0:00 / 0:00
Bring Me Home - Tisha B'Av 2017
7,286 views
Project Inspire is a non-profit organization that works to inspire thousands of Torah observant Jews to reach out to their less affiliated friends and neighbors. For more information on how YOU can get involved, go to projectinspire.com. SUBSCRIBE to get the latest from Project Inspire: http://bit.ly/1Ntl9rs Project Inspire on INSTAGRAM: http://bit.ly/1TiTAYX Like Project Inspire on FACEBOOK: http://on.fb.me/1QmzWIT Follow Project Inspire on TWITTER: http://bit.ly/1S3CYFN
Categories:
Torah
Comments(0)
Transcript
Auto-generated transcript. Not time-synced to the video.
I wanted to say shalom but we are not
even allowed to say this beautiful word
on the day of Tish and why because
that's what we're yearning for today
Shalom if we had Shalom we wouldn't have
the duty to fast to day so there I came
to teach just before tshav in Tel Aviv
and she sat there with her jeans and
t-shirt and on her T-shirt with huge
letters it was written Super Girls Don't
Cry and when I saw this I thought to
myself that's our tragedy during all the
year we are being trained and coached
that that super girls don't cry and if
there is something that we need this day
more than any other thing it's women's
tears women that should sit and cry it's
true during all the year I do this
coaching stop complaining say thank you
for what you have be happy with what you
don't have but on
TSH it's a tragedy to be a super girl
when sees you once a year this strong
super woman that is holding whenever
it's so hard she's crying wow if the
supero cries I have to come and answer
Hera we are being in a world that crying
is weakness that crying is being
primitive we want to see all the people
around us happy and smiling because it
disturbs us to see people mourning to
see people complaining today the
Supergirl cries how do you do it and
kazal teach us the beautiful secret of
this day
TSH is one tier only one tier you won't
find the word tears in me
only poor like a lake a
tear says
to only one tier what's the power of one
tier wow wow bet mikdash is being
destroyed Hashem calls and says why
don't you cry I'm like a father that his
son is getting married and dies in the
middle of his and you are not crying go
and call Abraham and
jaob they know how to cry
abrah since when are they
crying they are the only ones in Jewish
history that know what is one tiar when
Abraham puts on
the the Angels Cry from the sky they
shed one tear this tear falls into the
eyes of
Abraham when he is trying to make the
Corban of Y he is crying and one tear of
his eyes goes to the eyes of yak yak
becomes um blind because of this one
tear and then because of this he can
bless yakob instead of asav asav sees
that itak gave the braa to his brother
he sheds one tear and because of this
tear he did not have the bra and Leah is
watching him and saying this will be my
husband this man with no braa and she
sheds one tear and when Rael sees the
one tear of her sister Leia she sheds
one tear and when Hashem sees the one
tear of
ra he
cries
cries has a room called hidden place and
he cries one tier and when his one tier
falls into the sea we feel like an
earthquake like a tsunami one tier all
you should do on the day of Tish is
knowing the power of one tear and do not
clean it the benishai says that when the
beautiful handsome boys of Yehuda were
taking were taken by the Romans their
hands were tied they could not clean
their
[Music]
tear you should live this tear going
down your cheek with not cleaning it and
Hashem sees this tear sees that there is
no one that comforts you today so you
cry for your house when you're on your
way to the big house here that will be
built cry for your own house your own
husband your own children your own
hatred one tear is enough when you shed
one tear says thead on it means the it
meets the one tier of Rael do you know
that Rael in numbers in gatria is twice
tier plus is
ra only one tier only a woman knows how
to cry sit on the floor midnight midday
cry your heart out one tear and we will
all see this new baby being born
[Music]
oh
[Music]
my your
[Music]
oh oh
Ser
he oh he
[Music]
say
[Applause]
you oh
[Music]
[Applause]
if you're sitting here watching this
video today it means that it's Tish
again and that's not easy Tish is a time
where we tend to feel pretty hopeless
and very confused if we haven't gotten
it right until now how are we supposed
to get it right this time if we haven't
yet regained that Clarity of Hashem his
miracles
his love in such a revealed obvious way
how can we hope to do it now the good
news is that maybe we do have more power
than we attribute to ourselves because
if you think about it the mikdash was
not that abstract the mikdash was really
a reflection of a home that the Miracles
that we know that defined the mikdash
began in the home of SAR
IMU and that home home is a home that we
can create in our hearts and share with
others today and every day in our lives
to the best of our abilities and maybe
even with a stretch of our abilities
what is a miracle a miracle is Hashem
going beyond what we know as nature so
since the world works with our actions
creating kav hashem's reactions by us
going Beyond what's natural to us making
that stretch we could elicit hashem's
going Beyond nature and bringing us the
Miracles that we so yearned for in our
lives personally and nationally let's
look at those Miracles SAR was able to
have the miracle of her bread staying
fresh the miracle that was mirrored by
theim by the bread in the mikdash SAR
had her candles stay lit from one chabas
to the next similar to the n
mirrored in the mikdash by that eternal
light and SAR merited to have the
hashem's presence hovering over her tent
the way we had in the mikdash with the
Anan kavod so ladies how did SAR managed
to get those miracles to be her reality
because that must be a key to us living
our lives with the home that Hashem so
knows that we could have and it wasn't
that difficult with Kerner says that
sar's Miracles were deserved because
