Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
hi this is deborah dolowski welcome to
the robert arlowski show
whether you're watching with our friends
over at tour anytime or wherever you
watch or listen to your podcast it's
always a pleasure to have you
along for the experience
hey you want to build a studio how about
that
now you don't have to build it from
scratch you could just rent the location
and outfit it with all the equipment so
that we could raise the level of the
robiolovsky show for the thousands and
thousands of listeners who listen all
around the world
and uh
you know we'll have a more permanent
location we'll name it after you or
anybody that you want
so uh if you're interested please
contact uh
admin at raviolovsky.com
and uh we'll be happy to have a studio
named after you
as you know uh
we um
we do things uh a little bit uh on the
fly over here
and uh we do the best that we can
and uh in fact somebody uh submitted a
question recently uh um
you know how does the show work and
everything i advise you to go to our
third anniversary show
where
i interview our producer and i don't
think he would be a verse if he had a
professional studio to work in so if so
uh like i say we're always happy to um
if anyone's interested if this speaks to
you yeah different things speak to
different people and i happen to know
that this is a
um
tremendous uh physic for a lot of people
but we'd be able to say
from the
studios of the robberyolowski show
that would be your name would that be
exciting anyway just throwing that in
and we have a sponsor for this episode
it's sponsored in
memory of
rivka baskerville
and
sponsored by the freeds
and memory of
mrs grinberger and my wife in fact grew
up
uh with the green burgers and the shawl
and uh
it was uh they're very very special
people and i'm
honored
that we can uh
dedicate the uh the show
uh in memory of that yard site and uh
it should be uh
an aliyah for the shama and it should be
as close for the entire family
who i am not at liberty to go through
everything they're going through but
they're going through a lot and they are
wonderful wonderful people who do so
much good work
uh for claudiusville so
it should uh be an uh leah from the
neshama and
for the entire
that they should see only
sanchez okay something i want to talk
about and uh i'm i'm gonna base it on
one of the questions yes you know we
have question and answer at the end for
those of you who don't make it to the
end of the podcast
um jay gelb asks how does someone stay
calm and level-headed when they are
frustrated in an agitating situation
so that's what i really was going to
talk about this week anyway when i was
looking over the questions and i saw
that question i thought well doesn't
that targeted
the question is the following
at the end of devarim that's talking
about when you're going out to muhammad
there is a mitzvah not to be afraid
yeah
and there's four different le shyness of
don't be afraid
yeah
don't be afraid don't be afraid don't be
afraid don't be afraid don't be afraid
don't panic don't lose heart it all
comes differently shyness
and rashi says because the enemy does
four different things
they
trample their horses
they bang their
shields they
blow chauffeurs and they scream out in
human voices
desolate points out
the one thing they have in common is
they're all just sound
sound and fury and signifying nothing
the words of shakespeare
it's just uh uh it's just noise
but it frightens us
and it's an interesting thing you hear a
loud noise you get frightened
what is that
it's nothing just a noise
people get afraid
we get afraid
now
that doesn't mean
that there aren't scary things in the
world
right
uh
a person who can't pay his bills
it's scary it's a scary thing
people made investments the investments
went bad
the gemara brings that as an example
of uh of
tierda
people are worried
i see my ship floundering at sea
and i
have all my
investments in the merchandise on that
ship it sinks i'm going to lose
everything
well that's scary
there's no question about it yeah
you're walking down uh the street
in a in a
bad neighborhood like
anywhere in new york
and you're afraid
you're afraid
i'm not going to tell you there's
nothing to be afraid of
we were uh
at the kaiser we went to darwin like we
we doing kodash me or my wife and
i got a little lost
wandering
through the shook areas that we don't
usually know
you know my wife gets nervous
and uh so i it was very hot
i said if you want we can walk around
the long way you know through the
armenian quarter and through the
jewish quarter
or
we can take the shortcut through the
arab shook and it's covered over
so uh
you gotta decide what am i more afraid
of heat stroke or getting killed
it's so terrorist
