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We still have the parents, the fathers,
the sons, the wives, the friends
of we can talk about those who are
fighting
at the risk of their lives and even more
so those who have been killed in action.
And and what is something that we can
say to the individuals as opposed to the
claw the individuals those parents etc.
Those other relatives that have lost a
loved one and obviously that is an
unbelievable contribution that they've
given to claw the show but the personal
pain is so deep. How can we address them
in particular?
>> [sighs]
>> I'm going to try to get through these
words without crying too much.
Let's see how that works.
I'm always touched by the first vision
of Moshe Rabbeinu
with Hashem.
He sees a burning bush that's not being
consumed.
He wants to understand it.
What's the mechanism? A tree on fire
should be consumed. Why is this thorn
bush not being conformed consumed? I
want to understand Moshe is you know the
quintessential intellectual the Rambam
calls him
an oaf. And Hashem says, I'll take care
of a line don't get close.
Take your shoes off your feet because
you're standing on sacred soil.
In Medrash Rabba one of the metaphors in
this revelation is that Moshe Rabbeinu
was watching
the pain and the fires
that will consume the Jewish people.
When Moshe was looking at a burning bush
he wasn't only looking at a physical
bush. He was looking at his people who
thousands of years
will be burnt
murdered, tortured, slain.
Like the Jews in the kibbutzim who were
burnt
shot killed [snorts]
in barbaric ways. Their homes went up in
flames. Many families who died
embracing each other
in their security reinforcement rooms or
wherever they were
by the flames ignited by the Hamas Nazis
Moshe Rabbeinu saw it.
He saw he saw the 6 million
gassed and he saw the pain of the Jewish
people throughout history. Moshe
Rabbeinu wants to get close. He wants to
understand more about it.
Hashem says, take your shoes off your
feet. You're standing on sacred soil.
What that means for me is
when I am standing in the presence of a
person of a family in pain
a family
that has faced the flames of hatred and
violence and death.
A family that has lost loved ones
in the war
in this war against Hamas in the
atrocities of Simchat Torah
or in any other capacity in any other
form
now or earlier.
I have to know I am standing on
I am standing on sacred soil. I am
standing in the presence of absolute
holiness.
Literally the people I am standing in
front I'm talking to or I'm emailing or
I'm addressing are in a different
plateau. They're existing in a different
reality. Life means something completely
different for them. Death means
different something different for them.
Marriage, love they don't take anything
for granted.
They don't take for granted waking up in
the morning and seeing your husband your
wife near you your child near you having
the ability to say goodbye to your child
before they go to school. They don't
take anything for granted. Take your
shoes take your shoes off your feet.
I think
when we face these families when we talk
to these families first and foremost our
role is not to philosophize and not to
rationalize and not to justify and not
to find some brilliant philosophical
equation that might make sense or make
no sense. But really just to know that
this is a story beyond our minds. My job
is to be here
to say
we might
we are brothers we are sisters. We don't
understand why we don't understand the
the finite mind has no way of wrapping
itself around pure infinity. My job our
job is I'm I'm here for you today and
forever.
Give my I want to give my shoulder for
you to cry.
I want to be able to be here on your
terms not on my terms. I want to be able
to attend here to your needs and most
important and equally important
as an orphan once wrote to me
she lost lost both of his parents
and she said, I don't need people to
look at me in my eyes and think what a
case. What a
case. What a pity. Doesn't have a life
her whole life is destroyed. I want you
to feel my pain. I want you to empathize
with me but I want you to believe in me
also.
I want you to believe in my power in the
power of life.
I want you to believe in the power of my
soul. I want you to look at all of these
children at all of these women at all of
these families and completely empathize
and be there.
Experience them as much as you can. Be
there on their terms. Be kind. Be
gracious. Be attentive. Tune in to who
they are and what they need and equally
important
see their light. See their power.
Believe in them. Believe that
don't detach them from their source of
life. Don't look at them just as
isolated detached victims who were in
bad
appreciate the fact that their journey
is a sacred journey an inexplicable
journey and humbly we have the
opportunity to embrace them
every moment and say, we love you. We
love you now and forever. We are here
for you. We will be here for you. You
are our brothers. You are our sisters.