Hashem was reacting to her motivation
and the way she chose to live her life
why did her bread stay fresh because she
did CU it's so easy in life to get stale
to just be from from Habit to just be
same old same old every day and every
Mission and every shabus in our lives
but SAR didn't why did sar's candle stay
lit because she stayed inspired it's so
easy to go to that right speech and have
that aha moment and where do we go to
with that inspiration sometimes just to
the fridge but SAR had that ability to
take that inspiration and make it work
take that flicker of a flame and pass it
on to someone else and why did the why
did hashem's presence hover over Sarah's
tent because in the words of re Kerner
he just liked being there because she
made him so welcome by emulating him by
representing him by seeing people
through his lens and loving them as a
result we have this unbelievable
opportunity of bringing people home and
that's the mdash we could ignite their
freshness we could ignite their
inspiration we could ignite their sense
that Hashem is hovering over and waiting
for them always waiting for them if we
know that we have that potential if the
mikdash is a reality in the way that we
live our lives and we handle our
situations and our circumstances and the
relationships we have and the ones that
we Forge ladies join me
today in learning about three incredibly
special women who managed to forge a
connection with their mikdash within and
to bring a lot of people home with
theml Sham I believe represents the she
never got stale even into her old age
she had a freshness and a vitality and a
youth that inspired so many that made
everyone else believe in their potential
even before they knew they had it
ham was that tent that had Hashem
hovering over
it and everyone felt the same ases did
they just liked hanging out with her she
was the comfortable chair and reiton
Esther Yung sham she was the flame that
didn't go out that she came with a
mission out of the Flames of the
Holocaust and use those not to burn not
to rage not to have a temper but to
ignite the spark of belief in so so many
in a way that was beyond the belief I
believe even of herself of knowing just
how big her her flame would grow and how
warm it would make the world and after
we learn about those three Visionaries
of our time we're going to have to
challenge a belief that many of us have
that we can't be them how could I be
someone who really brings change to my
own life let alone others I don't have
the abilities of a rabbitson Yung or the
patience of a hen mes or the positiv ity
of a pearl banish so maybe this whole
mikdash thing I I just I'm not cut out
for it I don't have that genan pool I
don't have the
characteristics we're going to meet
someone named lyanna who without any
background and without any education she
knew that she had a mikdash within and
she knew that Hashem was the home that
she always had to come back to because
she knew something was missing without
him
so she'll bring us to the place of
creating a mikdash in every level of Our
Lives just the way the women did who
helped lyana in her journey the women of
her trip to erisel the women who invited
her into their homes in Brooklyn New
York and when we're done today hopefully
our bread will be
fresher and our candles will be that
much brighter and last a lot longer
and Hashem will have the pride of
knowing that we're the kids that love
each other that he always wished for us
to be pearl banish taught us all how to
Vanquish the dragon the Dragon for most
of us is the hopelessness that we may
feel wondering how we could feel fresh
again living in a world that seems stale
in a lot of ways and far from the
goodness that we hope for but Pearl
banish did teach to Vanquish that dragon
with a Muna with the belief that
everyone and every day could always be
something
different my mother grew up in krackow
she was born in demitz in November
middle of a big snowstorm my mother
lived right around the corner from SAR
shanir and the Seminary like here was
the Seminary one block the next parallel
block was s's house and my mother was on
the corner so she used to pass by and
see my mother and she used to call her
down to come collecting money with her
my mother was 10 10 years old 11 years
old P come ask your mother if you can
come with me and they would go
collecting mother money up and down the
steps stalker always she had always
another spck but she had a lot of first
cousins who survived and some of them
were like we were and some of them were
not religious some were traditional and
they were always welcome to our home to
our simus they were treated with
tremendous respect and covered we always
had an open house I mean we always had
people eating by us I remember my father
was ding in the shabus and one Friday
night he sent my brother home to tell my
mother that we're having two guests
somebody had gotten off the train at
thean a father and a son they had gotten
with the train and they they were stuck
for sharers they couldn't go any further
so no problem he just sent my brother to
tell my mother we're having guests for
Sharice and it wasn't a problem he knew
it wouldn't be a problem with her so
tell me what was most intriguing about
Pearl Bish's book for you one huge
running thing that I got from it was how
to live with a Mana everything that
comes your way is just simply a hurdle
for you to get over or a challenge and
that was that kind of concept and the
way that I kind of see my life now was
born from from reading palan's book even
if it's so serious and intense like the
Holocaust I mean you don't get more
dramatic how she said that she would
like say the words of tahim as she was
in the freezing cold snow and totally
like riddled with illness and God knows
what she more saw it as a challenge to
overcome to make her greater rather than
something to make her suffocate that was
her a single point that got her through
like Hera just there was nothing else
nothing else saved
her people would ask her questions like
Mrs Benish how is it that you were able
