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hi everyone so tomorrow night is the
holiday of lagba Omer if you're in
Israel you're going to notice children
festively lighting bonfires and making
you know marshmallows and s'mores and
maybe singing songs about the Marco
Rebellion you're gonna notice droves of
people going to Monroe and the gravesite
of the famous China it exchange you're
going to notice lots of grumpy people
including myself closing the windows and
taking their laundry to avoid all that
smoke and you're also going to notice
that from this day on people are going
to stop observing the morning rituals
that we have observed you know during
this Omar time from Passover until now
such as not getting haircuts not shaving
not hearing live music not getting
married and things like that
now if you're new to Torah uh observance
or even if you aren't it might kind of
take the cake as one of the stranger
Jewish practices log Wilmer doesn't
appear anywhere in the Torah if you look
for a hint for it in the profits you're
gonna walk away disappointed and even in
the writing of the sage it's like
mentioned but not in any way that really
resembles the modern practice of blogger
and you really only see this developing
later on so what is this day all about
when we look at the sources we might
find ourselves with more questions and
answers if we go back to the ancient
text there seem to be main three three
main like
uh main three contexts for uh this
holiday so first and like probably the
most famous reference is in the
Babylonian talmud and attracted and
bfmote we learned that about the death
of the students of Rabbi Akiva Rabbi
Akiva was probably the greatest stage
surely in his generation maybe ever
um and although he only began to study
at the age of 40 he was arguably uh you
know really like the greatest scholar
now we're taught in the tract awe mode
that the students of Arabic the Rabbi
Akiva had 24 000 students and they died
between Passover and Shavuot and it says
let's tell him that they died uh in some
kind of plague because they were not
respectful to one another now there's a
question if they actually what they
actually died from because the Tomlin
says there was a play like an illness
um some argued that maybe it's hinting
uh to the fact that they actually died
in the barkova Rebellion which we'll get
to in a moment sometimes the talmud had
to censor itself so it's to not create
suspicion to the Jews you know there was
a fear that uh you know of anti-Semitism
so maybe Jews wanted to kind of like
quiet down there you know the stories of
the courage and Rebellion against the
Romans but either way
we have this idea that the students of
Rabbi Akiva died on these days so that's
the conventional explanation for why we
don't shave or get haircuts or get
married or listen to music during the
counting of the Omer uh but we also know
that all of that morning and sadness
stops uh according to most on lagba Omer
so there's an oral tradition written
down by the sages in the Middle Ages
after the talmud but this is because
Omar the students of Rabbi Akiva stopped
dying so that's you know reason kind of
Direction number one the second sort of
Direction given for why we celebrate
lagba Omer is maybe a little bit
connected to that source and that it's
this idea that this is a day that
symbolizes Jewish rebellions against the
Romans there's not a whole lot of
historical evidence like exactly why
it's log by Omer this was something that
was very much like emphasized though by
early Zionism
um perhaps it's because as I said before
maybe Rabbi akiva's students died in the
Rebellion there's also some evidence
from Josephus that the previous
Rebellion the Great Rebellion that led
to the destruction of the temple
um happened around this time of year
some people have said that you know the
idea of lighting bonfires was how people
used to Signal the beginning of the
Rebellion for one another uh there was
also an ancient tradition of children uh
like doing archery games online so some
people believe that this is because the
rebellion was like have you know either
a successful battle or maybe began on
lagba Omer the third Direction has to do
with Rabbi Shimon baryokai the Great
Sage ravish who was a student of Rabbi
Akiva was considered the greatest Jewish
Mystic who brought who passed down the
mystical tradition and there's a
tradition in the Czar the greatest
mystical writing that Rabbi Shimon died
on lagaba Omer so here's the thing all
of these could be an explanation for why
it's like a meaningful time but none of
those explanations seem to tell us why
it's a happy timer at the very least a
time that we stop mourning like if you
look at all those reasons they don't
seem very happy what does it even mean
that the students of Rabbi Akiva stop
dying like a plague of deaths ended
because they dead like we know from
other sources that Rabbi akiva's
students total 24 000 and what Rapha
Akiva put into getting those students
we're told that he left his wife for 24
years to teach all those students just
think about like your average ivy league
college in America is you know 20
something thousand students in in Hebrew
University in Israel that has six
campuses
there are 23 500 students I looked I
Googled that today right like imagine if
all of the doctors you know all the
medical students and all the law
students and all the social work
students all the psychologists everybody
was just studying Torah and that's like
