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la.
Don't gossip. Don't
keep your mouth closed. Avoid the
silence.
everyone
evil
keep
your soul shine
La
speak to
gossip. [singing]
Silence.
Start
a fight. If you have good
harmful word,
keep the tongue warm.
We are back here on our Wednesday night
stump. The rabbi we're after
you guys will ask some questions
will give us the answers. Tonight's show
is going to be for the
bench
and all of AI is and all the righteous
noises that continue to watch us,
continue to learn with us, continue to
support the organization and continue to
be partners with us in this
extraordinary uh kiru revolution that
the organization is doing over the last
10 years. Anyone that wants to donate
can donate on bezem.org. And also as a
reminder for anyone that is not
familiar, we have a sadik that uh for
many years has been going to Kevl
uh to do special prayers for people and
uh he even makes a recording of the uh
prayer that he makes for each individual
person which we send it to them. Uh and
uh this uh Sunday is the yard site of
Menu. It's the art site of Menu where
there is going to be countless people
actually going to Rael and Sadik is
willing to go there even this year. This
is the first time over the last 10 years
that he's been willing to do that uh for
the sake of Israel for this to help the
organization to help people. So, anyone
that wants to get a special blessing and
a recording of that blessing uh from us
can go to our website, the shop page,
and get the Kevin uh uh blessing uh over
there. It's a uh $250, I believe, and uh
you'll get a of course uh you'll get the
blessing, you'll get the recording of
it, and uh certainly we look forward to
those blessings being fulfilled. If you
don't want to, you don't want to, you
know, there's no obligation. It's not
Shabbat that you have to, but certainly
it's something that brings a lot of
people uh, you know, salvations,
blessings, and the people that uh get
it, usually it's the same exact people
over and over again because they see it
obviously as something fruitful. So,
it's one way to uh to help the Sadik, to
help the organization, and to also help
yourself. Uh secondly, anyone that wants
to get the uh the Kiru boxes, the Kiru
boxes are also on the Bezm shop, you can
get them. And uh the uh the uh sponsors
are saying that uh we could continue for
another day for another 20 another 20 uh
of these uh for free for anyone that
buys one gets one free. Uh so one is for
yourself, one is to do Kiru with. So uh
anyone that wants to get one can get one
and you'll get one for free. And of
course, the smart people that are also
uh you know have the ability to
financially that want to sponsor or or
want to get 10 of them or 20 of them or
so on, there's a very big discount uh
there as well. It's uh uh instead of it
being uh $1,500, it's uh it's only
$1,000. So that
is also available on the store. Uh
lastly, anyone that wants to order books
or uh the SR cards, of course, you could
always go to the Kiru store that we have
kirutore.org.
So with that being said, Karim, we'll
get started. There's a very very
interesting deep subject that I am sure
has been on your mind at some point in
your life and you did not have an answer
for it.
Is an extraordinary para. We learn about
au. Even more so we learn about how runs
the world and uh in Hashem tells
that Isel is going to be slaves
in Egypt for 400 years and only after
the Amorites, the Canaanite nation of
the Amorites sins fulfill their measure
will am be allowed and gifted. ed the
land of Israel.
This is a prime example of Hashem's
knowledge of the future.
And of course, if Hashem knows the
future, the famous question is,
do we still have free choice?
This very deep and important question
will be addressed among other things.
And after that, you guys will ask some
questions and will give us the answers.
So we start off
where
tells
go for yourself from your land from your
relatives. Leave leave the comfort zone
which is something that many people have
to do as part of their chuva as part of
their conversion. You have to leave that
comfort zone that you live in where
you're you know surrounded by goim.
You're surrounded by idolattors. you're
surrounded by people that are not uh
living in a Jewish community that uh
praying every day to Hashem. Uh and uh
in order for you to do chuva, in order
for you to convert, you have to live in
a Jewish community. It's very very
necessary. And I know that some of you
have asked me about different uh
strategies. I even have a student from
England that uh years ago came to me and
uh asked me about uh you know different
things and uh guidance for conversion
and the biggest battle that she had over
the years among the divorce and the
complications of life and so on was
moving to a Jewish community
because her ex-husband became
anti-semite
became an anti-semite
and uh she wanted to convert her
daughters literally learned Hebrew
better than Hebrew speakers already by
the age of like six or seven and uh but
she could not convert because she
couldn't move to Jewish community
because of the court situation. Well,
I'd like to tell you that despite all of
the difficulties, despite all of the
endless endless tests that this woman
had,
she is finally converted today.
very difficult battle, very difficult
test. But of course, this was one of the
ones that wanted it and knew her heart
and after testing her over and over
again for years,
she merited becoming part of Israel,
many people look for shortcuts. Many
people look for different things. It
doesn't work. It simply does not work.
Even if somebody's going to convert you
despite you living in the end of the
world where the your next door neighbor
is a cow or perhaps a mountain and
they'll convert you anyway, all you're
doing is you're asking for problems. As
I told one of my dear students today
that wants to convert with his family.
Why? Because you need the Jewish
community. You need to go to synagogue.
You need to have a yeshiva for your
kids. And uh if you are a uh someone
that has a uh somebody to teach you, a
rabbi that's going to teach you on a
regular basis at home, no problem. But
most people don't have that. Most people
say, "Well, you know, why can't I just
read books to my kids?" It's not enough.
It's not enough. You need Judaism and uh
especially people that are new to it. So
is told by and commanded by to leave.
Leave is comfort zone.
And in the process
his number one talid
aside from
Ara his number one Talmid was his nephew
Lot Lot decides
to leave Aram and go to why there's more
money over there. There's more
materialism over there and also there's
no rabbis over there. SO MY RABBI IS NOT
GOING TO HAVE NOT have the ability to
tell me what to do over there. It's not
going to tell me what to do, what to
give, if I'm allowed to steal, not
allowed to steal. Lot goes. And of
course, as the par tells us, a war
begins. The five kings versus the four
kings. In the process,
the
disaster of a lifetime happens to Lot
where he becomes a hostage. Why does he
become a hostage? Why don't they just
kill him like everybody else?
They killed a lot of people. Why did
they just kill him? Because he looked
exactly like au. And the midrash says
because he looked like au. These kings
wanted to show their people that they
captured au because they knew that Abrau
is the man of God. He's the most
powerful man in the world. But if they
captured him, he's a prisoner. Then they
really are the kings of the world.
So what happens
in chapter 14 verse number 14? It says
and when Abraham heard that his kinsmen
was taken captive, he armed his
disciples who had been born in his house
318 and he pursued them as far as Dan.
Interestingly, even though this was not
originally part of the sh of course a
bahu sends us many messages and we
listen to different students, different
colleagues, different
I thought that this was an absolute must
even though
it doesn't have much to do with the
topic at hand of Hashem knowing the
future yet.
Here we see
that
lot nishbah
nishbah means became captive [snorts]
and of took action
in the world today
many rabbis and non-rabis
have decided that everyone that is
secular every Jew that's a Shabbat
Everyone that is keeps nothing is A
HE'S LIKE A captive
says our dear
who is our not only our editor but also
just came out with item he's been
working with for many years
he brings an extraordinary kush
and And he says, "Rav, I" he heard, he
tells me, he says, "Rav, I heard from
your lectures
when he was helping us with my book that
you said that even if somebody
is a nishb, a is a captive baby, secular
Jew, he's a captive baby."
Okay, don't leave him. Don't leave him
captive. And he says today, look, we see
it in the par
saw that Lot is Lot is captive. What do
went and went to war to go free his
nephew.
So he says, so even the tells us exactly
what you said in the IS BACK TO WHAT YOU
SAID in the book. Even if you want to
conclude that everyone is a nishb,
why are you leaving him nishb? Why are
you leaving them captive? Why you
leaving them? Go help them. Go do kiru.
Go help them do chuva. Get them one of
these kiru boxes. Help people. Just
today, one of my students told me that
she gave out some of our kiru boxes to
our co-workers that were Jewish and they
were literally they fell off their
chairs. Never seen anything like this.
Wow. It's so amazing. STARTED WATCHING
IT on the spot.
Started watching on the spot over the
holidays. We gave out dozens of them to
people we we had in the uh in the
synagogue.
People I never met before. People most
of them didn't even know who I was.
Not that I needed to, but
they now met me. They opened it up. Wow.
I never seen anything like this.
businessmen, developers,
all types of uh people from all walks of
life open up, start watching it. And you
start seeing these people literally
leave everything and start watching it.
The next day they come to me, he's like,
"Wow, I watched the the first thing, the
movie. It's amazing." And then the other
one says, "Listen, I started watching. I
couldn't stop watching it, but it's 19
hours. I had to go to sleep eventually.
I could have watched the whole 19
hours." I'm like, "It's okay. Don't
worry." Another one told me, "I watched
it until the battery died." I said,
"Don't worry. There's a wire inside the
box. You connect it, it recharges.
The K of box is making a revolution in
people's lives. As I told you time and
time again, it's the greatest gift
is given not only to but to this
generation. It's the ultimate tool to do
Kiru without saying a single word.
Everyone says, "Yes, I want one."
In fact, one of my students told me
today she gave it out to those
co-workers and one of our non-Jewish
co-workers saw it. She became jealous.
How come I don't get one? How come I
don't get one? So, she asked me, "Rabbi,
is it okay? She's not Jewish, but she's
really nice and can I give her one?" I
said, "Okay, okay, give her one. Give
her one. It's okay. She'll do chuba at
the very least. She'll become a
righteous no perhaps maybe even
converted to Judaism just like this
other dear student in England."
The point is
this whole concept of that everyone is a
captive baby like
is not necessarily
a uh something that
agree on across the board. In fact, the
vast majority of do not agree with it.
Shalom writes in
the 10th volume in Sim 55
in Yud Alif
here
clarifies
exactly the situation and he goes over
through with endless sources as he
usually does
about the different that talked about
this said that one said
but he concludes the answer as follows.
He says, "Although all of these matters
that the have brought regarding the
tinoishbah
pertaining to the secular people are
relevant in remote places that do not
have any Judaism
and most of the people there are
idoltors.
This is not relevant
to our places, meaning to our Jewish
communities whereby these people see
synagogues, bid, the uh the uh study
halls, and they see with their own eyes
many religious Jews that keep Shabbat
like says,
"May there be more." And yet these
secular Jews
are still not deterred from desecrating
Shabbat.
Therefore, you cannot consider them, but
rather consider them like idoltors.
So one way or the other whether you want
to be like the few that have said
or the vast majority of like and
countless others that said there's no
tinob today like
said no tinob today
and so on
regardless do something about it help
people
Where can you learn it from? Abrau who's
better than au from au is started
from au is started
and this
is certainly an important
insight
important
addition to the subject at hand.
But the subject at hand
about Hashem knowing the future, where
do we see it in the param
in chapter 15
verse number 16
after
the war and Abraham destroys all the
enemies
gets back Lot.
The king of Zdom offers him a bunch of
money.
Says, I don't even want a shoelace from
you.
So I don't want you to ever say to
people, I made you rich.
This, by the way, is the reason why a
rabbi should never ask people for money.
You could have campaigns, you could send
people links, but never beg people for
money. Why? Because once you start
asking people for money, they stop
listening to you.
And if you really want to help them,
that should never be the case.
Either way,
the
Torah tells us that after that
makes a covenant, a special covenant
with Abrau,
the
covenant between parts where he promises
the that he's not only going to get to
start the nation of Israel,
he's going to have a son,
but he promises him
endless blessings.
But in there
is told that
it's going to be a process.
Well, first
your descendants
will be aliens in a land not their own.
And they will serve them and they will
oppress them for 400 years.
And when is this blessing going to be
fulfilled and take the next place? In
verse number 16, it says, "And the
fourth generation shall return here,"
meaning here, meaning the land of
Israel,
"For the iniquity of the Amorite shall
not yet be full until then."
Here
unveils a secret about himself that's
not really a secret. It's
that he knows the future.
He knows the future.
And of course the
the
investigated
every little
tiny part of the Torah, every nuance in
the Torah, every verse, every letter,
every part of it throughout their entire
lives. Ask the question,
if Hashem knows
that the Amorites
are going to sin
by the fourth generation,
doesn't that mean that he determined it?
In essence, he
he is in control of choice. So, it's not
really free choice.
It's a very important question
that people ask all the time. If Hashem
knows the future, does do I really have
free will? Well, I don't know. Take your
hand, slap yourself in in the face. Did
Hashem decide? Now, you decided that.
Obviously, you decided. So, there is
free choice. But still, you see that
Hashem knows the future.
So, how does that work?
Shalom asked to brisk
this question and he said although we
have a mitzvah to have a inem to have
faith in Hashem
we also have knowledge that Hashem
certainly
created the world
for pure logic.
These beautiful world and this creation
did not come from nothing like the the
people that choose not to believe that
call themselves atheists. Of course,
Hashem created this. But yet we have a
mitzvah
to have. So where does fit in? THAT'S
WHAT RAV SHAK ASKED the briskav.
