the itsahara doesn't want you to
believe your charter wants you to
believe that you're limited you're
restricted
you're traumatized abused scarred
wounded victim
and we may be scarred some of us are
very scarred some of us have a lot of
scars to deal with
and you have to empathize with yourself
and with others and acknowledge it
but don't allow you to be defined by
your scars so that was the first thing
that the rebbe really
he saw in people the light of ainseif
and he really and he really believed it
it wasn't like you know dramatic and
fanfare and schtick
it was it was very real it was very
internalized very authentic
that's number one and number two the
rebber could not
um as a result of that he also felt that
every single person
can have a tremendous impact and can
make very very big difference
not only in his or her life but in their
environment in their community in the
world
and he empowered he empowered a
generation of people that way
and you see the effect till today it's
almost three decades
after his passing you see the effects i
don't know
i had yesterday i got a whatsapp from a
cousin of mine
really and just incredible just i have a
cousin his name is iraq milgarelik
he is in human
siberia that's western siberia
he's building a mick veneer now because
his wife and other women who started to
use the maker have to fly
four hours each direction so he's
finishing his mikvah
but for hanukkah he built a beautiful
manure from ice
in siberia you build them an iron out of
wood you build them in there out of ice
because there's no shortage you have to
pay for ice in siberia
it's not like here you go to the store
you buy ice i'm a nerd
14 feet two and a half tons beautiful
big mania i saw a video of it
and he lit them in naira the first night
of chanukah in
human siberia with his family and
community wearing masks
it was broadcast on israel in israel's
television the famous show of amnon levy
who broadcast it live and he made the
blessings there
and he made the blessings on the menorah
and then
amna levy in israel who broadcast it on
national tv
says what's your feeling of lighting the
menorah in siberia from ice
and he says when i was sent as a shliya
to siberia i was told that my mission is
to melt the ice in siberia with the
warmth
of yiddish guy but today i understand my
mission differently it's not to melt the
ice
it's to take the ice and transform it
into a menara
to utilize the ice itself as a
springboard
for spiritual light and spiritual warmth
and i thought what see that's
gullah thinking this gull is thinking
and gullah thinking
so i wrote him a text he's a cousin of
mine i sent him a whatsapp i said
you're sitting in a little fahak that
nobody ever heard of tuma most of you i
assume
you're sitting in a little one of the
most remote corners of the world
yeah it's northern russia siberia one of
the most
coldest regions in the world
consistently 10 below
zero sitting there with your family
lighting your manira
but you lit up the whole israel you lit
up the whole jewish world because it was
broadcast everywhere
not only that i assumed that hundreds of
jews went to light them and they are in
israel
because of you because he told everybody
i'm lining him in i are in siberia go
light your minority
israel and it was on national tv but
listen to this islam and the next
morning
he tells me the next morning he gets a
call
the protestant priest of the city
says rabbi i want to meet you
great we're at the meniere he is the
main priest the chief priest of the city
they come to the monarch the iceman are
outdoors 10 below
zero they're bundled up the priest
goes over to the menira and goes like
this
he kisses it rabbit relic says what's
this
he says this menorah also belongs to me
you see my grandmother my mother's
mother was jewish
my mother was jewish i'm a jewish boy
last night i saw they broadcasted you
lighting the manari here
and my memory of being a jewish boy came
out and i wanted to meet you
and introduce myself to you as a fellow
jew
so here you have ashley
in the coldest most remote region in the
world
lighting a menorah of ice and yet
because he knows that his mission is
to reveal light everywhere
look how many hearts and souls get
triggered
that's a mission that's related to every
single person
each in our own way but the condition
for that is
we have to get rid of our inner toxic
thoughts that don't allow us to see
ourselves that way
i what zapped him back this rabbi
garelick and i said
rabbi guy relic how did you manage to
impress the secular
israeli who was broadcasting it i saw he
was inspired and it's not easy to
inspire
you know real secular left-wing israelis
they're not so easy to inspire they know
it all
and he writes to me back on what's up he
says because
in siberia there is no cynicism
all the layers get peeled away and the
truth remains and it affects people
he said in israel many people survive
only through cynicism
but in siberia if you have even an ounce
of cynicism you will not survive
this all cynicism goes away because
there's no reason to live there if
you're cynical
and when people feel that they melt
what a story because i i know amnong
levy is a tough cookie
yes and this happened this is this
hanukkah 2020. you have to see i'm
a lady is sitting there and you could
see the ice in his heart
is melting is melting and and and the
rabbit
relic doesn't call him amnon he calls
him
and he says i want to tell you that in
your
house claudius is lighting the miner
tonight
i'm gonna leave he says my source it's
you it's not me he says no no no i'm
lighting it you're broadcasting it
and then he says i'm gonna make the
broca's make sure to say oman
levy what he's gonna tell the snake in
siberia
who gave his life to ignite souls there
are thousands of jews in siberia
thousands
and because of him and his wife they
have a jewish school
they have jewish observance they have
jewish life they have
hagim it's amazing you can't be cynical
to such
people what are you going to tell them
that they're who are living off
living off the money of the secular not
paying taxes and not serving in the army
you know what i mean
it it it melts away the love the love
comes out
so amna levy is sitting on television
and he's saying
amane
amen and i thought to myself i don't
know what's a bigger kiddish
lighting the manure in siberia or
lighting up the neshama
of of of of this israeli television
producer
now what happens is it gets better when
amna levy heard the story with the
priest
the next night he had him back on back
on again
national television and he says well
this is like
incredible when he says that the priest
kissed the menorah
amnon levy melted you know i'm not sure
when was the last time he would kiss him
or any jew is who would kiss him enough
with your meninitis enough with him
this but it brings out a much deeper and
more
more beautiful uh layer so that was uh
that's very inspiring and i i think you
know all of us could learn from this you
live in israel we meet people
when you live life with a certain
consciousness
you bring out the best in people you
bring out the most beautiful but the
only condition is you cannot be cynical
and you cannot surrender and stoop down
to the darker places of human behavior
you have to remain anchored in infinity
and then when you see a jew or any
person
you bring out the infinity in them now
it's not easy because
our neural pathways become judgmental
who are you
and i have to defend me we become
defensive we become dismissive we become
judgmental we become critical
in siberia if you're judgmental and
critical and defensive and cynical
you've got nothing to do there pack your
bags and go go to mayor shaw and go to
banebra go
go to crachabad go to go to kiryat safer
you know hang out with your buddies
there and eat latkes
and make fun of the world but it teaches
all of us