so she chose the terrorists so we go
through the shock and it okay except at
some point
the sewage was backing up
you had to like wade through sewage
and uh
women
and i don't mean my wife in particular
here but women in general wear the most
ridiculous shoes you know they have
these shoes that are called flats
they're basically slippers only without
the support that men's slippers have
and they just walk down the street with
this it's like wearing nothing
know but they don't want to wear army
boots you know or something that's
really strong and secure you know
so she was wearing sneakers but the
sneakers have holes in them and
it was really horrible she was really
upset
anyway we get to the turn off and the
turnovers close because they're doing
construction so we had to continue down
into the shook
and um
uh
further down into the shook and we
turned in and okay we got to the castle
we said we're going to walk back to the
show
and as we walk through this
uh
other exit
we come back and i see the shook right
in front of us so i said okay we go this
way maurice says i'm pretty sure we came
down the stairs
and i said no no the shook is right here
you know say anything with enough
confidence and even if people know that
you're wrong they will believe you
[Laughter]
now my wife
my wife says okay anyway
it turns out that the arab strike is
much larger than we were aware of
i didn't know there was a drugstore you
know in the middle of the arab shook
they were selling clothing there was toy
stores every time we were in a different
section of the shop than we had ever
been in before
and although my wife was pretty
confident on the regular you know shook
this was
we didn't know where we were
i still don't know where we were anyway
so uh but it goes on for a very long
time
i didn't see so many from people or
police around anymore and uh my wife was
kind of nervous
and uh fine eventually found our way
back we found uh found signs towards the
uh
towards the uh sharia for the jaffa gate
but we also saw signs for shashlam which
we don't usually go through
and uh eventually we made it back
it was kind of scary
and i'm not worried i'm worried for my
wife i'm not worried for me
because
um orlovski's never die in dramatic ways
we just don't we don't die in plane
crashes
that's why during covet i knew i wasn't
going to die of covet we don't die in
pandemics we don't we don't get killed
in terrorist attacks we die from
diabetes and heart disease that's how
orlawski's have gone for hundreds of
years
we don't die we just we fade away we
wither
my mother
made it till 89
in terrible health she had heart failure
for 20 years she was just she was a
wreck yeah and i said we all go we we
slowly
fade away
but my wife i don't know you know
she's she's a big sardacas you know she
might be
right for something to happen cause for
sure you know but she was really nervous
and i said there's nothing to be nervous
about
because getting nervous doesn't help you
either we're going to get killed or
we're not going to get killed it's
really very simple there's nothing to be
afraid of
fear does not help you
fear
um
comes from one thing and that is a lie
could be talking
coach burkha runs the world
and you have to take precautions
the messil sushem says there is a
mitzvah ushmaritem
you are required to take
uh
care of yourself and make sure
that you're not being irresponsible
that's why the people who say well
i'll throw myself over building it if
i'm supposed to die i'll die and if not
i won't that's not true because the
aveira of shemartam is not sure i'm
alone
the fact that you went against rats and
hashem is enough for you to die if you
weren't supposed to die
so what can you do you you look at a
situation
and you take all
reasonable precautions
reasonable so there are people who
will never fly
because the plane could crash listen a
lot more people are killed in car
crashes than plane crashes okay so i
won't
you know uh i won't uh i won't drive a
car
you know more people
die from falling out of the bed
than by getting hit by lightning and yet
in a lightning storm you see nobody will
go outside
so maybe you should put your mattress on
the floor and not sleep in a bed because
you're taking a risk
everything's a risk
i'm on a lot of medications because
surprise surprise i have diabetes and
heart disease
[Laughter]
it comes with the territory anyway so uh
um
when you open up a box of medication
that comes with a paper
very very long paper with very small
writing everything that could possibly
happen to you
now sometimes they do
sometimes they do but they're obligated
to put in all the possible side effects
um
i was given this one diabetes drug i
don't know what it's called in the
market it's called amaryl here and i