And the brisk
shalom said an extraordinary answer.
Say little and do much.
And he says as follows
is where the mind no longer understands
his ways.
Like the example here with Abrau
where tells Abra
that the Amorites
they're going to sin
and only after they sin
to the point of filling their measure
will they deserve to get punished and
get destroyed and kicked out of the
land.
says, "My dear Raime
Fraadik
an extraordinary which hashem just
published another books and that means
we have three books on the way
to distribute.
One of them has already been distri
being distributed in Israel about the
Mashika. two of them should arrive in
Israel and in uh in America over the
next week.
We stopped counting how many books he's
published so far and each one is greater
than the next.
So Frank says
past, present, and future
are all things that are determined by
time. The past is what already happened.
The present is what's happening. The
future is what will happen. These are
all things that are tied to time.
The
says
in 10 statements, Hashem created the
world, but if you count from the verses,
you find nine.
So then Mishna answers, yes,
because you missed the one. Where's the
first one? The first one is the word
which the Ramban says also means with
wisdom. But was actually a word of
creation. What did Hashem create the
word with the word? He created time.
He created time because before that
there was no time because it was just
there was just nothing but Hashem
and he's not subject to time.
He's not subject to time. He's not
subject to space.
But that was created with
humans
do not have an understanding
of two things.
Timelessness
and spacelessness.
something that doesn't take up space.
But gave us things in his creation for
us to at least get a idea,
not a complete understanding, but an
idea of what it is.
For example,
when it comes to
spacelessness,
something that doesn't take up space,
we say that Hashem takes up everything.
There's nothing else but him.
The whole world is him.
He's everywhere. He's omnipresent.
But yet there's nothing physical.
The says that
brings a verse from about the
measurements of the Mishkan the
tabernacle.
It says that the kureshim
was a measure of 20 ammut.
20 ammote for argument sake is about 40
feet. between 30 and 40 feet depending
on which
uh you
pin by
whether it's each amma is one and 1/2 ft
or almost two feet needless to say let's
just for argument sake let's just call
it 20 ft
from wall to wall
the says
took up no space
how do we
Because the Torah tells us that kesh was
put
in the middle of the Mishkan, in the
middle of the keshim,
that was 20 ammot wide and the kesh
itself was 10.
But yet when they counted how much empty
space
is on each side of the kesh it was 10
amote 10 here and 10 here.
Doesn't make any sense.
Why? Because logically speaking if it
was put exactly in the middle if you
have 20 and this is 10 that leaves 10
left. So if you put it exactly in the
middle, it should be five here and five
there. But noes
was in the middle,
10 here, 10 there, which in essence
means that there's 30 on. But it wasn't
30, it was 20.
How could this be?
says the
kadesh was in such a high level of
spirituality
that it was not subject
to
time and space like
we are used to especially space it was
spaceless took up no space
another example
is the clouds that surrounded is in the
desert.
The clouds which are were on such a high
level of spirituality of kadusha
that if somebody looked through the
cloud they could see through anything.
So if let's say somebody had a cup like
the cup that you could get the BHOP
bhop.org
Um, this you can't see through this, but
if you put this right next to the cloud,
the cloud would make this see-through.
The cloud would make this see-through.
And you could see that there's tea in
here.
These are different things that show
that when it comes to things that the
more connected they are,
the less they are subject to time and
space.
In fact,
for many years, the nations
thought that air
air whether it be
different gases
or the air we breathe in
didn't take up didn't have any measure
until the philosophers and Scientists
found that even air
has weight.
Now, they could have saved themselves
the time and the agony to discover that
because it's actually already written in
a Torah. In the book of Job chapter 28
verse 25
it literally says
making a prescribed weight for the wind.
Meaning the wind has weight.
If it has weight that means you can
measure it
and therefore
you can quantify it.
This is [snorts] not possible
where Hashem has no image and no
likeness of an image.
As the Rambam says inf
has no body and no likeness of a body.
In fact,
he says something that we always have to
remember, especially with all of the
heresy that's out there that tries to
confuse people
that the Rambam writes in
chapter one number seven,
since Hashem is not a body, the
circumstances associated with bodies
that produce division and separation are
not relevant to him
and therefore it is impossible for him
to be anything other than one.
Furthermore, he says in number eight
that a body cannot exist in two places
simultaneously subject to
the laws of nature.
So the brisk says
this timelessness,
spacelessness
of Hashem
that is beyond your comprehension.
That's where amuna comes in.
That's where amuna comes in
because it's beyond
our mind to understand it.
When it comes to
timelessness,
one of the ways that gave us to
understand timelessness is dreams.
As the says,
most dreams are nonsense that is
influenced
by the things that a person sees
throughout their uh waking uh hours.
But I know people that they have very
very vivid dreams
that uh they feel like is uh pretty much
like another life.
Why? because they feel like they went to
sleep and they have a whole thing that
happened. They went to sleep and then
all of a sudden they see these people
that are trying to go against them and
they're fighting against them and they
keep moving from place to place and then
after that they have a discussion with
the other side say leave us alone and
we'll leave you alone and they decide
okay you know what we're going to move
this place and there's a whole thing
that goes on for weeks and months and in
some cases years I met one person over
the holiday said I literally
had an experience where it felt like not
hours, not days, not weeks, but
literally thousands and thousands of
years
of difficulties and different things
that he experienced.
Of course, this is a very rare scenario.
Most people they have a dream and they
feel like they went through weeks or
months of a period of life. They had,
you know, raised kids, they got married,
they uh, I don't know, had a job, they
had problems, they had fighting, they
had all types of things. And they wake
up in the morning exhausted
and surprised that there's another LIFE
HERE. WHOA, WHAT HAPPENED? They thought
that this other life was real.
And sometimes they wake up and they look
at the watch and it's the middle of the
night and they realize what they've only
been sleeping for 15 minutes
but the dream felt like it was for
months.
Why? Because in your dreams
the which the say in the mind is in the
brain
is not subject
to the same rules of nature.
It's not subject to space and time.
And therefore the mind goes and lives
and has these experiences
that could feel like it's weeks and
months and years and so on. And gave us
that
in order for us to understand
timelessness.
Why do we need to understand
timelessness?
is right. Rabime says
the moment that you can define something
by space
or time
that means that it's not applicable to
Hashem.
The past, the present, and the future
are not applicable to Hashem. Because
anything that is subject to time and
space is a creation and not the creator
that is above it all.
Anything that has a beginning
has an end and therefore it's not
applicable to Hashem.
So when Hashem says
in Besit in chapter 15 verse1 17 that we
talked about that the fourth generation
shall return here
for the iniquity of the Amorites
shall not yet be full until then.
It means that Hashem is already in the
future.
But to him it's the present.
In essence, Hashem is telling ofu
his knowledge of the reality of the
future.
He did not determine the future.
Just because he sees it does not mean
that he influences it.
And of course, you're going to try to
understand that.
But it's impossible
to understand timelessness
and spacelessness.
The same way that you understand that
your hand is in front of you when you're
looking at it. The same way that you
understand the different things that are
facts of your life. It's not possible
for you to understand timelessness and
spacelessness.
And that the briskerv says that's where
amuna comes in.
That is where amuna comes in
to have
because your mind simply does not have
the ability to comprehend these things.
Now another way
that Kadesh Bahu
gifted us
the ability to understand
omniresence that he is everywhere
is in a relatively interesting
and recent discovery
and much further development in recent
years
called quantum mechanics.
I have a
about the last year or so or maybe a
little longer I've been looking into
quantum mechanics. Whenever I can't read
Torah, I try to occupy my mind with
something else that's useful.
And I actually happened to uh have a
student that uh told me recently that
that's actually his field of work.
That's what he's been spent his whole
life uh studying and working on.
And of course,
we're not going to give you a whole
about quantum mechanics right now, but
this is how he he wrote me an
explanation
briefly of what it is
quantum when it pertains to
quantum uh uh computers and so on.
And he says as follows. A regular
computer
for it to encode the word chuva.
The computer would physically have to
produce a string of digits that are ones
and zeros.
He actually gave the exact ones which is
one 0 0 11 one and so on and so forth.
And then the computer then sends it to
the screen. that translates the string
back into letters that we can recognize.
Physically speaking, there are several
ways of producing that signal. The most
common way is to use electric current
where no current means zero and some
current means one.
This is a real physical and measurable
quantity that could be used to encode
information.
An electrical current is basically a
huge collection of electrons.
And while measuring current,
we don't particularly care what each
individual electron is doing. The real
world, however, is a much stranger than
that.
It's much stranger than that. Why? If we
start looking at the individual
electrons,
we see that their existence isn't as
clear-cut where the electron is here or
it's somewhere else. No,
in essence, these electrons choose to
pop in and out of existence and
seemingly random
appear elsewhere and randomly exist in
both places at once.
Although it sounds like science fiction,
it's immeasurable and well-known
scientific fact and the overall
phenomenon is called quantum mechanics.
And he went further about how this is
applicable to to other things. And
actually I'll read another couple of
lines also to show you his mind also
being connected to Torah. He says people
had the idea of using individual
electrons
or any other object that acts as quantum
as storage of information so that we
could encode a word like chuva and also
a word like
at the same.
It defies classical knowledge but it's
completely possible for quantum
information to encode these two words at
the same time.
See here you have a very
sophisticated
explanation of something. How does this
help us
understand Hashem a little bit better?
Is when says
everything is mine.
There's nothing else but Hashem. Hashem
is omnipresent meaning that he is here.
He's where you are. He's in somewhere
else. He is everywhere. He's in your
mind. He knows what's in your mind. He
knows what's in your heart, which we
will learn later on in this para. He is
everywhere at the same time.
For a human mind to understand something
being
everywhere is impossible
because it's physical and therefore if
it's here it cannot be somewhere else at
the same time. It's either here or it's
there. You can say that it could travel
really fast back and forth but to say
it's in two place at the SAME TIME IS
NOT POSSIBLE. WHY? Because it's subject
to the laws of nature.
And therefore,
gave us the discovery of quantum
mechanics
where you can actually see in the
creation and you can measure it and you
can influence it.
And the goal is to do very very big
things with it
by simply understanding the discovery
that one electron
can be in multiple places at the same
time. It's the same electron and it's
not traveling back and forth.
It's the same electron, but it could be
in multiple places.
Another
extraordinary
thing that the Torah
tells us that allowed us to learn from
different creations.
Now
when it comes to this decree
specifies that it's the even though
there are many seven Canaanite nations
it's the Amorite nation
that
will have to sin
in essence
fill the measure to the point where
they're removed. Why the Amorite nation?
If we look at the Torah, we'll see that
the Amorite nation is constantly
mentioned in the entire Tanakh
in Deuteronomy
in the book of Judges. The prophet Amos
talks about them. Yeshua dealt with
them.
It's constantly mentioned.
Why?
Because the Amorite nation
was the greatest among those.
So much so
that their leader,
their original leader, Sikhon was
already alive at the time of Noah.
That's what says what Rashi says.
Sikhan was already alive at the time of
Noah and actually made a deal with Noah
to save him. But because he was such a
huge giant, he could not fit inside the
TVA, the ark.
So he was permitted to hold on to it.
There was also the animal that was huge
that also could not fit into the ta and
had to
uh be tied to it and in essence walk
behind it and a would feed it through a
little window
and that was a baby.
But Sikhon also was not led into the
TVA, but he lived
for a long time
until
he went to war with Moshe.
And this was an enormous giant.
And his nation was a nation of giants
that were powerful beyond any
comprehension.
Before Moshe Rabenu goes to war with Og,
the king of Bashan,
Hashem says to Mosher Rabenu, "Don't be
afraid. I'll be with you and you'll
destroy him just like I helped you
withhon." Because
in the natural law of things, it is
impossible for anybody to defeat
or the Amorites. They're just too
powerful. They're too big.
So what brought down this nation if they
were so powerful and
their leader at least lived for so many
years? We're talking about well over a
thousand years, couple thousand years.
What brought them down? says the Ramban
here
is telling us
nothing could have brought them down. No
nation could have defeated them in a
physical way, in a natural way. And the
only reason they went down is because of
their sins and their violations of the
Noahide laws.
Whether it's immorality, beastiality,
idolatry, and so on.
But who tells
even with these nations that go against
me, I don't punish them right away.
I allow them time,
but if they continue sinning, eventually
they fill up the measure. In so many
words, think of it as let's say there's
a cup
and so long as the sins do not hit do
not fill up the cup to the top the
nation continues to exist and even
prosper.
But the moment they get to the top of
the cup like the Amorite nation
destroyed.
This is the reason why
when foolish people say
that the IDF
is the only thing that's protecting
Israel from being destroyed.
This is 100% heresy.