a way of life that i think is the light
of the googler that hashem wants us to
bring in
to the world now
ask one follow-up question on this
i think this can help a lot of people
and i think it will help me as well
and and i'm sorry patience everyone that
the questions are pounding in
we'll get to as many as we can but i
thank you so much for asking
right rabbi jacobson uh what's his name
isadore ruby was that the name of the
uh is the door robbie the nobel prize
winner
his mother asked him did you actually
when he won when he won the nobel prize
they asked him
how does a jewish kid rise to such
heights and scientific
work and progress and he said we all
came home from school
and all the mothers asked the kids what
did you learn today in school my mother
never asked me that question
her question was is a door did you ask a
good question today in school
and she said that made the nobel prize
winner
so severe you're you're doing good
because there's a lot of phenomenal
questions but i have one
shot here uh uh one follow-up
it seems to me that regarding a many
different areas of discussions
people fall into cynicism almost by
default
cynicism and sarcasm very fast
uh subconsciously even i don't even i
don't think it's conscious
i think it's the default what's the root
of that and how do we how do we rid
ourselves of that is
the best of our ability i think what i
find is that the root of it is fear and
pain and that's why i don't judge it
when you see the fear and the pain
behind it you can have compassion for it
one of the most beautiful teachings of
the bala tanya that pervades all of
isfarim especially tara and lakota
toyota it's already in his tanya in
chapter 46 says
that one of the most important middays
to develop in life is
the attribute of compassion compassion
on what
compassion on your own traumas
on your own pain on your own anger and
compassion on other people's traumas
when i see
cynicism and sarcasm in myself or in
others
instead of judging it have compassion
there's a lot of
fear behind it people are sarcastic
because they're afraid
they're cynical because they don't want
to get backstabbed if i
am present in a relationship if i'm
there with all my heart and all my soul
i'm vulnerable you can hurt me you can
stab me
you can dismiss me i can get hurt again
so some of us just build
this very thick wall around us we put on
a bulletproof vest
and we walk around with a bulletproof
vest you ever see how people walk around
when i accidentally get up at a lecture
i'm speaking there's two thousand people
before corona and everybody miss it you
know they sit like this
and i say kevin let me tell you what my
personal challenge now is
i want that in the next 20 minutes i
should get you from like this
this posture to like
to like this you think i'll be able to
do it
and they're all smiling i said why are
you all sitting like this
this means rabbi why why don't get too
close
you're not getting too close i have
heard everything
i'm here because my wife schlepped me
here because she said that you're funny
but i've heard everything we went to
marriage therapy you're not getting too
close
now i understand it we become defensive
i also become defensive
cynicism and sarcasm is the way
that we people who are the who are
controlled by
fear by shame and by pain
it's a survival skill not to be
disappointed again
the problem is that what we need most is
connection
we need attachment we need faith we need
love
the greatest war disorder today is
attachment disorder people don't feel
attached
the first thing in the terror that
hashem says is not good
he doesn't say murder or idolatry or
adultery the first thing he says
is not good is low tov
we cannot be detached everybody needs
attachment
even if you're a bookworm and a hermit
and an
introvert and you don't like parties and
you don't like people and you love
staying at home and reading and thinking
and fat you still need attachment
attachment is the dna of the universe
because we're all attached
and when we feel detached it's very
painful
and we so what do we do we make
ourselves more detached
what we need is people who will say you
don't have to be cynical i'm not going
to hurt you
you don't have to be sarcastic i'm not
one of those people who's going to use
you
and when people live that way people can
melt away
and their ice melts and their menorah
comes out
all right so i want to on that note i
want to sing a negan for you
when you brought up a siberian and the
the cold
saying brothers in the cold this is a
that came down
when we were visiting our here we go we
used to at least
when the before the epidemic began for
the pandemic began we spent a lot of
time in ukraine
and with many many many hours on the bus
when you when you go from
you're on the bus for for quite some
time
one of the stops that we that we started
doing a few years ago
is annapoli and it's so uh have you been
there
to anapoli so you know so you have the
the picture of it and this is this was
winter
it was about 4 30 p.m maybe 5 p.m but it
seemed like midnight pitch black
freezing raining i can't go inside
and the whole place is you know it's not
exactly uh kohen friendly
at least in and
i was outside it's pouring my favorite
my inside i hear them
i go by the by the quorum of the maggie
then the position
so i was a little dick and this really
bites i i you got to give me something
so this is a
that uh came down right then and there
and we call it anapoli and
i'm inviting all our cover that are
listening that are governing with us
right now that are drinking in
every word you've been hearing to please
davin with us right now with this
[Music]
i
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open your cameras we want to see
clapping we want to see dancing even
smiles and to those cover that are
watching us on facebook and youtube
right now or will be listening to us
later on the podcast
give us everything you have
i am
[Music]
oh
[Music]
oh
hey
[Music]
once again you are we thank
all the sponsors for this whole program
throughout all these eight days
specifically tonight the gold events
it's family we thank you so much
and we're thankful for each person
that's been partnering with us giving us
kayak every little bit of help
spiritually and financially it truly
helps us
just to continue inviting without trying
to break our heads too much but to keep
on going strong
so all your help really really does go a
very long way
we thank you very very much so i i had
mentioned when we spoke a few weeks ago
i had mentioned that i was privileged
when i was growing up in los angeles
to have a masjid my first nashville
and that was ripped schwartz oliver
shalom schwarze in los angeles
those of you that knew schwarze you were
blessed to taste
ashtikul ashtikula what would you say
one thing i learned from from from
schwarze was that the whole concept of
denominations
is just like it's it's it's passionate
like for real
you know usually people that like want
to sound that they're very open so they
first
the first thing is they start when they
start speaking they say i'm still not
into labels
and they're that's more labeled than
anyone else in the in the in the ball
game
but one of the questions that came in
reminded me of schwarze so i'm just
going to take it from the other screen
over here
and this is a this is a this is a strong
one
uh d rabbi katz if you could please ask
rabbi jacobson the following question
i was recently invited to participate in
a program
that said that it was including all
types of jews as we were preparing for
receiving the torah
a pasuk was used to reference the
gathering
the famous pasuk of everyone camped
together
or something of that sort like one
person in one heart
as i entered the online virtual event
i didn't understand because all the
different types of teachers
even though some were female thank god
it was written over here