wake up in the middle of night with
these terrible leg cramps but like
unbearable leg cramps they won't stop
it's from the medication it's a side
effect
so i stopped taking it eventually i took
a lower dose
and every now and then i wake up at
night with a cramp
i can usually walk it off sometimes i
can't
uh it's a terrible terrible terrible
thing
but i need it because my my blood sugar
is too high
i take a uh
uh
a shot once a week it's called uh
osampec
it makes me nauseous i can't take the
full dose i just can't i get so nauseous
i can't get out of bed
so
okay so i take enough that it's having
some impact but
i don't get the terrible terrible noisy
i get a little nausea yeah
everything's everything is a risk factor
you have to take things into account
when you go in
for uh
surgery or certain procedures and you
need anesthesia they make you sign a
release form because there's lots of
stuff that can go wrong with anesthesia
i had a colonoscopy
and
they said do you want the anesthesia i
said or what
so some people who are afraid of the
anesthesia so they have it without
anesthesia now this is about
50 feet of flexible tubing that they're
going to put in
to uh an organ of your body where things
usually come out and don't go in
and i was like i'll take my risk with
the anesthesia i met someone he says his
wife was afraid
she did not take the anesthesia
it was unpleasant
it's a nice way of putting it
[Laughter]
i was actually going for a colonoscopy
and the
gastro said we'll also do an endoscopy
that's where they
go into your mouth and go down
i said okay but if you're going to use
the same tube do the endoscopy first
they said no no we have different tooths
just be on the safe side okay
so you always have risks and you have to
take those risks into account
and
there's no way to avoid all the risk in
your life
so what you have to do in a situation is
say
the best i can do
is be
reasonable
and so there's a difference between
being cautious and being phobic
i'm
terrified and listen we saw this during
covet
do you ever see people sitting in their
car by themselves wearing their mask
do you ever see somebody walking down
the street with nobody around outside
wearing a mask
because people were terrified
terrified
it was interesting they did a study
democrats as democrats you know
what percentage of people who get or
hospitalized
i think they thought it was something
like 80 percent
the real answer was like 2 percent
there's just fear just just people are
terrified
so you have to be talking i could borrow
who runs the world
and i'm not going to
be able to live a life without any risk
i have to take a certain amount of risk
there's going to be a certain amount of
calculated risk
that i take in
do i do a procedure do i not do a
procedure
i remember when my father had his heart
attack
they brought him to uh
mercy hospital in rockville center
that's where the that's where the
ambulance went
and uh they went to consult with major
cardiologists
so there's a place called saint francis
which is a heart hospital that's all
they do is they specialize in heart
and they said listen they don't have the
facilities to deal with your father's
condition you have to move him here
and the doctor in mercy hospital said if
you move him it could kill him
so what do you do
you're going to have to take it you have
to take a chance
there's some risk involved if i stay
here there's a doctor who says that he's
going to die and if i move him there's a
doctor who says he's going to die
so we
asked three major cardiologists two said
movements one said keep them
and so
two to one they moved him
they
they did the operation and he and he
survived thank god
but um
you've got to make a decision
in every situation you have to make a a
decision
there's going to be risk
and
which one do you do
i
during the holocaust
the decisions that people had to make
i run them over in my head
from time to time i just can't wrap my
head around it
i remember talking to
somebody and i said how come people
didn't leave and he said to me leave
he says people were so poor they didn't
have they didn't have money to put food
on their table how do you think they
were we were going to go
they were surrounded by anti-semites all
around them
what do you think
they were going to they were going to
take a shuttle to the airport and get on
a plane first of all all the countries
were closed to them
and every place around them was uh was
was
anti-semitic governments
and they had no money
so fleeing hide in the in the forest who
says the young strong men
what about the children
what about what about the elderly do you
abandon them
or do you stay you try to try to work
with them
hope this is going to pass i mean nobody
