Transcript
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You want to know who you
are? You were there, not your great
grandfather.
[Music]
This
[Music]
history song will be released
[Music]
tomorrow. It's a song
[Music]
for
[Music]
every night. The truth never died. We
got the Torah, we got the flame, and we
carry it
forward. So don't forget, don't lie. You
stood at the foot of
mountain. It wasn't just identity. It
wasn't a speech. It was driven. He gave
us joy, clarity, fear, and grace. The
blueprint
time and space. The
[Music]
changefore that truth in your daily
grind. We ain't just a nation with an
ancient past. We're the people who blast
from fire and cloud and flame. We still
walk
in. We were there. No stories, no spin.
Every Jewish
[Music]
fire, we got the flame and we carry it
forward. So don't forget, don't
lie. You
want the hat. They saw what we got and
ever since then we've been in their
plot. From Rome to Greece, from exile to
war. They couldn't handle the truth. We
swore. But we ain't breaking. We ain't
afraid. We heard a shim's voice. We're
already soul stood near. The future
heart said yes with cheer. And now it's
our time. Don't let it fade.
Don't let
it
fires break. Remember where your soul
was
[Music]
awaken and we carry it forward.
So don't
[Music]
forget you were there. Not just your
name, not just
your
stoodath. You didn't ask for proof. You
said we will do and we will understand.
[Music]
But if you want to
know me, you need a heart.
[Music]
Now this is our songs. Chuva music.
We're back on our Wednesday night stump
the rabbi. We're after
some you guys will ask some questions
and will give us the answers. Tonight's
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the
benit of
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has been uh Rab Fry worked on it
literally for for the last 20 years. Uh
and uh it remained unpublished for many
years. This sephi was originally written
over a hundred years ago by one of
Israel Yakim who was a dian in Morocco
in Taria and a Bedin in Kazablanca. He
was truly the h of his generation or as
many call him the Mosher Benu of his
generation. uh and uh this is one of his
three but this book hasn't been uh
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Fry
uh wrote a entire commentary
uh source sheet and explanations of
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Has to kabala in in regards to uh
different uh extraordinary wisdoms of
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that. So with that said, we're going to
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Spotify, iTunes, and so on. The song
will be released tomorrow. It's a
fantastic song for really for all year
round. Uh that's going to be available
tomorrow. And uh now we're going to get
into the para. We're starting a new
seafar. What is bam? Bameid the desert.
And interestingly, Abu Tai, we're going
to title this
lecture, he who laughs
lasts
best. Success secret.
Now, people of I'm sure that haven't
been born in the last 10 years have
heard of this old saying, uh, he who
laughs last laughs best. Meaning that,
uh, people could laugh at you, but if
you're right in the end, then you get
the last laugh. You're the one that's
the winner at the end.
And it's not a secret
that some of the greatest success
stories in history, whether it be
business or
otherwise, are also stories that come
from the biggest
struggles. How did those
people that succeeded in the end, how do
they know to keep pushing despite being
laughed at?
How can you use it as a lesson in your
Torah learning, in your business
struggles? Seems to be all about the
census, counting Jews. That would seem
to be irrelevant to success, needless to
say, to your life. But a closer look
into the
verses will uncover not only things that
are relevant but actually the secret to
success that's buried within the
desert. Hashem will succeed in showing
you this and learn it that you'll be
able to have literally a priceless tool
that you can apply in many many aspects
of your life.
Hashem spoke to Moshe in the wilderness
of Sinai in the tent of meeting on the
first of the second month in the second
year after their exodus from the land of
Egypt saying take a census of the entire
assembly. So here we see that is telling
Mosheu to take a
census. But the Torah is reminding us
that this is taking place in the
wilderness. Where else is it going to
take place? In Taj Mahal, in New York,
in Las Vegas, in Tel Aviv, where else is
it going to be? Of course, it's in a
desert. The whole Tawa is in a desert.
Why is the con insistence that reminding
us this is in a desert?
Furthermore, the
census, we've had a couple of
them. What can we learn from those words
of the census that can apply to our
life, that can apply to our success?
Nowaday is typically read right
before in fact the sages instituted that
at times where we are running behind if
you will that uh the last two par
of will be read a week
before in order to make sure that is
read right before
shave. Why? Why do we need to read it
before? Well,
perhaps if we look at what have said,
we'd understand a little bit better. The
in page
54A says that
inbar
21:8 it says,
A gift from the
wilderness. This is said during the song
that is sang. What gift? What is this
gift? The
asks say the gift
is that if a person treats
himself as if he is the
desert when people keep bothering
him then his Torah learning will
succeed.
But if he does not, then his Torah
learning will not
succeed. Treat himself like the desert.
Okay, I understand
desert. Hashem is speaking to Moshe in
the
desert. Now you have to treat yourself
like you're the desert if you want to
succeed.
Why? meaning
Abuai just like the desert does not
require permission or specific
conditions for you to enter
it. You don't need a green card. You
don't need a uh visa, a
citizenship, a toll. You want to go to
the desert enjoy.
If you treat yourself like the desert,
meaning that when it comes to learning
Torah, you'll take advantage of any
opportunity, any moment of time you have
and not wait for the perfect conditions
where you feel better, where you have
enough money, where uh it's perfectly
quiet, the kids are asleep, you uh you
are are into it, you're interested in
it. If you give yourself all of those
conditions, you're never going to
succeed. But if you treat yourself like
the desert coming and going any chance
you get, then you will succeed. In so
many words,
determination.
Determination.
The further adds, why was the Torah
given to Islam?
answer. In order to make sure that no
tribe out of the 12 tribes of Israel
would claim ownership over it since it
was given in their land, in their
section, Hashem divided the land and
gave a piece to each one of the tribes.
And if the Torah was given in a part
that was owned by Beyamin, perhaps
Beyamin would say, "Listen, the Torah is
really more connected to me because it
was given where where we are
or
is
or so in order to make sure that no one
thinks that the Torah belongs to them
more than anybody else, Hashem gave it
in the desert.
Why not Israel in general before you
divide the
land says the same midash
ma so the nations the
goim would not come with
excuses of why they
forsook the Torah and ignored it by
saying listen it was in Israel we live
in uh you know we live in Saudi Arabia
we live in America it's it's so
obviously it's Not for us. It's in
Israel. You gave it in Israel for for
the Jews. No habibi. The Torah is for
the entire world to comply with. The
Jews have to comply and follow every one
of the laws that's applicable to them.
And the Gentiles have to follow every
one of the laws that apply to them. No
one has an excuse. Hence the reason why
Hashem gave the Torah in the Mid in the
desert. In fact, in the
recent past, I would say 100 years or
so, there was a lot of fighting, even
more than 100 years, but a lot of
fighting between the Ashkenazim
and at times certain Ashkanazim that
would claim ownership over the Torah,
over
the many of them were surprised that the
even
have when they saw They simply couldn't
deny that the sun has
risen. And that's also why some of the
elders till this day remember the pain
they uh they suffered from some of the
their
brothers. But needless to say when
somebody came to one of
his so many words saying
listen feel like the Torah is theirs.
Shalom says the Torah itself
says the Torah that was commanded on
us was given to us
by it says Jacob Yakov is also another
name for Israel. It doesn't
say it
says the Torah is for all
of doesn't make a difference for all of
Isel.
Hashem gave the Torah in the desert to
all of Am is and in fact the entire
world has to follow
it. The problem that people
have is
that they don't put themselves in a
desert when it comes to learning
Torah. They wanted to be under certain
conditions. They wanted to be in perfect
mood, perfect physical shape, perfect
financial situation, nobody bothering
them. But unfortunately, that just never
happens. Furthermore, the Torah tells us
about a
census. A
census. What does counting have to do
with anything?
But if you look at the Hebrew words that
are used in the Torah, Hashem
says, which translates to take a census,
count every
head, also literally means lift up the
head.
Meaning get the
leaders, the leaders of the tribes, the
leader of a family. You that's watching
right
now. Let them know that if they follow
the Torah, they'll be the they'll be the
head. They'll be the success
story. If they don't, they'll lose their
head.
In the census, we
have the names of the leaders. Some that
chose to go in the way of Hashem and
some that did not.
For the tribe of Shimon, we have Ben
Shai which tells us this is Ben Sal, as
we'll learn in Balak later on in the
Torah. He was the guy that was over 400
years
old and did not like that Moshe Abenu
was given the death penalty
to people that violated the Torah. They
were part of his
tribe. So he decided he's going to show
that he's more powerful than Mushe. and
he ended up grabbing the
Goya
Cosby in order to change people's
perspective because he wasn't happy with
what he
had. He wasn't happy not being the
leader of all of Islam. On the other
hand, we have for the tribe of
Yehuda bin
Aminadav didn't look to be the
leader. But when he saw that Am was
afraid to go right, to go left, to go
back, to go forward at Yamsuf because
behind
them were the
Egyptians chasing after them to murder
them.