Chapter one number seven
says a story where
he was the ultimate Kiru rabbi. not only
wrote the Mishna
but taught to especially when he
discovered the power of Kiru when he saw
the heavenly ways of how they're
treating his nephew
who was a student
where all that sadikim
have place in heaven and they have the
ability to study at the yeshiva of
Mosherenu at the yeshiva of
the yeshiva of Yaku at the yeshiva of
hem. But before they're able to go from
place to place, they need permission and
they need angels to take them.
But who did Kiru HIS WHOLE LIFE DID NOT
NEED PERMISSION. He can go wherever he
wants like he owns the place.
When Rebados found us out, he literally
ran into the street looking to help
somebody do chuvat, looking for somebody
secular. Today, you wouldn't have to
look very far, unfortunately.
But during the lifetime of his nephew,
Rabbi Kad sent Rabi
Rabi and Rabi Ami to Israel to go do
Kiru.
They went there and they got to a city
and they want teach want to see. And the
people there, the leaders over there
says, "No, we don't need everything. We
don't need anything. We have everything
we need. Thank you.
Powerful. Okay.
Rich."
So the asked them,
"Bring us the protectors of your city.
Bring us your IDF."
So of course they were proud of this.
They brought them
their top soldiers. Each one was bigger
AND MORE POWERFUL THAN THE NEXT. GIANTS
enormous and powerful.
Look at these soldiers.
He says these are your
meaning these are your protectors of the
city. These are the destroyers OF THE
CITY. THEY'RE GOING TO BRING DESTRUCTION
TO your city. They're not going to
protect it.
So the people said, "We don't
understand. You asked us to bring you
the protectors of the city. We're
bringing you the soldiers." Who do you
mean? Says, "We don't mean the soldiers
that go fight.
We mean the protectors of the city."
Which where are your Torah scholars?
They are the real protectors of the
city.
The problem with people
When they don't understand
what the power of the Torah is,
they think that the army or the alliance
with other governments [snorts] or the
weapons or technology or money is what's
protecting the people.
They don't realize
that
when they see
war, terrorism,
their reaction is, "Oh, if there's war,
there's terrorism. We need more
soldiers.
We need more soldiers." Even though they
don't even have enough equipment for the
current soldiers that they have, they
still they want to draft more of the
yeshiva.
They don't realize
that terrorism,
that war is not happening because you
have a lacking in soldiers.
It's happening because the people are
Shabbat. It's happening because there
are heretics. It's happening because
people are not observing the Torah.
You don't need more soldiers
because in fact in many cases
it's the leaders and it's the soldiers
that are the destroyers of the city, not
the protectors of the city. Because as
long as you're violating Shabbat, so
long as you're not following the Torah,
you're the one that's bringing the
terrorism.
It's you're filling up the cup with sins
and Hashem brings a decree in order to
save the nation. He forces us to do
chuva.
When a person
hears that initially like, "Yeah, but
what do you mean we need an army?" No
one said we don't need an army. Even
Mosher Abenu had an army. David had an
army.
But if you look at what
our forefathers did,
a thousand soldiers and a thousand
people praying for them and learning
Torah for their sake.
Who's really winning the battle? The
combination of both. For every soldier
that's fighting with a gun, there has to
be a soldier that's learning Torah for
his sake. Why? Because we're not
fighting in accordance to the laws of
nature
in comparison to Israel. The entire
WORLD IS IS THE AMORITES. THEY'RE ALL
BIGGER THAN US. THEY'RE ALL MORE
POWERFUL. You can say no. They have the
best army. They have the best nothing.
We saw in October 7th
what happens when a kadosh baku in
essence hides his face. All the budgets
in the world and the weapons in the
world mean nothing.
When a kadosh doesn't help us, we have
nothing.
The entire world is the Amorites
relative to Israel. They're all too
powerful. They're all too big.
The way we have survived is only by the
mercy of
and therefore a person has to know
that even if you don't understand this
doesn't mean you have to go against it
because you don't understand's
omniresence. You don't understand's
endlessness.
You don't understand.
But we have an obligation to believe it.
Another place
we see
how
knows our thoughts.
page seven,
they ask, "How do we know?" Or page 17,
178,
uh, "How do we know
that the entire Torah was written with
prophecy?"
Says, "For we, we could see it." Why? It
says what Haman was thinking.
Another example of that is our
we know of course gave us the entire
Torah but the proved that even the
other 19 books of the Tanakh were also
written
with prophecy with
because you see that it's written
people's thoughts
but here au
is being told by Kadosh Bahud that he
will have a son.
In chapter 17 verse1 17 it says and a
threw himself upon his face and laughed
and he thought
shall a child be born to a 100year-old
man shall salah 90year-old woman give
birth
and said to God
oh that Ishmael might live before you
and God said nonetheless your wife Sarah
will bear you a son and you will you
shall call his name and I will fulfill
my covenant with him as an everlasting
covenant for an offspring after him.
So here
is in essence we're seeing the
communication in two ways. One is he
spoke to Hashem directly. We see Abraham
said to Hashem but before that it says
and Ara thought and Hashem TELLS US WHAT
DID ARA THINK?
Shall a child be born to a hundred year
old man? Should Sah a 90year-old woman
give birth?
So this is why one of our 13 principles
of faith is to not only believe that
Hashem created the world and he's only
one, but also that Hashem knows our
thoughts. And that's why the
says
the the thoughts of sin are worse than
the sin. The thoughts of sin are worse
than the sin. And explains that since
then is in the mind
and Hashem knows what's on your mind.
When you sin by
thinking of
immorality,
all types of things, it's worse than a
sin itself. Why? Because the only one
that knows about it is in essence this
is the
between you and
of course
shows us that
even though
doubts questions how could this be I'm
100 years old is 90 years old he didn't
punish him for it he didn't rebuke him
for it but later on when he hears about
it. She said something
and therefore rebuked her. It's
different making a statement versus
thinking.
Needless to say,
we see from here that is limitless.
He's the laws of nature are not
applicable to him.
This is a very important and fundamental
foundation
of Torah,
of Judaism,
of good.
Because the moment a person
applies the laws of nature
to Hashem,
they're applying limitation to him. This
is why we fight so hard against the
heretics because they all have the same
exact
strategy
which is to limit Hashem.
Saying he has an arm, saying he gets uh
he needs something. All of these things
are not applicable to Hashem.
Because the moment you subject
the laws of nature, the limitations
of humanity, of creation,
the moment you subject those to Hashem,
not only are you an idol worshipper
according to a heretic according to, but
also you're giving yourself a license
to do whatever you
license to do whatever you want to say
whatever you want because if he is if he
needs something then I can decide
whether I want to give it to him or not.
If he is limited, then he's like me.
and all of these convoluted
ideologies that keep returning from
generation to generation, whether it was
from the the Greeks or the uh the
Christianity or the other idolatrous
religions throughout history or heretics
out there, the uh the musculim, the uh
enlightenment movement that uh you know
with the with the Zionists after them,
all of them
have this common denominator
which is to start off their heresy,
start off their plan, build their entire
plan on limiting Hashem,
subjecting him to
laws of nature, subject him to the same
laws they are that are applicable to
them, to the measly human being that the
moment he has an ingrown toenail, he
can't function. The moment he has a
stomach ache, he can't do anything.
They're subjecting these
laws to Hashem in different ways.
So how could a person arrive at the
right conclusion?
Understand this.
We have an obligation
to serve Hashem regardless of whether we
understand or don't understand.
We also have a mitzvah meaning we get a
reward to have a
to have
when things are not uh so uh so simple
to believe or in fact impossible for us
to believe to to understand
and therefore tells us you see
when I told him
that he's going to be blessed
that he's going to have
all of these amazing things.
It says he believed it
and it counted as righteousness for him.
Meaning that in chapter 15 verse number
six
and he trusted in Hashem and he reckoned
it to him as righteousness.
Hashem promises Abraham that he will
have a son. Hashem promises of that he
will have
more descendants than the scar the stars
in the sky.
You're promising this to a
hundred-year-old MAN. IT DOESN'T MAKE
ANY SENSE.
You're promising him something THAT HE'S
BEEN TRYING FOR A HUNDRED YEARS. DOESN'T
MAKE AND FAILED. Doesn't make ANY SENSE.
BUT THE MOMENT TOLD US TO
testifies on behalf of
that trusted hem
believed it with ALL OF HIS HEART
WITHOUT A DOUBT AND HE TRUSTED IN Hashem
and therefore Hashem reckoned to him as
righteousness.
Meaning that despite the fact that some
of the things are beyond your ability to
comprehend,
having amuna when your mind no longer is
able to digest or even understand things
whether it's how Hashem knows your
thoughts, how he knows the future and
without changing free will uh you know
how uh you know before the after all of
the different things, but yet you
believe and you follow and you do what
Hashem says. That in itself
is the mitzvah
that counted as his merit that will
still carry on till this day.
And this
is what is supposed to be in every
Jewish mind in every human mind at all
times.
Hashem gave us different tools in the
world to give us a little bit of an idea
of how things work.
Whether it's the Aona cadesh that's
doesn't take up space
or it's the dreams that are timeless or
it's the quantum mechanics where an
electron is in two places at the same
time or countless other things that you
can see in creation where Hashem gave us
an idea of how these impossible to
understand things are at least
understandable to a certain degree but
they're still going to get to a point
where you're not going to understand why
does this uh seemingly or why is this
verifiably righteous person suffering so
much? Why is this wicked person
prospering so much?
Why did this happen TO ME? WHY DID THAT
HAPPEN TO ME? WHY DID THIS HAPPEN TO
HER? WHY DID THAT happen to her?
That's where amuna comes in. The moment
your mind cannot understand,
do yourself the favor. Do yourself to
kindness and have
because it'll count as righteousness for
you which is worth much more than you
can possibly imagine. We don't have to
understand in order to have ine
and will do the rest.
This is
some of the things that we learned this
week and uh now you can ask some
questions and
will give us the answers. You know, it
took a lot of time and effort to study
for this lecture and every lecture
changes my life a little bit and I hope
it does to you as well. If you're
enjoying it, please make sure to like,
subscribe and share with people that you
care about, people that you know could
benefit from it. you may end up changing
their life. Thanks again for learning
with me and we'll continue growing
together. Now, back to the lecture. The
Torah says to kill a baby and that's
very sad.
U Torah doesn't say specifically go kill
babies. The Torah says that if the uh
Amalecch or the different nations that
we're fighting against
uh if we're at war with them, there's a
uh during war there's going to be
collateral damage. So if that means uh
women and children, then that's that's
what it is. Bahu doesn't allow us to
risk our lives like the foolish
government of Israel does with the
Israeli soldiers where they tell them to
tell the enemy the plan before we
attack. Tell the enemy we're about to
bomb them in this building. Tell the
enemy we're about to uh go attack here
before we go there so there's less
collateral damage. This is stupidity.
This is pure stupidity and it leads to
unfortunately many deaths of Israeli
soldiers
and it's not something that any other
government or any other army in all of
history has ever done says when it's war
there's going to be collateral damage
and in fact you have to destroy you have
to destroy in this way that's how it's
that's how it's commanded by Hashem
and the reason for that is because
First and foremost,
your life comes first before your enemy.
Number two,
in the endless world of Hashem, in the
endless world of God, the there is no
baby.
All of the souls started with Adamish,
the first human being. All of the souls
were in in him and after that they were
dispersed among the people that were
born. But then the world restarted again
with Noah and his family.
And all of the souls
kept reincarnating each time a person
lived but did not complete the mission
that Hashem put them in this world to
complete.
Then they had to
try it again.
Unless they violated things so badly
that Hashem destroyed them or Hashem put
them in a permanent punishment like gay
cafa and so on. But many people don't
understand that you're not here in this
world for the first time. Nobody in the
world
is here for the first time. Only rarely
does Hashem
bring a new soul to the world that
hasn't been here. But still it was in
the original but it was at Mount Si but
a new soul meaning that it's something
that didn't go through the whole
reincarnation after reincarnation and
every generation or every few
generations and so on.
So a person has to understand that there
is no baby. Yes, the it's a baby
physically. It's small before it becomes
big, but the soul that's in that human
being has been here for thousands of
years, multiple times, and it's only
here again because it failed in
fulfilling the will of Hashem many times
before and therefore it has to come back
again to do it. That's why when somebody
told me uh asked me a question about uh
if uh they uh lend money to somebody and
that person doesn't give it back to
them, should they just forgive it?
Forgive them or should they uh keep
chasing them after the money?
And the answer is as follows. If you
lend somebody some money
and we're not talking about huge amount
of money where it's a uh uh you know
destroys your life and you have to go to
uh lawyers and government and so on.
We're talking about let's just say you
gave uh you have the habit of let's say
giving 100 bucks, 200 bucks, whatever is
small that's but still meaningful
wherever you are in the world.
And uh let's say you have somebody that
you know and you go back and forth. You
give them 100 bucks, 200 bucks.
And uh now this person
doesn't pay you back.