all the teachers were all coming from
the orthodox denomination
what i'm trying to understand is could
it be that we're reaching an era
that the gates must be open to hear
everyone's passion
and then there's one more line here that
i'm not going to say because it'll it
might it might give it away with this
person isn't i'd rather
keep it keep it like this uh this is a
shaiva that triggers my heart in such a
profound way and i would love to hear
uh what your thoughts are on this yeah
it's it's a it's a wonderful question a
very good question a very
very relevant and really very
contemporary question
and i think there are two components
here that both have to be emphasized and
emphasized
strongly and with a real broad
understanding
you are a thousand not a hundred percent
right you're a thousand percent right we
are living in a time when we have to
hear
everybody's voice and the passion within
every heart and soul
we have to remember that the madrid says
god said
if one jew would have not been at mount
sinai the torah could have not been
given
that means you can have moses you can
have aaron
you can have all the khasid you can have
all the litvaks
you can have all the yeshivas all the
kailalim all the rabbis all the
wonderful wonderful people
good jews but one drew in san francisco
or in los angeles not only rabbi cats
also other jews in los angeles
yeah or in a lot or in muncie
yeah or anywhere else in the world in
human siberia
or in hawaii and that jew would have not
been at mount sinai the torah could have
not been given
and we live in that time we live in that
time where this must be
discussed taught and lived with we have
it in the torah scroll if one letter
is missing the whole torah scroll is not
valid it's invalid
you have everything there one little
letter it's a letter of a word that's
inconsequential
you know the test of loiter nobody even
knows that pasek the
sister of leighton is some verse in
vaishla
the rambam writes there's no difference
between that verse
and hashem i am your god every
letter in the torah scroll is not only
sacred it's also
indispensable to the full symphony and
that is an
absolute given it's one of the great
teachings that inspired me when i was
growing up and i think a fundamental
truth and judaism
to be open to every voice every heart
every soul to understand every soul has
a unique contribution to make
also not to be judgmental of people to
understand everybody has their journey
and also to remember that nobody knows
the quality of souls
this jew may be called confirm this drew
may be called reform
conservative orthodox secular
reconstructionist
renewal khaburra bagel and lax jew
spiritual but not religious physical but
not religious
very orthodox those are all important
may be interesting and this discus
it can trigger interesting discussions
but in terms of a shama
of a soul we never know the depth of a
soul we never know the greatness of a
soul
we never judge souls the moment you can
identify people from that perspective
there is a deeper level of unity that's
point number one
which i can elaborate upon for a few
days with you
but i think you got the point and i say
this with strong conviction and faith
now there's another component and the
two do not cancel each other and when we
live in immaturity it become mutually
exclusive
when we live in a broader world we can
appreciate what i said and now please
appreciate what i'm going to say now
my second point my second point is
how do we define judaism what is judaism
i was speaking
i was interviewed by american jewish
university
just a few weeks ago which is a very
famous university from the conservative
movement
and the lady the spiritual leader her
name is a friend of mine her name is
shelley hirsch wonderful wonderful
person in the conservative movement
she interviewed me we should actually
get it out there i think he'll be of
interest to you
the title was the c she chose it the
secrets of chabad
she wanted to understand how khabad
works fine
but then she asked me if you could speak
to all reformed rabbis
and all conservative rabbis today what
would you tell them
i didn't expect the questions i didn't
have a week to prepare
questions if i give you another question
right every reform around there was a
rapper
and maybe she was asking a practical
question maybe i'll have that
opportunity i don't know
there were quite a few reform rabbis and
conservative rabbi which i said if you
could speak to every one of them i'll
bring them all into a room theoretically
zoom right you'll have a big zoom and
you could speak what would you tell them
good question right slimer
so you know these are the moments i
didn't i didn't i didn't i
never thought of this i speak to
everyone from one it was on the spot and
then everybody's waiting it was a live
webinar there's a thousand people
so it was just a plan that god sent in i
said i would look at all of them and i'd
say my dearest brothers and my dearest
sisters i want to ask you one favor
and that is do not dumb down
judaism anymore even
with the most noble of intentions i want
you to trust your constituents
that they are intelligent enough and
they will choose
what they feel ready for but you don't
have to dumb down anything
give them everything give them the whole
roster give them a display of everything
believe
in their intelligence believe in their
souls
believe in their ability to make choices
and in their convictions
and believe in their passions and their
desire for truth and not compromises
so i say number one don't dumb down
anything allow
everyone access to the whole torah
that's number one
number two i would say to them is let's
stop
defining ourselves as reform
conservative orthodox because all it
does is
it keeps us stuck instead i have a new
label for all of us and the new label
for all of us
is the possible jew and the possible
drew is
what can i do tomorrow in order to grow
to a deeper place in my consciousness
than today
i said when i call myself reform
conservative orthodox ultra orthodox
hasidic non-hasidic i remain stuck
why do that to anybody there is infinite
opportunity
let us allow everybody to continue
growing because everybody everybody has
to grow
and here is where the i think and this
is where the second point comes in
and that is is there something called
authentic yiddishkite and there is a
fundamental
there is a fundamental disagreement and
i say this with full respect to
different opinions
and that is there's one perspective that
says that the torah is authentic
it's god's blueprint for life and it
includes 630 mitzvahs
there were certain movements and leaders
probably for good reasons or at some
point
thought let's cut out some of them or
ignore some of them
why because they wanted to save the
jewish youth and i was telling them in
that message
you don't have to do that anymore you
don't have to do that
give let everybody know everything and
then they could choose not everybody
will choose everything
so i think these are two points that are
extremely extremely appointed and they
do not cancel out each other
i don't know about that particular event
but i do understand
that there is a fundamental disagreement
between people
who may with good intentions say you
know what
we don't believe that the torah is so
real
we believe that you could change some
mitzvas you can cancel submit twist
and i i will not i will never ever judge
anybody else
but it's not fair to ask a jew
who thinks that the whole torah is
divine to embrace
another view and say that is equally
valid because it's like saying i'm
married to my wife but i'm not really
married to my wife
that doesn't make sense um judaism is
real for me i am married to it but i'm
not really married to it
at some point we really have to make a
decision
whether we embrace it or we don't
embrace it and therefore sometimes to
embrace two opposite views