On the right and left, there was
enormous snakes and
scorpions that the Midash says were
bigger than people. The scorpions were
bigger than people. Something
terrifying, the worst nightmares
couldn't size up to it. Hashem
specifically put these things there in
order to make sure that he leaves a one
option for where go into the water. But
nobody knows how to swim. So everyone's
afraid. What was supposed to swim
across
Yamsu knew
that always does good even if it looks
impossible, even if it looks like it's a
certain failure. And he went into the
water first to the point where he
himself started drinking the water from
drowning. That's how much he believed in
Hashem. And he not
only brought the merit to where Hashem
split the ocean, but he also merited
being the one out of the tribe of Yehuda
where Msiah Ben Davidid is going to come
from. So on one end
one wasn't happy with a wanted more than
what he had didn't like the
conditions
whereas the polar
opposite he had
complete he knew that hem is right even
though it looks like he's wrong
shalom. He knew that the were laughing
at
him, laughing at laughing at laughing at
Moshe, but he got the last laugh.
So we see that there
is a certain pattern
forming that the Torah is trying to tell
us here much more than counting names.
tell
us the Torah was given to us in the
desert in order to constantly remind us
that in order for us to succeed, we have
to act like the desert. Stop looking for
perfect
conditions. If you're looking for
perfect conditions, you are simply going
to never progress. And this applies in
every aspect. It applies in learning
Torah. It applies in doing chuva and
needless to say it applies in business,
in your
career. If you're not willing to make
moves, to do things that other people
are not willing to
do, you're never going to progress. Now,
this does not mean to turn into a
speculator. This does not mean to do the
exact opposite of what everybody says
just for the sake of being the opposite.
That's a fool.
But what the Torah is telling us is when
you know you're
right, go all
in
everything. What about the fact that
everyone's laughing at me? Let them
laugh. But there's most people don't act
that way. Most people say, "No, listen.
Why don't we just change the
conditions?"
Changing the
conditions is not going to improve the
desert. It may ruin
it. There
was a rich man that came to Steinaman.
Abstein Kadosh
Sadik lived in a house
that literally it's the if the walls can
talk just going to that house you get
the mousar of your
life. A rich man came to him and
said I have an
idea. I want the RV to give me the 10
best
of I'm going to start a new coll for
those 10 best
of. Well, why do you want to do
that? Well, my plan is that I'm going to
build the fanciest, most luxurious col
that ever
existed where each one of
these is going to become rich. I'm going
to give them
houses full of luxury, cars,
drivers full of the food is going to be
available at all times in the
co. All of their needs and desires will
be met so they could learn Torah with
complete
comfort. of Steinerman says to the rich
man, "No, this I do not agree
to." Why not? I mean, people people are
collecting money for the kals all the
time. We need money for our kals and
everybody needs money for their kals.
This guy's offering not offering not
just offering money for the kals. He's
going to build a colo and the k is going
to be a multi-million dollar
establishment.
Why
not
say
the page
81A says be careful with the children of
the poor Jews because from there will be
the is where the Torah will come
from. Meaning that if you
give all of these
luxuries to these
Then we will all lose out of the Torah
that will come from the
struggle that creates Torah for
them. Basic needs, sure, give it to
them. But luxury, that'll ruin their
Torah.
Learning
Torah cannot be
attained if you have
conditions where you have to study at a
specific
weather, time,
location. You have to act as if you are
in a desert.
Whatever you have, you
have one sizefits all as
is. All types of different terms. We're
all familiar
with the adm of
petsa,
studied with complete devotion inside
the ghetto camps in the
Holocaust. to such an extent that he
would give his food. The minimal food
the
Nazis gave. He would give his minimal
food that he
had to other Jews in return for
paper. He needed paper. Why need paper?
To write his
kushim
inside the holocaust.
He not only learned Torah but he wrote a
sephil called
eshes full of extraordinary levels of
Torah beyond
comprehension where in later years he
would
thank for the struggle of the holocaust
that he
suffered because it brought Torah from
within him that could not come
otherwise.
the that I just told you
about. He was a son of also a
giantim, but his father died when he was
still a young boy.
And of course, when you are an orphan at
a young age, you have every excuse under
the sun to be a
failure. But
the precious
nish loved the Torah, but he couldn't
afford it. In those days, they would
charge you money to come to the bet
midrash, similar to the times of
Hil. And this young little
boy, seven, eight years
old, would sneak into the bet midash and
hide under the
curtains, waiting for the shield to
start where he will hide the entire
shield, listening to it attentively, no
different than the biggest in
there, and writing down everything he
because he couldn't afford to pay but he
couldn't afford not to learn
dua. One day the RV that was given the
sh heard a little ruffle behind the
curtains. So he went to
check. As he moved the curtains to his
surprise, he saw this young little
boy learning Torah with such devotion,
listening and writing everything that
the rabbi said.
something that you only hear about in
the the story of Hil Hil is a
ken who sacrificed his life by being
staying on the roof so he could hear
some Torah
from this little boy was the h of his
generation he said from now on you don't
need to pay you come sit
here next to me we learn Torah
He had every reason in the
world to be a
failure. Surely the other kids would
laugh at him. What are you doing? Come
play ball with us. Come cause trouble
with
us. Who needs to go? And even if you go,
if you get caught, you get in
trouble. The young
Mesame did not let any of that get to
him.
And years
passed and his precious nishama was
elevated further and further in the
world of Torah to the point
where he was a
gadul in the eyes of everyone in the
world. People from all over the world
would send him questions regardless of
whether he was ina or when he moved to
Morocco or when he went to Kazablanca.
Didn't matter. They would find him. They
would literally chase after him to go
send him questions.
One time a group of
businessmen came to the bed in
Morocco that was headed by one of the
greatest mikubal in the last hundred
years
Kabitz. They told him we have a
case and the Rav asked him where are you
from? And they said we're from
Kazablanca. The Rav got so upset. What?
Why are you here wasting our time coming
here wasting time, wasting money, coming
here to ask us to help you with this
case when you have Moshe Benu of the
generation back home? What you think
that we would ever know more than him?
More than
the Yes. The same young little boy that
grew up to be a giant. But he had every
reason to fail, every excuse to give
up. When they asked
the
shalom, "Who has a share in the world to
come?" The famously said, "One who is
happy with his share and does not want
something
else." What does it mean doesn't want
something else? So he shouldn't pray for
anything. If he is sick, he shouldn't
pray. No. No. Certainly you could always
pray for Hashem to help you, to heal
you, to give you pan. But that does not
change your state of happiness. You
don't want somebody else's life. You
don't want his life because he has a
car, her life because she has better
health, their life because they have
more
children, his life because he has more
money. You don't want anybody else. You
want what you have.
If you are happy with what you have,
you'll go to lava. You'll go to
heaven. in a sephil that just came
out called Lev
Neif. There was the journal of
Mazal. There he writes different things
about his
life and they published
it and he writes in
there my peak in
intellect was when I was seven years
old. Seven years old he was already a ga
knew the entire Tanakh by heart.
Something
beyond anything you could imagine.
And even in my dream, they told me from
Shamim that my came
from the highest level of worlds. That's
where his nama came from. Yet my problem
was, he says, that I had a terrible
stutter that I was struggling with to
the point where I was willing to give
99% of what I had just to get rid of
this stutter.
But when I
thought about Moshe Rabenu, the prophet
of all prophets, Isha Elohim, who also
had a
stutter, I was
comforted. Perhaps all this knowledge is
not going to go to
waste. Because if Mosheu succeeded in
teaching all of Am the Torah to this
day, despite his stammer and his
stutter, then perhaps I can succeed
too. And he didn't give
up. He didn't give up.
One of the biggest
problems that a person has in their life
is a problem they invent in their mind.
Because instead of worrying about their
own life, they worry about what people
think of their life or would think of
their life.
They're affected and
infected by everyone's laughs and
mockery of what they decide to
do. They want a different life. Why
isn't it easier, Rabbi? Why can't
everyone agree? You're not
understanding. The Torah was given in
the
desert
specifically harsh conditions because
that's
struggle is what brings success.
There's no shortage of
stories of
major
organizations that were a
laughingtock for years before they
became everyone's favorite
investment. I remember years ago when I
was still in the investment
business, the secret sauce
to the successful investments that we
chose was
looking for what everyone hated but for
the wrong
reason. We didn't just want garbage
weren't sanitation
department. We
wanted to
find the company that everyone was
laughing at, but they were
wrong. And a difference
between finding losers and finding
winners is whether you're able to
determine whether everyone is wrong or
not. Because while
they're being laughed at, that means the
stock has gone down. It's staying down.