And
you see that even when they have the
money, they're not paying you back. And
you see even when you ask for the money,
they're not paying you back. What should
you do?
If you can't get the money back that way
after you've asked multiple times and
you see that the person does not intend
to give you the money back even when
they have it, then you should forgive
them. In so many words, give up on the
money. And the reason why is because if
you don't give up on the money,
both you and that person will have to be
reincarnated back into this world in
order for them to pay you back the
money. As we learned in many different
examples, one of the famous examples is
a story of the Baltov that went to one
of his students who was a owner of uh a
horse ranch had many horses, sold
horses. And the Balmtov visited his
student and told him, I want to buy a
horse from you. Said, "Sure, Rabbi, you
don't have to buy. I'll I'll give it to
you for free." He goes, "No, no, no. I
want to buy it." "Okay, Rabbi, whatever
you want." And the rabbi looks and he
points at one horse
and all of a sudden he sees his students
face
become white.
He said, "Oh, Rabbi, ANY OTHER HORSE? I
HAVE HUNDREDS of horses here. ANY OTHER
HORSE BUT THAT ONE?
I just have this horse for six months.
He's such a good horse. He's such a good
worker. I don't have the dumb to work.
He just wants to work non-stop. He's
such a good horse. You could take all
the multiple horses, just not that one.
And the B symptoms says, "No, no, I want
only that one."
And of course, the student
says to the rabbi, "Okay, Rabbi, that's
the one you want because you are who you
are to me and I love you.
You can buy it."
The BMPto gives him the money. He says,
"Now it's mine, right?" "Yes, yes, it's
yours." He goes, "You sure it's mine?"
Yes, it's mine. The horse becomes his.
The moment after that transaction, the
bal says to his student, "Let me ask you
something. Did you have a friend that
recently died?"
She, "Oh, yeah. Yeah, Rabbi. I actually
uh just uh six months ago I had a friend
that died. He was a really good friend
of mine. Knew him for over 20 years."
Says, "You like that friend?" He goes,
"Oh, I love that friend. He was a great
friend. Really was sad for uh you know
that I lost him. Said, "Did he owe you
any money?"
The guy thinks for a moment. He goes,
"Yeah, but it's nothing. He was a good
friend of mine
anyway. It wasn't even a lot of money.
Only be uh $50."
says, "So the B symptoms says to him, do
you forgive him for that money
that he owed you and died without paying
you back?" The guy says, "Yeah, of
course I forgive him. I don't care. It's
fine. I wish I had him. I don't care
about the money. It's fine." Cuz say it.
Say that you forgive him.
Say,
"You're forgiven. You're forgiven.
You're forgiven.
And the guy says,
and the moment he said the third,
the horse that the Balmp just bought
drops dead. The guy shocked. Whoa. What
happened here?
says, "I saw
that the soul of your friend had to
reincarnate back into this world with a
way to pay you back that $50."
And therefore, in his mercy, put him
into a horse so he can work for you
until he earns the equivalent of $50.
And now that you've forgiven him, you've
helped him complete his tikun.
For a measly 50 bucks, a person had to
come back as a horse. The first time I
said this lecture years, this story
years ago,
one of the
people that watched this
said, uh, "Wow, that's really
interesting." and she had a cat
and uh it was an unusual cat
and she said the same she did the same
thing next to the cat. She went to the
cat's ear and she said,
"As soon as I finished it, the cat got
up, ran out, and got hit by a truck or a
bus and died."
Now, for those that
are familiar, you probably have seen us
when we talked about this before. We
published it as a story years ago.
Anyone that's interested in reading the
story from the woman herself wrote it,
you could uh just send me a message and
I'll send it to you.
But
even more so,
a person
that has a hard time believing some of
the stories, but at least knows that I
don't make stuff up.
You can know I I did it one time.
I had a dog, a really good dog. I had
him for 16 years. His name was Bully.
And this dog was an amazing dog.
Didn't have a mean bone in his body.
And we went through a lot of ups and
downs in life together.
But I always knew that this dog was
different. I had a dog when I was a kid.
And I knew that this dog was different.
Anytime I would have questions about
things, I would ask about it, of course.
And I did it.
I said to bully
and the moment I told him that, he was
perfectly healthy.
He was strong. He could have lived
another 50 years, at least the way he
looked.
But the next day,
he was sitting on the couch
like he did often.
And
when he tried to get off the couch
like he did a million times before,
he slipped
and fell off the couch, which again,
it's a regular couch.
Bully at one point when he was younger,
he was in my car with me and I used to
have him. He would sit in the front seat
with me.
He was in the passenger seat. I was in
the driver's seat.
and he liked to look out the window.
One time we were in the highway
and for whatever reason or another,
we're driving fast. We're not driving uh
5 miles an hour. We're driving.
Bully decides while I'm driving to jump
out of the window.
I was I had the leash in my hand and I
had to I had the instant reflex to let
it go because had I held it on obviously
that would have been the worst thing.
But I was sure that he died and I was
seeing him in the rearview mirror
that he's rolling and then got up like
nothing happened as if he was just
jumping off of a couch. Another time a
car hit him.
I saw with my own eyes, nothing
happened. He was a very uh brave and uh
healthy dog. So him getting off the
couch, nothing. But that day after I
told him
got off the couch, fell
and that was the end.
Don't try this just because you want to
experiment.
It's not with every dog or every cat
or every other animal.
But the point I'm trying to tell you is
that sometimes
a person has to understand that things
are beyond your comprehension.
They're beyond your ability to
understand. The world is much bigger
than you can possibly imagine. So much
so that the say that if a person really
was able to see all of the things that
are actually next to him at every given
moment, they would simply lose their
mind.
But does not allow us to see everything
that's really next to us because it'll
destroy our lives.
The point being is
that when it comes to seeing things like
what Torah says to destroy the enemy,
even if it's women and children and have
no mercy, understand that the one that
determined what mercy is and what good
is and what bad is, is the same one
that's writing what's in the Torah.
And since he knows what good and bad is,
what mercy is and what it's not, who
deserves mercy and who does not, who
deserves good and who does not,
if he wrote it, then you can be sure
that he is right. Even if we don't
understand,
it's hard for me to see.
as a reflection. So it makes hard to
here we go. Is do that or religion
mentioned in the Torah
as we Jews are religion or following the
Torah?
It's one and the same.
When
Bahu gave us the Torah, Mount Si before
Mount Si, there wasn't Judaism, there
was idolatry in the world. And then
there was the belief of the Israelites,
which was in one god. Meaning that
before Mount Si, there was either belief
in one God by
Yakovu, his descendants, the the and
obviously all the Israelites and there
was the rest of the world. There were
different forms of idolatry. Some served
different idols that they made. Some
served the stars, the the moon and so
on.
But there wasn't an official religion.
At Mount Si, we receive the Torah, the
written and the oral Torah.
And the Torah is the book of
instructions. That's what the Torah
means is instructions
of how to serve Hashem, how to fulfill
your purpose. What is your purpose? And
in essence, this entire book of laws,
book of instructions is how to live.
How to live for your own benefit.
This is when Judaism was born at Mount
Sai because before that we didn't have
the obligation to follow the laws of the
Torah. But the moment we receive the
Torah, we had the obligation of
following the laws. So if you want to
call those uh that religion or you want
to call it Torah, it's in essence
synonymous. If you're following the
Torah, you're following the religion. If
you're violating the Torah, you're
violating the religion. If you're
religious, that means you're following
the Torah. If you're not religious, that
means you're ignoring or you're
violating the Torah. So, it's in essence
one and the same.
What does mad mean?
Mat with a T is a needle.
Mad with a T is a needle.
is one.
But Mahad doesn't have a uh it's not a
word.
Why is the word Elohim plural? Um,
Elohim
can be plural, can be singular, but
again, Hashem is not uh
Hashem is not plural or singular. He's
he's one. Either way, the word Elohim
doesn't only uh mean God. It's uh the
word Elohim in essence is closer to uh
master. And uh so for example, the
Hashem says to Moshe Rabenu in the Torah
that you will be elimin
part of the ten commandments. uh do not
have other Elohim meaning don't have
other gods. Don't don't you know worship
idols. Uh there's also uh the word
Elohim also is another name for
different for angels. Uh so Elohim is
not a uh the unique name for Hashem. The
the unique name for Hashem is the
tetrogrammatan which is the ud and the
nav. It's a four-letter name.
Okay.
Uh, for the person that wrote the
question in Portuguese, I'm sorry I
don't speak Portuguese. If you could
translate it and then copy and paste it
and send it again, I can understand the
question.
When it comes to harvesting,
how is that was done at the time of the
uh beta mikdash? How is that
one? Oh, okay. So, question is,
we learned that the 39 milot, the 39 uh
uh things that we did to build the beta
mikdash
are what were forbidden from doing on
Shabbat. So, for example, harvesting
wheat, how is that or different crops,
how is that done at the time of the bet?
So first off know that there was the kto
uh the kto the incense offering which uh
actually I'll show you something really
interesting
in our prayer every day as safharti
Jews. This is uh
not done by most Ashkinazim. Uh it's not
their custom but Safhari Jews
do the every day.
uh before we get to Amida in uh and
after in Shahid it's both uh before and
after in Min it's uh it's before
and the Kobanote
is a segment of the Torah
uh we read in book of Exodus chapter
34-36
and then verses 7 and 8 and in there
this is uh the uh Hashem commanding
Moshe
to make the incense offering.
And in there it says the uh
uh this was obviously done the mikdash.
This is one way that the uh 39 were used
to make the but uh
it's a gula that I've discussed
extensively. uh the uh the Benish said
it and
has probably a 800 page
discussing the and the malaito
and the as you're saying the uh 11
spices or or or uh
uh incense parts of the kto there's the
atsoi the balsamipoin
clove kbona
which is calbinum
galbinum levon now is frankincense
uh it's a uh the mo which is myrrh the
kia which is casia n which is uh
spikener
kum which is saffron cost which is
costous
uh kilua kilufa is uh mushkat
nut bark and kilam is cinnamon. So these
are the spices that uh were part of the
now you're not allowed to combine them.
That's
but teach that uh it's a
to have this and actually point at them
point at each one and point at it.
each one the the part of the
we read the uh tell us the measure of
each one how much was made to to make
the the incense offering and uh the
reason why I bought this it was very
expensive is because there's a special
zula for and for many many other good
things to point at the uh the actual
incense offerings when you're saying
them. Now for people that don't have the
ability to get something like this uh
then uh the say that you should count it
in your finger every time you say uh uh
uh each one of the incense offerings. So
you say you put your hand
So it's 11 different spices that uh were
made made the point being is is that
this is a very uh precious uh thing that
uh that I got uh in the last couple of
years. uh anyone that's uh interested in
it, you could actually get it from the
living Torah museum
uh sells this, but I'm sure you can get
the the ingredients I just mentioned on
your own if you want. It's probably be
cheaper. It's just a uh this was a very
nice uh setup uh and uh eliminates
confusion of, you know, which one is
which so you don't point at the wrong
one. For me, it was very much a bargain
to uh to to get something like this. And
also got one for my dear Rav uh
and uh but uh I'm not you know I'm not I
don't sell this. Uh but the point is is
that uh there is a uh to point at them
if you can and if you can't because you
don't have them then it's uh to to count
them on your fingers when you're as
you're saying it. Uh it's a very
powerful for a lot of other good things.
Uh so uh one of the ways that the
melobat
uh were done were to harvest these uh
these incense offering. Another way is
also to make the the different things to
make the stones to make the uh uh the
different things. They needed uh it
wasn't like today where you have uh
cement and and the things that you have
today. So in those days they had to make
everything on their own.
Rabbi, what are the first steps to
convert to Judaism? What's your advice
on how to reach out to Kabad Rabbi to
start learning?
Okay, I'll answer the first question. Um
the the second question before the first
kabad rabbis do not
deal with conversions. Uh sometimes they
accept somebody that wants to convert
into their community but they will not
sponsor the person to conversion even if
they're there for four or five years.
This is the general
uh um mentality of pretty the majority
of kabat. Of course, there are rare
cases here and there where a kabad rabbi
will sponsor somebody for conversion,
but generally speaking, Kabad has this
policy, this, you know, unspoken policy
where they don't deal with converts. So
to go try to convert while being part of
a kabad, you will find yourself where
they may accept you to come, they may
accept you to to donate, they may even
accept you to, you know, to sit down
with them and and be there for 5 years,
but they will not take you to the bed to
actually convert. you'll have to find a
different rabbi to do that. And that
simply just delays your conversion. So
if you want to convert, you'll have to
find a regular orthodox synagogue uh
that uh to become part of and and to
have that rabbi convert you. Uh the
first question as far as what's the
first steps? Conversion requires two
main things. One is knowledge. Two is
life changes. Knowledge means you have
to learn different things that are
relevant to conversion. If you want to
know what that is, you can go to our
website bzem.org.
