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Holocaust Kinot | Rabbi Dr. Aaron Adler
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And uh we should share so to vote and
boy do we need
it. As usual the shur for this year is
dedicated in memory of
Alishimman
of and today as this evening we're
observing
Yamashawa. So the poem of choice is
coming from a special kina elergy that
was written by the bubba the late
baba
bashama. So before we get into it, two
words, two moments of introduction,
preamble. One, something
about and the second about the need
or not so
necessary need to uh author new keynote
for the Shaw to be set on Tishab. Okay.
So we're going to just say a few words
about this because this particular kina
was written for the purpose of saying on
tishab reba didn't know from yashawa in
his boro park headquarters that's for
sure not there was a sorry
he he did I can't believe that in bor
park they observed yaw they don't
observe correct they knew about the
shawah and they knew about it and no
doubt they knew from personal family
experience and and he introduced it to
be said on tishab on tishabuff the
um we know there was the baltov and his
main student the mag of mezvich and his
ma one of his main students was rebi
from lians those of us go to poland
always go to rebi's uh oh is play place
where he was buried in leans one of
rabbi melik's students was rafti from
rupchitz And one of Raali Roches's top
students was Raim Halbisham to be known
as the Reba of Sans. The first Reba of
Sons and he authors the book Dreim. I
can tell you that Arabetic told me once
in a comment that was quite surprising.
He said 19th century there were two
caims worthwhile talking about.
Obviously the first was his grandfather
Salvetic from Brisque. But the other was
quite surprising. He mentioned
Halbashtam the author of the Deim. He
thought he was one of the most
outstanding in the world of Galitzia. I
actually told this over to Rafa, my
great Rasha. He was surprised. He said
he never never heard this from the RV
and he was also very surprised to hear
it. But uh Halvisham for sure was one of
the allstars the great of the of the
facetic world and um he had a grandson
by the name of Rav Benion I'm sorry a
grandson by the name
of right he was Mahalashtam the namesake
of the of the last one was named after
and this Mahalashtam at one point before
he moves to the town of Boba B O B O W A
which is called B in Yiddish. Um he was
the RV in the town Oshven. Oshven is
Ashvitz. Obensson was the Polish name of
Oshvitz. And the Jews called
itin the rebbiten. And they said came
from the worden which means
guestnatim. And it was a town that was
known
for and heal before he becomes reb was
the ro of the town of or is um and and
that's part of his
history. His son was Rabenion Halbasham
who unfortunately perishes uh in Labov
which is Lmberg was called Lmberg. Today
it's Labov today it's in South Ukraine
but it was still part of Galitzia.
Galitzia starts from about Krakow in the
west and goes all the way to the east
across the Polish border and there are
many many towns of Galitzia that
actually belong to Ukraine today. The ma
main one is the city of Leb and that the
Jews called Lmberg and in Lmberg
Rabbitzian Halbashtam who had fled from
Poland was hiding but then the Nazis
caught up with him and he perishes
there. his son, Rabbitian's son, Rablan
Mahalashtam, go runs from place to place
to place to place and finally makes it
to the United States and um and he sets
up the Baba dynasty which I believe he
he's still with us until the year 2000
or 2002 means he he lives uh lives out
his life nicely and he and he sets up
the institutions and so on. So he
authors this kina for the sha. So just
putting it in the context and you will
see that while he does make mention of
the general shawah there's a very heavy
emphasis on the destruction of the
community of uh of of people who believe
people who connected to people who who
who are connected to and yes and so on.
He's not denying that the shawah was
very large. He even makes reference to
the big number, but the emphasis is
clearly on on the type of community that
he lived in that he led. No doubt. And
I'm not faulting him for this. I'm just
saying just we should get an idea
because if you would just read this, you
most probably would get a little bit of
a perverted view of what the shawah was
in its entirety. Whereas there are other
keynote that al of course they mention
destruction of kess midrash and
everything like that but but it's it's
much more it's a much wider wide angle
viewpoint of um what the shawah was all
about and most of the others are much
longer. This is a very very compact poem
that gets in a lot in the few lines that
he writes. So we'll we'll see it inside
and I'll try to draw some comparison to
some of the others. But before we do
that, I'll make reference to the
wonderful publication from the U of the
Kinote Masor Tarav. This is the keynote
of the
U that were translated all of the
keynote with our
great commentary. Now the ruff never sat
and wrote a commentary but what the ruff
did was on in Boston during the summer
he was in Boston people went up to
Boston many people went up to Boston to
listen to the rv explain the keynote and
he would do it for about eight hours
which was unreal basically what the ruff
kicked into motion is what we now have
for at least for the last 20 25 years
schuls not just emptying out after the
tishab chakras with some type of
B reading the book of the keynote
without having any knowledge whatsoever.