Nobody likes
it. Everybody makes fun of
it. And you analyze and you see is
everyone wrong? Is it possible that
these Wall Street banks and analyst
everyone is wrong? Yes, it's possible.
I remember the first big
deal that we did was a company called
Nexttel.
At the time that we were looking at
it, we saw
that this company had a unique
technology that was very special for
those times where it was not only a cell
phone but also
walkie-talkie. And everyone was laughing
at them. Why would anybody want to
walkie-talkie? Just call the
guy. This company's not going to last.
this company's this, this company's
that. Their stock went down from high
prices in the 2000s, 1999, and it got
down to as low as
$3. I did everything I possibly could to
get every one of my clients to buy as
much of it as
possible. I remember one of my
clients, his name was uh David Taylor.
He's already passed on many years ago.
Used to work at a uh major bank with uh
under Jamie
Diamond. And I called him. I told him to
buy more and more. Even though the
original purchase that he bought was a
little higher price, still you need to
buy more. In the beginning of the
conversation, he told me, "If I had $3,
I wouldn't buy one share."
By the end of the call, he bought
another 20,000
chairs. But he believed that it was a
loser. I explained to him that not only
was he wrong, everyone's wrong. And he
believed in the argument that I gave him
based on different information. And he
ended up making a fortune out of it. And
so did everybody else when the stock
went up over $20 a share. I think it was
25, 26, 28.
After that, there was another company
that was a
subsidiary that again, everyone laughed
at because it was a company based out of
South America, not exactly a prospering
area. I showed him that I found a
clause inside a legal document called an
SEC
filing that guarantees that they will
have to be bought out.
something that if if you could find that
and you have a billion dollars, go
borrow another billion and buy that,
too. But apparently the market didn't
know about
it. It was so clear to us that people
thought we made it
up, especially because of how much
people hated
it.
Well, about a year and a half later,
maybe it went up to from I think it was
$8 or
$6 and eventually got bought up at at 26
and a
half. The same thing happened with a
company called Price Line. They were
buying after the September 11th
attacks. People thought I was insane to
buy a company
that benefits from the airline business
that's crashing, that's going out of
business. Everyone is
wrong. Everyone is
wrong. And of
course, many left.
Bunch of brokers in the office thought I
was either going to go to jail or to an
insane
asylum. But eventually everyone was
wrong and the stock went up
drastically. I'd say we made a few times
our money, but we sold too early because
it went up much more. But still the
clients made a ton of
money towards the end of my
career. I had millions and millions of
shares of a company the whole world has
hated for years.
I told
my people that were working for
me same thing I told my
clients. I know everyone hates it. I
know it's
struggling. I know everything that
everybody else
knows, but everyone's
wrong. One day this will
change. I said, "Listen, the stock you
started talking about it. It was in the
teens. It's $2 right now. The market's
crashing.
Yeah. Started talking about it then. But
right now is when we're buying the
position. It's
$2. Why? This company is going bankrupt.
They would tell me to not go bankrupt.
It's impossible for them to go bankrupt.
The government will have to bail them
out before they go bankrupt. Why?
There's only two companies in the entire
sector and it's the most important
sector in a technological world called
semiconductor.
company was called
AMD after the crisis of
2008 was practically begging people to
buy the stock for
$2. Some people
listened. If they held on to the
stock, it's over $100 a share.
If I was still in the business, it'd be
worth over a billion dollars for me. But
again, Hashem didn't keep me in that
business. But he showed me
that just because everyone is laughing
doesn't mean they're
right. in the past couple years or year
or so, somebody asked me about
something and I told them to make an
investment, but everybody's laughing.
Let them laugh. They're wrong. How do
you
know? I also do research. I also look at
things. I also know a few things.
Well, long story short, it went from
being what everybody hates to one of the
most beloved companies on the
planet and a person
made pretty substantial
fortune. And this has happened multiple
times over the
years. Not to tell you that everything I
ever bought or recommended worked out.
That's not
possible. but rather to show you that
just because everyone is laughing does
not mean they're
right. The
key to
success number
one is to find out if you're
right. Do every analysis you possibly
can. Investigate your heart, your mind,
your facts.
put everything into it until you are
certain that you're
right. The moment that you find that
out, then you can go to step
two. But until you're 100% on board that
you are
right, step two is irrelevant to you.
You'll break. Why? Because step two
means not only putting everything you
have into this, whether it's your Torah
learning, your business, your idea,
whatever it is. It's not just
that. It's doing it with narrow
focus where nothing else
exists. Nothing else exists. Nothing can
change your
mind unless it
contradicts your information. which
means that
either you were wrong or you became
wrong because something material has
changed. But once you analyze a
situation to the point where you've
concluded that you're 100% know this is
right, then you can go step two. Step
two is
push with no holding
back despite the fact that you will be
laughed
at day in day out. You'll be called
crazy. You'll be called a
fanatic. You'll be accused of being all
types of
things
until everyone knows you're right.
and you get the last
laugh. But the last laugh is not
enjoyable, believe it or
not, because the pain and agony you have
to go through until you get to that last
laugh, nothing's funny about
it. In
fact, you have enough experience with
winning.
Winning
itself is not really all that
pleasing. It's
expected. I knew I was going to
win. That's why I continued while
everyone was calling me a crazy person
and all types of other names. The only
thing I regret is I couldn't do more. I
couldn't push more. I couldn't learn
more. That's the only
regret. Now everybody wants to jump on
board.
but it's too
late. The same
applies in the world of
Torah. For years, we have exposed
different people and some people agree,
but many do not.
We just published a
book showing everything we've said and
more of why Manis Freedman is a heretic
and anyone that listens to him is also a
heretic and anyone that follows in his
footsteps is a heretic and none of those
people will ever have anything other
than Gum Cafa and Keville to look
forward
to. Still, there are many that disagree.
Perhaps they'll change their mind after
they read the
book, but people think this is
new. Out of the three
works that the Yakim published in his
life, although there are many of his
chuvot in other people's books, the
letters that he wrote them, they used
for their books, but he himself
published three works.
One is the one we published just
now or reprinted with commentary on
it. Another one is something similar but
with different. But the third work,
perhaps the one that he's most well
known
for, is a book completely
dedicated, going against someone that
was a famous rabbi of the
time and saying that he is not only
wrong, but he is against the
Torah and everything he says is against
the Torah.
This is not just some average rabbi.
We're talking
about 30% of the work that is published
today from
him. Perhaps the most wellrecoognized
book that everyone knows them
by was solely devoted to go and
expose a
mistake that everyone thought was right.
No, but it's a
mistake. Someone asked me
today, a new person that started
watching my
shim, Rabbi, why do you dedicate so much
time to going against the cash advance
business?
So I told him it's because if you watch
my film called News in there there's a
section about the cash advance business
where I
bring historical
proofs that the proxy
behind virtually every pogram or
holocaust that Israel has had
was lending money with high interest.
Call it cash advance. Call it Lone
Shark. Call it whatever you want to call
it. Cash advance is not a new thing.
It's just a new
name. All of the
anti-semites that were looking for an
excuse to kill Jews in
mass
used the cash advance as a
reason to kill Jews.
Whether it's in the time of the Romans,
the
Greeks, the Spanish
Inquisition, the disaster that happened
in
England in
1100s, in Morocco, in Poland, in
Germany,
Holocaust, every one of
these, if you look into the facts, the
stuff that most people don't want to
look into or don't have time to look
into. If you look into the filings into
the legal documents that most people
don't even know what they're
called, you'll
find the
constant excuse, not justifiable, but
needless to say a proxy, an excuse that
Amalecch used to justify their murder of
Jews.
was the mistakes that Jews made
by charging high
interest with loans they gave to the
go to the point where their loans were
predatory. This is exactly what's
happening now. We've been screaming
fire for five or six years against that
business. And although Hashem many
people have left it, many people have
become aware unfortunately the business
continues to
grow. The industry continues to grow and
people continue to literally destroy
people's
lives while laughing on their way to the
bank.
And as I told that young
man, everything that happened to AmI in
the
past is what this business is going to
bring in the
future, which doesn't seem to be too
distant from
now. So when I see
fire, I yell
fire even if no one else is paying
attention or if everyone else calls me
crazy.
You
see,
once you
have an absolute certainty of
truth, it cannot be
undone. Once someone that's
blind is able to see for moment for a
moment what the sky looks
like. Even if he goes back to being
blind again, he will never be the same.