to keep your belief in God after having
gone through such gehenna so she would
say my belief hasn't changed there was
evil in the world before the War I saw
the evil in the War I see it now what
has changed so why should my belief in
God
change I think her amuna and her
knowledge that Hashem loves her and
everything he does is good that's what
gave her the Sim the ability to be B no
matter what we had a very close relative
of ours who went through the war
and when the war ended he became
irreligious and my mother always used to
say you can't judge anybody who'd gone
through the horrors the geham of the
Holocaust you can't judge them for
losing their faith and I remember when I
was 14 years old this man came to
America for a visit and during the 10
days that he was at our home he made a
complete turnaround he became sh shabis
he went to bmes he had a Shear he had a
Kusa every night and to what do you
attribute them I don't know he was just
by us for PES I don't remember them my
mother must have been she was busy
making we were just being
ourselves when my parents first came to
America their first apartment was in a
walkup building in
Williamsburg and on the second floor
lived a middle-aged couple they already
had a married daughter and a young
teenage
boy and they were
room but they were so nice to my parents
Mrs Stein would babysit for us
occasionally when my mother was in a
pinch and whenever we had an emergency
we'd go running down to the Steines the
six years that we lived there during
those six years they became sh shabas
wow and I think you know they were just
so amazed by this couple who were from
and spite of what they've been
through so you were driven to meet Pearl
Bish after reading her book Rabbi naali
shiff gave me her address and I I sent
her a letter telling how much she
changed my life and then he arranged a
phone call what did she say I just
remember a lot of it was just love it
was as if I was like she was speaking to
her granddaughter didn't know who I was
but I very much felt like we spoke for
about half an hour she had like she just
was showering me with love and care and
advice um that was beautiful so anyway
so then I I made a promise to myself
that the moment I step into America um I
would go straight to her house and go
meet her um I think it was yeah 5 years
later I finally went to America I
literally came off the plane and I went
straight to um her her house to meet her
it was 10:00 at night she didn't mind I
can't it was there about 2 hours and she
was just showering me with unbelievable
advice and words of Torah and just love
she believed in everybody no matter what
their level of yish was and she
encouraged us to love everybody and not
to judge people I definitely felt as I
was speaking to her that only was she
seeing the huge potential that I had she
was bringing that out in me I just felt
it she did not know and has not no idea
of the impact she made on me you know
like I only had a few interactions with
her um but she she fall me into the
person that I am today for
sure my mother had a lot of groups
coming here all kinds of cir of
organizations would bring groups to her
she had a big impact on them I could
tell by the way they reacted they
crowded around her and they asked her
questions I think they were just amazed
at this woman who had to deal with all
these Faith issues during the Holocaust
and how she came out of
it was just amazing she created my
desires to give and make an impact in
the world without me even necessarily
knowing you know I read those books I I
carried her lessons with me for life and
I'm going now back to London to work for
an organization for girls at risk in the
fir Community when you see these girls
that you work with how do you view them
through Mrs Bish's lens you're part of
me we one um you're my sibling you're my
family and I'll do whatever I can to try
and help
you and I think that was a lot from
heavy heavy from pal pales she spoke in
Beth L to a group of 200 boys and girls
who had also just found out they were
Jewish and um you should see what these
children looked like these 200 children
boys and girls um 17 18 19 20 at the end
my mother took out the whole group and
bethl has this beautiful staircase in
the front and they lined up on the um on
the steps and um she stood herself right
in the middle of the group in the front
first the second step with all the 200
children around her boys and girls and
and she wanted a group picture and as
she's standing there with all these
children some two ladies two BB OFA
ladies cic women passed by and they knew
my mother she was very well known and
they tell her
PKA P tell me are these your
grandchildren and she looked up at the
woman she says yes these are my
grandchildren cuz that's how she felt
about every Jew didn't matter what they
looked like she loved everyone and they
were all her children and her sisters
and brothers he has Che
we have
grandchildren we have great
grandchildren isn't that
great isn't that
some didn't he give us so much
joy I just
pray Hashem you tested us enough don't
test them
anymore I remember as a child seeing my
father cry the day his father died and I
asked him what the saddest thing that he
was going through was and he said it's
hard not to be someone's child anymore
pranish made us all feel like someone's
child and children need to go home and
they need to feel that there is a mother
caring for them who always wants them
who always loves them who always accepts
them them so unconditionally and openly
and nurturing and that was hen Maas hen
Maas gave us the home that we all need
the home that just always has that extra
piece of chicken the home that always
has that hug and the way that she was
able to feel and do and be so much to so
many is because she connected herself to
a limitless source of love she knew that
she was the proud daughter of hak
that he was always over her tent and
loving her throughout and giving her
energy that was far beyond the energy
that she could have generated on her own
so let's look at the life and the home