Over there there's a section of that's
called learning and under that tab
there's something called the free PDFs
or free uh ebooks
and one of those ebooks is a conversion
guide. That's a guide after dealing with
conversions and helping many many people
convert over the years. uh we made many
lectures about it uh and uh discussed it
often. So we made a guide where this
information that's there is everything
you need to know about conversion. Uh so
you just open the guide, you click each
thing that you click on, it opens up
either a video or a recommended book to
buy uh that you'll need to know for
conversion. It tells you the subjects
that you'll be uh you'll need to know.
Uh and um that conversion guide is in
essence will help you attain that
knowledge. Of course, you have to study.
There are some people that give some
rabbis that give and some regular people
that give uh online courses or
face-to-face courses with uh with
conversion. Um some people have a good
experience with it, some people don't.
It's certainly not cheap. Uh but either
way, you'll need to learn it. If you can
learn it on your own, that's one way. If
you uh you could afford to have somebody
teach you, uh that's another way. But
either way, there's no obligation to uh
uh to take a course. You could learn
everything on your own. Um but many
people prefer to have somebody go over
with them uh at least some of the
material. Now, as far as uh
the knowledge, that's how you attain the
knowledge. The life changes are well,
you have to start fulfilling that
knowledge, which means that you will
need to move to a Jewish community. Uh
so if you live in the state in the US,
you'll need to move move to a place
where there's a Jewish community with a
bedin uh whether it's in Los Angeles or
it's in New York uh uh New York City or
it's a uh in Florida or in other places
in the US that have Jewish communities
with a bedin or in Israel or in
Australia or in London, different places
around the world have it. There's not
that many
uh in the world. Uh but uh you know
certainly uh there are uh you know there
are options. You'll need to move to a
Jewish community. You'll need to develop
a relationship with the local rabbi to
you at that time.
Uh let them know obviously your
intentions to convert and so on. And if
they're willing and able, they'll uh you
know they'll guide you until you're
ready and you'll be able to convert.
It's a process. It takes time. And uh
you know it's not something that's done
overnight. We're not the Christianity
where all you need to do is just dip in
some water and uh that you become
Christian or in uh in Islam where you
just say a few words, you become Muslim.
That's not how Jewish conversion works.
It's a process. Uh in essence, the whole
goal uh of the uh the bedin, the Jewish
court uh and the sponsoring rabbi, all
the people that are involved with, you
know, uh helping people convert is to
make sure that the people that are
converting are able and willing to uh to
live a Jewish life after conversion.
Many people are very excited about the
idea of converting but then once they uh
see what it is uh they realize it's much
more difficult than they thought and
some people uh you know choose not to
convert. Many people continue and uh
many people don't but either way it
requires two things. One of them is the
knowledge and the other one is uh the
life changes and even that I discuss in
our conversion uh uh guide that I
mentioned to you one of the videos uh it
talks about how it's a process. It's not
like first things first. It's it's a
process you do you do both of them
simultaneously.
Most people start studying before they
move
um when they don't live in a Jewish
community already.
Knowledge of Hebrew is not required for
conversion. No.
In my city in Brazil, I only know Kabad
Synagogue. I go there for about 20 years
for not to buy some kosher food. And I
tried to talk about conversion but no
success.
Uh you will never have success not in
Kabad or in Brazil. Not that I'm cursing
you but rather because of you have two
things pinned against you. Number one in
general worldwide does not deal with
conversion. Does not deal with
conversion even if you've gone there for
a hundred years. And number two, there
is no conversion in the entire country
of Brazil and many uh uh countries in
South America. There's no conversions
there. The only there's no bedin to
convert people. You need a bedin. You
need a Jewish court to convert people.
And there they don't exist in in Brazil
and other places
uh as a result of many different things
that happened in the past. But they uh
the the leaders uh chose many years ago
not to have any conversion courts in uh
many of the uh uh the um
uh those countries. So you'll have to
move to a different country in order to
convert.
Rabbi, as someone that's currently in
shidim, what should I keep in mind and
how much should I focus on looks?
Uh, in a
lecture that I made two years ago in
there was a whole segment that I talked
about uh that's very very important uh
and very comprehensive. I highly
recommend watching that if I think I
believe our team made a clip
uh out of that very long lecture and
it's on the uh Rabbi your own Ruven
Shorts channel. If you go to the Rabbi
Ron Ruven Shorts channel, it's a
fantastic amazing channel where every
day uh our amazing team makes a new clip
that they cut out of my longer lectures
and they add some bells and whistles to
it, make it uh you know just amazing and
they really really exceptional uh job.
uh and over there um they uh first of
all everyone should subscribe to that
channel because it's just amazing.
Second of all, if you guys notice and
you follow us in different channels on
uh the different languages in French and
Spanish and Chinese, Arabic and uh
Russian, all the other languages that we
have, you will notice that all of those
channels get their new clips that are
published every day. they get they get
from that channel from that uh shorts
channel that I mentioned. Uh that's how
good it is. We literally rely on it.
It's just extraordinary work and big big
yesh to uh to to the one uh main person
that's that's behind it. Uh and uh I
have no doubt in my mind that Hashem
will bless him endlessly in this world
and the next for what he's doing. And um
so everyone should subscribe to it. It's
just amazing. That's number one. I think
it's that's even more important than the
question. Second, uh in there you'll
find if you go to that channel, you you
just write the word conversion or you'll
write the word shidim or you'll see that
clip that I'm talking about. Uh so
that's one. Uh second thing is in uh in
regards to shidim the mindset that
you're supposed to have is first of all
you need to know what you're looking
for. You need to know what you're
looking for if you're looking to build a
holy Jewish home and uh you're going to
be learning uh Torah and then obviously
you're going to be relying on your wife
for ponasa then you have to look for
somebody that wants the same thing. If
you're going to be working and uh
learning after work or before work or
both uh then you need to look for you
know a wife like that which is obviously
the majority of people are are like
that. You also have to look for to
decide whether you want your wife to
work or not. Why? Because if you don't
want your wife to work and you want your
wife to, you know, focus on raising the
kids, then don't date a woman that's a
that's a career-minded that wants to be
a lawyer or a doctor or or or some type
of architect because you're you're going
to have a problem. Even if you like each
other, you're going to have a problem.
Why? Because she has a certain mindset.
That's that's her goal in life. So, you
already know from the beginning what
you're looking for. and uh determine who
you select based on that. Second thing
is is uh ideology. You have to find
someone that has a similar ideology to
you. Don't if you know if you're want to
live a religious life, don't even bother
dating non-religious girls or girls that
are you know too modern you know where
they they may uh observe Shabbat but
they don't observe modesty or they don't
observe kosher or they don't observe
some of the other foundational rules.
Another thing I had one of my uh
students ask me about uh just uh
recently uh he was uh on a shid and uh
the you know and they went on several
dates and then the the girl told him
that uh she uh doesn't think that the
husband should be the top priority all
the time. Sometimes uh the her friends
should be more important than the
husband and uh so this is a red flag.
Why? Because this means that this woman
is not really ready to be a wife. She's
not really ready to be a wife. She wants
to, you know, she wants to have
somebody, but she still wants to live
the single life. So, if you want to
build a holy Jewish home, this is not
somebody that you should be dating or or
marrying. Why? Because you're going to
have a wife that's uh you're going to
come home waiting for to see your wife,
to eat, to drink, to to to to
communicate with, to socialize with, and
she's not home. Why? She's out with her
friends. she's having a a drink at some
bar or she's having a coffee or whatever
it is. If if you don't want to marry a
socialite, then you should already know
that ahead of time. And this is
something that you can discover pretty
quickly. Um, usually women that are
careerfocused
are more open to that type of
socialization. It's not necessarily
every woman that's careerminded but it's
very common uh among them especially
today in in uh uh in society. Uh so you
need to know what you're looking for. As
far as looks are concerned the itself
says that if a man wants to get married
he has to compromise. Meaning that if
you're going to look for a woman that
looks exactly like your dreams, then uh
either you are going to stay dreaming
and never get married uh or you're going
to be very very miserable because you'll
find a woman that looks exactly like
your dreams, but the rest of her is not
going to be uh like your good dreams,
more like your nightmares. So if a
person wants to get married, they have
to compromise and not look for Mrs.
Perfect. I'm not saying look for a
person with deformities or anything. Uh
but uh the main thing you should be
looking for is the ideology and uh to to
have the same goals in life, you know,
and uh so even if she's not uh you know
a 10 on your list, uh that's that's okay
because neither are you. The third thing
I would say is for people to be
realistic, especially for guys uh that
are very into the looks uh and they
every you know all of them want you know
all of their fantasies and desires and
lusts fulfilled. Um first of all that's
not good for you. Uh because if she is
that beautiful that means everyone
thinks that she's that beautiful and
everyone's going to think about her look
at her and it makes it very very
difficult for marriage and also uh you
know not not very good for uh for for
someone that doesn't want to get married
multiple times if you understand what I
mean. The second thing is is that you
know when it comes to a uh when it comes
to uh marrying somebody um you have to
understand that the ideology of the
person is much more important than their
looks because the looks do not stay.
People age, people get pregnant, people
uh go through different things. So, a
person that invests everything into
looks is going to live a very
disappointing life because she's not
going to stay 20 forever.
And uh if you have a horrible mentality
and a horrible personality that's
combined with beautiful looks, that
means you're going to suffer your whole
life because [snorts] the looks will be
will disappear over time or at least
deteriorate over time. Uh and but the
horrible personality will continue to
worsen.
The third thing or next thing on the
list that I would say is for people to
be realistic. This is very important
especially for guys that are very
focused on looks. Um before you
determine that you are only going to
accept someone that's a 10 uh on your
scale of looks or eight or seven or
whatever number you think is your your
uh what you want. Um I would highly
recommend to don't tell anybody I said
this. highly recommend to look in the
mirror.
Did you hear that? Look in the mirror.
Why am I whispering? Look in the mirror.
WHY? YOU'RE NOT A 10.
You're not a 10. STOP LIVING IN FANTASY
land thinking that you deserve a 10.
Stop it. You got these guys that uh
literally sometimes it's a little bit
you you need glasses to to to identify
whether it's a human or not but they
think that they deserve mali
like stop it stop it with the fantasy
stop it with the l stop it with the
garbage people I know people that they
they ask me for uh help I don't deal
with and there's a reason for that it's
not because I don't want to help people
it's because people in most cases are
unhelpable. able
are unhelpable. Why?
They're too picky. They're so people are
so picky and it makes me so sick to my
stomach how picky people are that we
actually actually have a song on our
chuva music about how people are picky.
I spoke about this many times over the
years and they made even a song about
it. I see people, they come to me,
they're 35 years old and he still wants
somebody that's uh fits his description.
She has to be, you know, uh, uh, no
older than 25. She has to look like
this. She has to look like that.
Khabibi, you're 35 years old. You're two
steps away from becoming a grandfather
already. What? What? What are you
talking about? Whoever was even willing
to look at you marry them. But they
don't think so. They think that, no, no,
they know better. And before you know
it, they're 40 and they're not married.
And they're 45 and they're not married.
And they're 50 and not married. And uh,
of course, they sin the whole way there.
And even if they hold themselves for a
year or two years, eventually they sin.
Whether it's with this or whether it's
with that. I don't have to describe to
you guys how people sin because I'm sure
everyone knows. Uh the point being is
people live a deluded life because of
their ego. Because they feel they're
melamaniacs.
They're melamaniacs that think that they
are better looking than what they really
are. They feel like they deserve more
than what they really are. uh they're
entitled to more to more than what they
really are and they're single for much
longer than they thought that they were.
So
say in the
and many talked about it over the years.
If you want to get married and build a
Jewish home
already know before you even met the
girl before you even looked at a shiduk
resume, you will have to compromise
if you want to get married to a a woman
that you're going to stay married to.
But if you are specific and you are uh
everything has to be perfect when it
comes to physicality or financials or
things like that [sighs]
unfortunately you are more likely to
live a very very sad and miserable life
than you are to be happily married.
Uh so
I suggest you listen to the
and choose wisely.
>> [sighs]
>> Rabbi, your people have committed
atrocities. Don't you think this is more
important topic?
Uh, my people have committed the best
things for society throughout all of
history. In fact, you could do a easy
Google search and uh just type in what
did the Jewish people contribute to
society throughout history.
We contributed religion.
Before that, there was just idolatry,
people praying to statues and and and uh
and motorcycles and and rats, which some
people still do in India. So, we
contributed religion, monotheism. Number
two, morality based on God.
Number three,
most of the commerce that you see in the
world today behind it were Jewish people
and still are Jewish people. Whether
it's technology that you see today, for
example, the phone that you're using or
the computer that you're using, the
microchips, the semiconductors
was developed by our people, Jewish
people. uh the uh most of the technology
they use today comes from Jewish people.