it's nice academically but in practical
jewish life
the two become mutually mutually
exclusive
thank you so much for that um
rabbi jacobson once you've finished all
your avodah sakodesh and hutzlarz
where will you move to in eretz israel
oh wow that's that's uh that's a
beautiful question
so the truth is whenever i come visiting
it's australian before corona it was not
very seldom it was
pretty frequent not as much freaking and
i would i traveled a lot
i'd always every visit fall in love fall
in love with another place
you know i remember once i visited
itamar and uttar
and i fell in love with with this and oh
this is the place to live
and then i visited bhatt ayan and i fell
in love there and then you go visit
jerusalem
and the various neighborhoods here in
shelia so i don't know i guess where
hashem
wants me to live i'll live but eric
israel
is uh you know there is the whole
artist's role is just to find
as the gemara says
god allows me to be i'll i'll breathe in
the air and i'll feel privileged
okay here's a here's a a heavy shila a
good shyla
rabbi i've heard you speak on many
topics but i've not heard you give his
to all the many singles who have not as
yet
found their soulmate perhaps you did i
just didn't hear it
what i would actually love to hear is
your perspective
on why it's why it is that hashem put
such an isaiah
on older singles and their parents
what's their tafkid and their ishtadlis
wow that's so that's a it's a very heavy
question
and uh to give a very i mean
this really deserves as you said a shear
or fuchsia europe
but just to give a very brief two-minute
answer i think it's
important to emphasize two things number
one
god forbid to ever entertain the idea
that somebody who's single
is somehow blemished or flawed
or you know a misfit and they have to
feel embarrassed and unworthy and
inadequate
every single soul has a schliches at
every single point of its life
and nobody should ever look at their
life as a single and say okay now i'm
not really alive when i get married i'll
start living
that's not the way to live every moment
has infinite potential and if you're
alive right now as a single
maximize it with gusto and with passion
yes of course
you want to get married and god willing
you should find yours if you can get man
and build a beautiful family
but till that point we don't believe you
know there's space
a and then there's space b and the
journey in between is just like a random
mistake and we have no choice so we have
to do it begrudgingly
if this is part of your journey then the
journey is your destination
so i think it's so important to
cultivate that approach
i may want to move next year i may
want to my children to grow up a couple
is waiting to have a child
i may want my business to grow
significantly etc these are great goals
but the worst thing is when i take my
goals for the future
and i cause them to paralyze me in the
present
that's such an important line i'm going
to say it again when my goals in the
future
cause me to become paralyzed in the
present
yes i want to get married you want to
get married and you do whatever you can
according to derek to the laws of nature
to be able to find
a wonderful soul mate but never ever
should you look in the mirror and say
now my life is just wasted there's no
shabbos
there's no yum tiff there's no nightlife
there's no morning life i feel empty
i feel like that approach is not a
jewish approach
you know we mention god god god god god
until it comes to the to the to my own
life
if i am right now single it means that
right here away incredible opportunities
for me
maybe opportunities to grow
opportunities to learn
opportunities to connect to myself in a
deeper way opportunities to develop
deep empathy opportunities to live my
own life to the fullest flex your
muscles believe in yourself
you're an incredible soul when you get
married that's going to be amazing
but before you get married you're still
amazing and you could live
a wonderful an extraordinary life there
may be
yes you may be longing you may be
yearning and you should try to do
whatever you can
but don't god forbid dismiss your
present life
as valueless and as as inconsequential
i think that that's a mistake the fact
that sometimes our society makes people
feel that way
that's our shortcomings because we're
not living with
real infinite consciousness when we are
we don't have that attitude and don't
let you define yourself by other
people's shortcomings
i just want to say
that that's that's one that's probably
the most uh
profound answer to this i've ever heard
so i thank you so much for the
hashem i'm married with four kids but
it's it's shy
to anyone it's not just people that are
single it's
that line i just want you to repeat it
again if you don't mind when my plans
for the future
paralyze my my present is that what
it was yeah when my plans for my future
paralyze me in the present
then i'm i'm not in touch with the whole
with the energy of life with with the
energy of life the energy of life
is the balsamic taut and it's one of his
most
amazing and beautiful teachings really
it says in madrid and tehillim but he
really explained it
that creation happens every moment anew
we say it in the morning in david
every day and every moment creation is
renewed why
why couldn't god just create the world
five seven eight one years ago
you know and wind the clock and say
goodbye if you need me call me
i'm taking a nap nope says the balsham
hashem
recreates the world every moment i'll
tell you why
to teach us that life is always about
the present it's always about
living in the now with the now in the
moment
of course we learn from the past we hope
and prepare for the future
but life is always about what is
happening
right now right here there's a beautiful
slonam of art
i know it's not pesach yet but from
chanaka we get ready for all the
there's a beautiful slanted vert he's
as we say in the haggadah
literally it means in the beginning in
the past our forefathers were idol
worshipers and now
god brought us close to his service he
said as follows there are two
philosophies in life
one philosophy in life is mithila
everything was all glory was in the past
mithrilla
it used to be he says
that is a perspective of idolatry
and then there's a consciousness of
everything is happening right now
now you know that you're in the presence
of god what does it mean to have a
relationship with god it means that
you're living in akhsaf
right here right now who is the most
important person
you'll ever meet in your life friends
it's the person you're speaking to right
now
what is the most powerful and
interesting place you'll ever visit in
your life
it's the place where you are right now
and what's the greatest moment
in your life the moment you are
breathing in
right now hashem tells me
you have to learn that the place on
which you're standing is
sacred soil this is the core of life
from a jewish perspective
reality is happening right now in the
moment and if i'm not living in the
moment if i'm living in yesterday or in
tomorrow
i am misaligned with the heartbeat of
creation
you know when you're marching to the
wrong beat if you want to be aligned
with the heartbeat of the cosmos
it's always about right now reality is
happening now
yes learn from the past of course
prepare for the future but don't live in
the past and don't live in the future
live here right now ma la kim darishmi
mani
what does the rabindra want for me right
now right now i'm a conduit for infinite
light but for this i have to go away
from my ego
for my trauma for my toxicity for my
insecurity and for my cynicism
because that takes me to the past i say
right now
i rabbi or you rip schleimer or all of
you here my dear brothers and sisters
you are a conduit for the light of
infinity
what is it that hashem wants to now
shine into the world