If he was born blind and for 30 years
did not see
anything, doesn't know what color
is, doesn't know what shape, doesn't
know. You tell him blue, red, that has
no idea what it is. But if you gave him
the ability to see for even a moment and
he looked at the sky and then he went
back to being blind, his life will never
be the same. Because until that point
that he saw the
truth, his suffering was
limited. He didn't know what he was
losing out on. Once he saw the truth and
it was taken away from him, life becomes
unlivable. He can't live with himself.
How could I be losing on
that? When you are certain of what the
truth is in the
Torah, it's not a question of whether
you're going to fight for it or
not. It's not a question of whether the
conditions meet your desire or not. Let
it rain or shine. Let it be a
desert or some type of paradise. It's
irrelevant. That's where the truth is.
That's where the truth
is and I can't live without
it. So when a
person
understands what we're saying
here, they can apply it to their life in
different
aspects. If you're wise enough to
succeed in the world of Torah and
learning, if you want to
succeed, that means Torah has to become
the number one priority in your life.
The absolute
certainty where nothing else compares to
it. Not food, not relationships, not
physical pleasures.
Until you do
that, you won't get to your full
potential. You may progress here and
there like everybody else. Maybe you'll
fail, maybe you'll succeed.
But if you turn yourself into a desert
where there's only one
option and the conditions are
irrelevant, then it doesn't matter that
your family's laughing at you, that you
spent all your time learning Tawa.
Doesn't matter that your brother and
sister and cousins are telling you
you're insane for reading books all day
and watching lectures. It doesn't matter
that everyone is asking your wife, why
is she so modest?
Why don't she wear clothes like
everybody else that's practically no
clothes? These things don't become
confusions. You're not confused by what
people
say. They call you crazy. You have no
idea what they're talking about. In
fact, you feel bad for them for them
being the way they are. You don't get
angry at people making fun of you. You
simply feel bad for them because while
you see the sky as blue as a kadosh who
made
it, they're still
blind. So while you see
that this person is a
heretic, it's irrelevant that someone
disagrees with you. You simply feel bad
for them for not having the
vision. You could try to help them, pray
for them, tell them
maybe give some on their behalf.
Hopefully, they'll have more merits to
see the
truth. That's the difference between
those that succeeded in the world of
Torah and those that
didn't. Dole Isel did not
become giants because of their memory
skills or because of who their father
was or because they grew up in a
religious family or because they had
perfect conditions. It's quite the
opposite.
The more you learn about, the more you
realize they literally had every excuse
under the sun to justify failure, to
justify giving up, to justify being like
everybody else, whether it's being
orphans at a young age or extreme
poverty or or or death of loved ones.
All types of horrible things happened to
them, but their absolute certainty in
the truth of the
Torah did not allow
them to believe anyone's fairy tales
that the sky is not
blue. to believe anyone's fairy tales
that you don't need to learn Torah, that
you don't need to serve Hashem, that you
don't need to put everything into
it. Because to
them, the Torah was more important than
air, more important than the
oxygen. They're only breathing because
they simply they have to for the sake of
learning Torah.
So when a
person wants to succeed in learning
Torah, throw out all the conditions.
Throw out all those requests where once
I have money, then I'll do it. Once I
have comfort, then I'll do it. Once I
get married, then I'll do it. Once I
this, once I have more time, then I'll
do it. Once I quit my job, then I'll do
it.
No, no, it doesn't work that
way. If you eliminate one of the
struggles, it'll simply be replaced by
another struggle. Why? Hashem is putting
it in front of you. Choose your
struggle. You want to struggle with
money, you want to struggle with time,
you want to struggle with people, the
struggle is there because Hashem puts it
there because the struggle is necessary
in order for the Torah to come out of
you.
And if you're waiting for that cup of
coffee to be perfectly warm before you
start drinking it while you learn
to you may become a connoisseur of
coffees, but you're never going to
become
a applies to people that are doing
chuva, people that are converting.
So long as something else is priority to
you over that
chuva, over that
conversion, then the journey will be
unnecessarily
difficult. Because as long as you don't
believe in the path that you're on to
the point
where everything is on the line, there
is no turning back. There is no other
option. There's no way that I can
continue living my life the way it is. I
have to constantly get closer to Hashem.
There's no way that I'm going back.
There's no way that I'm staying the
same. There's no way that I could I have
to keep going forward. I have to keep
going forward towards doing chuva more
towards converting towards growing as as
as a servant of Hashem simply you do not
see any other possibility being a viable
option for you so long as it's not
that then you'll
struggle
because while the difficulties will
exist
regardless after all it is the
desert. When you're not 100%
convinced, when you're not 100% narrow
focused,
then you
create a new struggle for
yourself, which is a struggle where
you're not sure you're doing the right
thing. You're not sure you're going in
the right direction, which means that
every one of your steps is full of
doubts.
Every time you pray, you doubt whether
you should have prayed or gone to the
movies. Every time you do a mitzvah, you
doubt whether you should have done that
or perhaps hung out with your friends.
There's always a
doubt and that doubt is
Amalik waiting for you to
break. The person that's narrow focused,
completely certain and sure that doing
chuva, that getting closer to Hashem is
the only option. Sure, they have
difficulties, whether it be financial
difficulties, relationship difficulties,
all types of difficulties that happen in
life, but none of those make them
question their
path because they're sure they're going
in the right direction and they
realize that the path has bumps in
it. That's the desert.
The same concept happens in business in
investments. If a person wants to
succeed, it's of
absolute necessity to arrive at a point
of
certainty as soon as possible. Sometimes
you can't arrive at that point of
certainty on day one. Most of the time
you can't.
But it's paramount for a person to
arrive at that point of certainty as
soon as possible where nothing would
ever put a question in their mind.
They've checked out every possible idea,
thought,
possibility, conflict, rebuttal,
whatever there is. And they know for
sure this is the
way. This is the way for me. This is the
path for me. That's where I'm going to
put my time, my money, my research, my
my efforts, my uh abilities, my
everything. And if the situation
presents itself and people continue
laughing at me, I'll capitalize on it
and do even
more. Yeah, maybe you're wrong. If
that's in your mind, that means you're
not
certain. If you think maybe you're
wrong, that means you did not arrive at
a point of certainty.
This is something
abai that if a person knows how to apply
it, it could help
them serving Hashem in Torah and mitzvot
in learning Torah in business in finding
investments in every part of their life.
But what most
people do
instead is they wish for a different
circumstance. They wish they could run
the
world. As one woman came to Moshe
Feinstein
Shalom looking for permission to wear it
seat.
Rabbi, can I wear a
tit? As Mosha Feinstein said to her, you
can if you can meet these two
conditions. One, the tit cannot look
like the tit for men because you're not
allowed as a woman, you're not allowed
to wear men's clothes. It's a violation
of the Torah. Okay, that's easy enough.
Put some sparkles on it, some
decorations,
maybe. Condition number
two, you wearing a tit cannot be as a
result of you being
unhappy with your circumstance as a
woman and wanting to be like the men.
Because if that's the reason why you
wearing a tit, then you are an apicos, a
heretic. Because by thinking that your
situation would was supposed to be
better if you were a man or you're
supposed to be better if you can have
the same thing as men or would be better
if you lived somebody else's life or
would be better if you were born at a
different time or would be better if you
were born to a different family or would
be better if you had his car and her
wife and his this and had that. It would
be better. That means you think that
Hashem makes a mistake. Or worse yet,
you think you're smarter than Hashem.
Either way, that makes you an AIO. That
makes you a
heretic. Then at that point, there's no
point of you wearing a tit because
you're going to get home regardless. And
that's what Feinstein
said. Many times people want a different
circumstance. What if I was born here?
What if I was born to a religious
family? What if I was smarter? What if I
this? What if I that? But you will
see battling that same
thing
wanted
everything in the world of
Torah and he did not let the
stutter that caused him a lot of
suffering to stop him from it. And
eventually, not only did Hashem allow
him to grow in Torah and to grow in
teaching Torah, but he literally brought
light to the world. Has the biggest kale
in the world, biggest in the
world, Torah empire that he built.
Despite the
stutterenu had a stutter, had a stammer,
had every excuse under the sun to run
away from all of the
responsibilities. But he
didn't. He
didn't.
Pensa
had perfectly logical excuse not to
learn Torah. He's in the
Holocaust. People being murdered left
and
right. He didn't let that excuse even
appear in his
mind. He studied Torah with such
commitment and devotion that he even
wrote a sephil during the Holocaust.
And we're not talking about seph or of
books of uh uh some nice stories about
something that happened thousand years
ago. We're talking
about the highest level of Torah type
of had endless
struggles, but they did not allow any of
those to change the truth that was as
clear as the sky to
them. Lastly, I would tell you this.