Now Rabanim and other guest speakers are
coming into the shs and speaking about
the kinote. I mean I've been doing it
for years. So not eight hours because I
don't have to do it eight hours but at
least min time four and a half hours.
I've done five hours. So, but people are
a lot of people are doing it and and
they're doing it out of the the the way
the ruff taught us this is the way we
should experience tish not run out of sh
but to go over the keynote and explain
them uh what the message was what the
background was and so on and there's
really a lot to do so much so that this
book became very very popular to use it
as the English translation of every kina
and it it then gives us also footnoting
where the sources come from and so on
beyond ond this book previously to it
Rabbi JJ Sha from Yeshiva University
fame but he's also here part of the year
now um he he put out this book the lord
is righteous in all his ways
sadikav in Hebrew and it's reflections
of tishov of the keynote from the ro and
he writes all this up in essay form so
it's not like following the keynote if
you use this book you have to have
whatever edition of keynote with you on
the side to see where he's referencing.
And what he does was he he tackled the
whole issue by topics and he gives you
on the in the table of contents what
he's doing in each uh section. And yes,
he has a few pages about the
relationship to the shawah and the ro's
relationship. Before we just scan rabbi
jar's words, I'm reading from the
introduction of the u edition. It was
put out by um the ed the general editor
was Rabbi Manakim Ginak who is also the
head of Kash at the OU and he writes the
following. A word about the keynote for
the Holocaust is in order. The Rob was
not in favor of reciting keynote that
were composed to commemorate the
Holocaust. His view was that the
traditional tishab keynote expressed
mourning of elud for all Jewish
tragedies and no new keynote were
appropriate. Nonetheless, the practice
has arisen in many communities to recite
keynotes for the Holocaust and we have
included several consistent with our
view that this addition should be of
practical use for the general Jewish
community and not a reflection of the
Ruff's personal practice. This was very
honest, very honest. You have to realize
who we're talking about. Rabbin is a
Talmud Muhok of the Rough and he sets
policy, company policy for the U. And
before I actually saw this, I knew that
I have five selections of Holocaust uh
keynote in this book and I was also
keenly aware of the RV's opinion and I
couldn't believe it in the U
publication. So I said somebody must
write something and I scanned I wrote
carefully all the very there about five
introductions to this book. Different
people wrote different introductions and
Rab Ganak said it clearly in a paragraph
that yes the RV had had objections but
we overruled it because if we wouldn't
put it in there would be shuls that
would feel they couldn't use this
because they need it in the book.
They're going to say keynote for the
Shaw. So Rabbi Shear has about five
pages on the subject and he actually
writes and it's very interesting because
these are seems to be a recorded
sentence. Of course there is no doubt
this is the rough speaking. Of course
there is no doubt that on tishab we
should recite a special kina for those
who were killed by Hitler in the last
hurban we lost more people than in
destruction of the first and second
mikdash. Of course the six million
deserve to be eulogized on tishab but we
do so within the frame of reference of
the keynote that already recite we
already cite that day instead of vna we
mention warms and minds it does not make
much difference because the scenes
described and the words of despair
mourning and grief are the same and and
he goes on to show what the ruff said
about the shawah in the context of
different keynote of
tishab this is Not this is somewhat
controversial because what the rub is
really saying and I'm not saying that
that you know you have to accept the
RV's view or not accept the R's view.
I'm just putting it on the table. The R
was of the opinion that the Shaw was
just the next of the giant tragedies.