that's the question that's the most
important question right now he wants to
shine
light into the world love what is it
right now
okay so i i can't believe i'm gonna have
the hooks but i'm asking the following
question but because
it came from a few different uh
different
sources and it really is one of my
questions
it'll be like this forever i think i
have to ask you the gates are open it's
just hanukkah and we're
we're just trying to to get close to him
into ourselves so i want to ask you like
this and merciless from those that
sent me different variations of this
question i hope i
represent you all all uh become with
asking the following sheila
those of us that did not grow up
lubavitch even if we did but those of us
that did not grow up necessary
and at one point in life
when we heard that or learn that
void or started thinking about things a
little bit deeper
and suddenly began to inhale the air
of the ataraba
but also are inhaling the air
of rib nachman and are
also you mentioned the base of realm and
the dynasty of sloanin is penetrating
through our veins
and is i
i i can't go as a shabbos without some
kind of an ishbits
whatever it is i'm mainly speaking about
khabad in brussels because
for people that are coming in it's
usually
generally speaking probably one of the
two i
i don't know of a of a gevaltic uh uh
vision it's kirov movement
or or you know what i mean anyway
so the sheila is assai the shia is like
this because
there's a kin of suffering that many of
us have
to people that grew up with a certain
maharaj and they really
don't need anything else like they
posture don't need
they don't need anything else there's a
kind of suffering that means how do you
say cannot suffer
in english
healthy jealousy i don't know
envy i don't know a proper media of
jealousy
but because today you can't go
and stand online for dollars on sunday i
mean you could but
you might have to go see a doctor
afterwards but and and also
the whole indian in brussels there never
was a rabbit that succeeded so you have
to kind of like connect to that vert
it seems to many of us that once upon a
time
it really was about one mahalakh
one rabbi one dark
but maybe perhaps could it be
that the closer we're getting to a
machine consciousness
and befret that we shouldn't feel
guilty that we need
everybody
there's a lot there's a lot lot more to
this question there's a lot of different
facets to this question
i've met people that became froome
through chabad
but at a certain point they felt that
they they want to become
not just good chabad nicks they want to
become good jews
they want to become good jews
and that's their experience
that's their experience it's not
necessarily how it is by everybody that
was that's their experience
i'll take this shyla one step further
then i would love to hear what you have
to say
um
i was once coming back from the ukraine
and i met this
guy at the airport this is this israeli
guy and he said to me
started schmoozing and he started
telling me
that to me was one of the lowest
comments i've ever heard in my life like
you really
that's that's what we're talking about
what
what are we talking about but
i think that the for those that
understand the the shaila that are in
the parasha of this shyla
this is a very very sensitive issue
because there's a rut zone visit there's
a tremendous threshold that
when we're in hardich nothing else in
the world exists
but that's when we're in hadith when i'm
in vedic
nothing and else in the world exists
when i'm in brussels by the nasa there's
nothing else in the world exists
so we would all love to hear a little
bit what you have to say on this
beautiful question very beautiful
question as you said a deep question a
very delicate question a sensitive
question
and probably a question that if not
answered correctly
can probably in the past and in the
present
has caused different jews to uh become
alienated in some dutiful way
so i'll make i think a lot to say of
course
but i think i'll make two points and
again
as i said earlier the two points are not
mutually exclusive
but i'm going to ask us to think about
it in a mature and broad fashion i think
you'll understand
at least the way i see it that both of
these points are really valid the first
thing we have
to say is that all of torah is
ultimately one we have to always
remember that
you know imagine if schleimer you come
to me and you say you know i have a
question
you know i hear about god when i go to
the agudan avenue jay
then i hear about hashem when i go to
the coil in los angeles then i hear
about hashem when i go to satmar
in monroe then i hear about hashem when
i go to babuf then i hear about hashem
when i go to service and they hear about
hashem when i go to botte younger and
when i go to the castle
which god should i worship
[Laughter]
we understand the problem with the
question right what do you mean which
god
i thought there's one god
yeshiva university and with the
literature by the yeshiva there's
different gods
they may have different they may have
different agunim
they may have different hug him they may
have different things that they
emphasize
but it's one hashem indivisible
hashem and todd are one just like
there's one god
there's one toyota toyota is expressed
in endless facets endless colors and
news and dimensions the rainbow of
toyota's infinite arugula
it's midori but it's one tire that we
always have to remember
that if it's real tata it's one it's
unified it's integrated
the actus of hashem that comes out
through toyota
and comes out in israel it's true with
the jewish people also
you know we have labels we have
differences there are differences
there's no question
you have different types of nashamas you
have different types of missions you
have different types of characteristics
you have in the shamans that come from
khassad from gura from teferes that's
why
the menorah has eight branches aaron
that are more ambitious the summers that
are more
humble etc every soul has its flame
and but it's one minority
of the minority to be harmed out of one
piece of gold so i think that's always
important to remember
if you're dealing with real tire real
tire not fake tyler
not camouflage tighter not pseudo
tighter if you're
dealing with authentic terra terror that
moisture brought down on her sinai
there's always a oneness there there's
always a oneness
there's a oneness that pervades it and
the deeper we get to that oneness
the deeper we get into the core of torah
the deeper we could connect with each
other and the deeper we go out of our
biases
and stereotypes and divisions
because we touch a place of authenticity
that's number one number two a person
needs their souls to be alive
so if you have a particular teacher who
gets your soul on fire
you stay there very important
you have to find your neshama you have
to find your soul
you have to find yourself
you have to go to yourself you have to
go to your shama
sometimes you go to a certain web a
certain teacher a certain safer
today i guess you could say a certain
website
i don't know if you're allowed to say
that but you go to certain website a
certain
podcast a certain podcast you say
this man or this woman gets minor shama
on fire
i feel happy i feel i feel
i feel powerful i feel divine i feel
elevated i feel inspired
that's your place that's your place you
have to be able
to feel infused by vitality and by life
by spiritual life and vitality
and let's face it the balatini writes as
an introduction to tanya he says
there are books that speak to one song
and they don't speak to another soul
other books speak to that song and then
don't speak another song he asks it
about himself
is it possible to include in my safer
advice
that would speak to every soul because
by definition
different messages speak to some people
in an incredible way
i once had i was at i like boymerkumsits