and the warmth of Henny Maas and get a
taste of what a real home could feel
like my mother used to say that every
Jew has a a spark
could be there's a lot of dark spots but
in every Jew there's a spark take that
spark and make believe that the person
is that whole spark because they all
have a beautiful light to them and
that's why my mother one of her
beautiful qualities that she was able to
see in every person the real spark and
to see that every person above what what
a human being could see she's very
loving very sweet very accepting she
knew exactly what to say my husband
always says that that she had like a
little like but it wasn't really but she
could he said IMA could get away with
saying anything cuz she would like just
say it in the right way or even like
people like completely secular she would
like she said also a very non-judgmental
she was extremely non-judgmental
everyone was okay in her books so like
if you were religious not religious
Jewish not Jewish asazi it was like
you're okay in my books I see you and
people felt it well she loved people so
she would meet someone and say Hi H Maas
right and she would just have this big
smile and big warm welcome
and very unassuming and she would share
of herself and and and really care for
people so on chavas it was always very
exciting cuz there were like between 80
and 120 people coming for the meals
every type of person you could imagine
Yeshiva gu Seminary girls tourists balas
people who were were interested in
converting to Judaism or or even not
interested in converting to Judaism the
door was open to just anyone I'm from
California San Diego
and I was a professional swimmer in high
school and happy gol lucky um I started
keeping a little bit and what I was
keeping was not chabis but I was keeping
to going to the to go to SCH I had a
scholarship to go to San Diego
university and I'm like Mom I want to go
to Israel I mean I want to go to Israel
please and she wouldn't let me she said
only if you can defer your scholarship
and I found
Baron University onee program that's
when I met Rabbi M he was teaching on
the that was he was The Beginner's
program that was like my first Rabbi
Rabbi M said you're all on this chabas
invited in my house oh my gosh can you
imagine you're not you're not accepting
expecting anything and you walk in and
you think that you're going to be your
the guest and we're going to get so much
attention here and then I can talk and
we our friends and you open up there's
like another 60 of you 70 of you and
you're like we're probably in the wrong
place and then you see RAB Maas come in
and honey Maas come in she came from the
side Shalom oh my God you know really
really
happy there was something about being in
in in that house and in her presence uh
that was just so comfortable no
judgments like welcome you're a human
being Welcome to our home this is your
place
uh and and that's really what it was
like for everybody for everybody I
remember once she came to our house to
visit uh and there was a gardener
working in the back uh and he had an
Arab worker so she offered him something
to drink and she was talking to him she
said tell me what's your name and he
says my name is Kim she she said Kim
what do you mean your name is k is a
Jewish name she said he says oh yeah
well my my dad is an Arab but my
mother's
Jewish my mother
couldn't believe it she said you're
Jewish do you know that you're Jewish he
says I'm Jewish he says you're Jewish
and then she calls me a quick bring your
Fillin bring your filling right and and
that was her you know she wanted to give
him the gift of of a Mitzvah and it's it
that was her interest in in in in
helping other people anything she had
she would share like she didn't really
have a sense of you know me versus you
it's kind of like us anything anything I
have if you need it take it she taught
me so many times that another person's
physical needs is they become your
spiritual
needs I worked on my relationship with
the mes from then on cuz I said this is
what I want I knew this is what I needed
for myself and I would go and I would
after the meals I would do the dishes
till 2:00 in the morning but it was I
got something back cuz they would stay
up with me I was there doing those
dishes cleaning up because I wanted to
hear about them to know about them and
ask questions and Henny would say it all
the time I feel like you're I feel like
you're my daughter I feel like you're my
first daughter cuz I was older than y
did she say that to all her guests I
don't know but I didn't care she said
that to me that was like the world how
did you see her real amuna play out I
remember once there was a it was a
Friday and there was some type of
chicken shortage I think in Jerusalem I
don't remember exactly long time ago and
EMA was just totally you know
indifferent yeah nonchalant like no
worries you know whatever we we'll make
do whatever we have you know there's
other we'll feed them other things you
know Hashem will take care of it I don't
know a few hours later someone shows up
I don't remember the details but just
someone shows up with like a case a
couple of cases of chickens 's like oh
okay here are the chickens let's let's
put them in the oven you know let's just
get them into the oven you know and I
remember thinking one of the things that
was the most amazing about amazing part
of that story is that it did it didn't F
Ima she just lived with Hashem she was
like totally just she said oh hashem's
going to take care of it it it wasn't
like wow like what do you mean you know
if I ask you for a glass of water you
know or if I ask you to pass me you know
pass me the fork I can assume you'll
pass pass it to me you ask God Hashem
can you plast the chicken he'll he'll
pass it it's like well of course that's
what's going to happen your mother's
book was unbelievable unbelievable and
so many women reading it would say how
could I ever be heny Maas what would
your mother's message to those women be
everyone could do it their way there are