The
country with the highest
uh per capita amount of people that have
won the Nobel Prize are the Jewish
people. It's Jewish people. Say if if
you compare for example the amount of
Jewish people that have won we the
Jewish people have won more than 25% of
all the Nobel prizes in history
even though we have less than 20 million
Jews in the world more than 25% of all
the Nobel prizes were won by Jews if
that was uh you know a let's say if you
compare that to the amount of Muslim
people that are in the world about two
and a half billion or so literally you
would need a few hundred million people
to win the the Nobel Prize winners which
there haven't even been that many. So
the point is that the biggest geniuses
development in the world has come from
the Jewish people whether it's for
technology or it's the science or it's a
uh you know the the world the arts uh
you know it's pretty much in every part
of society you will see Jewish people
behind it. So to say we've committed
atrocities, if you mean the advancement
of society and good for society, if you
in your world uh you know equate that to
atrocities, then yes, we've committed
many atrocities. But if you are like
most people, civilized people in the
world, non-terrorists,
then we don't usually call that
atrocities. We call that contribution of
good to the world.
And you're welcome.
No, no, stop with the thank yous. Yes.
You're welcome. You're welcome. I
understand. No, stop. Okay. You're
welcome. You're welcome. Oh, you didn't
know. Okay. You're welcome. You're
welcome. You're welcome. You're welcome.
You're welcome, sir. Okay. I understand.
I understand. You love us now. Thank
Okay. Thank you. Enough with the thank
yous. Thank you so much. Thank yous.
Rabbi, do you speak Yiddish
or can you speak Yiddish? No, I don't
speak Yiddish. I speak Hebrew or
English.
Um, I was born in Israel
and there we speak Hebrew.
Uh, I'm a Spafari, so most Spafari Jews
do not speak Yiddish. Ashkenazi Jews,
many of them speak Yiddish. Um, but, um,
I don't I don't
Rabbi Manoahide. Should I not eat pork?
Uh, oh, that's not a matter for no
hides. Uh, as far as whether you're
allowed to eat pork, yeah, you're
allowed to eat pork as a nonjew. There's
no problem of you eating pork or eating
a monkey or eating a frog. Just don't
eat them while they're alive. As far as
health reasons, uh, no, you should not
eat pork. It's a
It's not a uh it's not a good feel.
Okay. So, the Jews discovered a lot of
things in technology in the past. What
are they doing now?
Okay. Uh what are they doing now? Okay.
So currently the
number one most uh valuable company in
the world today is a company called
Nvidia. You may have their product in
your phone uh in your computer as we
speak or if you're using AI certainly
you're relying on their product. Now,
Nvidia
has uh happens to have a lot of money,
happens to have a lot of choices, but
the vast majority
uh of all of their profits that they
have today, all of their revenues they
have today were as a result of the work
that their Israeli department located in
Israel discovered and developed. And
that's why they are building a whole new
headquarters
uh in Israel, a whole new huge uh place
in Israel. They're determining which uh
city to go to. There's a, you know, a uh
a race between the different cities,
whether it's the same one they already
have it in or a different one. Uh but uh
everybody obviously wants them to be
there. It creates jobs. It creates uh
you know uh momentum and so on. But
Nvidia is uh investing a whole lot more
into Israel because if it wasn't for
their uh Israeli department, Nvidia
would not be Nvidia. And like I said,
they are the most valuable company in
the world today. And if you know
anything about the markets or economy or
technology or really anything, you
should know uh about Nvidia. And um you
could check everything I just said.
you'll be very very uh disappointed that
uh your anti-semitic uh questions did
not pan out. Uh furthermore, it's not
just Nvidia that's investing more in
Israel. Uh Intel is investing more in
Israel for the same exact reason.
uh and uh other major corporations are
investing more and more in Israel
specifically because even though you can
find Jews all over the world
uh there's a special uh blessing for
those that live in Israel apparently uh
because the discoveries that they make
over there in the technological
scientific world uh physics every field
is beyond beyond comprehension per
capita like if if you look at the
statistics of what gets developed in
Israel produced
uh
it doesn't make any sense because it's
such a small little country with so few
people in comparison it's smaller than
than most of the US states but yet more
is produced in Israel than anywhere else
in the world per capita
and in fact
more is produced in Israel than anywhere
in the world with the exception of a few
major countries like America and and
China uh that even not per capita a few
other countries obviously but meaning
that there's an enormous amount
of good that's coming into the from
Israel that's why when people say oh
listen you know America is uh you know
funding Israel gives them what do you
think America is doing it for free all
of the weapons that America produces.
Many of them get a little bit of
upgrades from Israel. A lot of the uh
things that you see that are protecting
Americans today are due to Israel. Uh
and there's a lot of other benefits that
America gets from Israel that are much
much more valuable than uh the few
shekels they send. But needless to say,
it's good to have allies. It's good to
to have partnerships, but the vast
majority of the world and needless to
say, the anti-Semitics around the world
do not understand how much they
themselves rely on what comes out of
Israel,
they themselves rely on what comes out
from the Jewish world.
It's it's it's unprecedented. Just do
some research on the people that you
hate. What have they developed
throughout history? What are they
developing now? The medicine that you're
taking most likely was developed by
them. The uh the best doctor in town
most likely is one of them. The phone
you're using by them. The semiconductors
by them. The software by them. It's uh
you're using Google by them. The Jews
it's everywhere. So you say, "Oh, they
control the world." We don't, but our
God does.
And he chose to make a special. Does
that uh mean that there isn't uh special
people that are non-Jews? No, there's
plenty of them. There's plenty non-Jews
that are very good that are very very
nice and uh and uh that that produce
good for the world. But if you compare
per capita of how much the Jews
relevant to the number of Jews and how
much they've contributed to society,
every intelligent person sees this is
literally the blessing that's in our
para
in our paradism
those that will bless you will be
blessed. Those will curse you will be
cursed. Every country that has allowed
the Jews to live there freely for at
least a period of time was blessed
tremendously.
Egypt blessed tremendously until they
turned us into slaves and then they were
destroyed.
Babylon blessed tremendously until they
decided to torment us and destroyed
them.
Spain blessed tremendously until they
had the Spanish Inquisition and then now
most people don't even know that Spain
exists still. Greece, you know, had had
a blessing for a period of time until
they don't.
um Turkey, Morocco,
um Russia, all of these countries, if
you look at the times that the Jews
lived there peacefully, those countries
were blessed tremendously.
When they kicked out the Jews, the
blessing left with the Jews.
So, America has
extraordinary blessing over the last
hundred years. Before a 100 years ago,
America was not the most powerful
country in the world. Simply was not. In
fact, it was uh considered insignificant
in the world. What happened 100 years
ago approximately, they allowed the Jews
to live here freely.
And so long as they do, they'll continue
being blessed.
Why? The blessing comes in the package.
So, as much as people like to complain
about the Jews,
really, we should be getting thank you
notes.
Thank you notes. Thank you. I love you.
Thank you. I love you. Thank you. Thank
you. I love you.
I'll take a thank you, too. No problem.
I
>> [sighs]
>> Thank you for the blessings. Thank you
to the
Taiwan and China does way more. I'm
sorry, buddy. You are mistaken. Per
capita. Per capita.
Per capita. Do you know what per capita
means? Go online. Want me to spell it
for you?
You can do a spell check. They'll help
you. Most like you don't understand what
per capita means.
Did you go to school?
School. School. School. S C H O O L
school. Yeah.
Tik Tok is not a school. YouTube is not
a school. No. No.
Tomorrow is my feeling.
I was wondering if you have any help to
do it.
Uh if you mean tomorrow is your bar
mitzvah and the first time you're going
to put on to fill in.
Um well, I mean you should have gotten
somebody to teach you how to put them
on.
If you did already that a few things you
need to know about. Number one, anytime
you have on, you're not allowed to speak
mundane things. You can pray and you can
learn Tawra with your on. Other than
that, you're not allowed to do anything
else. You're not allowed to socialize,
ask about the weather, ask about the
game, ask about the stock market. I know
that you probably see some people do
that in your synagogue, but they're
making a sin. Shabbat
uh talks very very harshly uh about
people that speak mundane things while
wearing just imagine that is a one-way
call to Hashem. You're on a it's that's
in essence you're connecting yourself
with the so if so long as you have no
mundane conversations
that's the second thing. Third thing is
it's good to after you finish praying
it's good to study Torah while you have
on whenever you can. It's not an
obligation but it's good to do it if you
can. That's another thing. Third thing
is respect them and and and and uh treat
them with with respect. Meaning that not
just don't put them on the floor or drop
them on the floor but treat them
carefully. get yourself a very nice uh
bag to protect them uh when you put them
on. You know, do it slowly and and and
with with with care and respect. Don't
uh treat them like uh people treat uh
you know uh sports equipment. Uh that's
that's it's very very important to treat
the well. Uh another thing is make sure
that you got your from a reliable sofair
or merchant of and not just someone that
sells it. you need, you know, it needs
to be a reliable person that's an
orthodox Jew that uh is aim
because unfortunately sometimes people
buy uh based on the cheapest price and
they end up finding out years later when
they check the
uh there's no feline in there. It's just
a box
like a video that we published a few
months ago where somebody went uh bought
feline and two years later he decided to
go check his feline and on camera
they're opening it.
Even before he opened it the tells him
that are not kosher based on certain
things of how the were made were glued
instead of sewed. But nonetheless, as
soon as they open it, even a blind
person would be disappointed at the
disaster that happened there. What
happened? They found out that there's no
feline. There's no scroll inside. Just a
piece of uh leather. So the guy has been
putting on fine with a blessing every
single day for two years. And every
single time he did it, there was a sin.
He was saying Hashem's name in vain. Two
years he didn't put on fine. Why?
Because he bought it for the cheapest
price and ended up being nothing. He
bought nothing. free is was was too
expensive for that piece of garbage that
that he was uh that he was sold. So a
good pair of tilene is not going to be
cheap. Uh and also prices have pretty
much almost doubled almost doubled uh in
the last 10 years or so. Uh we sold
feline on our website. I remember where
we were able to get feline uh for $400
or $500. A decent parrot feline. It
wasn't the best, but it was a good paren
$400 or $500. Today you can't get
anything for even close to that. A good
parrot feline is not going to cost you
less than $1,500.
$15, $1,600 for a decent one. A really
good one two 3,000. It's going to be
much if you're asking a
three 4,000 it's much much more
expensive much much more expensive
u there's [snorts] number one inflation
number two uh there is uh less people
doing it uh there's [snorts] uh also
more technology that uh is sometimes
utilized to uh to make it better quality
uh whether it's the leather or to the
monitoring the uh the sofair all types
of things that they utilize to make it
better and better. Point is that if you
want to get a good pair of be ready to
spend a couple thousand dollar or you
know more more or less if you bought
your for less than $1,000 if you could
still get your money back get it back. I
had somebody that uh I don't know maybe
a year ago he uh asked me about Feline
and uh I told him you go on the website
and buy it at $1,600. I think that's
what it was at the time. I think it
still is for at least the the Rashi
Safari one. The Ashkinazi is much more
expensive. Um but that's because that's
just the way it is. Uh Lebanon's a
little more expensive also. But
nonetheless, whatever. These are very
very good fine that if you find the same
file anywhere else, probably spend
almost $3,000 for them. So, but anyway,
I told him this is what it is. He goes,
"No, it's too expensive. And this is a
person that has money. It's too
expensive. This other person is selling
me fine for for $900, but I want to buy
it from you.
I'm I'm sorry. This is not like for
business. I'm doing it more for, you
know, courtesy and to to help people. Uh
sometimes we end up losing money on
these things. Like for example, meot the
standard meuzot we're contemplating
whether to stop doing it or not because
it's losing money. Uh the saf have uh
you know need more and it costs more and
we bring them from Israel which is
costing more with all of the different
added costs over the last few years. Uh
but uh whatever. For now we're you know
we're uh we're continuing but um most
likely we'll uh stop the standard messes
and only focus on the really high-end
ones because uh at least there we won't
be able to you know uh we'll be able to
keep our there's not that many orders of
that number one and it's not uh going to
be a loss. Anyway, the
uh the guy uh asked for he wanted me to
sell it for I said I'm sorry I can't
lose money. It's an organization. It's
not it's not it's not like my personal
bank piggy bank, especially since I know
that the guy can [laughter] afford it.
Anyway, he decided to buy it feline from
the guy that uh sold it to him for $900.
Said, "Bo what you want. Your money,
it's your life. Uh do what you want." He
comes back literally a day after he
bought it. He starts asking me questions
about his why you ask me that you bought
from somebody else. He asked me
questions. He shows me pictures.
things don't, you know, you can't really
tell 100% from pictures, but they don't
really look so kosher. Oh, maybe you
want a check, maybe this, maybe that.