i'll never forget it it was very
humbling
and a young man came over to me and said
these words he said you know rabbi
jacobson people rave about you
they say you're great you're amazing
your presentations are inspiring i want
to tell you something
you have nothing to say to a person like
me
i tried to listen to you a few times
irrelevant
there's nothing in any of your messages
that speaks to any part of me
i have to say i started to laugh and i
said just give me a hug
give me i need to hug the person who
could tell me
you have nothing to say to me there's
nothing in your words
that have anything meaningful meaningful
to say to me
it was very interesting to hear and he
was actually very he's a very i know him
he's
he's an honest person and he wanted to
say so i say why you sharing this with
me
he says you should know that don't think
don't think that when you speak
everybody is interested
some people it means nothing he says
it's good for you to know
and you know what it was good for me to
know it was very good for me to know
then we spoke for three hours afterwards
because you know i asked i i want to
know what does touch you what does touch
you
and he shared some interesting things it
was it was and i had and i started to
incorporate those things too so i can
get to him as well
but in any case it's so important to
understand that and to respect that
and not to think that one person could
say something
that relates to everybody that's why
toyota is so diverse
after saying this which i hope people
understand but people have to really
take to heart i think i'm going to say
one more point
and that is i was sitting friday night
and i had a lot of
yeshiva boys and many of them dabble
in different hasidic texts like you
mentioned ishbits and bresliv and chabad
and other students of the balsham tev
and svasemes
and tyra semes and irhame krisha slavi
no emily melech yoshida
and somebody somebody asked me he said
to me and he said
um i hear in you she urdum you quote
from a lot
a lot of diverse samara i went to other
chabad
people who teach they don't they just
stick stick to the text
see he asked me is this a weakness in
you
or a strength in you because you don't
fully accept khabad
or it's a strength in you interesting
question the boy
i said why you asking he says i want to
know if i should emulate
you or i should reject you you see
people are sometimes very blunt
he says should i emulate you or should i
reject you
i like the question it was a good
question
and i'll tell you what i told him and
that's my my my third point that i
wanted to make here
and that's as follows i said there's no
question
and i say this as a very serious student
of the balatanya
very serious student who had the source
of teaching this
now for 20 years after learning them
myself for many years from great
teachers
there's no question that bala tanya had
a very very developed
and it's a shitty it's a shitty industry
meaning it's a mahalak
and anybody who knows anything about
balatanya it's always about
wholesomeness
he's the author of sukhana kharav he's
the author of tanya
he wrote a nusakh of davaning he
instituted new types of
mykvis and new types of knives for
shrita
anu nu sakhindavaning shitten
in learning because for the
balatanya there was this sense of
synthesis and integration he synthesized
mourinho
probably the first one in history to
really synthesize jewish philosophy and
jewish mysticism
which were two streams that were not
synthesized before
he synthesized the balshemptiv and the
maggot
with not only kabbalah but with jewish
philosophy and with chakrabin
das and with nigla nigla and nistr had
to be completely one
so you're dealing here with a very very
thought out and developed
and the quote rabbi salaveczyk who
nobody will accuse of being a hosted he
was a litvak he was a salvatrik
and he said this yacht kisl of 1969
publicly
he said and i quote rabbi celebrity
rabbi yoshibara salvatrik
that since they rambam there was no
intellectual and judaism like the
balatanya since they rambam there was no
isha
an intellectual giant in judaism to
encompass the full gamut
of wisdom like the balatani this is from
a salavaitrik
a grandson of rebechayam sylvatrix so
there's no question when you learned
about latanya well
very well and i don't mean learning it
just superficially
it takes a lot because it's very deep
stuff
but if you learn and there's you know
this 50 60s forum to learn it's not uh
it's not 20 pages to learn
and each safer you could sit on for 20
years between toyota lakota toyota all
is my marum
his tiny adjusted my mark there is a
very very fully developed chitta
so here is what i told this boy and i
think that it's i mean
i find this to be very true and that is
there are people
who gnash from everybody i'm gonna be
blunt
they're wonderful people but they never
really mastered anything
they just avoid here of our tear of
arterioverte
i feel in my life and i can't speak for
anybody else
if you really really get into the bala
tanya there's a full there full
developed
and just like yeah when you're dealing
with a full and wholesome
it's not just easy to go nah go now
let me compliment
you could compliment things when they're
not wholesome when something is very
wholesome and penetrating
it's very hard to complement so here
comes the question and there are really
two streams today there are those
who initially don't really have strong
commitment
to one or the other i'll take it from
here i'll take from here i'll be
inspired behind this probably
and you know what for many people that
may work for them and that's fine
in my life i know that there's no
question that my
what speaks to my soul in the
deepest way is
the derek of the balatanya however
because it's one torah i find everywhere
in all of siddhas and in all of torah
in swarm of muslim philosophy and swarm
of kabbalah
and all the swarm i find so many amazing
nuggets and
insights that sometimes give a certain
way of saying something or connecting it
to a certain story or a certain possible
certain mitzvah or capture the truth in
one way or another way
so in that sense i find them all to be
so powerfully refreshing
so what i know in my life is i always
try to make sure that i'm
anchored in
what i find to be uh an incredibly deep
and sophisticated approach to judaism
which is the encompassing view of the
bala tanya
and the successes all the way to the red
when i find myself anchored in that
space
i am never hesitant of quoting and
enjoying and growing and being inspired
from all types of safari because i think
that they all
have tremendous tremendous infinite
richness i said ultimately
the toyota is one so i really you know i
cannot tell anybody else
what to do and how to find their fire
but i know
that to find a for me
that synthesizes all streams of toyota
and science and physics and psychology
and cosmology and kabbalah
the way the balatanya did it all the way
down to the river the seven generations
of chabad
i have not found that anywhere and
that's why
that really ignites my soul and that's
where i'm very very firmly anchored
anchored that approach that passion
however
i feel that whenever you're anchored in
real toyota strongly
then everything is part of it because
again
the rainbow of toyota is infinite and
when i read the ishbitsa and i read the
izbit so often
and i read nachman and i learned all
this form you mentioned abnormal breast
lift or others foreign
i see lakute maharan i read it and i see
ah
wow that is an incredible incredible
nitsuits an incredible incredible
insight
that is so powerfully inspirational but
i know that in my life it brings me back
to the place where i am i would say
maybe mostly anchored in
which is in the of the balatanya
and that's very very special that's very
very special i
i have to say to all the chevron that
are with us right now
um it's kind of like we built up for