Sure it was greater in scope than any
other tragedy. Not just the beta mikdash
but should be seen in the context of the
ongoing tragedy where he cites the puk
and the midrash of balai by the by the
says they cried that night and kazal say
it was it was a crying for generations
to come that all Jewish tragedies would
somehow focus on tishab and for sure
there was room on tishab to make
reference to the sha
that there's no question about but the R
felt that to author keynote you had to
be imbued by the levels
of that he did not believe exists any
longer. That was his point of view. He
felt that when
our and in the in the middle ages Khal
and and Rabu Allevi and Ibenezra in the
days of theim in the middle ages they
still had they didn't have prophecy but
they were still imbued by what's
called and hence the the the kinote
themselves somehow are extensions of the
type of trila that we have from the
anchesset
from the days of beginning of Bay Cheney
but he felt that in the days of the
after the 161 15 16 17 18 19 20th
century it it just falls flat and
therefore um the the the words may not
be imbued with that kind
of and therefore he preferred to use
those uh keynote that was said about the
crusades of 1096 and other crusade other
persecutions and so on who were written
these these were written by Moram
Rutenberg great great great of the
greats of the middle ages to read
between the lines and show that that on
on some level these things happened
again in the period of the shawah that
was his position that was his position
with regard to the ongoing so we we I'm
sure we didn't forget lea sedar not long
ago leaed so by the time you get to
you're signed with relief You're looking
at the watch and trying to figure out
what time it is now in the AM zone. Um,
and you're
singing and finally get to the last
one. So, this is not a kindergarten
song. This is the song of
of it's and hand in hand walking through
the tumultuous Jewish history and each
stage and each era there is an
issue and it gets worse as the story
progresses until it comes to
the and then it comes to
and that's
the will come a day God will wipe away
all the tears it's going to come to an
end and at each juncture what's
left walking together walking together
and so on and therefore the RV
understood the in the context of the
it's just it's the next it was the next
thing on the level and hopefully the end
there shouldn't be more you know that we
have to there was more there was but
there was more right but there was more
so there's going to
be but um there were many communities
that felt the need for for having
something tangible and not having to
homalytically rewrite the medieval
keynote and snuff out the idea of the
sha. There was somebody in 1947 here in
Israel. His name was Biala and he wrote
an unbelievable poem and now we say it
for the Shaw. And then there was um
Rabbi Rosenfeld, Abraham Rosenfeld from
England wrote a sensational poem for the
Shawah for the
forishabove. Uh and then there was Rabbi
Shiman Schwab from the Bruer's community
in Washington Heights also writing a
very very moving uh poem and then you
have the bubba. So they printed all of
these in the in the U book because they
figured look we have something from
Israel from merit Israel we have
something from England we have something
from the kidic world we have something
from the the ger the German Jewish
remnant of the fun Jewish community so
it's a type of mixed bag of different
communities who all suffered in the
shawah and having some rabbitic writer
author pen a kina for the sha.
So and and therefore our you know custom
already is our is that we do say these
so let's see what the bubba had to say
and you should know that bab is the
largest today in in America in America
the largest in Israel is g second is is
bells and and both all three of them
suffered the shawah mean the bell s he
he got out he
He was released but most of his
community perished and the Grebba also
most of G of the world perish and he
makes it and uh and he um there's all
controversy with regard to great
rabbitic leaders whether or otherwise
who when asked what should we do we have
an opportunity to go to is or to flee to
America it was to stay here Chev not
That was the general answer that was
given not by all not by all but by some
of the leading
leading leaders but the the the really
crushing blow is that they got out
themselves at the end of the day and
it's very difficult to accept this very
difficult but again I wasn't there you
know you can't judge and so on but one
thing is true the grebba ended up
resuscitating the whole g so did the
bellza
And so did the Satma by the way and so
did the I mean Satma rebel was saved by
the cast deal with a man and by the
Zionists that's you know the most
anti-ionist of the rebels was saved by
Zionists and by the castner deal with
right and and and the Baba who was able
to come to America so Baba became very
large in the United States as
Baba and Sansa are first cousins they
were halbush right so when I got engaged
uh It's a long time ago. Who remembers?
So my wife's maiden name is Halbashtat.
And the and I told the Ro I forgot Ge
what's a caller's name. Said he asked me
what K's name. I said no halbushtat.