The
Lublin was well known as and was called
the Lublin because he was he had he was
able to see from one end of the world to
the other and people would come to him
with all types of
complications. And one
day a family comes to him crying saying
please rabbi
cry pray
for such and
such was a situation that
required to know what to
do and lublin told him I'm sorry I
cannot I no longer have I gave it back
to hashem
Why? It's virtually impossible for
99.999% of
people throughout all of history to
attain. You got it and you gave it back.
Why would you do
that? He says, "Because I didn't know
what to do." People would come to me and
cry because someone's
dying. So, I'd start praying for
him. And as I'm praying, another family
would come to me telling me, "Please,
Rabbi, my wife, she she's in the middle
of labor and the baby won't come out,
and if it doesn't come out soon, she's
going to die and the baby's going to
die. Please pray." So then I would start
praying for them and then I would see
with that the guy that's they're asking
me to pray for him to live instead of
die, his soul is supposed to go into
that baby, but it can't go into that
baby that's supposed to be born until he
dies. So who do I pray for? For the guy
to stay alive or for the baby to die or
for him to come out? So I said, "Hashem,
I don't know what to do. You run your
world. Take this away from me. Take this
from
me. The more you
understand that you don't
understand that Hashem
understands that he
knows. He's the one that's putting the
bump in the road. He's the one that's
making the weather difficult in the
desert. He's the one that's giving you
all of the obstacles because that's the
perfect solution for you.
And what you need to have is not a
different life, not a different
situation,
rather absolute certainty of the truth
that you're willing to put everything on
the line for it to the point where it
doesn't matter that everyone's laughing
at you because you
know that in the
end only the truth will
win and you'll get the laugh at the end,
the last laugh, even though it won't be
funny because you knew was true the
whole time. It's just simply an
expectation of the
inevitable. This is some of the things,
some of the tidbits that we learned from
this. It helped you as much as it helps
me. And now ask your
questions will give us the answers. You
know, it took a lot of time and effort
to study for this lecture, and every
lecture changes my life a little bit,
and I hope it does to you as well. If
you're enjoying it, please make sure to
like, subscribe, and share with people
that you care about, people that you
know could benefit from it. You may end
up changing their life. Thanks again for
learning with me, and we'll continue
growing together. Now, back to the
lecture.
What is kavana supposed to feel like?
Well, the more focused you
are on the prayer and on the purpose and
who you're praying to,
uh, the more you, you know, the the more
connected you are to the words. Now,
there
is certain things that a person can do.
They're called coven. That's not usually
for women, but uh that a person can do.
And it's in essence it's a
um let's just say
it's narrowing the mind's
eye into a smaller and smaller and more
focused
point.
And if that makes any sense to
you, what's the best type of Torah to
learn on Shvot? Uh that depends who you
are. depends where you stand. I mean the
uh if you're part of a Jewish community
then usually in the synagogue they'll
read a certain portion of each parat
throughout the night. Uh certain segment
of each one say about each par
um if you're not part of a Jewish
community uh yet then uh learn whatever
is uh most pleasing to you, whatever you
like the most, whatever you connect to
the most, whatever is going to help you
study Torah all night. Bunch of wood.
Someone told me that if you don't intend
to hear any curses, if you hear one by
accident, it doesn't affect your
nishama. Uh that's correct. If uh you
don't intend to hear it, but it depends
what uh you have to make sure that you
know that uh you know what you're doing.
You're not expecting to hear it either.
Meaning if you uh listen to let's say uh
rap music that's full of curses
uh so you know that there's going to be
curses in it. So even if you don't want
to listen to those curses since you know
with a certainty that you'll hear them
then certainly it's not good for you.
But if it just happens with uh without
you expecting it then
yeah. Am I allowed to download books
from websites that have free books for
download? If it's not allowed, should I
get rid of those that I already
downloaded? Well, if it's free to
download, then yes, they made it free to
download for a
reason. But if you made it free by
cracking some type of code or something,
then that's stealing. Then it's a
problem. What about reading curses
accidentally? Why would you be reading
curses accidentally? I mean, what kind
of stuff are you reading? I mean, you
shouldn't if you're reading newspapers
and magazines, then you shouldn't be
reading them even if there's no curses
in them because they're full of they're
full of atheism, heresy, and complete
nonsense. So, read better quality uh
books and uh things, and you won't have
to even worry about reading curses.
How do I
get hold on the questions are
moving. Rabbi, is the book on freedman
Freedman available in English? No, it's
only in Hebrew.
How do I get a Jewish husband, Rabbi?
Well, if you are
Jewish, then uh you uh shouldn't have uh
an impossible time finding a Jewish
husband. Just go to the synagogue, meet
some more people that uh could help you
find a husband. meaning meet more women
if you're a woman and meet more men if
you're a man and try to see if anyone
has a recommendation for you. You can
also use a shakan which is Jewish
matchmaker. I'm not Jewish. Can I go to
synagogue still? No.
How do I forgive myself for a
mistake? Uh simple. Commit to not
repeating the mistake and know that you
can't do anything about it since it's
already been made. And the only thing
that you can do
is the best you can today in order to
make tomorrow better. There's no point
of harping on the past. There's no point
of crying over spilled milk. It's
already
spilled. And the only thing that crying
over it and being upset over it is going
to do is lead you to make more mistakes.
So, it's better to focus on committing
to not repeating the same mistake and
doing everything possible not to repeat
it.
Why aren't non-Jews allowed to go to a
Jewish synagogue? Well, if it's an
Orthodox synagogue, which is the only
version of Judaism, that's true. then uh
the synagogue is not going to be very
welcoming to non-Jews because they would
be afraid that uh there's going to be
intermarriage and uh assimilation and
all types of things that are
antithetical to a Jewish life. So if uh
if if the non-Jews would come and sit
next to the Jews in a synagogue, then
within a relatively short period of
time, they develop relationships and
could end up leading to intermarriage,
which is bad for both of them. So if you
liked the Judaism so much, then you
could convert to Judaism. But uh if you
just simply want to uh be next to the
Jews, um then uh do it outside of the
synagogue, not not at the time that
they're serving Hashem, praying,
learning. Could do business with them.
You could uh you know, befriend them,
but there's no reason for for you to be
part of their religious uh servitude.
What's the difference of praying to God
or the Lord or his name mainly in a
blessing?
uh where there's different uh
um ways that Hashem connects to us and
each blessing that the
uh the great s the sages of the great
assembly each one of the blessings they
uh they instituted uh they knew exactly
which gates in Shamim are open at at
which specific times of the day and
which specific Specific words are
required in order to make specific
sounds in order to connect to specific
vessels which also includes certain
names that uh are utilized for Hashem.
And in fact uh the Ramal writes also
that the
uh the different angels that
uh you use their names in different uh
teachings and learnings and coven and
um and the reason why Hashem allowed
this to happen um is not because we're
serving the angels or we're praying to
the angels or anything like that. is
because in essence, Hashem created this
world with certain uh uh
uh opportunities or certain gates that
are opened, certain vessels and in so
many words different holy names open
different locks. So just just imagine of
it that there is a unlimited amount of
doors in order to reach different
blessings from
Hashem. But these doors have all have
different
keys. Sometimes the key is the
traditional blessing. Sometimes the key
is a uh you know a blessing that uses
the uh a different uh a different uh
wording than traditional. Some uh
blessings are uh longer, shorter, you
know, different times of the day,
different times of the
year. Is one allowed to wear a very
large seat in length up to
the middle of the hip or knee or does it
need to stop by the hips? Uh, no, you
could wear a long
tit there's no there's no problem doing
it. It's not common, but certainly it's
uh
um it's it can be done. Sure. There's no
prohibition of it.
In fact, the uh uh there was a big about
the uh um the kan that many
uh would wear. There was a of whether uh
it had four corners and you have to wear
a tit on it, the strings on it. So even
though it reaches all the way to the
ground, you don't have to put seat on
it. Point is that yeah there was certain
garments that had tit that were longer
but today usually people wear uh tit up
to the
hips. How to deal with from non-Jews?
There's no such thing as from non-Jews.
There's
only from Jews. And the reason why is
because the Jew is obligated to love
you.
That's one of the inra he's obligated to
to love you. So when he hates you uh
then already he's violating the Torah
and when he hates you for for a uh
baseless reason then it's an additional
sin of the Torah. The go on the other
hand are not obligated to love the Jews.
And in fact uh many of them hate the
Jews uh since the time of Mount Si. So
when they hate you, they're simply doing
what they've done throughout most of
history. There have been exceptions.
There are some non-Jews that love Jews,
but for the most part, throughout all of
history, non-Jews hated Jews. So there
is no such thing as they hate you
because they hate you because Hashem
uses the the non-Jews uh sometimes as
the stick to hit us with in order to
remind us that we're different from
them.