Long story short, six months later, he
realizes that he was better off taking
the the the $900 and putting it through
a shredder. You know, a shredder, how it
cuts up money, cuts up any paper into 50
million pieces. He was better off doing
that because at least they'll have the
entertainment of watching something get
cut up. It's a little bit, you know,
what do they call it? a uh um
uh satisfying satisfying satisfying.
[laughter]
Why? Because for the last 6 months he
was uh simply uh not putting on fine
while he thinks he was putting on
feline. He thought he was saving money
ended up having to spend much more. You
know, it is what it is. But uh so don't
try to save money when it comes to
parent. Try to uh find somebody that
sells good quality that's reliable.
Cheap things are often much more
expensive. You're right. 100%.
Are return certificates obtainable? If
I'm living in Mexico, can I obtain my
tuda? If I obtain a rabbi as my sponsor
and not being excluded,
I'm I'm sorry. I don't really If you
mean, can you convert in one country, go
back to your old country? Usually not.
Usually the bet is going to want you to
live in the place that they're
converting you. They're not going to uh
convert you just for coming to a trip to
Israel and conversion and you go back to
Mexico or wherever it is. Usually, no.
It's very rare.
It's frowned upon by the ravenut to for
anyone to do that
if I was thought to say before reciting
in the morning services while wearing is
this correct?
Um you don't have an obligation to say
um but you can if you want to. I mean
usually if you're praying at home or in
synagogue you're supposed to pray the
entire which you know um so you have
some prayers before uh before the u
and um there's no before it. I mean when
you teach usually when you teach
children uh to just say the for example
uh either before going to bed or or in
the morning because you know obviously
they're not going to pray the entire uh
usually then you say to uh you teach
them to say
that's what I've taught my kids it's
very good to do but for an adult uh you
should be praying what's in the sidu
but even if you pray if you want to say
you can. There's nothing wrong with it.
But don't replace what's in the with if
it's the same. It's not. You have to do
more.
[snorts]
No, a non-Jew is allowed to eat any meat
that he wants as long as it's not a
living animal. Meaning, don't chop the
leg off the horse or the cow while it's
still alive. But once the cow or the dog
or the or the horse or whatever meat you
want to eat uh is dead, you could eat
the whole thing. As a nohide, you can
eat the whole thing. You don't have to
worry about kashut. As a Jew, you have
to you're only allowed to eat kosher
meat and uh
uh you have different uh
restrictions.
I like sardines and anchovies.
Enjoy.
Eat sardines. Eat anchovies. No problem.
Sardines are even kosher.
So summon
I admired certain Rav who has helped me
throughout the years to come back in
Chuva and closer to Hashem. Recently was
surface this Rav who once inspired me
had fallen in sin of allayot. This news
hit me hard and has me questioning a lot
of things and has been hard for me to
digest. I need your advice. Well, it
depends. What do you mean the person has
fell? I mean, do you did you see it? Is
there witnesses to it? If you're simply
saying that somebody says that this
rabbi did something wrong and you
believe it, then not only are you
sinning by believing it, uh, but you
haven't done chuva yet and you need to
do chuva because [snorts]
first and foremost, in order for
something to be, uh, proven that it
happened, there has to be witnesses to
it. One witness doesn't count as
anything. In fact, it's a sin for a
person to come to the bed, for example,
say this person did this uh without
witnesses considered
or depending of whether they're tell if
they're telling you the truth, it's if
they're lying, then it's which both of
them are uh are big sins that bring
destruction to that person's life. And
actually, all of their merits go to the
person they're saying about.
Furthermore, the people that uh listen
to it or watch a video of somebody
saying these things uh they're all
sinning uh if if they believe this uh
even hearing it is a problem. But
needless to say, if they believe it,
it's a sin. It's a sin from a Torah.
They'll get punished for it. Uh so uh
it's a soul to believe uh such a thing.
Uh and I think that in today's world,
it's very easy not to believe because
most things out there are fake. uh most
things out there are fake. So, as far as
if you're saying that this rabbi you
have uh you heard bad things about him,
um number one, how did you hear it? Did
you see it? Do you is anybody is there
any you know confirmation that this this
actually happened from, you know,
multiple witnesses or is it just uh
hearsay? Uh is is is even the hearsay
coming from a from a valid person? um
uh meaning this person is a uh could
could this person even be a witness.
That's number one. Uh the the second
thing is that uh you know even if a
person made a mistake in their life uh
let's just say your your your your uh
example of that does not negate you know
everything that they've ever done. Uh
people have made mistakes, people will
make mistakes, you make mistakes and
most people forget to look at themselves
in the mirror and and you know
people are very easy to judge. They
judge harshly everybody else but lightly
themselves.
uh and and and it's it's a very horrible
trait that comes from arrogance where
they'll for example me okay me people
people that uh that I've helped over the
years the moment that uh many of them
are good but many people that I've
invested a lot of time and effort and
even in some cases money to help them
and and different things many people are
not only ungrateful people and terrible
people but it all starts with you know
people that judge harshly where they
heard me say something in issue that
they either misunderstood or simply
didn't like and from that moment on all
of the years that I've helped them all
of the years that I taught them all of
the years that I've I've invested into
these people all of them went to
complete garbage and uh they turned me
in some cases into their enemy. I'll
even give you an example.
I'll even give you guys an example.
There's always so many real life
examples that why even give
hypothetical. There was a family that uh
that wanted to convert and uh they
wanted my help and they were learning
all my lectures. They came attended many
my lectures
and uh
they were nice people and uh you know I
tried to do whatever I can to help them
and they needed a lot more help than the
typical people did. there's a lot of
issues, a lot of family problems, a lot
of whatever. Long story short, if if I
invest, let's say an average of let's
say one hour into let's say a family and
this family I invested five. Okay, just
so you understand how much more I
invested into this family in a lot of
different ways. Nonetheless, I know it's
free. You know, if somebody wants to
donate, they could donate on their own,
but it's never like a charge. Nobody
ever gets a bill for me or anything like
that for for the time that I invest into
them. So anyway, and this is a people
that wanted to convert. These are not
even Jews yet. Okay. So anyway, they
wanted to convert, but I told them that,
you know, there's certain requirements
that they were not meeting the
requirements. Uh and uh I I can't
sponsor them until that changes. You
know, it was the main problem with was
with the husband.
The husband didn't really want to live a
Jewish life. So that's that's a
requirement. you can't stay married and
if the husband doesn't want to live a
Jewish life and doesn't have a job that
is conducive to a Jewish life. So until
that changes I can't sponsor you. So
they decided, okay, let me ask uh
another rabbi and uh then they would
have the other rabbi call me, you know,
then would So I told him, listen, if you
want somebody else to convert you, would
go to somebody else. If you want me to
convert you, I'm not going to do it
because you have to meet Allah. It's not
long story short
after all the years that I invested with
this family and the resources and even
invited this family to my house which is
a many thousands and tens of thousands
of people that I've you know spoken to
and helped and and and communicate with
and and so on. Very very few people have
come to my house. Very few.
This one came to my house multiple times
and uh
they decided
to
go to rabbis
and start badmouthing me.
And if that wasn't enough,
you know, after the rabbis called me,
asked me about it, I said, "What are you
talking about? I could give you, you
know, proof of all." He goes, "No, we
don't think anything about it. you just
wanted to know. Okay. Then they took it
a step further. They went to a uh uh a
different uh rabbi that hated me and uh
apparently he brought them to a bedin
and uh
at the bed they invented a whole bunch
of lies.
They said I I I stole $40,000 from them.
that uh I I did this like literally
invented lies that even I don't even
think terrorists do what they said. They
invented every lie under the sun. Like
literally try to destroy
anything that's remotely good that I've
done over the years for no reason. Just
to look favorable in that bed dean's
eyes. That's it.
And of course the the uh the they they
this got back to me. Then they tried to
do it with another place. They uh cuz
that place didn't convert them. Uh
anyway, they just heard and the person
that didn't like me over there enjoyed
it, publicized it. Uh felt like he was
there was ammunition for him. Um then
they didn't even uh you know they went
to a bed that I'm very familiar with and
I've worked with and and that know me
well and they did the same exact thing
over there
and they said they came to bed know me
they contacted me and said we don't
believe anything they said but I just
want you to know this is happening. I
said I already know because they did it
somewhere else and I told him the whole
real story of what happened and I said
listen we won't look we won't convert
them even if they pay us a million
dollars. Uh I said you shouldn't based
on what these people are doing. So long
story short after they did all this they
thought that if they destroy my name uh
with different rabbis with different
places
uh it will raise them up in in in total
pole. U it ended up not doing anything
good for them. In fact only bad things
happened to them after that. Um, and the
best part about it is that after I don't
know, however much time it was, 6
months, a year later, they tried to
contact me again. Oh, you know, we're
sorry. Can can can you still be our
rabbi? [laughter]
said to them, "Okay, once you fix what
you've done, all of the that you spread,
all of the, you know, the lies and uh
that you made people think that I stole
money or I took money from you or
anything, uh, go fix that first, then
come and say I'm sorry." You say, "I'm
sorry," means nothing. You say, "I'm
sorry," means nothing. Go fix what you
did. I did everything I did for free.
And
you made like literally like lies that
were like destructive and and
disgusting.
So I mean I could charge for everything
I do. I don't I don't have to, but I
can. There's no problem. People will
pay. People pay other people that don't
don't even do 10% of what I do.
Uh
so they uh said, "Oh, please can you No,
go fix it." Anyway, they obviously
didn't want to fix it because that will
bring them embarrassment.
for being liars.
And guess what? All of the people that
told them that they will help them if
they speak bad about me, all of the
people that told them that they will be
there for them if they speak bad about
me and they go against me because guess
what? All of those people ended up being
bad to them. Ended up taking advantage
of them. They realize that what they did
to others, what they did to they tried
to do to me is being done to them and
even worse. And they realized that they
made a mistake of a lifetime. And uh if
you can ask me, oh, can you forgive
them? No. No. Until they fix what they
did, they can't fix it. Okay.
Don't problem. You know, you can't you
can't just try to destroy somebody, try
to kill somebody like Ishmael tried to
kill,
but then he missed. He said, "No, no,
no. I was just playing. I was just
playing." No, doesn't work that way. So,
when it comes down to people,
unfortunately,
many people are ungrateful, many people
are not nice. Uh, but there are some
nice ones. There are some nice ones, but
uh so when it comes down to
this uh rabbi of yours that you say
somebody told you he did something bad,
number one, I told you you have to check
if the source of information that you
have is a valid source according to
Allah. Because if it's not, you are
making a sin. you are uh trusting a
criminal that's publicizing a you know
that's publicizing something that's not
allowed to be publicized because that's
not the way that works. You can't just
be a single witness.
Um
unless it's like something like
pedophilia or rape or something like
that which I'm assuming that's not what
you're talking about. Uh so number one
you have to check whether that because
if not you're a sinner and you're
relying on a sinner. Number two, you're
being ungrateful.
Uh, and number three,
it's doesn't seem like one thing has to
do with the other. If somebody told you
what Torah said for many years and let's
just say you found out that they stole a
million dollars or let's say you found
out that uh I don't know, whatever
whatever they did. One thing doesn't
negate the other. One thing doesn't
negate the other. It's it's not I think
people are uh are very very harsh and
very ungrateful and uh quite frankly you
should be ashamed of yourself.
Um
last thing I would say about this is is
this. Do you judge yourself the same
way?
Like would you give up on yourself
[snorts]
if you did the same thing?
So
how do you
how do you judge somebody that helped
you? Somebody that in essence is partner
to creating you because before you did
chuva, you were considered dead. So
after this rabbi helped you do chuva. In
essence, he became partners with Hashem.
That's what the sages say. Became
partners with Hashem with creating you.
How can you
even even even even even dare thinking
that you can judge that you're in a
position of judging anybody?
It's bizarre to me that people think
that way. Um
and uh and then quite frankly, I don't
know. I just I just uh I would say
was your gratitude
over the last I don't know however many
years you've been uh benefiting from
this rabbi was your gratitude as great
as your criticism is.
I bet you if you check the facts
for sure you're making a mistake and
judging this rabbi harshly and judging
it all
uh
irrelevant of of of the circumstance
because there is for everything.
There is al for everything
and we can't just decide that uh we're
going to use our logic instead of
doesn't work that way.
If the person wants to do that, pick a
different religion.
Can Hashem take away my arthritis away?
Sure, why not? He created the world.
How does the rabbi make money? How do
you make money?
Same way you make money. I make money.
Now you're going to tell me, "No, I make
money because I work in construction."
Okay? I work for Hashem. I make money.
Hashem gives you money through your
construction. Hashem gives me money
through working for him.
Is it good to live in Aventura, Florida?
I don't live there, so I can't tell you
if it's good to live there or not good
to live there, but I know there's a lot
of Jews that live there, and there's
several synagogues,
uh, there. I've been, uh, at a few of
them. I gave a lecture, I think, at a
couple of them. So, yeah, there's
definitely, uh, good there. As far as
living, it depends what you're looking
for. It depends what you want.