What did he hear? Halbusham. He said ah
Sansza. I said the last thing in the
world my father-in-law from Frankfurt
was a Sansza. The last thing in the
world. But but not a bad uh blurb
because u the Halbashtam family name was
originally Halbashtat. The halves family
name that's all theim were originally
halvishtats and they became halvishams
but the halvishtats didn't change
because you know yeish don't change the
sed right so you have there there are
many halvishams families and I'm sure
they're somehow related um the the rebba
of sons
halbashtam he had a sona halbashtam who
was the rebba of shinv some of us on the
trip we went to Kev of the Shreb. So he
was the son of the sons of but the
Halbasham was the was the grandson
already. And then there was a
greatgrandson whose name was Yukel
Yehuda Halbasham who becomes the founder
and rebans in Natana right so he's a
great grandson of the sons
of he was in the shawah and did go
google go to YouTube and see the movie
about they made a fulllength movie about
the rebuff sons a sensational
sensational person who I had aut of
meeting several times over biscuit a
great uncle of mine who was the reb's
right-hand man name the um so there
there there are some noteworthy people
uh that came out of sans and and which
is buff which is also a cousin to s
correct okay let's look at the
poem so you have one page is the
translation so it's a little bit awkward
because the way my book opened to take
the picture but here it
is All
right. Always remember and mourn all of
Israel. Let your voices be heard on
high. Not a good translation. Not a good
translation. Look at source number one
in the the bottom. I don't have numbers
there but it
says from from we read this on onash on
the second day
of this is the prologue
to right when starts the
song he begins with
[Music]
That's the first line of which right so
so here what does the embryo say
on right the place is called Rabba or
it's Heights and it's not Washington
Heights and it's not Crown
Heights. Some claim it's the Golden
Heights. Why the Golanites? Because Yo
is talking
about Yo is talking about Ben Israel
after the destruction of the first beta
mikdash and Am is being exiled to Bavl.
Now, Bavl is modern day Iraq, which is
due east of Israel, except nobody walked
that way because it was complete desert.
There was the oasis travelers route. It
was an arc. If you went up norththeast
of Israel, you get to Golden Heights.
You continue further where we have
Israeli soldiers there now. And you pass
Kenetra, you get Damas Damascus, and you
continue in this arc, and you make it
down to Baghdad. So that's really the
the uh the route the travels route of of
the exiles who left and as they're
leaving a voice comes out from the
heights. These are the golden heights
and it's Rael who's crying and the
midrash says all of the forefathers
matriarchs and patriarchs cried to God
but God only listened to Rafael. Why?
because of a secret secret uh marking in
her file of what Rael did aid without
calling a press conference to brag about
it with Leia. So Lavan gives
Yakov switches Rael with Leia and Rael
knows that and and and Yakov knew that
his future father-in-law is going to
pull stick. is going to do something and
because of this high level of of modesty
he thought that they will be together in
a totally dark environment. So he Yakov
gives Rael secret signs that will be he
she'll be able to reveal to him that
indeed she's Rael. What Rael does is she
gives over these signs these signals to
her sister Leia so she won't be
embarrassed. And this is indicated by
the in the morning it turns out that it
was Leia. He thought it was Leia. And
that's what Amedra says that at night
time he didn't know because she gave him
the signals. Leia gave the signals. And
this was tremendous on the part of Rael.
She knew she was being stolen away from
Yakov at that moment. And she's willing
to do it not to embarrass the sister
Leia. And God writes it down. This is a
that deserves to be rewarded. And he
saved it in the for posterity for this
moment when Ami is leaving Israel for
Bavl and all of the patriarchs and
matriarchs yell and cry to God. And ah
says I'm going to listen to Rael
Rael and to Rael I will give the
message and they will return to the
borders. So the the looks at this
pulish we don't have the resolution here
we don't have the
sh the sound was heard echoed from the
heights from the
Raman was terrible bitter bitter
tears you would translate this
bitter
tears is
crying she refuses to be consoled
for her sons, her children are not
here. So what the what theb does he just
lifts out of
context their voices can be heard in the
clearly flashing at this clearly. By the
way, this p has caused big problems with
the geographic location of Rael. Is it
is it Bethlehem the traditional place or
might be north of Shallayim in Eris
Byamid those who go on that road number
60 towards Adam right before Adam
there's a place we point this out by
Rafael Benoon several times over that
there is a a a cemetery there and the
Arabs have remained with a with a ke
that they claim is Rael Mayu so maybe
that is really Kev Rael or Maybe Rael
was actually buried in the
Golan. And this jives with something
that Ramban says that our
forefathers say observe the Torah. Well,
is that true? Yakov marries two sisters
Rael and Leia. That's a biblical
violation. That's
giot. How can you have that? So Ramban
says that their forefathers observed
mitzvot only
init but they did not observe mitzvot
and therefore when Jacob returns to
Israel with his family one of the two
has to go and the one who was destined
to die would be Rael that talk to God
about but the idea was that she dies
before before Yakov enters inherits
Israel and one of the resolutions to
this is that she dies before but they
bring they don't bury her on that spot
but the Torah seems to indicate
apologetically that Rael couldn't be
slept to maran but if she was very slept
to be from Golan it's not a long
continuation journey
to so there's a big question as to where
is I
remember used to say so many have been
poured out already at the traditional
burial place
of that it's already her burial place.