Just imagine that despite the
anti-semitism in the world before the
Holocaust intermarriage was over
80% in
Germany. Jews were marrying Gentiles
left and right. Today there is
extraordinary
anti-semitism and despite that there are
many Jews that marry Gentiles.
Uh so despite the hatred
by extraordinary amount of non-Jews
especially as we've seen the last couple
of years after October 7th where a lot
of hidden Amalik showed their true
colors
um Jew many Jews still intermar and
still uh don't see uh difference between
them and non-Jews and uh many times even
convert to the religions of the
non-Jews. So with all of the hatred and
the anti-semitism, look how much
intermarriage there still is, which
pretty much means that if there wasn't
hatred and there wasn't
anti-semitism, we'd simply lose all of
we'd simply have 100% antimarriage.
So that
anti-semitism, that
hatred, that prejudice is actually a
tool that Hashem uses in the world in
order to preserve Israel and remind us
that we are different from them. And
sometimes getting punched in the face uh
with that uh with an awful remark by one
of your co-workers that that's
anti-Semitic is what you needed in order
to remember that you are from two
different nations.
Do you need to follow the Talmud in
order to be religious as an Orthodox Jew
that you have to know not only to follow
the Talmud, you have to know that the
Talmud is the oral Torah. We have a
written Torah and we have an oral Torah.
They're all part of the same thing and
you cannot do one without the other. You
cannot understand the written Torah
without the oral Torah because the
details of the of the written Torah are
explained in the Talmud. For example, uh
God said that if we violate Shabbat 12
places in the Torah, he says that if we
violate Shabbat, it's a death penalty.
So therefore, we need to know how to not
violate it. But if you look in the
entire Torah, the Torah, you're not
going to find the details of the
violations with the exception of fire.
But there are many other ways of
violating the Torah. So where do you
know? So how do we know the details of
how to not violate Torah so we don't get
a death penalty?
Simple. You go to the oral Torah, which
is where you have the explanations. This
is what's allowed. This is what's not
allowed. In so many words, without the
Talmud, there would be no Judaism
because we would not know how to serve
God. And this is actually one of the the
uh one of the um biggest uh and clearest
uh proofs that Judaism is the truth
versus Christianity or you know that
that denies the oral Torah because while
Christianity says they accept the the
written Torah but they reject the oral
Torah uh you see that that's uh complete
nonsense and a complete uh fallacy
because it's not possible to accept the
without the oral Torah because you
cannot understand the Torah without the
oral Torah. So much so that even the
ability to read the words is impossible
without the oral Torah. Because as I've
said this several times over the years
that most people don't know in the
English language you have a vowel
system. You have a, e, i, or u. And
sometimes y. So you have a handful of
letters that one of those letters at
least has to be in every single English
word. One of these letters, a A or E or
a U or or O or Y. One of these letters
has to be in every word. Why? Because
they're foundational letters that have
to be in every word in the English
language. And the same thing goes for
other languages. In the Hebrew
language, we do not have a vowel system
that's comprised of letters.
The vowel system that uh uh uh uh that
Hebrew has is those dots which is called
nikud. That's how we know how to read
the words. So for example in English
when you want to write the uh the word
Moses that Moses spoke to God, right? So
you have to use vowels in order to write
the word Moses. So you use M O S. So you
see in the word
Moses you had to use two vowels. You had
to use the O and the E. Without the O
and the E. All you would have is MSS
which changes the word and it turns into
miss. So in Hebrew we don't have a vowel
system that's comprised of letters but
rather of those dots. In order for us to
know that this word is Moses, we need
those dots. those
dots, that nikud, you're not going to
find that in the written Torah. If you
open a Torah scroll, you'll see there's
no dots there. There's no punctuation
whatsoever. There's no period. There's
no uh uh indication of when the sentence
begins or when the sentence
ends or how what are the sounds, what
are the vowels? The Torah scroll does
not have it. So, how do we know how to
read? because the oral Torah provided us
the vowel system and it told us where to
put it in the entire written
Torah. Therefore, not only do we have to
have the oral Torah in order to
understand the laws, we have to have the
oral Torah in order to even read the
word Moses or any word. And in fact,
this is one of the proofs that shows
that the Christian beliefs is complete
foolishness because they themselves deny
the oral Torah while using the oral
Torah because that's the only reason why
they know how to read the
translations of the written
Torah because they know they are using
the vow system which is part of the oral
Torah and the foundation of the oral
Torah is the very Talmud that most
anti-semites and ignorant people speak
against and it's only because they're
ignorant of
it. But once you understand what's in
the Talmud beyond what the
anti-semites like to uh uh like to
highlight and misrepresent, you realize
how fundamental it is to the entire
Torah, not just for the Jewish people,
but for every religion. Because the
Christians and the Muslims also say that
they believe in the Torah and that their
books are in essence a continuation of
the Torah. Now the fact that their books
are not a continuation but rather a
fabrication is irrelevant and a moot
point. Still they both accept the Torah
as divine which means it's from God.
So that means
that once you have a Torah that's from
God, but
yet you don't know how to read it, then
it's
useless. So where do you get how do you
know how to read it from the oral
Torah? Because the oral Torah gave you
the vowel system, the punctuation
system, tell you where the sentence
begins, where it ends, and so on and so
forth. So, it's a uh it's it's a it's a
beautiful thing when you learn more and
more Torah and you realize how
clear the truth
is because it also makes falsehood like
Christianity and Islam and all the other
beliefs out there also more clear. The
more you know about the truth, the
easier it is to identify falsehood.
Why is there a
minag some sphartics eat on shot? It's
not just some sphartics
also. And the reason why is because
after came down from Mount
Sai with the
Torah, the Torah had laws of how to
slaughter the
animals. and Amish is prepared already
before Mosher Rabenu came down which
means that all of the animals that they
prepared that they slaughtered was not
in accordance to the law of the Torah
which was applicable at that point and
therefore all of those animals were
deemed non-coosher so they could not
have meat and they ate uh they ate uh
dairy. This is one of the explanations
of why we eat dairy on shot. It's not an
obligation to eat dairy on it's simply
customary uh to do so but it's both and
not just not
just what do you know about the god of
the Assyrians that he was a another idol
false idol and uh I believe if I'm not
mistaken
um now that may be the pleim
No, I'm mistaken. Yeah, either the Pi
idol uh or the Assyrian idol was uh
after a uh mermaid. Mermaid Serena, but
um but a male Serena. But either way,
they're all idols.
That's bad to lump Islam and Christians
together. One is severely idol
worshshiping and Satan
too. U it's not a matter of compare and
contrast.
It's if you listen to the entire
lecture, you'd understand that when you
have the truth and it's as clear as as
as the sky is, then everything else is
falsehood. So it doesn't matter if this
falsehood is uglier than that falsehood
where one falsehood is praying to snakes
and scorpions and the other one is
praying to a man and the other one is
praying to mosquitoes and the other one
is praying to motorcycles and the other
one is praying to rats. It doesn't make
a difference. It's all
falsehood. It's it all goes in the same
basket of falsehood versus the single
truth. So it's not necessarily comparing
them that they uh they both do the same
thing. They're both this both. It's
simply everything is falsehood except
simple.
Is it to stay up all night
on? It is a custom. It's not an
obligation.
Can you explain what it says in
the 12b? Whoever sin does a sin and is
embarrassed by it is forgiven for the
sin. when a person makes a sin and uh
then he suffers as a result he's doing
chuva he
uh you know he's not he's not planning
on doing it again and uh it brings him
different types of suffering that
suffering uh is
a is in essence a uh could be a uh to a
certain level depends on the sin
um wiping off part of the uh payment
that he has to pay or punishment that
he'll have to suffer for that
sin. Is a firefighter, paramedic job
good to take in the Jewish world? Uh
certainly there is a need for paramedics
uh and firefighters. Um is it good?
Depends on the person. Depends on uh on
um opportunities available. Depends.
Do we get a mitzvah by asking these
questions even online? Uh, sure. If
you're learning Tawa, you're asking
questions that you actually want to know
the answers for that. Sure, why not?
Just learning
Tawa. Doesn't matter if you learn Tawa
online or in
person. Question gets to destination, it
gets answered. It's good.
Inuk we have a mitzvah of sitting in a
suka Passover we eat
matzah the four cups
um mdash say a story of Egypt what is
the main of there isn't a main
of there isn't a main of and that's
actually one of the things
that toil over of why didn't
specifically make a mitzvah of like you
know I heard once said uh why he just
make a mitzvah to eat cheesecake you
know we eat dairy anyway often on on
this as a custom so why don't they make
a special blessing on a cheesecake
because Hashem has his uh his ways, his
reasons. The reasons for the mitzvot
uh are beyond our comprehension and
there are certain things that need to be
done uh at different times at different
to open specific gates in Shim during
the holiday of Shabot. It's a uh there
isn't a specific mitzvah that's
necessary on Shabot aside from the
Yumitzvah of keeping Yum.