You are our children. You are our
parents. You are our families. We will
never be able to thank you enough for
the ultimate sacrifices that you have
made to protect millions of Jews who the
Hamas would love to murder like they did
on Simchat Torah. Remember we're dealing
here with people who would love to give
us a holocaust every single day until
every single Jew in Israel is dead and
it's your your family members
who literally went and are going on
I saw a clip of a of a commander who
spoke about a debate an argument with
one of his soldiers in
a few days ago.
He told this soldier, I'm going in first
to the home and the soldier says, no I'm
going in first. You have four children.
He says, you have two and you're young.
You still have to build your family. I'm
going and I have experience in Gaza and
the other person says, no you let me go
and he says, I am going. He says,
imagine two Jewish fathers in Gaza
fighting who's going to go in first to
make sure the other person is protected
and their children will have a father.
Where do you find such people? Where do
you find such people? I was watching
this clip I started to cry. I just
wanted to hug him and tell him, wow I am
in awe of you. We are in awe of each and
every one of you. All of Israel is
indebted to you. Is grateful to you.
Every Jew from
till Messiah
not only is part of your fan club but we
cheer you on. We salute every one of
these soldiers. We salute every one of
these
and we salute every one of their
families who are surviving who are
continuing their legacy and their life
with such courage. I don't want to be
able to ask myself why because the
question of why is mute is mute. I don't
have an answer for it. I don't think
anyone of us have have answers for it
but I think we need to go into a deeper
place. Questions and answers don't
really touch the nerve of the issue.
This is this is a time where we go into
a place where we call a means not
passivity. It means the courage to face
adversity
head on looking at reality not being
naive without losing our power of love
and connection and commitment and our
will for life. And [snorts] I think
when we can approach this from this
perspective it doesn't give answers and
it doesn't take away the pain. But none
of us can do that. None of us can do
that.
Our role at this point is to take off
our shoes
and embrace each and every one of them
knowing how much
of the love.
How things are going to work out in the
long run you know how history works out
this is not for me to know. This is only
one knows it the one who created the
whole world.
The one who's
divine providence and every single
person's life. The one who is the source
of all love and all life and all bliss
and is completely not defined by any
that we make.
Our job is
at every moment to be an ambassador for
God's love and light and empowerment and
confidence. I just want to be a channel.
I want to be a conduit. It's not about
ego self-consciousness
rationalization is every one of us being
a conduit to say, what is my role now?
What is my mission now? You know I had a
zoom with a bunch of teenagers and a big
question that came up was fear. Fear you
know there's so much fear now
and somebody asked somebody asked, what
do I do with all my fear? And I I just
something hit me. I was I was talking to
somebody who was in Kibbutz Be'eri.
Kibbutz Be'eri he's now in Tel Hashomer.
He's recovering because he was wounded
very badly.
And
he killed maybe 50 or 100 terrorists
until they blew off his hand
and he went to protect his wife and
children
and they survived. They were under a
bed. They went into the box under a bed.
The terrorists came into their bedroom
and they didn't notice them and they
were saved. His wife and two children
were saved and he was also saved.
And I asked him about the fear. What
He was surrounded by 100 or 200
terrorists in Be'eri. I said, "What do
you do with the fear?"
And he told me a line, you know, he
said,
he said, "At that moment,
you cannot afford to live in fear.
At that moment, the entire body
and the entire psyche tunes into one
thing, and that is what is my role right
now in order to save my life, to save my
wife's life, to save my children's life,
to save other people's lives, and to
eliminate the murderers. Anything that
distracts me from that space is going to
literally endanger the life of my loved
ones. Fear I can wait till later."
It was such a powerful
the defining moment cuz I realized
in our own lives,
obviously, we're not living every moment
for Shalom in that moment, but it
teaches me so much, you know, every
moment I can choose,
am I going to tune into what is my
mission right now?
Or am I going to allow myself to get
lured in and slept in into the abyss of
fear and depression and uncertainty? I
have to respect and acknowledge all my
emotions, but I think ultimately, we
each have to make a choice. What's the
space we want to live in? Are we going
to sublimate our pain into a driving
force for more love and connection? Or
are we going to sink into that abyss?
And ultimately, I think that's the
choice of every single Jew, and every
one of us is a leader, every one of us
can bring that sense of love and
connection to others.