no two rebit and mes there are no two
Moshe RAB there's only one of each
person and everyone is in a unique way I
want to read you something that that IMA
said so my dear girls remember to love
yourself to know that there was never
anyone like you and there never will be
you have unique talents personality
wisdom character traits looks abilities
that AES who wants you to use to shine
your specific light in this world then
remember to empower all of your friends
and the whole world remember that Hashem
loves you like his only child and
everything you are and you
experience is only to draw you closer to
him remember to speak to him always to
achieve the clarity you need to fulfill
your purpose in this world by maximizing
your potential remember not only to do
what you can but more than you can
because one more
said we'll bring the Gula and remember I
love all of
you meeting Hy M's children and getting
a taste of her home left us feeling what
the Ana cavod must have been those
Clouds Of Glory hovering over us giving
us that feeling of hashem's love of his
nurturing of knowing that we are all of
his kids when we're all his kids there
is no I and there is no you we all do
just become one and there's another way
that that's manifested in all of us that
we're one in the sense that we share a
flame and when I give of that flame to
you we know about Flames that they don't
get extinguished they just keep growing
and stretching Beyond us and staying
illuminated and Illuminating others that
ladies was the gift of the legacy of
Ritson Esther Jung Ritson Yung brought
that flame out of the Cinders of the
Holocaust and she proved that
inspiration can live on and Beyond just
about anything and she didn't let people
have it easy when they didn't believe it
themselves and we have a chance now to
get a taste of it and make it our own
let's
see so I grew up in a home that had a
very traditional Jewish connection but
was not that observant I was B Mitzvah
on a Sunday in in the in an orthodox
school we didn't keep kosher but we
didn't eat like the real trafe but we
didn't follow all of the laws I did go
to Hebrew school I was able to read
Hebrew so there was a connection there
but it certainly wasn't you know a full
observance I was very fortunate I went
to Harvard as an undergraduate and um I
had a very interesting career that took
me to Washington DC to Jefferson City
which is the Missouri capital I took a
position as legal council in the
Missouri State senate for the Democratic
minority leader but after a year a
position opened up because of term
limits in the legislative district where
I had grown up in St Louis and I was
elected as a a state representative
while I was doing all of this
legislative work I was studying with an
a rabbi in St Louis Rabbi gromberg and
he gave me a copy of the ritson's book
The committed life and it really was
transformative for me somehow when I
turned turned the pages of that book it
just resonated with me I she would have
these anecdotes about people and I would
think this is the way life should be
lived this is the way I want to live my
life about 20 years ago and it was
Christmas Eve and I I I met the ribbits
and that was like that was it I could
not get over the rabbits she's
unbelievable I just could not get over
it she was you know just such a um like
a Powerhouse I was just regular secular
girl living in New York and I had a
cousin who found out about the singles
um party or so as we're there they tell
us that there's a lecture that you have
to hear before you go to the party and
I'm sitting there and she's talking
about the para and she's relating it to
modern day times and just so happened to
be that that para was exactly what I was
going through in my life at that moment
I just couldn't believe what I had
heard every Tuesday night I would go
listen to her speak and her soft voice
sounded to me like a hummingbird singing
a sacred song cuz her teachings they
were so easy to connect with but they
were really deep she was incredibly warm
and I think there was something about
how she held your hand and touched you
and how she looked at you and focused on
you and held you and I think there was
like some kind of warmth that you
immediately felt like you know you were
the only person in the room and that she
really really loved you which she did
she loved every Jewish nsh she had an
uncanny sense of perception when it came
to people my mother taught me at a very
early age that if you can't help
somebody the least you can do is feel
for them she would literally stay on
stand on her feet until 1:00 in the
morning until every person that had a
problem or was looking for a sh up or
whatever had a chance and these were
acts of kindness that she did herself
there'd be another person wanting to
talk to her she would see that and she
would take her hand and hold the other
person as it to say one minute and I'll
be with you and that's such a kindness
that a person shouldn't feel that
they're just standing there being
ignored it was little things that she
always knew how to be kind and good and
understanding my mother was and and and
Rachel's mother the same thing both had
terminal cancer and the Ritson would
call both of our mothers every shabas
just to give him like another holiday
these calls were so meaningful to my
mother she really looked forward to it
all week even when my mom was sick in
the hospital the rabbitson would call
her that was the the kind of hassid that
she could do even though she lived her
life on a global platform speaking
around the world writing books she was
famous in the Jewish and non-jewish
world she could take those moments to
reach out to a human being on a personal
level how did she get her energy she
would recharge by being with people by
speaking by doing I never saw her waste
her time if she'd be sitting down she
had a toil him she had a safer she'd be
preparing for a class she would always
say you must accomplish something every
single day so a couple years years later
she had written another book it was
called life is a test and the riton came