It makes no difference if her body is
there or not. It's already but I'm just
pointing out that there's an issue and
this is one of the focal points of the
discussion. So let's continue in the
poem. Germans destroyed our
nation in the wrath of the days of the
wrath of the
war right in cruel and unusual death by
hunger by
thirst never forget the says we are not
allowed to forget this for generations
to come until a day
until we worthy to see the
consolation. And then he goes
on
their yells, their shouts, and their
cries. Theim were the cars, the cattle
cars. And we can still hear the cries
and their shouts as they were stuffed
into the cattle cars. So here he's
talking about the transport, you
know, they were brought transported like
sheep for the to their
slaughter to be burnt in the in the
crerematorium. We're going to remember
the sounds of their shoutings forever.
basically before
God. That's a phrase before
God with the calling of
Israel before they gave up their
lives to God.
Well, yes, many did say
Israel, but not everybody
did. And that has to be said also. That
has to be said also. So, we had a
gentleman
in modern you
know
big and funny every year the night of he
wasn't there in next morning where were
you? I went to the
GB. Okay. I went to Why'd you go to
Greb? He says because my family was
they're all okay. So once a year he
doesn't look like once a year he pays
tribute to his his his heritage goes
back to G. So I said um any he said most
of the family perished. I said um any
any survivors in the family still
giddim? He
says, "I'm the only one with a
kip. All the others, forget about
throwing the in the garbage. They
threw the kip in the garbage. Shabas in
the garbage in the garbage. Everything
went the only one that still believes in
God." And believe me, he's not the only
one because I met other people who also
were Holocaust survivors and they left
it all. And you know
what teach us a long time ago
that don't judge another person until
you're there. And thank God I wasn't
there and thank God we thank God. Thank
God. I don't want to be tested in that
kind of a test. Yeah. But always amazed
me that anybody came out and was
correct. My my father sham said this
many years ago. He said remember was
again with a season. So my father had to
get up very early to catch a in the
regular year work day and catch a train
to Manhattan and he got picked up by his
boss who drove him then to the the place
the the factory that he worked in in New
Jersey. A long trip but in so my father
remember D in the living room. I
remember seeing him in still in the
weekday in the living room but in he
left the house at 5:30 in the morning so
he can catch a minion in Manhattan for
and he said okay it's the season
again you know he said you know after
the sha says you make a kdish that I'm
still making kdesh Friday night
I heard him say that my father answer
the question why stately riches of one
of my sons right he said policy wouldn't
hit level would win would win would have
won. You're fair. You're fair. So there
are all kinds of good reasons that
people continued. So yeah, people are
coming out of the funnels and it's
unbelievable. It's unbelievable what's
happening in the last year and a half in
terms of the who were released. um the
emergence of people who were not
religious before and now becoming deeply
deeply bala to the extent of observance
whatever level it might be. It's it's
absolutely amazing. It's absolutely
amazing that um that that this actually
has happened. You'd think otherwise.
You'd think otherwise. And uh and there
were people
um that you only voices in the dark.
Okay, ye only he deep voices in the
dark. That's a very good point. Very
good. I remember when um Vad Vashm once
asked me to uh to to lead a a
conversation of Holocaust survivors.
They had a program for Holocaust
survivors uh to help deal with the fact
that they're survivors because many of
them didn't say a word for for years to
their family. Now to their
grandchildren, they start talking a
little bit. So uh they need they needed
help post trauma. So so they had people
there that psychologist that historian
that raon different carrying on
conversations with leading basically to
lead conversations but have them talk
out. And the truth of the matter is uh I
was very uh apprehensive because never
did this before. I didn't know what type
of people I'm going to meet and I heard
it was a mixed bag. It was religious,
not religious. It was men, women, really
a mixed bag of 20 people going to sit
around the table. And how do you begin
such a conversation? And you know, most
of you know me already by now. I'm
usually not short of words. And here I
walked into Yadbashm. I didn't have a
clue how I'm going to begin this
conversation. And I looked at the muza
of walking into the building of Yadashem
and I
said, "God, do me a favor. Just put the
first sentence in my mouth. You know
that you made me good enough to continue
to the second sentence. I just need that
first sentence. just get me on the get
me on the track. Just start. And and and
what flew into my head
was I was all set. I was Oh, you don't
know what it says? All right. Where did
I people
there? Not going to embarrass anybody
publicly. There theor talks
about the
part and the part the orchard is is
interpreted in multiple ways multiple
ways. But what happens is the uh this is
the the baka re the aftermath of the
baka revolution the hriicic
persecutions. Rabika is the only one of
the four who comes out sane religiously.