could anticipate what was going to
happen obviously this was so outside of
the realm of imagination no one had ever
experienced anything like this with a
total genocide there was no hope nothing
to do
maybe they would have made different
decisions but where do you go what do
you do
riveran cutler
uh
did the villenegan's gorilla
it's a special way of flipping pages in
a particular type of uh tanakh till you
come to a posic
and you count certain parashiots and
pursue my whole thing
anyway he did the girl and it came out
hashem said to arun to go to moshe you
know that pasek
when moshe was
coming to mitsurai
so he says well
the
most famous moshe alive now moshe
feinstein he's in america so i'm going
to go west
and they said don't go west that's where
the nazis are coming from
he says i'm going west the other town
went east
turns out that the nazis circled around
he survived the others didn't
i have to make a decision
where do i go what do i do
how the decisions that you have to make
and
do i wait do i wait over here do i go
there
should i try this
you just get trapped
okay but sometimes it's not
it's not that decision
um i was in america with my wife
and my nephew was getting married
up in muncie
it was in november
and uh i left myself
an hour and a half to get to muncie from
long island
all of a sudden there was a freak
snowstorm
a freak snows
in november
okay so we set out
i was skidding a couple times a little
scary but okay
we get onto the highway we get going a
little bit and then
stand still
we're not moving
turns out there was a 20 car pile up on
the george washington bridge
where you supposed to go
you're stuck
i have to get
to muncie i'm on an island long island
is an island yeah i have to get off
so
my brother managed to
you know get off of where he was
and he got onto the tappan zee bridge
and when he got to muncie all the roads
were closed because all the cars skidded
in the snow
and they
were accidents all over the place and
all the roads were closed he had to turn
around he made it all the way to muncie
had to turn around and come home
a lot of the people who made
made it to the house and i just put on
snow suits and and you know and trudged
by foot
to get to the hall
you you're stuck in traffic what do i do
do i stay on this road do i go to
another road
i have to make decisions i can't
so today you have ways just do whatever
waze tells you to do you know
don't make any of your own decisions
ways are good
ways they'll tell you what to do
[Laughter]
if you have ways
you know it's sure i don't have ways you
know
i have a phone in america that i can get
ways by here
so nothing i do i have to make my own
decisions
you're stuck in traffic what are you
supposed to do
where do you go
you know what's going on in the airports
now
i spoke about this in
podcast when i was there and they
suddenly they cancelled my flight down
to
memphis back from memphis
there was one seat on one plane over in
philadelphia
i had to get to philadelphia
to get on this one plane with one seat
left and then when i'm leaving memphis
there are no flights out any place
nothing you can do
come back tomorrow with the witch's
broomstick you know
and you just stop what do you do
and you hear these stories going on now
you're reading the news
people were sitting on a plane for five
hours waiting to take off and then the
crews timed out so they had to cancel
the flight the people on it that
happened to me once on united
leaving our show
it was delayed so much that the crew
timed out they were they were still okay
but
in the middle of the flight they would
run out so they would just have to stop
and
you know
parachute out you know leave you
and you can't land without the crew
because as you're leaving you have to
have somebody going bye bye so long
thank you thank you for coming by bye
bye thank you thank you very much bye
bye
otherwise how can you get off the plane
[Laughter]
oh i don't have the guts but i always
wanted to when we hit the tarmac i
wanted to scream out i would like to be
the first to welcome you
the newark airport
in the
studio no no i want to be the first one
no you're the second to welcome them i'm
the first one
but uh
you're in an airport what do i do
should i switch flights should i go over
here do i do this what do i do how do i
and you're trapped you're trapped
when somebody's getting close to shabbos
do i get off the plane do i stay on the
plane do i take my chances oh my gosh
you know the decisions people have to
make decisions decisions
so you do the best you can
and there's no point being afraid
because being afraid is not going to
change the situation
you have to you have to trust in hashem
and you have to do the best that you can
and you can rethink situations a hundred