I guess that's getting back to the PTSD
versus the growth question, but I I want
to get back to this emunah that you
mentioned. I have a question that
somebody sent me, but before that, that
was an amazing story about those two
highly in the soldiers, who's going to
go in first and the mesirus nefesh. Just
to bring it a little bit more, I guess,
common because none of us, almost none
of us are ever going to be in a
situation like that, but I remember when
I was a little bit younger,
uh I had two friends that were
counselors in Hask and they didn't have
a mattress. Between the two of them,
they had to decide who's going to sleep
on the mattress cuz there were too many,
I guess, maybe too many
campers came or whatever, so they were
short of mattress. And the two of them
got into a machlokes I'm going to sleep
on the floor. No, I'm going to sleep on
the floor. It wasn't I'm sleeping on the
mattress and you're going to sleep on
the floor, but it was the opposite. And
I think we can all internalize that
mesirus nefesh each on our own levels.
It's It's
Hopefully, we're not going to be in the
situation of pikauch nefesh, but we can
be moser nefesh in a very simple way,
giving to other people. And we can use
that as as an example. Yeah. But to get
I I but I I would just say, I would just
say if you would ask those two soldiers
and you say, "Oh, wow, you reached such
a madreiga of mesirus nefesh." They
would probably both laugh and say, "Oh,
you don't know what you're talking
about."
And I think it's important to
understand,
there are moments that the yechidus of
nefesh, what the what the kabbalists
call the core of the Jewish neshama
comes out and then you realize that
you're operating on a level of
consciousness
in which you're echad yachid umeyuchad
me Hashem Yisbarach. You are operating
on a level of consciousness where
everything that 10 minutes ago or a day
ago we thought was so significant,
you're completely transcended. Not
because you're crazy, not because you
became an angel, because you actually
tuned into the deepest deepest
frequencies of your soul. And when
you're on that level, it's like
I'm not sacrificing anything. I'm not
going crazy just because I'm such a such
a nice person. I'm actually I'm actually
connected to the deepest level of myself
that says, "You know what?
Of course, I want him to live and go
back to his family."
And therefore, there was a simcha. It
wasn't with a depression or with a
sadness. It was done with such a sense
of simcha. And it's hard for us to
fathom. What's more precious than
protecting your body? What What else do
we want to do? All of life, we're busy
protecting ourselves. Why do we go Why
do we go to work? Why do Why do we spend
time going to a doctor? Why do we eat?
Why do we sleep? Why do we take care of
ourselves?
Cuz we just want to protect our lives.
And at that moment, you realize that
you're part of something that's
infinite. You're part of ein sof mamash.
And even physical life may not even
capture that truth, you know. We say,
you know, according to Yiddishkeit,
death is really, you know, the
refrigerator's unplugged. When the
refrigerator's unplugged, electricity
doesn't die. The electricity doesn't
die. The electricity returns back to the
source of electricity. It's just not
channeled through the refrigerator. And
I believe at that moment, he felt that.
At that moment, he didn't feel my life
is going to end, but I'm a nice person,
I'm giving it to somebody else. He felt
that the dveikus of the neshama in
Hashem and ein sof is absolutely
eternal. The difference between death
the tragedy of death is that we don't
see it. We don't feel it. The
electricity of the neshama is not being
channeled through the guf.
It's not being channeled l'havdil
through the refrigerator. The
refrigerator can't do its job because
it's unplugged. Death is not death. It's
not the cessation of life. It's
unplugged. The soul is not being
channeled through the guf. And
therefore, on the level of the soul,
there's an absolute clarity and
certainty
that this is not the end of it.
There's complete oneness with Hashem for
eternity. That's why we know every
neshama is eternal. Yet we grieve
because we want to see you. We want to
hear you. We want We want to be able to
touch you.
So, they touched that deepest deepest
frequency. You know, you're talking
about you're talking about mesirus
nefesh in our own in our own our own
life. There was a moment I heard this
from somebody. His name is Yair
Einsbacher. He works in Tzahal, IDF, in
the terror unit, anti-terror units. And
he went to one of the kibbutzim.
>> [sighs]
>> I think it was Kfar Aza.
And uh
he eliminated dozens of terrorists and
then they went home to home searching
for Jews who were hiding.
And he said this, he went into one of
the homes and there were Jews hiding in
the cheder mamad, in the reinforcement
security room.
And he knocked on the door and he said,
"Zeh Tzahal." They didn't believe him.
They thought it was Hamasniks
camouflaged as Tzahal speaking Hebrew.
So, he started to quote sla you [snorts]
know, words in Hebrew and they didn't
believe him. He said, "Sh'ma Yisrael
Hashem Elokeinu Hashem Echad." They
thought maybe Hamas memorized Sh'ma
Yisrael.