what the loss was and then think about
the Rebellion both the Great Rebellion
uh before the destruction of the temple
and the Barbacoa Rebellion after that
ended in tremendous tragedy the
destruction of the temple and the Exile
of the Jewish Community why would we ask
what
and if it's the third reason Rabbi
Shimon baryokai died on that day is a
bad reason to celebrate we lost the
greatest Jewish Mystic like you could
literally take all of these explanations
and use them as a perfectly reasonable
description of why we would have
traditions of mourning not as reasons
for stopping mourning it doesn't seem
happy and all this seems absolutely nuts
but when you look a little closer I
think you can learn something really
deep from the kind of you know like
meeting of all of these different uh
reasons that have been brought for this
special day let's start with Rabbi Akiva
where we learned in the talmud is that
there was a serious chance that all of
Torah would be forgotten
but then after all the students died
right back even started a new Yeshiva
and what we're taught in the town was
that he only had five students five
students
that essentially carried on the Torah as
like the leaders of the oral tradition
for the next 2000 years the students
were Robbie Mayer Rabbi yossi Rabbi
Shimon hi Rabbi Yehuda Rabbi elazar and
it says that they alone continue the
Torah we learn that if you read like a
random mishnah that's not attributed to
anyone which is most of the mishnahs you
should attribute to Robbie Mayer Who was
a student of rabi Akiva we're taught
that the midrash is to be attributed to
those students of Rabbi Akiva if you
read a mystical work it's attributed to
rabi Shimon baryokaya student of so to
understand the magnitude of who Rabbi
Akiva was and what he did and what his
students did was that basically through
the funnel of Rabbi Akiva and his five
students all of the world of Torah
essentially was reborn and then let's
look at the Rebellion it's true that the
rebellions ended in disaster physically
but imagine a world where we hadn't
rebelled let's say we hadn't rebelled
against the Romans
it's not so hard to imagine what Our
Fate would have been because we can look
at all the other places that were
conquered by Romans and didn't Rebel the
Jews never gave in with the last bit of
strength that we had we rebelled and the
temple was destroyed and we were
rebelled again and we lost again but the
spirit was that the whole world can be
Roman everyone can say that the world is
one way that this is truth but a Jew
wouldn't bow it's the Maccabee Spirit it
never died it was that spirit that
although we were physically crushed we
were sustained for two thousand years of
Exile it's that spirit that will allowed
us to survive and then look at Ravi
Shimon yes Rabbi Shimon died that day
died that day but the mystical tradition
teaches that at his bed while he was
dying he
he shared the secrets of the mystical
Torah and it says that his bed was
actually consumed with fire there's like
a thread going through all these stories
if you put together all the reasons for
log Balmer they all concentrated in one
period of time that time at the end of
the temple but the beginning of like a
new type of Torah new type of Judaism
like everything was destroyed and
everything's starting over the world of
Torah was destroyed like when you think
about the sheer amount of Torah that
could have been learned from 24 000
Scholars just going around Israel and
teaching Torah it was all destroyed but
what did we get we got a whole new way
of learning because before that the oral
Torah had been an oral tradition being
passed down but because of the death of
all of these students there was an
actual fear that the oral tradition
would be lost and then for the first
time the oral tradition was written down
we got that mission that we got the
talmud it became accessible ironically
to more people than ever we're still
studying these texts so while our look
and then look at the look at the
rebellions our physical destruction you
know our physical nation and and Temple
were destroyed right but the fighting
Spirit was like immortalized that would
you know that spirit that would allow us
to rebirth with the re-establishment of
the state of Israel after 2000 years and
it's the day we lost but we gained the
revelation of mystical you know secrets
that would sustain us for two thousand
years of Exile spiritually so maybe
that's the secret of lagba Omer like and
and of the Jewish people as a whole
maybe that ability to see lockba Omer as
what although it looks like a sad day to
see it as a day at the end of mourning
it's like we don't deny the sadness we
don't say these are happy days we say
these are the end of mourning we say
like we recognize the sadness we mourn
but we also stop mourning the Jewish
people are special because we stop
mourning like Rabbi Akiva he saw his
entire work crumble it would have been
so easy for him to Despair and say like
okay this whole thing isn't working and
how easy would it have been for the Jews
to after the first rebellion was crushed
to just say whatever enough let's just
get along with our Roman occupiers but
they didn't
had to hide
in a cave for years and years because he
spoke out against the Romans like he
could have just said enough why do we
have to keep fighting but he didn't and
it's like all of those things unite the
reasons that we have for long but Omar
you know my son Akiva I love his school
and they're studying now the subject of