One leaves the fold, one commits
suicide, one this goes to goes to work,
goes to politics, that's also suicide.
Says, so is the only one. One out of
four. One out of four. And and you know
what it means? It means that
great. You don't know what their exit is
going to look like after they go through
and suffer a mammoth tragedy. The same
with the show. So I walk in and I
realized this is going to be the opening
number with this group men that lowi
everything. I said look there are some
people who were religious with the sha
and they survived and they're not
religious today. You see some people
going like this and there are some
people who entered not religious and
they exited religious and there's
another person going like this and some
people who entered religious and exited
religious. another person, two women,
another person who was not religious
before and not religious after all four
scenarios existed. And I said, and it's
all
legitimate, legitimate. They thought I
was going to come, you
know, and everything. No, no, no, no,
no, no. Legitimate. Let's talk about it.
That's how I began. It cleared the ear
because everybody's response was
legitimate and now they can talk. Now
they were able to open up and so on.
It's not simple. What the exit is is not
simple. So one of my trips to Melbourne,
Australia, I met up with a lovely family
whose mother the wife of the mother of
the the wife of the family, she himself
a holocaust survivor and has uh
grandchildren here in Israel. So she
told me that she was invited by her
class. It was a it was a type of betakov
one of the bet stools and uh whatever it
was I think of more than than yashawa
but she was invited to tell her story to
the class to her granddaughter's class.
It's a very nice thing to do but the
principal told her you have to say that
everybody went with Israel and an imam.
So this woman says yeah but that's not
what happened. So the principal says I
know I know I know but you can't say
that to the kids. So she said if I can't
tell the whole story I'm not going to
tell the story at all the story at all.
So she declined the invitation had her
daughter invite the class to come up to
our house here in New Shallay and she
told the story. So what did the
principal accomplish by that? No, you
can't falsify. You cannot falsify
because you have to deal with the fact
that people lost faith in the Holocaust.
You have to deal with it. you can extol
the virtue of those who kept it and it's
it's heroic heroic absolutely heroic. So
it's true that people went
without and that's based on when he dies
he's
saying with the word that's how he
leaves this world and that's where it
became that you say is at the end if you
know it's all over you say
is okay but not everybody can do
that from the point of view of the b of
rebba he doesn't want to deal with those
who didn't he is talking about those who
did right he
says it's true many did but others
didn't that has to be pointed out
also they were great yeshiva and their
students and the masses so it's not just
a shah for Torah it is a shawah
But it's a shaw for the masses. The
masses, right?
They made them work slave they enslaved
them with with terrifying and punishing
work and they murdered them you
know the blood of the children of young
delicate sensitive children are
screaming to
you if you look down from parat from
cayenne and
Cen kills his brother and God
says, "What did you
do? The blood of your brother is
screaming from me from the ground." and
Kazal point out it doesn't
say it
says in
pluralim the blood of why doesn't it say
dam because when he was killed 50% of
humanity potentially was killed so it
was a big big murder every single person
who potentially could have come out of
he and their children and their children
and their children was murdered as well
so it wasn't a one-shot deal of killing
have was killed killing 50% of your men
called
the and the Reb takes this when he talks
about the children.
Okay.
Okay. that uh that the dam was actually
accusing effect because there is a story
of
the not necess not related to the uh
shawat but to pumrums that happened in
his days and he has a a thing called a
dyra with the he summons god to a din
you know how can you do this and it ends
with kadesh I mean it almost sounds like
lenard co but it's the same idea by the
way very similar idea
concentration
that in the concentration camp you can
say the same thing the entire for sure
for sure. So and the last line
is that God should revenge the child and
the
women nobody should left nobody should
be left alive. Where does that ple come
from?
So you look at the next source on the
bottom. It's the third from the end from
I'm sorry. I'm sorry. It's the third to
third third from the top
from the eradicating the seven nations
of Cananan. And there it says
eradicate don't leave anyone alive with
regard to it. Not just this sounds very
harsh but teach us and
it's that teaches us that Yeshua
actually sends out letters to the seven
nations and offers them a choice and
choice number one was that they should
all become geraf not gimm not converts
but residents of Israel with the absum
um assuming the responsibilities of the
seven mitzvot of mit and they will be
okay the other is if they don't want to
do that, they can pack their bags and
leave. And if they don't want to do
that, we're going to beat them. That's
all. And if we do have to do
that didn't want locals who are idol
practicers, you know, to be on hand. And
therefore, the Reb uses this out of
context. No Nazi should remain alive.