But then he said enough psukim and he
gave enough Jewish references that they
believed him
and they opened the door.
And Yair said he came into a room
that was filled with Jews who were
hiding from the terrorists and they
survived. And he said, "You know what
happened instinctively? I just fell on
each one of their shoulders
and I just embraced them and kissed them
and we hugged them, we cried. And then
Yair said, "I walked out of that room."
And I'm going to quote him in Hebrew. He
said, "Yatzati misham im ratzon echad
l'chabek
ul'nashek
kol Yehudi sh'ani ro'eh al ta'am
habri'ut al pi ruchaniut."
I walked out of that room with one
feeling. I want to kiss and hug every
Jew I meet. Any Jew I meet, I just want
to kiss you. Don't talk to me about
fragmentation and separation. It doesn't
interest me.
I realized at that moment, what do you
say in in Israel? Nafala siman, right? I
had an epiphany. Nafala the gem. Huh? A
siman fell. A siman fell, right? An
epiphany moment, right? A ha moment. You
know, we we operate in psychology and
neuroscience, you can operate
on different vibrations.
You know, there's the vibration of
guilt, vibration of shame, of hate, of
jealousy, of self-loathing, of
judgmentalism. They're all vibrations.
They're all They're all very active. I
can operate on those levels of
consciousness, those frequency levels,
but they're very very low vibration
levels. It's a very narrow and
diminished way of living. And then you
get to the higher vibes, you know. And
one of the highest ones is pure love.
And I think the Jew as Jews, we can
operate and live on different vibes. You
know, I could be in a place of
judgmentalism, jealousy, hatred, anger,
frustration, resentment, guilt,
self-guilt, self-loathing,
embarrassment, humiliation. We all know
these emotions. We live with them.
Yeah, what Yair experienced at that
moment was the highest frequency of the
Jewish soul. It was living on the
deepest vibration. I see a Jew,
and if I'm in touch with myself, you
know what I want to do? Just want to
kiss you. I want to hug you.
Why? Why?
Why Why do I want to hug you?
It's a ridiculous question. This is not
about a logical, intellectual, cerebral,
you know, idea in science or mathematics
or geometry or engineering. This is the
deepest frequency of the Jewish soul.
We're all one soul. I want to hug you.
V'ahavta l'rei'acha kamocha. The bottom
line is he says because he is kamocha.
She is kamocha. Our souls are one. And
on that moment, he felt it. He
experienced it. I don't want to live on
on lower vibrations. And I think this is
what these soldiers
can teach us all, that even as God
willing, there'll be more peaceful days
and we'll go back to normal,
let's not go back
to normal in the sense of diminishing
who we are,
of tuning into our lower frequencies. I
want to go back to normal in the sense
that I can remain always connected with
the truths we discovered since October
7th.
And that's what it means
>> Having clarity. Having clarity. Having
clarity,
emotional clarity,
even physical clarity in our nervous
system, and certainly intellectual
clarity, and not allowing other emotions
and thoughts, which always come in,
that's part of human struggle, to
control us, to dictate us. And it's very
easy to happen. Listen, we are a nation.
It's very easy for us to be fragmented.
Let's face it.
You know, judgmentalism is pretty comes
natural to us. Argument, debates, and
it's not a curse. You look, open up any
page of Gamara, it's filled of debates
and filled of filled with arguments and
filled with disputes. The first mission
in Brochos already has a three-way
argument. But the last mission says
Brochos
we have to learn how debates and
arguments should never undermine trust,
loyalty, connection. And living with
mesirus nefesh in a practical way means
that every moment of life I want to
choose to remain in the space of
godliness, space of kedusha. That means
in a space of light, of love, of
connectivity. And that doesn't eliminate
pain.
The soul feels pain.
Shechinta begalusa.
Im anochi betzara. Hashem feels pain.
The soul feels pain. A chelek Eloka
mimaal feels pain. But there's always
clarity. There's clarity. What do I do?
How do I relate to it? I don't detach. I
attach. I don't drift away. I don't go
into a place of ego and isolation and
detachment and self-righteousness and
self-consciousness. Those are all
blockages. They block the soul. I want
to always tune into the sacred space
with these unbelievable amounts of love
and trust and loyalty and connectivity
and clarity what is good and what is
evil.