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Likutei Sichos, Inreach, Tzama, Friction vs. Complancey - Rabbi Chaim Dalfin
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that has a punchline.
>> What you talking about?
>> Your avoid
and your daily life.
>> You're talking about
Yes.
>> Yes. Yes. That's very different than a
Torah that you're going to hear from
many or that you're going to read. It's
a nice vort that picks apart, you know,
some gumatri of a word, but it doesn't
have a practical this is what you take
away from it. And in learning the
rebikas, I always see that he draws down
the practical level something to learn
from it.
>> Right?
>> And in your aod,
>> right? And and and and you could
understand why that didn't really
interest Rabi Salvich because that's not
the way the brisker mind thinks. You
know the brisker mind is is is
enthralled with with the concept.
I I so so I dab a shaw with the roshiva
who was the the shaw who was a roshiva
who mamash was a brisker in his thinking
process despite his strival and what he
would take something from rashi
something from the pussk and he'd go to
the ram and then take a steer in the
rambom and come to some some resolution
of the steering in the ram based on
[ __ ] very nice
>> very nice very deep Yeah.
>> But what how what does it deal with me
in my
>> life in my Hashem and how I relate to
other people?
>> Yeah. Um it's a it's it's a
>> Go ahead. Go ahead. Yeah.
>> Was that was that the idea of Cayeno?
>> No. Hayo is a a recent publication to
make it accessible to English speakers
and is done in a fascinating way.
They're always adding more and more but
Cayeno I would say is more of a
is more a practical a practicality.
So it has myimas,
letters, stories, uh,
you know,
here [snorts] we're talking about, um,
the Reba's own writings, you know, and
the the the the novelty of the our our
Reb, the lastb of the Reb is the
six from the alterba through the freed
they all said my mor
even if you look at the of the previousb
which I I really encourage you to to
read
because it but it it's it's kind of the
history of kabad
and that's very important but the reb is
unique he's taking the paras with rashis
and as is says and then there's a a
takeaway, a bottom line.
That's uh
that's uh that's unique. That's unique
because you you were saying about how
other people that are not necessarily
born into so they've taken on these
things. I'm telling you, all over
Israel, ask Moshe, ask Elliot, the
Everyone was walking around with the
not people with beards and and and hats
and a wreck. People love it.
>> Okay. Okay.
>> People love it.
>> But but but
for English speakers,
>> I understand, but we're living the sixth
town. I'm not I'm not I'm not what
>> I think I think I I think Yoni means
Yonyi when you meanu you don't you
you're also I think what you're talking
about is the malus the the all Hebrew
all
>> yeah so that yeah okay fine that's a
publication but I'm not putting down the
public I'm saying that within the
publication there's I'm talking about
the virtue and what is
this is not a contradiction
And has so much more than
THE MALAS HAS THE I believe as well.
It's not not a contradiction. It's just
a Yes. Then people are not walking
around with the as much as they walk
around. I agree with you.
>> Yes.
I think I I want to just say that um
I was speaking with my son-in-law um
because Iser is and I had planned to go
to Tama Monday night, but because Esther
had to go to Detroit, so his ticket
became available. So I I actually
invited my son-in-law to come with me
and he and he he said, "Yeah, I'd like
to come with." So after the concert and
everything, we walked we were walking
through the the swarm sale in Bign, you
know, it's
>> Yeah.
>> And he said he said to me, "Wow, like
there's all types of people here, you
know, litish." And it was interesting.
There were a lot of a lot of what I call
like bakim litfish people. really really
all types.
And I said to him, you know,
I said, you know, um, today it's like
you have people who are really lifish
guys who are coming out and saying that
they have kuses in Tanya.
And I said to him, I said, you know, I
said, I said, you know, when I first
started after I had become observant and
when I really started getting connected,
you know, more to Libavich and slowly
slowly, I said there was a certain
point, this would be in like the '9s, I
would say. Um, even into like, you know,
2000 plus, I said, all my like litfisher
type friends, like I get like I I got a
lot of push back, you know. I got a lot
of push back then then
but not now. Now now I think it's the
opposite.
>> Yeah, there's been a a great change
especially in Israel this this organ you
know what moil was behind this summer
what they've created. I was telling my
on our group chat because they're they
really not they're not as aware as I am.
I've seen it up close because I, you
know, frequent so over the years has
really made a change in in in what
you're saying. It's it's made a it's
made a real change. A real change. You
know, I'm not going to go say that uh
you know, hardcore Punovicher or
Lakewitterers are u are behind that, but
it's it's much more open and you know,
>> yeah, my my nephew is my nephew is in
the mirror and he says that there's a a
huge kabur of guys learning.
>> Yeah. Every day.
>> Yeah. Yeah. And in in fact there's a boy
here who's in the mirror is going back
mat shabas and he's from kabad family
and they have an entire two three times
a week at a shul near mir where they
have
but um
one of the points I said at this fab I'm
going to send you
I didn't send out fabangan in Cleveland
I spoke about friction
Ra Salvich
he opened my eyes to this idea when I
researched him Salvich believed that
without friction
in terra
you're not getting the essence of Tyra
the whole brisk approach is the friction
with friction to really see the steus
the contradictions like Isa said this
Rambam that Rambam and then to really
get into it. So, so too in in in life
friction
ultimately can be used and should be
used in a healthy way where that's where
you kind of settle this is who I am,
this is what I want to be, etc.