how to keep your faith in Hashem in the
face of tragedy and so the kids were
asked to go interview somebody who kept
their faith in the face of a horrible
thing and so my son our son Akiva
decided to interview Rina Ariel whose
daughter Halal was killed by a terrorist
in her bed and he said he asked her
um you know like how did you you must
have had a crisis of Faith how did you
overcome that and she goes why do you
think I had a crisis of Faith she's out
of Crisis and I have had faith I didn't
have a crisis of faith I had a crisis
with faith
and then she went on to tell our son how
you know all of what you know everything
that that she did that she does and
everything her husband does to
commemorate Halal you know uh creating
love you know fostering love of the land
and love of the Temple Mount and you
know that's that is you that she was
like encapsulating that spirit
um and you know that that's the spirit
that sustained us throughout 2000 years
of Exile
and I think there's another thing here
you know
the Rabbi Akiva dusted off the world of
Torah dusted off that tragedy and
created the world of Torah from 5 000
from five students you know
he didn't try to make a huge Yeshiva
again he had 24 000 students but look
carefully at what the talmud says so
they didn't treat each other properly
that's why they died
now that's so strange of all reasons
because we know that Rabbi Akiva always
emphasized teaching love your neighbor
as yourself love your neighbors they'll
be taught so many students but they
didn't really get the main idea the
message and then he taught five students
but what students in a whole world of
Darkness five people really got it and
they taught the entire world you know
Rabbi Shimon one person taught the
entire mystical tradition that
eventually you know sustained us for for
two thousand years and we live in a
world where quantity is so often you
know taken as proof of something being
right like follow the experts we're told
look how many countries condemn Israel
we're told in the time of the you know
before the Holocaust zionists like
jabatinski warned that a disaster was
coming but they were a minority the
majority wanted to stay in Europe and
and didn't believe him didn't believe
the zionists that this is you know
disaster was coming a lot of people here
even in our own Fellowship probably have
an opinion or a way of you know seeing
things different from people in their
Community or even their own family
people say look at everybody else you're
the one who's figured it out and it's
like Rabbi Akiva
tells us that Torah is not always
discovered by following the majority but
sometimes it's by a few that are willing
to be loyal to that which they know to
be true and from them Springs forth a
transformation a greater understanding
and so maybe this holiday is also a
tribute to those few who don't follow
the crowd but are willing to be a Small
Voice of Truth that reverberate you know
great courage in Divine 7 7 it says that
Hashem chose us not because he says not
because you are more numerous than any
people did the Lord Delight in you and
choose you for you are the least of all
the people like it says Hashem tells us
Hashem did not choose us because we are
the majority and we have the majority
opinion that everybody listens to and
that's really popular no he says you're
the least you're the fewest you're the
quiet small voice but because you
forefathers followed me that is why
Hashem loves us right follow that's why
I love you Hashem tells us I so perhaps
you know this holiday is a tribute to
that spirit that Spirit that's willing
to be a small voice that speaks the
truth no matter what everybody else
thinks that that voice is you know that
that small group that's willing to say
no matter what happens we dust ourselves
off we get back up and we keep on
fighting we keep on going that is the
spirit and and you know it's an
interesting thing most holidays we kind
of look at them as having a diminishing
value like if you look at pesoff you
know Passover how we celebrate it today
is nice but it's so diminished compared
to how our forefathers celebrated it
with you know the temple and the and the
you know pesach offering and there was
so much more you know think about our
our forefathers celebrating Shavuot they
didn't just have you know prayer in the
synagogue or in their homes but they
were able to bring the big Korean bring
the first fruits to the temple like
everything seems so much richer and
today it's like just a shadow of what
used to be but lagba Omar is a really
interesting holiday because it seems
like a holiday that every year is
getting stronger and stronger like when
I was growing up a lot about Omar was
like hardly a big deal hardly a thing
and like with every year goes by you
hear more and more log but one more
celebrations more people are like
looking into this and studying it and
talking about it it's a holiday that you
know really developed so much more
recently and it's become so much richer
than it ever was in the past and maybe
that's a sign that that Spirit of Vlog
of Omar and everything Omar represents
is getting stronger and stronger with
the return from the Exile and the
re-establishment of Israel like that
Spirit of of of rising up from the dust
that Spirit of coming from the
destruction of the Holocaust to creating
the state of Israel that spirit is
Awakening and getting stronger and
stronger every day so with that I wish
you guys a happy and meaningful Omer bye
everyone