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Charlie Kirk’s Wife’s Daring Statement
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It went viral. Everyone knows about the
Charlie Kirk incident that is quite
familiar amongst the whole entire world.
But what is less familiar is what
happened in an auditorium in a stadium
in front of 300,000 people when the wife
Mrs. Kirk of the wife of Charlie Kirk
Mrs. Kirk actually went ahead and based
on writings in the gospel I was informed
was went out and said that I officially
am I forgive the killer for what he did.
Now in Jewish literature this is not so
simple. We have rules and ramifications
for everything including when one should
be m when one should forgive someone for
doing something. Even a Jew that does
something that is an is you're allowed
to hate him if he does it a blatant isur
something that is completely off the
books he has a status of a rash. And
when you're dealing with a Jew so you're
supposed to hate the actions maybe not
the person himself as opposed to a
who does an action like this. So we have
a rule clearly that every has to
keep seven mitzvah no only seven not 613
straightforward not killing adultery
stealing and the like and if they are
over one of them if they don't keep to
one of them so then then they
immediately deserve to be killed for
what they are doing which is exactly
what this person deserves the death
penalty which hopefully the state over
there which has the death penalty will
give it to him for what he definitely
deserves.
If a person even is wants to and do
chuva at the end of the day if he's the
death penalty is there there's one other
an important point to mention is that we
have a rule that the rabbis bring very
often if someone has raman if someone
has pity on people who are not deservant
of pity who are who are cruel so then in
the end of the day you will be cruel to
those people that deserve pity a person
has to know there are guidelines and
boundaries in everything we do and
everything has to be done in the right
time and place and we don't st give ma
just because it sounds good on on tape
or because it has to do like that person
has to know when and where especially as
the mish brings down in the in the laws
of forgiveness he brings it if the
person doesn't come to ask forgiveness
and this so maybe necessarily you do not
you're not required to come and give
forgiveness having said that since this
happened exactly during this time period
when we are sitting in the 10 days of
repentance it is kadai that we should
learn from this to build from this that
if someone who is not Jewish can do such
a event even though she probably did not
mean it I think it was more just because
it was written in the book and b it was
for the microphone and for the publicity
a little bit but I'm not going to try to
be facitious in the end of the day we
have to go ahead and learn from this the
important that is brought during this
time period and that is that whenever we
say the 13 of we say
we say the 30 m of repentance
of mercy in front of Hashem. We say
Hashem. Hashem. Why do we say the name
Hashem twice? Because the Gmorrah says
in Rosh Shaan 17a that it says Hashem
before the before the sin. And Hashem is
after the Hashem our God does the same
before and after. What does that mean?
That even after we sin, he erases the
sin so much that he doesn't even feel
it. Whenever you have a fallout with
Lenu, your spouse or a friend, someone
that you were very close to, but you had
a serious fallout between you. Yes,
eventually hopefully you make amends.
But even after the amends are made, we
always know there's just it's just not
the same. It's not what it used to be. I
can't, you know, I can't forget it. It
can't put it behind me. those those
those those grudges those belligering
types of frustrations still remain in
the back of your mind says the this is
what we say when we say the 13 midotem
that Hashem erases he forgets it as if
it didn't exist we start a fresh slate
he wants us to build ourselves from
fresh again and he doesn't hold any
grudges incredible how Hashem is capable
of doing such a thing and how are we to
this says and daffod 17 the rule and how
we are able to get to such a stage that
Hashem will give us a full
aqu quiddle he'll be able to acquit us
which is something we're begging for it
keeps us alive for the whole entire year
it gives us a profitable year in every
type of way so the says
if a person is willing to relinquish on
his
frustrations on his irritations at
someone else someone who deserves it for
me to be angry at him cuz he embarrassed
me or he said something incorrect or he
did things that were out of place and
I'm a person goes ahead and lets it go
and when he comes to apologize they say
no problem let's be friends again and I
try to make it up with him we go so to
someone who even someone who did
something wrong and he did in the wrong
way but he's no you carry the iniquity
again for someone who did something like
speaking incorrectly or this not extreme
So then such a person is deservant of
receiving
the same way reciprocated back to him
because you are willing to relinquish to
your friend that relinquishes to you.
He's willing to go ahead and oversee
what you did to a certain extent and
erase it scot-free, which is something
that is so important and so fantastic to
be able to get such a level as the Torah
writes. And with this, I'm finishing
that to realize that when we say in the
we say who is like you what does it
mean? Who is like you? It means that
even though I'm sitting and doing
something wrong to Hashem, he still
keeps me alive. My the person's heart is
pumping, his pulse is going, his lungs
are breathing, and even in the process
when he's going ahead and rebelling and
doing something incorrect to Hashem,
Hashem still has. So yes, we do have to
learn the lesson of of acquiescing, of
understanding the needs of someone else,
of doing things. When a person does an
act of rishoot of absolute evil, you
always have to check up with your rabbi
when and where, but especially in this
case, especially when it's a to a
there's not much of a question
about it that there's no room for
forgiveness. But in the end of the day,
we do have to learn from this idea. And
I have no question that that's why this
thing abrupted at this stage in order to
teach us that yes, we can do it. It's
not easy. Sometimes it's frustrating and
sometimes we don't know how or why or to
what extent the person did what he did
and it hurts. He hurt he hurt me. But in
the end of the day if I'm able to give
it over you hurt au then aju will also
acquies to you also will also give
forgiveness to you. That is the power of
being able to beem
not only saying the words but living
them before the because I also am going
to go ahead and pull that forgiveness
which I want to do on someone else. I'll
end with a a story from the state who
lived approximately 60 70 years ago who
was intar about 50 60 years ago and he
was the biggest in the whole was
unbelievable and there was another
person there who was so jealous of him
so he rigged him up with the cleaner
lady over there and he paid her he said
I'm going to pay you a nice hefty amount
if you can go ahead and say
god forbid to say that themed
that was uh inappropriate with you with
inappropriate. She needed the money
desperately and she went ahead and said
I will do it. So she went ahead and
started telling people in the around
about themed and how out of place he was
etc. And he stayed still he stayed
quiet.
Eventually this person within that week
within that week the person who set her
up he had a quick heart attack and he
died immediately very quickly. This the
story was stood by Michelle Madrron who
knew about the story firsthand. The lady
admitted that she was being held up to
the uh to this and he was willing to pay
her. She ended up not getting her money
because the guy died. A she ended up
losing her job because they fired her
for lying in the first place and she
admitted that she lied.
But at the same time, this day had no to
that person. He wasn't upset with the
person. On the contrary, he said not to
make it a public affair. don't let them
know what he did because he felt bad for
his widow. He didn't want his widow to
understand what he had done. So he was
very maked very stringent to make sure
that things are quiet.
Sometimes a person has to know not to
always have the last word. It's hard. I
get frustrated when I'm in the house. I
get irritated when I'm by the neighbor.
I get annoyed by the rabbi or by the
person sitting next to me in sh. We got
it. We've all got those frustrations.
Things happen all the time. It doesn't
work the way we want it. But a person
who knows how to control those
frustrations, how to put them in place,
how to understand and see things in the
big picture.
on yum keeper with