times
but how do you know
very kineric
that's how it was the mushrik in for
many years
he escaped with the mirror from europe
and someone asked him
well khan invasion was in america when
the when the war broke out
and he went back
to europe
to be with the yeshiva why did he go
i connected he really didn't unders
nobody knew
he didn't know this was going to be
extermination
he thought it was going to be a rough
time people world war one
was a terrible time for the yeshivas and
they were kicked out of here and kicked
out of there and the poverty and it was
terrible
but it wasn't extermination
we had no
basis for understanding this nobody knew
what was going to
happen it's easy after the fact
i'm so smart
now that i know what happened
so you gotta make decisions
i gotta i gotta be reasonable and being
afraid doesn't get you anywhere
if if if being frightened would help but
you got to make the best decision you
can and then trust in hashem
it's a famous story with briskarov
that there was bombing going on
and he's in the room and he walks here
and he walks there and he's looking
around trying to decide what the safest
place is and once he decided he laid
down and went to sleep
that's it what am i being afraid for
you can you get you can
uh
paralyze yourself with fear
and so you have to have
confidence
i forgot who it was there was a french
philosopher i i
had written this down once upon a time
to look it up
but
he says
um
most of the things that kill us are
things that never happen
it's worrying
they say we're concerned there might be
this we want to do a test
you know and until the test results come
in you're so frightened and then the
test results come in and it's like no
it's fine there's nothing there
and you just you just worry and worry
and worry
i'm so afraid what if this what if that
but talk about hashem
now when you go out to battle it says
don't be afraid that doesn't mean that
you're going to survive the battle
but being afraid is not going to help
there's no guarantee you're going to be
successful
you've got to do the best you can
you got to be reasonable
and you take reasonable precautions and
you make reasonable decisions in life
and that's how you go about it that's
the best that you can do
we're living in scary times
no question about it
iran keeps upping their nuclear weapons
and they've been very clear who they
want to use it on
remember the 1960s
during the tarmullera who
used to write
funny songs so he was writing about
nuclear proliferation
and just remember there was one verse
there
egypt's gonna get one too just to use on
you know who so israel's getting tense
wants one in self-defense the lord's our
shepherd says the psalm but just in case
we better get a bomb
so now it's iran
and they're very clear if we have a bomb
we want to use it and drop it on israel
it's amazing
i remember one summer where you could go
up north because lebanon was shelling us
and you couldn't you know you couldn't
go anywhere you know near near gaza
because they were shelling us
so you had to you know go between that
you were sheliman bene brock you know
back and forth that's that's how you
spend venus vine you know
a third of the country we're in bomb
shelters
what can you do
you can be afraid to be afraid
i was a fellow from south africa we were
friendly with
and um
he was
in town when the uh suicide bomber blew
himself up near cafe ramon
and he got shrapnel in him
that they couldn't remove
and uh
my kids say does it hurt he says no but
when it gets cold the middle gets cold
inside of my arm
so he says so do you regret that you
came to israel and he says no you think
this wouldn't have happened to me in
south africa
every bullet has a name
you have to take precautions you have to
be reasonable there's no way you can
stop living
no way you can you can avoid everything
there's no there's no life without risk
there's always going to be risk
this fellow from south africa he left
south africa because he was uh
you know afraid of the crime came to
america
a couple of uh guys attacked him in his
house
shot him
thank god he lived
but uh
where's the guarantee
but talk about hashem
there's no point in being afraid
you have to have confidence you have to
be
uh
uh sure that occurs who is there he's
watching after you
i've had
to coofers where my uh
where my career was uh was on the ropes
and i had people give me suggestions do
this do that i said listen god knows who
i am he knows where i live my file is
open on his desk he knows
you think if i tried this or i tried
that i'll be more successful
you have to be talking
i told this story uh
my son had a very very long list of what
he was looking for in a shira
and i said listen you got to do
this
you know he says i am i happy talking