to the whole the whole every night of
night
because this hanukkah this night this
night for us here in ireland israel but
they really shine here you
have sanika wherever you are in the
world
the swarms speak about this night being
that this day
being as much as the chanukah
is and
we're open to receiving things and
hearing things that are beyond our
natural teva so
therefore a lot of the tires that you're
saying uh
by jacobson they're they're really
they're streaming they're stimming in a
place that usually isn't accessible
unless it's like a this hanukkah like
you know
you know the void from the harim there's
a beautiful word from the first gary
rabbit the hindus
really something special he says it says
so he says why by avika your father it
says listen to his moosa
and by your mother it says don't abandon
the terror of your mother
why the difference see he says musa
is the muslim that your father teaches
you growing up
is the terror you learned in your
mother's womb
so he says have to listen to your
father's muslims
don't let go of terrorism that's already
inside of you nobody has to teach it to
you
you learned it in the womb of your
mother you learned the whole terror but
just don't let go of it altitude
and that's not musa that's the terror
that's the lessons that are ingrained in
your dna from the
your mother's womb so i always tell my
students when you're sitting at a shear
how do you know that it's real terror
how do you know that it's real tighter
i said i'll tell you how if you know
that everything this person is saying
you already knew
if everything this person is saying
you're already new then it's real tight
because if it's real terror you learnt
it in your mother's womb if it's not
real tidy then then
when you're hearing real tired it may be
challenging but it's something you
already know
because you heard it already in the womb
it's terrific it just resonates in a
deep place
it may shock me it may startle me may
challenge me
it may get me you know maybe
rattle up my nephesh my sahara a little
bit of my
my trauma that's fine if it rat you know
if it shakes me up but i know it deep
down i'm like
that's uh that's exactly how i feel
about nigun
you know what you know what i hear wait
a second i never heard this before
but i
i i know this i i know this thing in my
whole life
actually yeah it's a beautiful metaphor
for a pillow of pirates
he once said something so special he
said he said that
there was a man who heard a negan and he
just melted
it was incredible and he was singing it
over and over and over
and then he left the place and he forgot
the negan
and he was thirsting to hear the negans
he went back to that location looking
for the person he couldn't find him
so he went everywhere in the world
looking for the version anyone who's
sang he says sing me a negan
sing me a song sing me a song
and everyone sang beautiful songs and he
said they're beautiful but it's not the
negan
it's not the and he said in the
shama
the soul is a helico
it's in his ainsoif infinity but
then it leaves heaven it comes into this
world
and it forgets the negan and it searches
everywhere
everywhere so we go skiing we go to the
movies
we develop all types of interests and
curiosity we travel the world we've got
new
gadgets we read books we're trying to
hear the
and there's nice nagunum out there but
it's
it's not that negan the pillow said and
then when you hear the negan of ain't so
if you say ah
that's the naked so that's
that's the question a question that came
in
was that rabbi jacobson which negan
takes you to that
place
this i don't i i i don't maybe i'm
supposed to have an answer to this but i
can say that i have one fixed and
i think
and think different moments different
days another
a different niggin affects me in
different ways
there is i think you know there are the
nagonam that are
timeless classics that always touch me
but sometimes different different
moments different regalia i do find
generally that there are two types of
nagunam there and the guru that i would
say
are inspiring but they're more
superficial and then there are nagunim
that are deeper and they're harder to be
inspired by because you have to be in a
much more authentic place
there are nagunum that i call them
microwave nagunam they make it hot and
they make it fast
and they're good they're geshmak
you know when you're in the shower maybe
but then there are nagunim
that they're not so superficial and you
have to really work harder
to get their message but when you're in
a deeper place they really
they get to the exam they get uh they
get to the corn
so i you're leaving me no choice but to
sing a that
describes exactly what you just said
right now it's not a microwave
this is not a microwave it's probably
[Music]
i would love to sing it together no
pressure but
we could sing this negan together
[Music]
[Applause]
[Music]
oh
[Music]
[Applause]
[Music]
yay
[Music]
oh
[Music]
oh
[Music]
oh
[Music]
oh
[Music]
it's an amazing niggin in fact when you
asked me what's my favorite and i
was thinking should i mention this negan
because it's certainly one of my one of
the deepest nagunam that touched me
and then you started to sing it it's
called the paltavernigan
it comes from a city called paltava
which is in the ukraine
not far from haditch and it was composed
by a man named
ribayakov mordechai bez pilov
yak of mordechai bespolav he's known as
the paltavirov
he was the rabbi of the community in
paltava he was a very very
profound and deep jew
and he used to davin in the morning with
this
he would darwin chakras in the middle of
dhavaning this was his niggen
you would hear him you know they were
hasid they were darwin very long every
morning and there was a lot of nigunam
in the darwining
different words they associated with
different night it was just like you
know talking to
the especially it was pouring out their
soul
and this was this was his in the
paltaverovsnigen
so it's called it's known as the
paltaver negan the paltavern again
and it's it tells such a powerful story
such a powerful story of of the journey
the dr the journey of an ashama the
journey of
yeah i thought when you said you kept on
singing
we could fool around with microwaves all
day long but
this is this is that that see so
that's also in life it's it's important
you spoke about you know people choosing
different paths
it's like sometimes you just you know
you touch the nuclear energy
and when you feel the nuclear energy
like the source of the energy
there's no going back
there's so much out there and then
sometimes you know you
feel that this just touches you in your
deepest core and and don't go away from
that
accumulate learn grow grow grow more
but if this is really revealing your
deepest
oneness with the essence of everything
that's your place
that's your place you don't have to
doubt it because that
doubting after that is coming not from
strength it's coming from weakness
in other words if a certain if a certain
person's neshama
or a certain person's teachings manage
to ignite
my soul in the deepest way and i find
all my violins chords
all my nashama's chords are playing
right i'm a harp for your melody levy
before your shalam shows
ryu daley says you know if you find that
all the strings
are are playing in your shaman then
this is this is the negan this is the
naked
you know and and and and all the other
negotiatum you hear
will will intensify the negan and will
allow it to resonate further and deeper
but don't uh don't run away don't run
away from your terrorism
don't run away from your niggin and and
and i find we live today in a world
where people are searching they're
yearning their what's my what's my
i said the other night i said what
is love
somebody once said what is love love is
learning the song of someone else's
heart
and singing it to them when they have
forgotten it
so i i bless all of you