to St Louis to speak at an event around
her book and she she wrote an
inscription that I would like to share
which said to my dear Rachel May Hashem
be with you and guide you to your
soulmate your mother is watching over
you never forget much love Esther
Yung well that same night the rabbitson
pulled me aside at the end and she said
there's someone very special I want you
to meet and she told me all about Barry
I was 50 I was not married I the
rabbitson never gave up on me and she
knew me for 20 years and she never gave
up on me she most people gave up on me
they everyone gave up me like Terry
you're never going to get married it's
just it's just not going to happen you
know but the bottom line was the Ritson
never did Rachel and I got engaged and
then the Ritson came to St Louis you
know my mother passed away so I said
would you walk me down the aisle she
said no I I can't walk you down the
aisle she said but I'll walk behind you
and I always used to tease her I said
you were walking behind me because you
were afraid I was going to run
away she did not tell me when we were
dating or when she first introduced us
that his mother had also been sick and
passed away and that she had had a very
similar connection to Barry's mother
that she had had with my mother and
before both of our mothers passed away
each of them had asked her to connect us
with a Jewish soulmate and then she
connected us to each other and when she
came to the wedding she said that our
mothers were dancing in the heavens and
we you know we always felt the power of
those words that's what we all said at
that wedding these mothers are dancing
in shmay because not only have their
children connected but they have Yiddish
grandchildren who are going to know
about Hashem and knowing how to doen and
becoming the Next Generation that they
never would have been there's so many
people that would call her our
Tabby because she made their sh and now
they have children and grandchildren who
are from because of her the rabbitson
gave us a blessing on our marriage night
our wedding night for children and again
we were a little bit older you never
know what could happen in life um but
very quickly barem we had a son so
whenever I look at the kids I always
think of her and I think of how
proud she'd be she introduced me to my
husband she made us room we have six
beautiful children all in Yas and bakov
and she spent her entire life doing this
to zillions of people what do you think
that she'd be proudest of about your
children anything that they do or about
who they are well you know we we
celebrate Shabbat to come to the table
to say the bras to you know to light the
candles down my is watching that feels
very good and very right to us beautiful
how would you define her Mission you
know the rbit went through the Holocaust
and then when she got to
America all these people were not only
not following Judaism but they were you
know marrying non-jews they would not
keep en kosher and so she said there was
a spiritual Holocaust in the United
States or around the world she wanted to
make the uh to change that when my
mother was just a little girl she began
her mission in this world
and she took a place of terrible gehenna
and instead of sitting in the darkness
and being angry she came to this
country and she learned from her parents
that you have a choice in life you can
either sit in the K and be angry and
upset about what Life deals or you can
light a candle and my mother told us
always light a candle wherever you go
never sit
in there was no stopping the rabbitson
and look just in my family my brother
and I we both grew up
sacular we probably did things we
weren't supposed to do and the rabbitson
really brought us back when people would
start to become from and discover she
would say now it's your turn to invite
somebody to your house for shabas or
teach somebody and they would say but
rabbitson I I don't know enough and my
mother would say whatever you know you
share one kind word one piece of
knowledge just saying one thing to
another Jew a little little spark could
ignite and become a flame bar hasem um
we light Six Candles on chabis and um
these are always at the center the
rabbitson presented these to my husband
and me on our engagement you know it it
brings her presence to our Shabbat do
you have a personal prayer that
introduces chabas for you I always say
the Hebrew names of each of my children
and my husband and I pray for their
well-being and I pray that I can
continue to grow our home in in a Torah
way you must feel a tremendous void in
your life now without her it sounds like
she just such a force big void she was
just there I mean you know but the the
great part about the Ritson is that she
was she was so prolific in the speeches
and all that she wrote and she did that
you never forget her you know wait till
I talk speak all the time to say that we
had the honor to meet someone of this
caliber she was bringing me to the
connection to God and to his mercy and
to his
protection and there was nothing like it
it was
extraordinary when my mother became ill
this past year it was a very difficult
year when we heard the terrible news and
I looked at my mother and I saw two
tears roll down her cheeks and she said
I have so much more that I want want to
do and so much more that I'd like to
teach can I still teach Torah because I
have a nation waiting I have my people
waiting and I love to teach
Torah that was her only question so
listen to me my wonderful people my
sisters my brothers my kind I'm a great
grandmother say oh my
kind I want to leave you all of you
withm should be with you should give you
the wisdom and your heart to understand
who you
are you
are shabas you are the Angels of shabas
never forget your legacy never forget
your Tyra remember my father's words
after he discovered nobody's left no
only one thing I ask of you hasem all my
children and my grandchildren should
remain with
t there the only thing that can't you
say it is in sh in the heavens above by
saying please children don't forget that