They still there's still handful.
They're still Well, they should do it
yet right today. Right. Right. Right.
Look, we have a problem. Not I'm not as
they say I'm not sitting there in
government to make decisions. The
Israeli court the Israeli law has it
that terrorist murder terrorists there
can be a capital punishment. They can be
and um we just don't do it for a variety
of reasons. For a variety of reasons we
don't do it. Um, one is that if they
would murder, if they would execute
right now all the the uh prisoners that
we have, and we do have quite a few, uh,
they would simply slaughter all the
hostages. That's a it's a death blow to
them, too. We know that. But again, I
I'm not speaking in the name of the
government. I'm just saying
that because
um, as the R pointed out in the name of
his grandfather, Amal is not necessarily
a nation. It's a policy
of spelled out beautifully in
the it's total annihilation of the
Jewish people. So if you assign a Mullik
status to Nazi Germany
then the truth is at first the like they
were against receiving uh all the
various reparation fund monies in this
country rocked in 1951 when Bengurian
made a deal with with Adenhau the
president of Germany for these monies
later and the rub believed you shouldn't
buy any German products and everything
everything was a mullik but truth is
late in life the rough softened up
softened up already and he realized that
now we're already second third
generation of Germans they're not Nazis
and it's just a different country of all
things the closest diplomatic country to
Israel today is Germany it's a very very
ironic but it but it's true it happens
to be true and um and and and many
Germans have expressed remorse there are
Germans who come to Israel to volunteer
on kibbutim and so on just to do
something to do nothing. Um I I may have
said over the the story that happened to
me once in in Avitz where I have a group
there and we were right outside um u
okay one of the blocks of one of the
buildings and a gentleman comes over me
he was about 40 years old look about 40
and he asked me if I'm Jewish. I thought
that was very funny you know like no I'm
actually Chinese but I'm wearing a mask.
Are you Jewish? Okay, what what can I do
for you? He says would you forgive me? I
said for what? He said, "For all of this
in Avitz," I said, "Well, look, you
know, you you look like you're a little
younger than me. I wasn't here. You
weren't here. We weren't here. What are
you asking forgiveness for?" So, he
tells me, "Doesn't it say in your
Torah?" He doesn't say Bible. He says,
"In your Torah, doesn't it say that God
will punish three or four generations?"
So I looked at him and I
said, you know, that verse was dealt
with by our sages by in contrast to
the it says that God will not punish
someone for the sins of his father.
Won't won't punish a father for the sins
of the son. Everyone has their own
record.
So how does that jive with three or four
generations down the run? So
say if the third fourth generation
continue in the way of the grandfather
and great-grandfather they're going to
get the bill for everybody. If not then
everybody has a clean slate. And I told
this guy I said look I don't know what
your background is but it was pretty
clear that he's got a grandfather who
was there and and he's walking around
with this guilt. And I said, "If you
weren't here and you
disavow all of this that you know you
were not part of it and you wouldn't
have been part of it, then God won't
hold you accountable." This man took a
sigh of relief. A sigh of relief. Like a
whole burden off his shoulder right then
and there. And we walked away and I
looked up and I said, "Okay, now I know
why you put me here right there that
day." Because the rough talked about
And it's an article by the and it's
there's
limited limited is do me a favor stock
100 check I'll give it over there I
can't get there or some other
things you can do a lot of things by
messenger the things you can't do you
can't fast for somebody by you can't eat
matzah for somebody by you know there's
certain things you have to do but the
things in that you can do with that's
called it's limited has a beginning has
an end it's defined and so on. And then
the
said ongoing says that's life. That's
life. Says God sends you from place to
place. You don't even realize it's a but
sometimes afterwards you realize you
were put there. You were sitting next to
somebody on the plane for a reason
because he needed some to know something
and you filled in that information and
you made him feel good. like the woman
sitting next to me in the plane who was
so nervous about uh flying and had to
calm her down the whole flight. And we
came to the landing, she's ready to go
bananas. So I said, "Listen, there's
nothing flying. Landing is very easy.