and myself that we should have the
courage
to learn the song in our own hearts and
also learn the song in other people's
hearts and to sing it to them when they
have forgotten it
people today are searching for their
niggin what's my niggin
sing me my song sing me shiru la
shemsher khadashi
means learn the song in people's hearts
and sing it to them when they might have
forgotten it don't stop singing it to
them
but i guess to be able to sing the
people their songs you also have to know
your song
so that you could sing to people their
people their songs
well i i uh that that's that's very much
i i'm gonna i'm telling you already
right now
that i may butcher that vert but i'm
probably going to be using it every
single time the average day oh let me
open my mouth in public again so i'm
just saying
and i'll be basham i'm right but the
shrita of the vote will be on my account
don't worry but that was unbelievable
i have i have uh i have a message from
my father he just texted me and he said
please tara
rabbi jacobson that you are the um
you are the hasidis rabbi jonathan sacks
so i have to tell about that
that that's definitely true and rabbi
saks was the
british hasidis rabbi jacobson so
it's all it's all one you know
by jonathan sex was a great man rabbi
jonathan jackson was a great man
and he lit up he he he imparted a great
light to the world and this hanukkah i
think the jewish world misses him
uh he was a great light to the world and
uh you know it was interesting
here's here is it here is an interesting
man
who grew up in left-wing universities
and to a certain extent he maintained
you know his education throughout his
entire life and yet he became such a
pillar of faith and light to so many
really it's
something everybody could learn from
just to finish off a vote from this
faceboos
please summer says why is it
the gemara says that the way chanukah
was instituted
everybody should light them in outdoors
not indoors
and yet he says throughout history more
and more jews were lighting them in
their indoors either by the window
or by by uh by one of in one of the
rooms at the site of the mezuzah
parallel to the mezuzah
there are jews who lighted outdoors but
most jews lighted indoors he said how
did that happen so he says that the
kashmitsumagi the helicopter
margaret said something beautiful he
said the point of hanukkah is to
illuminate the world
outside he says however as time goes on
we realize that sometimes the outside
penetrates into the inside so just
taking the light outside doesn't do the
trick
because the outside is not always
outside the outside is inside
so he says we started to light them in
inside because we have to realize that
the way to change the world is by
changing yourself
if you really light up your own life you
light up your mind you light up your
heart you
light up your trauma your toxicity your
wounds your scars your insecurities your
fears that's the outside
that comes from cuts it doesn't come
from your panemias your eponymias is
always holy
but the outside is toxic you light that
up you bring the light over there
then ultimately you light up the whole
world
so i have i had this there's one last
silence and this is going to be the
easiest shiloh of the night
i've been at the easiest trial of the
night and and with that we'll let you go
to
the bench uh the vetch chronicles um
if there was one thing that you would
want
people to know about you or about
something that you feel
while you're in a state of being
mashipia while you're talking while
you're teaching
who would it be
this is simple yeah this is the easiest
shot
it's a great question and uh i think
the most authentic answer to that is
that if i am really in a state of being
mashpiya
if i am really in a state of being
mashipi yet remember there's two ways of
being mashmiya
one is i'm being mashpia and i want
people to like me
in other words i'm not being mashpia i'm
being macabre
i'm giving because i want to get that's
not my spear
then i have to work on my own
self-esteem issues
but if i'm really really being my spear
then i don't exist so thinking
what the people should think about me
already means i'm not in a state of
ashpo
i'm in a state where i need to do i need
to work on my therapy
on my own self-esteem when i'm in a real
state of ashpore then i don't exist
because the real mashipiya is a conduit
for the infinite light to be channeled
through them and go to the people
the maggot of mizritch has an amazing
terror
it's a night of nagunum so this is a
torah
it's it's it's it's an incredible title
the maggot of mizritch says as follows
we're just at his yard sight yat kislav
the magadam is rich says elisha says
in order to be inspired
hashem as the nagging started to be
nagging
the presence of hashem dwelled on him
so the margaret of mesrich says the
menagen is the singer
when the nagin becomes the negan that he
sings
when the menagen is transformed and
metamorphosized
it's not anymore a singer singing a
negan why he cannot gain hamanagan
the menagen becomes the negan
his very identity is just a condo with a
channel
for the to flow through him then
the tahia love ya'll
then the shechiner can dwell on him
because the
ego the i doesn't create any more
a barrier to obstruct the flow of energy
i know that in my life when i'm
communicating
and the managing becomes the negan
that's when miracles happen but at those
moments
there's no eye there can't be an eye
because if there's an
eye then the niggin is being obstructed
because the niggin is the of
enoid movada it's the of oneness
so when the managing becomes the
that's when everybody
feels the presence of god
in our language we we say you are a
vault
in a good way you are you are you have
not you whatever just happened right now
whatever just happened right now
the negan the the
i once asked a great musician he played
in carnegie hall
pianist and i said how do you know
that you're in middle of a success story
you're playing the piano
there's thousands of people listening
and watching
how do you know that you hit the jackpot
how do you know you say this was good
you know every every every performer
knows you know you come out of a
performance and you're like
this was a home run this was it passed
you know what he said he said i know
that it was successful
when the middle of the performance i
cease to exist
and all i experience is
that the music is flowing through me
and there's absolutely no
self-consciousness i'm successful i'm
not successful
i could have been successful i'll be
more successful i am amazing i'm
incredible
the moment there is no eye there's just
the music flowing through my fingers
that's success and he was makhaven
he was somewhat makhaven to this vert of
the market
and it's it's one of the great truths in
life it's a paradox
somebody once asked
v filters how are you feeling but in
yiddish it's actually translated as
how are you feeling yourself v filters
so on the spot he says
if you start feeling the self you know
when you start filling your body
if you feel your hands it means
you gotta scratch if you feel your head
it means you have a headache how do you
know you're healthy
after a two hour workout yeah you don't
feel yourself you're light
you're just a conduit for the summer so
you said as much
now it's very hard to get out of that
that's why we drink
that's why people become addicted
they're trying to get out of themselves
but that's the whole avoid the whole
avoid of of real yiddish guy the real
citizens to be able to become the
to let go and to let the the shrine flow
through you
thank you very much for the opportunity
to be able to share our nagunim
with our beloved sisters and brothers in
our tissue all in the world over
and afraid inside hanukkah teaching
every one of you my love and blessings
everyone good hunters
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