and i darwin
that's the stuff
i said look there aren't many girls out
there that you're looking like the one
that you're looking for he says but ah
but i only need one
founder
[Laughter]
because he'll be talking
being afraid
not going to help
so that's what we have to do we have to
we have to be confident
as we go into difficult difficult times
this is a difficult time
all the things that are going on around
the world it's scary
scary
one thing you should do is not watch the
news it doesn't help
[Laughter]
and the other thing is you have to know
because pearl runs the world
you have to have confidence and you have
to be sure about
your relationship with hashem and that's
what you should focus on
and that brings us to the question and
answer
portion of the ruby yolovsky show
anonymous asks
what do i do if i impossibly get angry
how do i stop well
speaking as someone who has an anger
problem i was born angry meadows are
something that you're born with
and uh i was born with anger i had to
work on it
a lot
the thing that i found that was very
interesting is i remember seeing this in
one of the muslims firm
that when you get angry it's like a
spark
and if there's no fuel then the spark
goes out
spark itself goes away
you may not have that control because of
your amiibos that when you see something
go
the question is do you give that fuel
do you let it get going
stop
the ramban and then garrison ramban says
that
stika is a very important thing because
it saves you from cars
don't say anything if you're angry walk
away
walk away from the situation
you don't have to respond you don't have
to say anything
yeah
you have to you have to
calm yourself down that's very important
so do not give fuel to the fire the more
you give to it the worst that it is
anonymous asks in most cases how come
you find that kids especially teenagers
get along with grandparents better than
parents it's simple
because grandparents don't have any
responsibility
i mean it used to be that way
yeah
parents have the job to raise the kid
if the
grandparents give the kids uh candy give
them soda with caffeine they don't have
to stay up all night when the kid is
going crazy from a sugar high or
caffeine high the parents have to deal
with it
grandparents can be much more relaxed
because they're not responsible to raise
the children
parents have to raise the children
every ari khan once made a very
interesting
observation he says
in judaism god is our father and
christianity he's our grandfather
christianity god doesn't have any
expectations of you
it's all love it's all this
he doesn't care what you do or what what
happens
but a parent is worried you understand a
parent who says to a kid
you don't have to go to bed you don't
have to take a bath
you can eat all the candy you want you
have to go to school
social services will take the kid away
because that's called
neglect it's not called being a parent a
parent has an obligation to raise the
kid grandparents don't
so grandparents aren't as invested and
so it's easier for them
to be able to be
less involved
parents parents not only are worried
about the kids but also
they're the ones who are held
responsible when a kid does something
wrong
when a kid is crying on an airplane it's
the parent's problem when a kid is in a
supermarket having a temper tantrum it's
the parent's problem
anonymous asks thereof has a reputation
for being funny is it ever hard to be
funny does this ever cause a pressure to
be funny when you're not interested
so
uh
i i i i i
speaking a personal level
my father told me from the time that i
was little
that you're a lawyer and you're never
going to succeed and if i don't take
care of you you will starve to death
and that's true by the way
i believe that
anyway so my father
believed it was possible to come up with
a system to win at dice
and he spent the last years of his lives
trying to come up with a system of dice
and he would always tell me
i'm going to leave this to you my dice
system this way whenever you need money
you could just go to atlantic city and
you can gamble for a few hours and
you'll be able to make a parnosa
i'll leave the business and the house
and everything to the kids but i'll
leave you my dice system
[Laughter]
he never figured out the system you know
so uh so i got left some urusha
but
i i said my father in heaven said the
same thing you're a lawyer if i don't
take care of you you'll never be able to
do anything
so he gave me a different matana he made
me funny
um
it's just almost automatic
so sometimes it's gerhard sometimes i
sit down you figure out a way to
what word is funny you try different
words you know i know this from
comedians you find certain words
uh if you know my yb jewish you know uh