Oh, how did they say that I stole the
$40,000? I have no idea. They just said
I stole $40,000 from them.
No idea. They just invented things. They
invented they invented uh they invented
a uh story.
And uh I tell you actually the funniest
thing, not really funny, it was not
funny at the time. The worst part about
it that the guy that spearheaded this
whole thing was a Jew, this miserable,
miserable Jew that wanted his son that
no one wants to marry to marry this
non-Jewish girl. He wanted to convert.
So you ch So So when he came to me, when
the guy came to me is
he asked me, "How come you don't convert
her?" I'm like, "They're not ready."
"No, but I think they're ready." Yeah,
like listen, I understand you want him
to marry your your son, which it's none
of my business, but I'm not going to
convert somebody just because you want
to marry them. It doesn't work that way.
So, this guy is actually the guy that
also helped influence them to the bad.
They're still 100% guilty. Just because
uh somebody else was involved doesn't
mean anything. Everybody's responsible
for themselves, you know, they're
adults. Uh but uh yeah. Yeah, there was
a guy there's always some rash that's
behind the scenes. It's always
but uh it is what it is guys. It is what
it is.
As far as the story I told you right
now, I can give you a dime a dozen of
stories of ungrateful people that uh
that uh that do bad things to us. We
suffer a lot from people. Quite frankly,
the only thing I get I suffer from is
from people. But we don't work for
people. We work for them. We help people
because that's what we need to do. Uh we
try to help people. If people want to be
ungrateful, it's their problem, not
mine.
My question is for my question is work
for Hashem and make money
but Kabad does fundraiser. Rabbi gives
lecture for free. You're not
understanding the answer.
No matter what you do,
Hashem will send each person their
page 16
also 16. Just one is 16a, the other one
is 16b
says that
decides how much money you're going to
get, how much you're going to make, how
much you're going to lose. He decides
all of that in whether a person's going
to live, die, and so on.
So the specifies that the money that
Hashem decides how much you're going to
get in is irrelevant
or irrespective of
your profession,
your age, your color,
uh your uh you know your doesn't make a
difference. Doesn't make a difference
what you do for a living. Meaning that
you could either be a guy that sells
cups like this, you know, from hotel to
hotel, or you could be a guy that uh
sells uh books like this. Probably you
don't want to sell this one. It's mine.
You can't really sell it, and it's also
very precious and beautiful. But most
likely, people want something new
anyway.
Uh or you can be a guy that's a hedge
fund manager, or you could be a guy that
is a lawyer, or you could be a guy
that's a uh criminal. Whatever you are,
Hashem decides how much money you're
going to make, going to lose. So you in
essence work in your profession and
therefore that is one of the vessels
that Hashem can give you the pona. But
it doesn't mean it's the only vessel a
person a uh can make is money. Let's say
he makes uh $50,000
from his profession. But if Hashem
decided to give this person $350,000 for
that year, he could still give him
$350,000.
You can ask how is there a limitation
for how much Hashem can give? He can
give it to him through an inheritance.
So he got 50,000 from the job and
300,000 inheritance. He gave it to him
from a lawsuit. He can give it to him
from finding it. He can give it to him
from investments. He give it from a
million other things. Meaning that
Hashem gives you your money. Hashem
gives me my money.
So as far as the vessel
has no end of vessels, no end of the
vessels. So the fact that I give
lectures for free and we distribute
everything for free is because I believe
that Hashem runs the world that no
matter what I do, Hashem will send me
food to eat.
Needless to say, if I do his will and I
help his children come back to him.
So if he feeds the gash, the idol
worshipper, if he feeds the guy that uh
you know is a uh working all day, even
if he's religious, he feeds other
people, why wouldn't he feed me? Why
wouldn't he provide for me
if I'm all I'm doing is serving him,
praying to him, learning his Torah,
helping his children come back to him,
sacrificing my life, sacrificing my
time, sacrificing my family, sacrificing
my health, sacrificing everything that I
have to publicize his name and help his
children and the rest of the world get
closer to Hashem. That's all I do. every
waking hour that I'm that I'm that I'm
uh that I'm I'm out is simply connecting
trying to get more people to come to
Hashem. Whether it's through uh
publishing more books or giving more
lectures or helping people, guiding them
with answers and questions at 3:00 in
the morning, at 3:00 IN THE AFTERNOON,
ALL I DO IS serve Hashem. That's it.
That's it. That's all. That's all I'm
consumed with. And
that means I have less time to be with
my family, less time to take care of
other things. All that's it. So what?
He's not going to feed me then?
He's not going to feed me. He's going to
leave me starving.
Says,
"I have been young. I've been old and
I've never seen a righteous person uh
you know a um and his children not have
food
or abandoning them." So yes, provides
provides for you. provides for me.
Not really understand. I don't really
understand
why people
ask those types of questions. What do
you care about the profession of
somebody, the uh the whether they rent
or they mortgage or they uh they uh
bought the car, they leased the car or
they got a raise and all
who provides it all. And uh that's it. I
mean,
if I'm not mistaken, you didn't get a
bill for me to pay for my rent, right?
You didn't get a bill for me to pay for
my food. Not relying on you.
So, what do you care how I get it or
what I get? Who provides? Provides for
provides for you.
If you say, "Oh, yeah, but uh you know,
I want to donate." So, donate.
You're not going to get a call from me
to ask you to donate. If you want to
donate, donate. There's a website.org.
You can donate. You want to donate to
send me money personally. Send money
personally. There's a sell and send a
zel.
You're just a curious uh person. Okay,
fine. You got your answer. I just don't
I don't understand those types of
questions to be honest with you. It
doesn't uh I don't I don't I usually
like questions that uh I would ask also.
I have asked before, but in my entire
life, I've never asked somebody how they
make money. Like I would ask somebody
what they do for a living out of, you
know, getting to know a person, what
they do for a living. But as far as how
they pay for a house, how they pay for a
car, whether they bought, they sold, I
know I never cared about other people's
pockets. Don't understand.
Don't understand. Don't understand.
People ask, I know it's common. You're
not alone, by the way. I'm not I'm don't
even know who you are. I'm not I'm not
targeting you or anything. It's a very
common thing in society. I just don't
understand it. I don't understand it.
People ask all the time. They they ask
uh you know Robert Fry all the time, did
you buy? Did you sell? Did you do this?
How much do you have? Like I don't
understand that. Why do you care?
Why do you care? I mean, is it coming
out of your pocket? Are you paying for
it? Did you get a bill from uh from from
my bank or something like that? I
[laughter] don't care. Hashem provides.
Provides. If you want to know, you know,
do I have or not? I work for free. I
don't know. Isn't that Isn't that
indicative that [laughter] I'm I'm a
decent human being. I work for free. I
give you this lecture for free. Three
hours. Go get three hours for free from
your doctor. Go get three hours from
from any lecturer. Go. Good luck finding
it. Only people that speak for, you
know, uh for three hours of people that
get money. I'm doing everything for
free. I don't know. I think it's a it's
a good indication that I have I believe
in decent.
[laughter]
I don't know. I find I find those
questions bizarre.
>> [sighs]
>> All right.
Um, is YouTube the only place to ask
questions? No, I have four, one, two,
four, five different screens
in front of me. Really, six, but one of
them for questions. I'm trying to go
back and forth. There's Facebook,
there's WhatsApp, there's YouTube, there
is Tik Tok, and then there's just a uh
another camera. So, there's cameras. If
I don't get to your question, it's
whoever, you know, I don't get the right
questions. It's not because I I I I'm
dodging questions. I just um
I'm trying to get something from
everywhere. Oh, wow. Almost three hours.
We got to finish this. Let
me see.
Is there a reason why I see most Jews
with silver watches instead of gold
watches?
I wouldn't necessarily see most Jews,
but silver is aim is mercy, whereas gold
is dee. So if somebody is wearing
something based on their spiritual
connection to Hashem and and Torah then
silver is because usually they wear
something silver or at least white gold
or platinum because it's mercy. Uh
whereas gold is dean is judgment.
It's not prohibited to wear gold. Um
obviously the beta mikdash was full of
gold. the uh
uh gold is used. Uh but some people
somehow not to wear gold
uh because it brings judgment.
Rabbi, how can an electron be in two
places at once? physically cannot be in
two places at once or is it only with a
body and not electricity.
Uh how the electron is in two places.
This is this is the uh part of um this
is part of uh quantum mechanics.
Um this is how Hashem created the world.
uh for for certain things that's that
are not necessarily on the physical
level like uh material that are certain
things that are uh closer to
spirituality. The same concept for
example with uh fire. Fire is very close
to something completely spiritual but
it's not completely spiritual because
you could see fire with the naked eye.
Uh and if you touch fire obviously it's
not going to be good for you. Uh but you
cannot hold fire. can't grab it and hold
it. You can't contain it. Uh so there
are certain things in creation that are
in between. There is obviously the
purely solid physical
uh things. Uh there is the uh things
that are completely spiritual like you
know the uh the the angels, the demons,
the you know different spirits uh
different things. There's something in
the middle like fire. Uh then there's
also the the uh different uh things that
make up uh the you know uh things like
the you know electrons, protons,
neutrons, uh you know atoms, you know
all these different things. Uh you can't
really call them physical things. Uh you
can't call them completely spiritual.
It's it's somewhere in between similar
to fire.
And uh when something is, you know, not
completely physical, it's not subject to
the u the same uh laws as something that
is completely physical. Not just based
on physics, based on just you know how
Hashem runs the world. Like we saw for
example with the example of Don Kesh. It
was 100% physical. You could hold it,
open it, touch it, but it was not
subject to because the spiritually
speaking it didn't take up space, you
know. So this is beyond human
comprehension.
I live in New York and love it here.
What should the Jews do if God forbid
Madani wins the mayoral election next
week?
We should do chuva today.
I don't think you should wait for next
week.
Do chuva today for believing that uh he
could do anything to you that um is not
in the hands of Hashem. He has no power.
Hashem has power. If Hashem wants good
for Israel, no one can get in the way.
If Hashem wants to punish Israel, no one
could do get in the way. So what people
should be doing is stop being afraid of
people. Stop being afraid of
politicians. Stop being afraid of
anything about Hashem
and
All right, let's see. One last question.
We'll finish it tonight. I think it's
been long enough.
What do you think about the draft
decree in Israel?
What do you what I think about it? any
any Jew that has yachim
knows that the this is only going to
bring problems to Israel because they're
fighting against the Torah. You know,
the they're simply uh fighting against
the Torah.
They think that they fight fighting
against the uh Torah learners is going
to help. Um but they should look at
history. Anytime anyone has fought
against the Torah, it only brought them
a disaster.
Now, of course, is to always do chuva,
has to always get stronger, has to
always fight against somebody that's
going against them, even if it's from
within. But this is part of the that are
going to fight even the Msiah himself
when he comes.
So, uh you know, this is part of the
this is part of the end of days.
Okay.
Hopefully
you guys will take some of this and
apply it to your life. Anyone that wants
to donate,
you can go toem.org.
Uh, also as a reminder, anyone that
wants the sadik that we have
uh to pray for them uh at then you can
uh go to the website, go to the shops
and uh you can um buy yourself the
ticket over there. You'll get if you do
that uh you'll get a video of him
actually uh praying for you. You'll hear
his voice. You'll see the candle he
lights for you. Uh you'll hear your
name. Uh and um
you'll get it uh
you know right after he does it. Usually
it's within a a day or two. We send it
to people and uh that's for it's a big
uh thing that people do that uh to do it
all year but it's a special thing to do
it during her on her yard site which is
on Sunday. So if you want to do it few,
you'll have to uh um
sign up u no later than mo Shabbat and
even that's cutting it close because I
have to tell him and uh he has to you
know he goes there uh on Sunday which
again is a sevenhour difference
and of course for those of you that are
clever and want to help Hashem uh shem's
children to uh come back and not to go
to Gome. Get at least 10 of these Kiru
boxes that uh are simply the ultimate
tool to help people do cha. Get 10, get
50, get a hundred, get as many as you
can afford. And as Rabbi Fry said
publicly, even if you have to go borrow
money, go do it. It's worth it because
it'll be a uh an investment of a
lifetime for you. You give it to
somebody, they watch it, they'll do
chuva. It's simply a tool that's unlike
anything else uh the world has ever
seen. Get as many of them as you
possibly can. I understand it costs
money, but that's what Hashem that's why
Hashem gives money. Hashem gives money
so you could use it to sanctify his
name, not just to uh buy gold watches
and silver watches. Uh it's it's also to
do.
We will learn again next week. Hold
tight. We're finally here. The new Kir
box
opens up. A nice little cushion here.
I got
Let's see if it's charged.
>> Isn't that amazing? Still bust your
life.
>> Now available at.com.org.
org. Get yourself 20 of them, 30 of
them, 50 of them. distribute them to all
the people that you care about
and you get people to do the chuba.