remain
with I to
give
to don't forget who you are where you
came from should give
you children and Grand great
grandchildren I thank you all for
listening and ieng
that light of rabbits and young rice is
a light that lives on in the homes of so
many women who light her
candlesticks who ignite The Souls of
their children those children who learn
the Torah that has become their life
because it was life to rabbits and
Yung three phenomenal women seeing the
freshness of a pearl banish the student
of a
sarne who teaches us
what it means to keep going and forging
ahead as those benos Yakov we saw the
home and the nurturing and the
graciousness of aeni Maas and the spirit
that she had that so many felt and we
saw that inspiration that incredible
energy of a rabbitson young rice where
do we go with it all we go to Brooklyn
New York to a group of women just like
us women who are busy baking their own
bread keeping things lit keeping that
inspiration and realizing that it's not
enough to just keep it in here that
there are people that deserve it that
need it as much as they do as much as we
do they find a girl named lyanna and
that name says it all Le Anna me where
is it coming from can I relate to those
greats can I be that Visionary can I
create the mikdash and the answer ladies
is yes that mikdash is our inheritance
it's our right to
perpetuate and to pass on to others
lyanna began her journey in a little
town in azerbajan and We Begin by asking
her just what it felt like to be that
Soul among the people there and not
realizing how much she was missing let's
see you know we were hiding the fact
that we were Jewish I remember on
Fridays sometimes my um grandmother
would light candles and you know on
holidays she would we we couldn't
understand why she was doing this we
were completely secular we thought that
she just had her own agenda that's how
she would she grew up and this is
something cultural we didn't think it
had anything to do with religion itself
uh I came to the United States when I
was uh almost 18 it was difficult for us
for my parents especially um we didn't
know the L language we had to learn our
community we have a a very small Jewish
Community uh where my parents live so we
tried to go for holidays here and there
but there wasn't really much of an
influence and after I got my degree I I
went to work at the Immigration Center
as a fingerprint technici and then I
transferred to customs and that's when I
met hashy I guess me seeing me with my
armac on and and knowing that I was a
religious she would come over and we
would talk about you know uh Jewish you
know uh studies Jewish subjects it
wasting in these things you know
whatever I I felt she would be able to
handle you know we we would speak about
we had invited her a number of times
previously and she never accepted and
suck us time it was chabas of H and she
said yes and we made room for her and
and it was wonderful she came over to me
one day and she said you know what I
heard about this trip um to Israel with
this group you think I should go it's
for women that want to become you know
more religious whatever to see the
country so without knowing anyone else
on the trip gutsy was that scary it was
it was but uh I thought you know I'm
going to just go and meet all these
wonderful Jewish women and maybe connect
somehow so when I first met lyanna we
were close to closing the registration
for our trip and right away I was
stricken with
her I would say her her her grace her
Poise her presence and her genuine
desire to learn about Judaism and she
felt that if she came on this trip she
would get that that that opportunity to
to share it with her kids you know to
have it for herself but I don't think
she realized how much she would get for
herself I think she was really motivated
that her kids should get but she didn't
get a chance to you know the moment I I
I landed in
Israel I it hit me this sense of okay
this is home I'm home that's
it a great group of women they were just
very open and inspired and you know the
the Brooklyn women that we take are
mostly all of Russian background we
loved lyanna on the trip she was just
she was an absolute Delight she was just
fun and easy
and very very very very very open and
very very receptive it just impacted her
so she really wanted to get it and take
it with her and um and she did she did
we were there for 8 days and we had just
one event
left and that's when this terrible
tragedy
happened we just saw a a bus just
craying down
backwards I we knew there was no way for
us to dodge it so we both got
head um what happened was I got the the
bus hit me and then I went under the
wheel of the bus and it dragged me all
the way until it hit the nearby
building the ambulance was there within
about a couple of minutes a man he knew
that he he he was asking me constantly
questions to keep me I guess uh
conscious he said we don't want you to
panic but the wheel of the boss is still
on top of you and we can't get you
out so I had we had to I had to lie
there bleeding broken bones and
everything I was not aware of how bad it
was I wasn't even aware what happened to
me I uh in my mind I thought that I had
a broken leg I I I didn't know what
happened we you know got to the hospital
and they were Wheeling Leon in on the
stretcher and she looked frightening and
uh we were basically beside ourselves we
just didn't know and we were Ding and um
it was it was just a shock the doctors
didn't didn't think there was there was
anything they could do they said that
the dangerous the inuries that I
suffered um were
catastrophic I went to hadasa in uh in
Jerusalem I I couldn't move for two
months I
couldn't do anything at all I was
basically just pinned to the to to my to
my
bed um so I needed I needed the help I
mean the the doctors weren even sure if
I was going to survive if I was never
going to walk and thank you Hashem he
brought me to a team of brilliant
brilliant
doctors so when she woke up so I was
able to be by her bed and um I I was
crying I I woke up and I saw shalamas