It's nothing more than a controlled free
fall out of the
sky." And she was ready to jump out the
window. I got that from Microsoft
simulator. That's the definition. It's a
controlled free fall out of the sky. So
let's just continue and finish this. It
says it's not that's that word is not
but the word
is one second let me just read it right
I know I was a
mistake give me a second I'll find it
it's river vote thank you it's river
vote right English it's river vote
tens of thousands of Torah and study of
Torah. Here there was a little problem
with the with the word what the word
went and the translation in
English was we will eulogize with songs
of
desolation. There were shels, mikdash,
jewels that were burnt and we were
forced to witness it. We saw it with our
own
eyes that comes from this the third to
the last
sign what's called
the if somebody causes fire and does
damage. So the Torah says and it it
burnt his uh his silo or his field and
everything. So you you you're
responsible. So here whips this out and
he says this was all they will pay in
the language of the Torah. The burners
will will pay for those who are
victims. That's the second to the last
from that we know from the we know
this is talking about that is going to
get back at those who who harmed Davidid
and obviously by extrapolation later
generations. It means that God will
judge those nations that are full of
bodies. And the idea being I went to
Rashan Falh to see how he how he
understood this puk and he said that
obviously it wasn't that they're full of
bodies they kill people and on their
record are all the body numbers and so
on and and it's applied to Nazi Germany
perfectly by the
rebot and then he
reads and the the heavens will will will
yell and the and the earth will shake
for the thousands of of centers of
Torah.
the countries in Europe and their
communities, those who who kept the
tradition to connected with the pure
faith. The day that we were exiled from
Israel almost 2,000 years
ago, there was never such destruction.
Awesome, terrible destruction.
So you see in the last two paragraphs
his focus is on his life. Yes. On his
life. It's very clear. It's very
clear. God should have compassion on
those who survived
remnants to the camps of
the of the
mser 10 times the number of those who
left Egypt. How many left Egypt? 600,000
times 10 is 6
million mdash to be
rebuilt and he will he will give us the
twice. I think what he has in mind is
the last verse on the
page the double and I've spoken about
this often that the medish in Yeshu says
he father that beat he he he had already
the remedy on the shelf
because 110 years later is going to
write you're going to cry you're going
to cry at night so why is there a double
expression of crying so the med says has
all kinds of answers. One is first beta
mikdash, second beta mikdash, derd take
on that was that within the context of
every great tragedy, you also have the
individual who suffers and we shouldn't
lose
sight on
there's we're doing it for the last 20
years. Every person has a name. I
remember last year I was in Phoenix,
Arizona to give a lecture and the Jewish
community center had a yashawa and I
just went there to be with them, not
with the people ploing away about uh
Jewish studies and uh and and and they
asked people to come up and say names,
you know, for family. Okay, Rakasha, I
have family names also to say and
remember saying some names at this
Yashaw thing, but they do it here in the
Knesset and other
places in schools. Every person has a
name not to forget the individual and DV
said that's why on some of the keynote
the focus is on particular individuals
the children of the the the and others
particular particular people and and I
think the Reb also was talking about
the and there's the national tragedy and
we need national and that's why gives us
the double because of the double cry
of Yeah, for sure.
The second one is God. Don't just
comfort the people, also comfort. Okay,
that's And by the way, there's some
basis to there's some basis to it.
There's some basis. The idea that is
that needs that's very good that can be
said as well. Um it was the rebent in
the ghetto who read and I heard this
from he read
the which means even if I'm in the
valley of death I won't fear the evil
because you're holding my hand. So the
Reb read
it I won't fear
but she says I feel
horrible you also have to be here in
this mess. The idea
of that God is with us in Sah and the
Reb says that theb says it's bad enough
that I have to be in this s you also
have to be here in the sun. We say on a
sukas yes it
says God will take us out of but he
ought to take himself out also because
he was also
there tells I am going down personally
to take them out and we say it on
the father used to say you notice that
name is not there in the what happened
to him? He's the main personality
in the answer is if you think you need
aua we would have given up a long time
ago. You don't need
au that's
all. And and and here the brings us
to it's it's an unbelievable poem. It's
an unbelievable poem. Short, compact,
says a lot. None of them say it all
because you can't say it all. But
nevertheless, it's a it's a very very
very good poem for
for By the way, a little of an
announcement. I got notice from Rabbi
Shore from the OU just a few days ago
that next Wednesday there will be no
shirim here. It's yum kon and the center
is actually putting up online a ceremony
from at 11:00 and uh the he just said
that there won't because of yon there
won't be formal shirim here uh so m will
meet in two weeks time