pestilence
you know i don't know why pestilence is
a very funny word
[Laughter]
we have to say pestilence and people are
already laughing you know so
it's a total
gift so
um
even when i am speaking seriously
sometimes a joke will slip in
uh i had somebody who was very upset at
me
he said this is about program and he
said you know you get up and you tell
jokes i said i don't tell jokes it was a
very moving thing and he pointed out
this one this one this one there's a few
jokes that slipped in without my even
realizing it little asides
yeah
so um
do i have a pressure yeah yeah there are
some times when i'm giving a share and i
think to myself this is
dull
now sometimes the torah itself is so
exciting the way i'm presenting it and i
don't have to do anything else but
sometimes only giving a public share
and what i have four goals when i give a
share i said i want to say
because i
very often have tammy
who are listening i want to say
something that's new
i want to be practical
i want to be inspiring and i want to be
entertaining
i want people to walk away and have a
good good time so i have four goals and
i feel like it's not entertaining enough
so then i yeah i i have to come up with
something but uh
but if you've ever seen people who try
too hard to be funny
it's very sad
and that's why they're a certain
abundant they don't try to be funny
they're not funny
and uh they get by with the torah or
with the inspiration or whatever else
they do
i happen to have a gift that uh coach
baruch who gave me
yeah to be able to do it
anonymous asks how is it for the rev to
move towards some regard to a two-day
yantif
thank you for such a wonderful show
it was fantastic
it was great
now
i'll give you an example
you work very very hard for the pesach
seder and you put everything you have
into the pesach cedar and you'll get
schmidt
and the next day
davin take a nap
you know have lunch
and have uh
and it's over
in america you now have to psych
yourself up for another seder
and the sad thing is you have people who
say oh i like the second side of better
because i'm too tired at the first one
but the first one is dear isa
so you really get a feel
for what the torah envisioned
when you have a one day yandeff
it makes you appreciate it that much
more so for me i found that it added
tremendously to my voters hashem
is it possible to learn the entire torah
so that's an interesting question
the rambam in his introduction
says
you have a mitzvah to learn torah to
learn the whole torah
which means the mitzvah
to learn the torah sheikh viksav and the
tara sheba
so teresa wasab is very easy
24 books of the bible
so you know what that is
um
the random says teresh about is bigger
because there's
shas
and there's um
well he didn't really have the mafirsha
band you know but there's all the
halachic uh
midrashim sephirah the safri the
bachelte yeah
and all those things that you have to
get
for us
there's also the the tour and the
to to be able to get that down and to
understand it to get the turrish paper
um
so the rambam writes the beginning of mr
torah i'm writing this
because this is all you need for uh for
turismo
just learn this safe and you'll have all
the tourism in it
so that was one of the objections people
had
to the mishnah torah and that's why the
rivide wrote a parish where he argued
with the rambam
in order to protect the mishnah torah
from being
this self-contained safer
but
yeah you can you can learn the entire
torah having said that
of course not
because there's shattam on top of
shatman dreshes on top of jurashas
so so reby see ugly the tana said that
in the yam of torah i've learned one
drop
there's always more but there's a
certain just like by torah
there's a definition there's a
definition to tourish about pair that a
person can learn and needs to learn
okay that's it for this uh for this
episode if you want to find out more
about the show you can go to my website
rubyalovsky.com
you can leave a comment you can sponsor
an episode
you can
have
sign up for any of my online shirum
the
trelashier is moving along
beautifully and i get tremendous
feedback from the participants
it's really adding to that feeling they
tell me and i know it's adding to mine
too uh there's two missile shisharam
there's a da fiomi uh it gives you an
opportunity to be able to sign up and
participate in the shoe room
people ask me why don't you put the
shiram online i said because the shirt
is interactive by definition i can't
give a shirt and put it online because
it's not it's not
between the
two people that's what a sheer has to be
has to be interactive
um
and that's it
for uh
for this week if uh
hope to be able to see you at the next
one until then i am david orlowski and
this is the raviolovsky show