was standing in a corner crying looking
at me I said thought to myself why is
she crying I'm I'm okay I'm okay it was
this
[Music]
peace and she said to me that she didn't
know why I was crying cuz she felt so
peaceful and she felt Hashem was with
her and Hashem was safe in
her and why was I so
sad and that's what I
knew that the whole trip affected her so
amazingly because a week before that
when she wasn't on the trip she would
never have spoken like
that I had this peace in my heart I was
grateful that I'm
alive I
knew I knew Hashem was with me I I I was
just I was was okay so I actually have a
friend some friends that like let's say
m alah live in Israel and I would just
get like certain messages through you
know I went to see lyanna I brought her
a sandwich and I really feel like she
got to see the best of CLA ra like she's
in a hospital bed she's not a she's not
a from woman she wasn't really exposed
to to a lot of religious people before
and and this is what she sees like you
know that someone's coming people are
taking care of her all the time and I
feel like she sees it and and Hashem
sees us taking care of each other and it
was like that to me was like wow I could
see why she would come home and want to
keep shabas when I was in Israel I felt
something was changing inside of
me I felt
like I was finally finding
myself I knew that there was no way I
could come back the
same after I woke up in a in a hospital
I made that packed with myself
to go on with go on with this and um
just try to reach a a higher spiritual
level and it was like unbelievable uh
change she start telling me all the
things that she was doing you know she
starts asking me questions like uh I had
uh orange juice and oatmeal for
breakfast today and I goes does the AL
cover the bir of Fes or do I and I say
to her I go I go like who are you it was
like unbelievable she was she was
learning how to read and to D she gave
me such it was is
unbelievable I read my sedor in Hebrew
now I mean I'm very
slow very slowly but I I still read it
yeah you were so worried about the kids
how did they take to all of this I
pulled them out of public schools right
away put them both in yeshivas and I saw
the difference in
them what what was it like standing at
your son's Bar Mitzvah feeling that your
body was yours again and that your
children were home the way you wanted
them to be what what was that happy
Pride I don't know I don't know all of
these things I mean um Indescribable
feeling the people were there for me and
you know we danced danced with shalam
danced a little with etti you know and
it gave me so so so much happiness I I
it's definitely just about us trying
giving over caring sharing um Hashem is
in charge of kind of having that that
that that wheel uh take it to whatever
level it's going to you just have to be
a link in the chain and uh and share um
developing these wonderful relationships
with these women is is so uplifting and
so inspiring and uh really makes my life
very meaningful and uh also makes uh my
family appreciate um different people
and you know what you can accomplish by
just being a nice person and talking to
people and bringing them to your home
showing them the beauty of a shabis and
the beauty of yish K how have you seen
it impact your family um well I remember
the first first one of the first shaton
that we did at our house which we at
some point I think at the M we must have
had about 150 people and um my son who
was a teenager then he said mommy this
was the best shabas of my life I said
what you know I wasn't able to give you
any attention I was busy with all the
people with everything he said you know
just to see how much they appreciate
what we have all the
time changed my life and he was six
so lyanna the women that are watching us
today they're sitting in the audience
and it's Tish above and it's the day
that we lost the temple because we
weren't good enough at loving each
other what would you want to tell those
women as your message from your
experience about being loved and coming
home we should love each other there
should be this this love for each other
I
can't stress enough the love that I have
for my fellow Jewish women make a
connection it's so easy we're
women what's the worst that can
happen make a connection lyanna if you
could go back to that little house in
azerbajan
and you could see your grandmother
taking her candles out on a Friday
what would you want her to
know I wanted I wanted to say thank you
I wanted to thank her thank her for
teaching us although we didn't
understand it and we dismissed it there
was something inside of us it was always
there we just needed someone someone
else to open it that's
all
so I guess the whole sh was experience
started with my
grandmother seeing her and knowing her
story is got to give to anybody if you
can reach
out to another fellow JY just do it we
all have what it takes to be that home
to have our bread stay fresher to have
our light stay lit and to have that
awareness of Hashem in our lives
constantly and consistently L and feel
his love through every stage that we go
through through every up and every down
knowing that he's with
us and then we have the ability to
create a difference this
Tish by deciding that we have enough
light to share with so many that we
could bring our home to be their reality
in the workplace by a gesture a kind
face an invitation offering someone to
learn with us just giving whatever we
have in us to light that next Nish that
much more we have the ability to
remember that we are the home that we
could bring to others and by offering it
to others we become ourselves we could
get it right this year we could give
hakes the home that he has been waiting
for us to give him back for so long by
recognizing that the home that we have
the home that we live in the home that
we breathe is the oxygen that'll keep
his children alive and going and it'll
be the air that we breathe in the
mikdash tomorrow mem we'll see you there
[Music]
sh
[Music]
because
[Music]
because
[Music]
beond for
[Music]