And that's so this is a you could we
could say moisha like this that the
friction that you experienced in the 19
1990s and 2000s the push back
led to the kind of situation now where
there's less friction and more
acceptance.
You see we could look at the differences
between the reb
and the rabbutler and all of those
things which you know that that's what
I've studied and write about written
about.
There's [laughter] nothing there's not
more I don't have more more friction to
write about. what I've written
[laughter] about everything
like it's all been said right you got to
now find find
new friction and there isn't there isn't
really
>> last night there was in the crown
heights by the sat uh by the what do you
called last night the sat get together
the yard site yeah site
>> what's the
>> yeah the yakiola but what was the
friction what
>> what was the friction
>> Ben land there was Then Lando was there
and they threw him out. It was the whole
thing.
>> Okay. But that that has nothing to do
with
>> No. Nothing to do about it.
>> No.
>> So in a way, Mosa, in a way
it's like I I missed the friction. In
other friction really gets you to move.
You got to make a decision. Who am I?
Where do I want to be? When things are
very complacent and nice, there's no
movement.
Generally, there's no movement. You're a
nice boy. You're a nice girl. You're
doing well. You're the best. Oh,
so and we talk about the 60s and 70s,
right? [snorts] Like the whole
counterculture revolution, you know,
and that's what the Reb saw. The Reb saw
this as an opportunity for truth. And
then the six day war, the bala movement,
an upheaval. When there's an upheaval,
there's movement. When there's no
upheaval is okay.
So, you know, as much as we talk about
what you're saying and and as I said,
it's real. You're right. It's real.
But but but know that
there's still another step. It it it
there's another step where in other
words to to jump over it takes it takes
a challenge. If there isn't a challenge
then you're not really jumping over. You
just gradually a little step. Okay. And
and and some people get to the higher
step and many people don't. And that's
what I'm finding within Kabad as well.
me over the last since Gimmel Thomas 30
plus years now. This is a challenge
where because the Reb is not here but
Gash is to kind of say do this now you
know new campaigns
and new issues which caused alarm inside
Kabad outside Kabad and things were
shaking and moving. So when things are
shaking and moving, people move.
But when everything is like complacent,
yeah, it's not nice. There's there's
less movement. And this is the and this
is I think an overall issue. So there's
what I'm saying is there's pluses and
minuses to the the the the feelings that
you said about
now compared to your time acceptance of
I'm saying I I understand it. I see it.
It's good. At the same time, I would
like to see a little more friction.
I friction doesn't, by the way, friction
doesn't mean you're a jerk and you're
bad, but just your movement, you know,
let let's let's really get into it. So,
that that's how people make moves. What
What do you say about that?
that I I think that it um I I totally
hear that. I totally hear that. And as
you were speaking, I was thinking how
one of the things I think that's changed
since then is the amount
of inreach that is needed.
And I think that that is a what is the
situation today within the community.
>> Yeah.
>> Is
in many in some ways very different from
you know 30
30 you know since Thomas
>> right
>> very good point.
>> Yeah. That is a very good point and
that's what I saw in Cleveland. This was
a paprankan sponsored by four kabad
shuls anash the young the younger ones
you know and this issue is is is the
issue what you're identifying the the
inreach you know
so that's a very good point and and that
is true and um
if leadership
in every community in every group will
allow Sorry, I I don't understand what
you mean by inner reach.
>> Withinad, not going outside and doing
not the part
>> within the people. You have a lot of
kids going off the d. And
>> there's other issues in that they didn't
have so many years ago and has a lot to
do with that there's no reba today. It's
one of the reasons. I [snorts] think
it's one of the I don't think it's the
only reason. I think there's many
reasons because everyone's having it.
It's not just a kabad issue, right?
Everybody's having this issue,
>> but I think with Kabad because they're
so, you know, they're so good at the
outreach, the inreach is something
that's really neglected.
>> Yeah, that's He makes a very very good
point. That that's I You're saying the
same thing, right?
>> Yeah. Yeah. 100%. But yes, sir. Did you
do you did you do you understand that?
Did you did you
do you understand what we're saying?
>> Yes, sir.
>> Yeah, I think so. I understand now.
And
>> okay,
>> you know the but like Y said it's not
just in Kabad. I think it's in every
community today. It's in every
community. The inreach,
you know, the sadikim, the big rebas,
it's finished. They've gone up. Okay,
they're good people and holy people. But
this era of 1900 to 2000 is over. as far
as that level of holiness and and and
and sitkiss and and and godliness that's
listen God willing it'll come back we'll
have a new generation of but you know so
so the focus has shifted should shift to
the okay now we have so many so many
yeshivas so many girls schools no what's
going on inside and now like said What
are we finding the OTD? I spoke about
that at the fabraan
OTD and this and that, you know, and and
like I always go back to what Misha told
me when I came to Ramsh the first time.
He he told me this people are stale and
he was talking about his own shoe ace
kes I remember he said that great people
but there's a lot of people that are
stale
so that's in reach how do you get the
excitement to people who became balichua
and FFBs who who are also just you know
stale how do you get them to to be
excited and to be new and fresh and how
do you communicate that to our kids and
grandkids?
And that's that's that's the issue.
That's the issue that we're all
confronted with. And uh hopefully, you
know, more and more people and
organizations are dedicating themselves
to this approach. I think they are. I
think they are, you know. So whether
it's summer or whether it's another
group um I think they are everyone
should have a great chabas. We'll see
everyone next week and we'll start
learning again the m zaz great shabas.
Take care. Byebye. Byebye. Byebye.