Except that you're allowed to cook if
you have pre-existing
fire services atone for bez sins that
one already did chuva for since they
become
bish upon
chuva. Not to my knowledge. No. No.
Not even sure how you got such a
connection to be honest with
you. Is it okay to learn by yourself
with art scroll or must one have a kava?
Having art scroll is like having a kava
uh but uh it depends also on your
ability to learn. But having an art
school is like having a kabuta. And if
you need further help uh but you don't
have a face tof face available to you
then there are uh several good rabbis
that teach duffi
um online that you could watch it while
you uh read the duff you could uh also
after you finish the duff you could
uh watch the uh you know 30 minute video
that the rabbi made about in
essence to make sure you un understood
everything. That's also like having a
kava. How is it allowed to turn away a
Jew who wants to learn Tawra because
they don't have money like in the cases
of H and Yakim? If so, why is it allowed
to sneak in and learn without paying?
Why is that not stealing?
So as far as uh turning away somebody
because they don't have uh money it
depends it depends on the uh uh you know
the
uh what what what's his rationale behind
it there may be limited spaces
uh there uh there's a uh uh let's say if
there is only 10 seats and one person is
paying and the other one doesn't have
any money you have to take the one that
that is paying uh not because his money
makes him better, but rather because you
need the money in order to pay rent, in
order to survive. It's it's the ways of
the world. So, it's not you're not
rejecting that person from learning
Torah. You're simply, you know, uh not
making your particular place to be the
only one. He could still learn Torah. He
just doesn't have to learn with you. He
could learn Torah else. He could read
books on his own. Now, as far as the
uh Hel or uh or the young listening in
on the
uh no, it's not uh it's not stealing.
Hel was on the roof. So therefore, he
was not occupying the space that
required money and the also was not
taking up one of the seats. Uh and
therefore it was uh like uh doing
benefiting from someone
uh without them losing. There's a uh
concept of benefiting from something
that someone has without them losing. Uh
that uh at times is permitted, at times
uh uh not depending. But the point is is
that uh they no it's not considered
stealing what they did.
What makes our hearts more capable of
loving God and others? The more you
invest into something, meaning the more
effort you invest into something, the
more you're going to love it. The reason
why a mother loves her kids typically
more than the father is because a mother
typically invests more of her efforts
into raising the children. Aside from
the fact that they used to be part of
her body and she gave birth to them even
later on in life. The uh the mother is
typically more connected to the children
uh than the father is because she
invests more of her efforts into raising
them, into feeding them, bathing them,
cleaning them, crying with them. uh
crying about them and so on. So the uh
the more you invest into something, the
more you're going to care about it. In
so many words, if you want to love God
more, then invest more into the
relationship you have with him, uh pray
to him more, speak to him more, do more
of what he says, and the more you'll do,
the more you will uh uh fall in love
with God, uh because the more you'll
you'll feel connected to him. Uh the
same goes with uh other people. The more
uh you help other people, the more
you'll care about them.
Can single people say the prayer for
parents
onesh? Sure, why
not? You could pray for your parents
every day.
Is it true that Mashiach has to come
within the next 20 years maximum based
on calculations? I believe I heard this
from
Rai. Uh has to come. No, nothing has to
happen. Uh likely to come. Sure.
Possible to come for sure. Has to. No.
Hashem is not subject to any rule
whatsoever that we have in our minds. He
can do whatever he wants.
He could do whatever he wants. There's
no no one can tell God what to
do. In fact, even Moshe Rabenu asked God
specific questions of why he rewards he
he uh he gives uh benefits to uh the
wicked at times and uh hardship to the
uh uh to the righteous. And Hashem gave
him seven different reasons. But the
seventh reason is I'll do whatever I
want. In so many words, Hashem was
telling him it's beyond human
comprehension. and I will do what I do
without having to explain everything
that I have to do. So anyone that tells
you that something has to
be where God has to do something uh then
you have to uh um qualify that you have
to qualify that. So I don't think I
again I I haven't heard Ra Misrai uh say
that uh but uh you could ask him does it
have to happen guarantee like God has to
do it or you really saying it's just
really likely it would happen or it's
really possible it would happen but
doesn't have to happen so a uh there's a
uh a big difference between the two big
difference between the two and I'm sure
that Rami will say no it does not have
to
It can, it should, it could, it's likely
even, but it doesn't have to
happen because God does not have to is
not subject to our rules. We're subject
to his
Can you make it to Allah but not be
resurrected by but not be
resurrected by the dead? And if so,
where would the soul be during those
thousand years? Yes, there are plenty of
people that uh have no uh merit to be
resurrected with the dead, but will
still eventually go to and during those
thousand years, it depends on the soul.
It could be that it's in gay. It could
be that it's in Kafka,
uh that it has to clean up the filth it
gathered before it goes to Lamba. Uh it
could be it's even in a lower heaven,
but it doesn't have a merit to go to
Lamba. In fact,
says on the uh um Chevet Ben I believe
it was that left Egypt prematurely. Uh
and then they were the ones that uh
Ezekiel resurrected in a desert when you
know the the the dry bones story of the
dry bones. Who were those people? Those
were the Jews that left Egypt before
Mosher Rabenu. before Mosher Rabenu came
uh and uh they got killed uh because it
wasn't time and
uh explains uh that uh there was about
uh 970 years between Moshe Rabenu the
time they left and Ezekiel and
throughout that entire time those souls
were in
Kafka because they uh they put a
definitive statement of when the
salvation will come. It's like saying
the mashiach has to come at this
specific date. That's a violation of the
can't say anything like that. Can't say
anything like that. Can't can't put
timing on on on that because that in
essence subjects God to our laws. There
is no such thing. So they suffered
nearly a thousand years in
uh for uh for doing that. This is
I've converted in my heart long ago and
only want Hashem to take me deeper and
level
up my soul to its highest state. His
glory and face is okay. I have no idea
what you're talking about. I'm sorry.
What is the
AI app? Do we Oh, AI Rabbi. AI
rabbi.org.org. You go to the uh app and
you go to the website AI rabbi
uh.org or you could just type AI rabbi
on your phone uh app store and uh you
could download the uh the app over
there. You'll get a few questions for
free and then after that you'll have to
become a paid subscriber. I could assure
you it's a million times better than uh
chat GPT or your internet all the stuff
that you'll find randomly uh out there
because it not only uses Torah sources
that are reliable but it provides them
to you as
well. Am I allowed to enter a church for
a parents funeral? If you're Jewish, no.
If you're not
Jewish, why are big Tadikim not talking
about wigs and modesty like they should?
How do you know what big Tadikim are
talking about? Do you listen to
everything they say? Do you read all
their
books? Does spilling seed make you
physically and mentally very weak? If
so, why? Yes, it does. I have an entire
uh series of lectures about it. There's
actually one lecture that I did about um
I'd say close to eight nine years ago
that gives a um uh proofs from books
that were in over a hundred years ago
and before uh of the different medical
uh issues it creates, health issues that
it creates. Uh so you can watch those
lectures. I believe if you just go to my
YouTube channel, you type in the words
wasting seed and you watch the longer
lectures, not the clips that are 5 10
minutes, but rather the longer ones that
are an hour or more. Over there, you'll
find a uh endless amount of information.
Each one is different from the next. And
some of it contain contains uh medical
uh uh uh information that you're
interested in. It's called wasting seed.
Go to my uh YouTube page, Rabbi Yuron
Ruven, go to the search, type in the
words wasting seed, and you there's a
whole playlist probably somewhere in the
neighborhood of 150 200 lectures I've
done about the topic if not
more. Is it true that only 20% of Jews
will be saved when Msiah comes?
based on what we say in Kadusha and
Musaf only 20% left Egypt. So as far as
how many people left Egypt, there's
different opinions. On the conservative
end, 20% left Egypt, 80% died in Egypt.
On more aggressive end, uh much less
than that left Egypt. In fact, in the
Miam Lues, he says one out of every
500,000 left Egypt, meaning that it's
2% left
Egypt.
Um, and uh, the final uh, salvation
uh, we're hoping it's going to be much
better than that. If mashia came today
then certainly it would be a disaster
because unfortunately
uh many Jews do not keep to and
therefore they will not survive they
will not be rewarded. Quite the
opposite. The reason of why I do what I
do for the last decade and why Rabb Fry
does what he does and the shim and the
lectures and the uh books and the USBs
and working for free non-stop around the
clock is to change that percentage to
help as many people as possible dom
um couple days ago uh my uh my dear
mother left me a uh a message uh as
excited as can be her. She said uh she
walked into a store and there was a uh a
group of young uh young guys religious
and she always carries either one of my
books or USB or something. Uh she likes
to give it to people to do kiruv and
uh she uh I believe she gave him one of
the books. She says you know my son and
uh as soon as they saw the picture on
the book they all started like jumping
around. Wow wow you know you're his
mother. Wow wow wow. And then she was
happy to see it. But then they explained
why they're so excited. Says, "All five
of us did Chuva because of him. All five
of us read the book. All five of us uh
did Chuva because of this book." So and
they watch also, but I think it all
started with the bookm. So uh that uh is
a big uh big win.
five special nishes that are on the path
to Gan Eden that are gonna sanctify
Kadosh Baku's name uh have religious
families are going to do
mitzvot for generation after generation
till Msiah comes are from someone that
invested into putting that book
somewhere and those uh guys picked up
the book read the book and decide to
transform the rest of their lives
because of it five guys five people mean
five it's five
families five grandkids uh sec next
generation next generation next gener
you know this is this is an endless
amount if
if says it's worth it to spend an entire
life of 70 years to try to make one Jew
do one Jew it's worth it to spend 24
hours a day running around the chasing
after one Jew trying to convince him to
do
chuva to start keeping Shabbat to start
keeping mitzvot one Jew if you and you
succeed after 70 years finally the day
before you die you succeeded you got the
guy to start keeping it was worth it for
you to live that whole life was worth it
just for that one so here you have a
group of five
guys wanted to make my dear mother very
happy and of course me happy as well.
But uh it's certainly a special
experience for a mother to see the the
fruits that come out of all of this. And
it never gets old. There's always more
and there's always it's always exciting.
That's extra happy gift to see come into
a store happens to be five ballet chuva
all from the same
book written in Hebrew that these guys
read in is in in
America and all of them changed their
life and transformed their life because
of this book. It's unbelievable. But by
the way, I don't know who these five
guys
are, but if they're watching, thank you
for number one doing chuva, learning to
with us, making my dear mother happy
bless you
guys. Continue serving full force.
Sanctify's name and please return the
favor by getting other people to get our
to to to read our books and to and get
some books from the store and distribute
them in your community. It worked for
you guys. Transform your lives. The
least you could do is help other people.
We have uh look what the question he
just asked. If only 20% of are going to
survive. We don't want only 20% of this
much more. Help us. You guys benefit
from these shim. The least everyone
that's watching
these and benefiting from them. The
least you can do is share these lectures
and go to the Kiru store, get yourself
some books and distribute in your Jewish
community. That's the least you can do.
If you could do more by donating, by all
means. But the least everyone that
watches the lectures can do is do kiru
and distribute these books in the Jewish
community. Why? Because if you benefited
from them, it transformed your life. Now
you're keeping Shabbat. Now you're
keeping family purity. Now you're eating
kosher. Now you're learning to as a
result of these lectures. The least you
can do is help other people do benefit
the same way you did. So that's uh
that's that's an important thing for
people to to to help. And the people
that already gave the books, don't think
that you're finished just because you
gave a bunch of books. Some people tell
me, "Listen, I gave a few cards or I
gave you a few books. Am I finished? I'm
done." No. As soon as you finish, get
more. When am I finished? When your life
finishes. When your life finishes, then
you're finished. As long as you're in
this world, you have to do as much as
you possibly can to get Amishai closer
to Hashem. give more give more of the
books, more of the USBs, especially
since it's free. It's free. I don't
know. I wish I wish I had stuff free for
me to give out uh when I was uh first
starting out. When I first started out,
I had to go buy from different uh uh
rabbis and organizations the stuff that
I would give out to people. Uh you guys
have it for free. It's unbelievable to
me that uh some people are not smart
enough to literally uh order, give out,
order, give out, order, give out. Now,
some of you guys uh sometimes order more
than you can handle. So, order, give
out, order more again. You know, it's
it's important because if you order the
books and you don't give them out, then
it's a problem. Then it's a problem.
Why? Because then you've wasted our
resources
uh for nothing. We could have used those
resources to give those books to
somebody else to distribute. Plus, we
paid shipping. Each box cost 40, $50,
$60 to ship just in in in in America.
Needless to say, if we have to ship it
uh to different countries, people don't
understand that it cost a fortune. A
fortune to publish every book. People
say, "Oh, yeah. Can you uh translate
this book to English and that book to
English?" You guys don't understand how
much it costs to publish these books.
Each book cost 100,000 plus. Each book.
Each book. One book. one book over
$100,000 per book depending on how many
copies. People don't understand that you
have the editors, you have uh the uh uh
graphics, you have a uh uh the printing
shipping taxes, just taxes taxes to ship
the books to to Israel, for example, is
17 and a half% of the cost. So, if I
bought $100,000 worth of
books, for me to take those $100,000
worth of books and get them to Israel,
for example, I have to pay
$17,500 to Israel in
taxes, plus shipping, which 10, 20, 30,
$40,000 depending on how how heavy
everything
is. It's not uh you know in in to ship
it to America is less in taxes but not
less in
shipping. So the cost is enormous. And
this is just shipping it to the
warehouse. After shipping it to the
warehouse, it's shipping the boxes to
all of you all over the place. Each box
is anywhere between 27 to
40. We send it UPS. Average cost is
anywhere between 35 to $65 per box. So
you ordered 10
boxes. Let's say you ordered 10 boxes
over a period of time. You got 10 boxes.
Just the shipping
costs, just the shipping cost to get you
the stuff is somewhere in the
neighborhood of
$500. Now if you calculate the cost of
the
books talking about huge investments
huge investments but people don't
understand it. Sometimes people think oh
listen I uh you know I'll do what I can
you know and and in reality they don't
they don't understand how much they are
benefiting from the organization. Go to
any rabbi any rabbi and see how many
books he's going to give you for free.
For
free. Go any rabbi. Go to any rabbi. Go,
go tell, rabbi, listen, can I have uh
200 books for free? Okay, why? What do I
uh steal my money? Why would I give you
200 books for free? No, I'll give them
out. Okay, pay for them and then you
could give them out. No, no, you pay for
them and I'll give them
out.
Why? Nobody does what we did. Nobody
gave 300,000 books for free like we did
in the last few years or pretty much
ever. 300. I'm not talking about 300
pamphlets. Talking about 300 hard
coverver books, hard coverver
books. But that's the thing. If people
understood the value of what we're
providing, literally they would take
money from their stock market, Bitcoin
market, real estate market, retirement
market, non-retirement, every investment
they would take some of it and start
investing into. Why? Because literally
the amount of benefit that we provide to
the public for the sake of amad, for the
sake of amad getting close to Hashem is
endless. There's no there's no limit to
how much sacrifice we're willing to
make. And when we're asking people to
donate, it's not to enrich ourselves.
It's so we can do more for you. So at
the very least, a
person should contribute what they have.
If they have money, contribute money. If
they don't have money, at least they
have time. They live in a Jewish
community. Take some of that time and
give some books in your community. You
go to shul, there's 10 people show up to
prayer, give each one of them a copy.
There's a another shoo down the street,
another 10 copies. There's a bigger sh
that has 30, 40 people. Here's 30. Don't
just uh do nothing out there and expect
to go to
Ganeden. Don't do nothing and expect to
go to Gheden.
Guneden is not for free.
Lot of sacrifice is required. Lot of
sacrifice. Okay. Thank you very much for
learning with me. Shem bless each and
every single one of you that's learning
and applying these lessons to your life,
especially those that support and help
us do all the wonderful things the
organization is doing. Please make sure
to share this lecture, subscribe, uh
donate if you can on our website,
bzantashem.org, Subscribe to the AI
Rabbi. Order some books for free so you
can distribute in your community. Do all
of this stuff. Apply some of this stuff
and don't just make this a uh a YouTube
video that uh simply occupy two hours of
your life but had no impact whatsoever.
If the videos do not impact your life,
if you're not planning on doing anything
that it says, if you don't care about
any of it, don't come. Don't I don't I'm
not looking for views. I'm not looking
for views. If you're planning on doing
something, at least taking one thing on,
another mitzvah,
another something on something on,
continue watching. You're not planning
on changing anything, continue on
staying exactly the same. Nothing
changes, don't come back. Go watch
somebody else. Do me a favor. Make make
the uh the the uh uh the spiritual nest
available for somebody
else. Make sure you take something
on. It's time for everybody to pick it
up a notch. No matter where you are, all
of us have to pick it up a notch. Do a
little bit more. Whatever you doing
until today, start doing a little bit
more tomorrow and will all succeed. Call
to enjoy the and we will learn again
soon.
I'd like to introduce you to your new
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